Plans for Giant Domed Stadium at Fairgrounds Near Plans for a giant domed sports and entertainment stadium at the Michigan State Fairgrounds are expected to be announced this week. ★ * * ★ The public announcement revealing details of the proposal probably will be made Thursday by a citizens committee. The Weather U.S. Waathor Bureau Portent Showers Tonight Cooler Tommorrow (Detain on Pane 1) VOL. 125 m NO. 133 The stadium reportedly would be built on the assumption that the Detroit Tigers baseball team and the Lions football tepm would play in the stadium and pay rental fees. Designed to seat 70,000 spectators under a permanent dome, the stadium is estimated to cost at least $34 million. In May, one of the major figures behind the recreation complex, Alfred Glancy Jr. of Detroit, told The Pontiac Press that a decision on the stadium was forthcoming. URGED PLAN Last January, Glancy urged the sev- eral groups studying the stadium to work together on a unified plan. It has been Glancy’s contention that this 160-acre fairground site is the best for any sports complex. “There are very few cities with a tract of that sort inside the city limits,’’ Glancy said in May. . ’‘Its" primary function is to house the State Fair once a year;”' Glancy was unavailable for comment today on the anticipated announcement. SIMILAR PLANS Similar plans for a stadium have been suggested iri recent years, usually lb-connection with the Olympic Games.. ★ ★ * The stadium would be used on a year-round basis as a site for such events as rodeos, circuses and other events too large to be held in Cobo Hall. THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition ★ tfr ★ PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. TUESDAY, JULY 11, 1967 —32 PAGES Citizen Study Panel Favors City Income Tax A united Citizens Study Finance Committee last night voted to recommend that the Pontiac City Commission impose a city income tax for the next fiscal year., ★ ★ ★ Included in the recommendation is the proposal that the commission lower the property tax levy. from the charter limited 10 mills to 7 mills. Hie motion to recommend an income tax was made by Charles Yeager, a retired UAW-CIO official. The resolution was backed by the 21 members at the meeting. The total committee, headed by Robert R. Eldred, ex- ecutive vice president of Community National Bank, numbers 44. The group discussed alternatives to meeting the forthcoming financial crisis in municipal spending for more than two hours before voting to suggest the income tax. A recommendation to ask voter approval of a charter change which would allow a 13- or 14-mill property tax limit was discussed at length. Several committee members said they felt an income tax—1 per cent for residents, one-half of 1 per cent for nonresidents—was more equitable to all persons involved. "Left up to commission discretion was whether to hold an advisory vote of the public before calling for the tax and whether to tie the property levy cut to a charter amendment. The citizens committee, at the opening of the meeting, gave unanimous endorsement to a resolution which states “the committee recognizes the need to raise $1.6 million” for general fund operations for the next fiscal year. City Manager Joseph A. Warren has estimated that an income tax would yield $2.9 million but would cost $87,-000 to administer the collections. A 3-mill property tax cut would mean loss of $1,242,000, so the city would end up with an estimated $1,571,000 if the citizens committee suggestions are followed. Setting of a city income tax is governed by state regulations. Hie commission is called on to impose the tax, but petitions calling for a referendum vote could force a public vote. Warren said that to effect an income tax next year the commission must ado]pt an ordinance by Nov. 1. Petitions for a referendum can then be filed until Dec. 15 and a vote would then have to be held between Feb. 3 and March 20,1968, he said. (Continued on Page A-2, Col 1) Reuther Gives New Emphasis to Profit Plan DETROIT (AP) - Walter P. Reuther said today that a profit-sharing plan is "an essential part of equity” his United Auto Workers Union is “determined to achieve in 1967” in contract talks with the nation's automakers. Reuther gave new emphasis to profit-sharing as he opened bargaining with Ford Motor Co. a day after starting negotiations at General Motors Corp., where he revealed the UAW would seek profit-sharing for its 655,000 members in Big Three plants. He will take bis demands to Chrysler Corp., third member of the Big Three, tomorrow. Reuther’s use of the word “essential” in describing profit-sharing in this year’s negotiations was a surprise indication the union will try with greater determination to win something it repeatedly has failed to obtain from the Big Three since the 1950s. Profit-sharing was made a part of UAW contracts at American Motors Corp. in 1961, l>ut the financially troubled and smallest automaker has had no profit to share since the first two years. FORD NEGOTIATOR Malcolm L. Denise, vice president — labor relations and Ford’s chief negotiator, made a brief statement in which he told newsmen that his bargaining team recognizes the interest of all people who would be affected by the contract under negotiations. “Our objective will be to translate that recognition .. . into an agreement that— to borrow an old bargaining phrase—is fair across the board and does not favor one group to the detriment of the others,” Denise said. “If the union is of a like mind, we will (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 3) In Today's Press Walled Lake 1 Community a “city on the I move” - PAGE B-10. McCarthyism | “Witch hunt” reportedly drove 1 I key N-scientists to China — I | Page a-7. McNamara Cuts Troop Request SAIGON UPl — Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara will not recommend sending all the additional troops the U.S. Command in Vietnam told him it needs to prosecute the war fully, a high American source said today. McNamara, on his ninth trip to Vietnam, also reportedly ordered Gen. William C. Westmoreland’s command to cut away the fat from the 466,000-man American military force and step up the effectiveness of the U.S. fighting machine. With 80 American maneuver battalions, the U.S. Command normally has only about 40,000 to 50,000 combat troops available for operations. The secretary was reliably reported to have pressed for limited integration of Vietnamese troops into American units to get the Saigon army to handle SOVIET ADMIRAL ARRIVES — Soviet Adm. Igor Molochov sits beside Hamdi Ashur, governor of Alexandria, Egypt, yesterday during a press conference after the arrival of a./fleet of .12 Soviet warships in Egyptian ports. The naval officer said the fleet is ready to cooperate with the Egyptian armed forces to i;epel any aggression. After Promise of Aid Key Soviet-Arab Talks Slated CAIRO UPi — Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Jacob Malik returned to Cairo today in the wake of a visiting Soviet task force commander’s promise to help the Egyptians “repel any aggression” and of conferences by top Arab leaders in the Egyptian capital. Egypt’s official Middle East News Agency said Malik would hold “important talks” with Egyptian officials today and tomorrow, then visit other Arab capitals. Malik visited Cairo with Soviet President Nikolai Podgorny June 23 after the Arab-Israeli war. Many Egyptians interpreted the prom- ise of help from Adm. Igor Molochov as a major change in the Soviet Union’s cautious Middle East policy. Considerable significance also was attached to the arrival yesterday of the Soviet warships — eight of them at Port Said, at the northern end of the Suez Canal, close to the area where Israeli and Egyptian jets and artillery fought Saturday. Thebe has been no sign in Moscow, however, of any change in the Soviet Union’s policy of confining its aid to the Arabs to political moves and replacement of some of the arms they lost in the war with Israel. Kremlin leaders have been reported urging the Arabs to adopt a moderate course. a bigger share of the fighting, now done mostly by American battalions. However, some additional, troops are expected to be sent following the secretary’s report to President Johnson. Westmoreland was reported to have Asked for 100,000 to 140,000 men to prosecute the war at an optimum speed. He also submitted studies of what Washington could expect with various smaller amounts of troops. Before he left this afternoon for the United States, McNamara told newsmen of Washington’s troop policy since mid-1965, “It was then, it is now and I expect it will be in the future to provide the troops our commanders think necessary.” However, he qualifed this, saying: “What is necessary depends on the extent to which we are using the resources we have available to us.” He noted the allies have over one million-men under arms and said: “There are many ways open to increase the effectiveness of those men if we set our minds and hearts to it.” He added that in the rapid buildup to date, U.S. commanders had overlooked means of getting the most use of their forces. Bombing Proposal Made by Romney LANSING (AP) — Michigan Gov. George Romney today urged that bombing of "North. Vietnam be concentrated on targets “directly related to the infiltration of men and supplies into South Vietnam.” The Republican governor also urged more South Vietnamese participation in the .war,, warning that “there has been too much substitution of American for Vietnamese effort." Romney is considered a>,prime contender for the 1968 Republican presidential nomination although he says he has not decided whether he will enter the race. However, Romney said the comments should not be interpreted as those of a presidential candidate, adding that “I consider this a subject on which people have been asking me questions.” “The South Vietnamese must demonstrate their willingness and capacity to play the principal role in destroying the Vietcong infrastructure, instituting the necessary social, economic and political reforms and winning the loyalty of the South Vietnamese people,” Romney said. MODEL ‘MOON’ LANDING—A model of the Surveyor 4 spacecraft, which will attempt a gentle touch-down on the moon, goes through tests by engineers at Hughes Aircraft Co. in Los Angeles. The latest Surveyor will carry a new tool—a tiny magnet—to determine whether the lunar soil contains magnetic particles. The Hughes firm builds Surveyors for NASA. 'Number of Leads Are Left' in Trustee Murder Case “We still have a number of leads to follow” on the DeConick murder case, said West Bloomfield Township Supervisor John Warren today. Lower Humidity Due Tomorrow Thundershowers' during "the might brought some relief to Pontiac area residents as temperatures dropp|d into the mid-60s. More than eight-tenths of an inch in rain drenched the downtown area last night. Warm and humid with skies overcast and a chance of showers or thundershowers is the forecast for late today and tonight. * The weatherman said tomorrow will be partly cloudy and less humid. Mostly sunny and mild is the outlook for Thursday. Measurable precipitation probabilities in per cent are: today 50, tonight 40, tomorrow 10. The low in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 p.m. was 66. The 2 p.m. reading was 83. He said his 13-man police force has been on an almost round-the-clock schedule since July 3, the night of the killing. Edward Emmett DeConick, 63, of 5847 W. Maple, a township trustee, was slain by four intruders at . his home and his sister, Kathleen DeConick, 73, beaten and shot. She lost an eye but is recovering in a Pontiac hospital. The reward offer, for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the slayers, stands at $6,666. ★ ★ ★ * Aiding the West Bloomfield investigation are law officers and experts from the state, county and FBI. Supervisor Warren said “We are still checking out clues. You never can tell.” DeConick was killed by three Negroes and an apparently white woman, all in their 20s, according to descriptions supplied by his sister. ★ * ★ They were all well-dressed and may have left the scene in two cars, one of them with a bad muffler, according to police. Whoopee Sirens Lose Pitch, Warble Waterford News I Bpard approves two special ^ | assessment street lighting dis- i I tricts — PAGEC-12. ♦ Area News .................A-4 . §f Astrology .................C-4. | I Bridge ................... C-4 ft Crossword Puzzle...........C-U I Comics .....................04 -I Editorials ...............A-8 ^ Markets ...................C-5 | Mystery Series ..........« B-8 Obituaries ................B-6 i Sports ...............C-l-rC-3 1 Theaters ................ B-8 ; TV and Radio Programs C-ll 1 Wilson, Earl C-ll 1 •-City officials and representatives of the two ambulance companies in Pontiac agreed yesterday that those high-pitched, warbling sirens will have less pitch and less warble in the future. Meeting with City Manager Joseph A. Warren and Police Chief William K. Hanger were Floyd Miles Jr. and Richard Rudlaff, president and vice president, respectively, of Fleet Ambulance Service, and Clyde Marshbanks of the General Ambulance Service. Warren noted that following city com- mission criticism of the use of the comparatively new electronic “whoopee” siren# ami the resultant publicity, there had wen a decrease in the use of the sirens in the city. General and Fleet are the two major companies which provide ambulance service in Pontiac. A third, located just outside the city, North End Ambulance, 2661 Opdyke, will be contacted and asked to volunteer a reduction in the use of the electronic sirens. Hie ambulance company owners stressed, however, that electronic sirens are here to stay. Rudlaff noted that most law enforcement agencies in Oakland County have cars equipped with electronic sirehs. PENETRATING NOISE Miles said this is because there is a definite need for a penetrating noise which other motorists will react to and because die newer sirens do not strain a vehicle’s battery or electrical system as much as the regular sirens. Fleet has nine ambulances operating from four stations in Pontiac, Independence Township, Rochester and Commerce Township. Seven are equipped with, the electronic sirens, he said. General operates 14 ambulances throughout Oakland County, one of which has an electronic siren.,Marsh-banks said this will change, though, because he intends to equip the vehicles with electronic sirens. (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 6) 20 People Were Looking For Space Heaters “A Press Want Ad really started things going. We could have sold 19 more,” advises Mr. J.C. REAL > GOOD OIL SPACE HEATER WITH Fgrt and 250 gallon tank. Nothing heats up the buying urge like a PRESS WANT AD Dial 332-8181 or 334*4981 'A—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JULY 11, 1967 House Boils as Senate Broils in Sun LANSING -•Meetifig until midnight on a hot, sticky night, the House Monday passed appropriations bills spending $1S0.4 million and boiled because the Senate took the day off. The Senate, a bare quorum of 20 out of its 38 members present, met for about 20 minutes in the afternoon and quit for the A number of House members angrily made it plain they also wanted to adjourn. The Conservation Department was appropriated $12.64 million; Department of Agriculture, $6.53 million, and Mental Health Department, $113.2 million. The mental health bill, next to ate version would appropriate I the House until Aug. $240.2 million. The House upped that figurer to $255.7 and added a $39 million school aid crease. Irked House members corn- education the largest single I plained that talks on the educa-spending item, represented a tion bill were stalled because victory for the House in a week-pll three Senate negotiators-long battle with the budgetslashing Senate. Hie Senate originally passed a mental health appropriation of [only $128.5 million, compared Majority floor leader William Hampton, R-Bloomfield Hills, successfully opposed the motion, although noting: “I certainly don’t condone the actions of a few senators.” The House considered another appropriations bill to give $15.97 million to three state depart- 55. The Sqpate then wrote the same provision into the appropriation bill for the department of licensing and regulation. With only about 84 of the 110 members present, House leaders feared they lacked the votes to pass the bill with that provision in it. Frank Beadle, R-St. Clair, Garland Lane, D-Flint, and Charles [ments. But it put off a vote Zollar, R-Benton Harbor— spent [after debating one section which the day relaxing at a cabin on would change real estate brok-the Au Sable River. ers’ license fees. “They feel the state can do | Beadle, chairman of the Sen-The spending bills were ap-i with $137.45 million recommend-1 without the budget for a few i ate Appropriations Committee; proved after reported agree-|ed in February by Gov. George more weeks, apparently,” said'introduced - Gov. Lurleen Wallace of Alabama began today a two-to-three-week period of recovery in a hospital from an operation which a doctor says may rid her of can- 3 Convicted Murderers Get Chances for Parole Local Sirens j to Have Less |'Whoopee' through the Office of Economic jDavid Breck and charles clip_’ Opportunity, pays 80 per cf°t pert, also attorneys, agreed with of the program’s , cost. Pontiac I In_raham [ thus will pay $29,440. LANSING (AP) - Michigan residents will have a chance to sound off later this month on the new state income tax. The House Committee on Revision and Amendment of th»[ Constitution plans a day of hearings on the tax, lotteries and sweepstakes, judicial appointments and ballot designations. The meetings will open at 10 Members of the committee who were not present last night were: E. Eugene Russell, Helen R. Hagstrom, Jim Jenkins, Phil Sauer,. Dale Carney, Monroe Osmun, Mrs. Charles Billings, Mrs. David Saks, Charles Mills, Mrs. William C. Wright, Jerome Barry, Albert M. Wilmot, Dr. Joe R. Grayson, Dr. Robert R. Turpin, Rev. Arlond Reid, Tom Chavez Jr., Wyman Lewis, Jack Mitchell, Don Johnson, John B. a.m., July 31, in the Supreme|Maye, Richard F. Aust, Robert Court chamber of the State Cap-Critchfield and Charles R. The Weather VanKoughnett said the cutback in federal funds reduces the planned number of nonprofessionals, to be employed in ;the summer program, the rate [of pay, length of employment [and amount of equipment. (Continued From Page One) j 34 PROFESSIONALS North End Ambulance oper- Mrs. Pearlina Butler, coordin-Three convicts serving life 1 pleas of guilty to second-de- ates two ambulances. Both have | ator of preschool education, prison terms for two murders] gree murder were entered by electronic sirens, in Oakland County were assured each and a c c e p t e d by the CAUTION USE their freedom yesterday. .... „ , , 1 # t ^ j court and the prosecutor’s of- fice. Circuit Judge William J. Beer gave each reduced sentences, First-degree murder carries which will allow them to re- an automatic life sentence on ceive immediate consideration conviction and no chance for for parole. parole. They are Alexander GUva, 51; Robert Hearn, 32; and Ba- The maximum prison term for second-degree murder also is life, but unlike first-degree murder, the court can set a minimum. This was the case in each A malignant tumor in the lower abdomen was removed during 4 Ms hours of surgery Monday. One of hen physicians said afterward; “We found nothing . _ . . . that would prevent complete] 5,1 ^P018’ 38’ aU * Detrmt-recovery,” Gliva has been in the state * * * prison at Jackson for nearly 22 It was her second operation years for killing a Southfield ^ ^ H for cancer in 18 months. Township real estate man, Arba L av' T)ie nation’s only woman gov- Hawley, in 1945. - instance yesteraay- emor was kept under sedation. * '★ ★ | NEW SENTENCE Anders^ Uoso^and ^ o t h e r two have each Gliva was given a 15-30 prison Anderson Hospital ana sentence. Since he already has served seven years over the minimum, the only thing preventing him from being released is the paper work involved. Marshbanks said the one ambulance General operates with an electronic siren is stationed Farmington now. He said that he will caution drivers to use new sirens only when absolutely necessary. Miles and Rudlaff said their drivers are cautioned on overuse of the sirens. They said the “yelp” feature of the sirens will only be used as a last resort. assembling a staff of 34 profes-s i o n a 1 personnel, 36 parent-teacher and community aides and bus drivers and cooks. VanKoughnett said he is hopeful of getting federal funds to continue the program through the regular school year. Storm Damage Left Some Areas\ Without Power INTENTIONS GOOD Breck said Moore’s intention for the meeting “is good, but not wisely advised!” After Ingraham objected to the attendance of commissioners because it might be an endorsement of the proposals, commissioners decided to have the police chief, Darryl Bruestle, attend, but only as a nonvoting observer. In other business, the commission awarded a one-year contract to the Oakland Directors Service Co. to provide emergency ambulance service for the city. ★ ★ ★ | The Royal Oak firm won the contract with its low bid of $300 a month. | LOWER BID The bid was $700 less than jthat submitted by the Birmingham Ambulance Service which has provided the service for the last 13 years, and $200 M.D. ....Mg....... ... Tumor Institute for two or three served 15 years {°r the stabbing weeks before returning to her ?n ^2 of Alfred Jones, 27, dur-home at Montgomery, Ala, !*n6 a robbery of a Ferndale gas HUSBAND ELATED >Stat,0D RETURNED FOR RETRIALS Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC ANp VICINITY — Cloudy with fog this morning. | Variable cloudiness, warm and humid with chance of showers or 1 thundershowers this'afternoon and'this evening. Turning cooler.ii]L09P‘ta^ and becoming partly cloudy and less humid tonight and Wednes-day., Lows tonight 62 to 68. Light variable winds this morning and South west to westerly winds 10 to 17 miles this afternoon, becoming northwesterly tonight. Outlook for Thursday: Mostly sunny and mild. Measureable precipitation probabilities in per cent: Today 50, tonight 40, tomorrow 10. Her husband, former Gov. George Wallace, whose concern for his wife’s health had become increasingly visible, said he was “elated” and “very thankful” for the doctors’ encouraging prophecy. He will stay at his wife’s bedside “as long as she is in the All had been returned to Oakland County for new trials last month after appealing their cases on grounds that their constitutional rights had been violated. Rather than stand trail on | first-degree murder, however, ! The same is true for Hearn, given a new sentence of 15-25 years, and Dupuis, 15-20 years. ★ * ★ According to eouftty court officials, prison authorities described all three men as “model prisoners.” Reuther Stresses Profit Plan Si (Continued From Page One) Downtown Tomporntures Monday's Temporaturo Chart i 62 New York S Pittsburgh NATIONAL WEATHER—Showers and thundershowers are forecast tonight from the central Plains eastward to the Appalachians and the Gulf Coast states. Showers are also expected ip the Rockies and the northern portions of the middle Atlantic states. It will be colder in the north central region of th|a>untry. « -succeed in this endeavor,” said Denise, but he made no direct reference to any of the union’s contract demands. Reuther called profit-sharing a “rational and sensible method of determin-injg equity for workers.” STRIKE TALK Asked if the UAW would strike if it did c not win profit shading and certain other of its goals, Reqther said, “we don’t like £ to talk about a strike at this juncture.” ‘‘Our fervent hope is that we can achieve a satisfactory and equitable settlement without a strike,” he added, “but ip a free society, the workers have their right to withhold their labor power to .achieve equity,” -j * * A Reuther said he would open talks at Ford with precisely the same program he outlined Monday at Gen -al Motors. Reuther said workers should get a bonus based on profits at the end of Hie fiscal year just as company executives get bonuses to supplement their basic salaries and stockholders get. extra dividends. “What we’re proposing,” Reuther said, “is that workers be given the same consideration — no more, no less — than the executives! and Hie stockholders.” - Louis Seaton, GM vice president for personnel, declined to take a position on the profit-sharing proposal or any other UAW demand. But he told newsmen that 20 years ago the union was firmly opposed to any profit-sharing plan. In asking the auto industry to share its profits with workers, Reuther was making an old request in new trimmings by calling it “equity-sharing.” But there had been very little emphasis placed on the idea this year prior to yesterday’s opening talks. The UAW has had a profit-sharing— dubbed ‘progress-sharing’ — agreement with American Motors since 1961, but since the company has been operating in the red for the past two years, there have been no profits to share. But the automotive Big Three, GM, Ford and Chrysler, thus far have been adamant in their opposition to the concept. A Labor Department study shows, however, that the number of workers covered by profit-sharing plans has more than doubled in the past decade to well over- 2 million. GM Agrees on Talks DETROIT (fl — General Motors Corp. agreed Monday to open negotiations a month ahead of schedule oh its contracts with United Auto Workers union members in CShada. This concession to the UAW was viewed in some quarters as an indication of GM willingness tq go along with^ the UAW’s desire to have toe same termination date on U.S. and Canadian pacts. 5H .______ , ■ j „„„ . i Storm damage left some set to operate with a’ regulari311®3 homes and businesses[lower than the second bidder, set i ope e a gu without power for several hours General Ambulance Service. wail or can be controlled so that jgJS according t0 a DeJ .-----------------------------g a vacillating squeal which rais-]^^ Co kesman. es and lowers m pitch results. | In cSmrn^e Township, 50 customers in the area surrounding Fox and Carroll lakes were left without power from 1:10 to 3:45. Lightning apparently blew a fuse on the distribution circuit, according to an official. Chief Hanger said at meeting that the city has an ordinance which regulates noise making devices and provides for up to a $100 fine and 90-day jail sentence far violation. WILL BE ENFORCED This, he said, will be forced if the need arises, said at the meeting that he did hot think there would be any need to do so. “These are two of the most cooperative- ambulance companies we’ve ever had,” he said. . The owners stated that drivers have been advised that the electronic sirens, and especially the “yelp” noise, should be used only when necessary; mostly at busy intersections and on rural roads where it is harder to hear. ★ ★ ★ said the newer sirens are coming into more use because today’s cars are becoming more insulated and containing more and louder radio, stereo and tape-playing equipment. The electronic sirens costs run from $150 Up for the basic unit attached to the dash and $50 up for each speaker on the outside of the ambulance. Lightning also blew a fuse on a distribution circuit in Highland Township causing a blackout from 3:10 to 6:15. Some 150 customers in and around Highland village were affected. About 400 customers in Mil-ford Township, west of Milford aid north of Kensington Metropolitan Park, were without power from 2:57 to 6:20. The blackout occurred when lightning downed a power line. A Bell Telephone Co. spokesman said that about 40 customers in the area surrounding the intersection of Dixie and Williams Lake Road, Waterford Township, were temporarily without service this morning, due to wet cables because of rain. Dental Work for Ike Routine WASHINGTON (AP) - The dental work former President Dwight D. Eisenhower is to have done this week at Walter ! Army Hospital is described as routine and designed to reduce the possibility of pyor-rheal gum Eisenhower, 76, entered toe hospital Monday. He also is scheduled to; undergo a routine physical examination. 6 Armed A/ldn Grab Vessel MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) -Six armed men believed to be Cuban stowaways took charge of the vessel Freight Transporter off Miami Beach early today and came ashore in a lifeboat after smashing the ship’s radio, the Coast Guard reported. * * * The Coast Guard said it had receWeff i reportfrom the ves^ sel, which had sailed from Miami’s Dodge Island port at 12:30 a.m., that the men had taken over the ship. * , ★ ★ At 2 a.m. several persons saw flares fired off the beach and then saw six men carrying rifles and other firearms come ashore. ★ ★ * Police recovered the lifeboat n the beach at 13th Street, City Commission to Hold Zoning Hearings Tonight City Commissioners, with an unusually light agenda, will public hearings an three proposed zoning ordinance changes tonight. They . will also hear reports on shift of former city public health services to toe Oakland County government and on negotiations with Bell Telephone Co. to trade downtown parking lot land to allow toe telephone sompany’s expansion. Transferred' to toe county July 1 were toe Alcoholism Information Center and operations of three public nurses., The services were located in City Hall. Transfer to toe county payroll saves to» city about $21,000 yearly, City Manager Joseph A. Warren estimated. 1 * ★ ★ The telephone company' has offered to provide the city with some 27,000 square feet of parking space in exchange for a city-owned parking lot of 25,000 square feet south of the present telephone company building. ZONE CHANGES The zoning proposed changes would allow an area north of E. Walton east of Giddings to become Residential 3, land connected to General Motors Truck St Coach property to become a parking district and a parcel next to Vandeputte Buick and Opel, RiC., 2100 Orchard Lake, to become comn^rcial. THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY II, 1967 rA Junior Editors Quiz About- ROBINSON CRUSOE QUESTION: What makes Robinson Crusoe such a famous story? ANSWER: The English author, Daniel Defoe, wrote his book about Robinson Crusoe in 1719. Defoe’s Crusoe was an imaginary character, but the author had been inspired by the true adventures of Alexander Selkirk, who had lived on an uninhabited island for over four years. In Defoe’s story, Crusoe is the only survivor of a shipwreck. Finding himself on a small, uninhabited island, he manages to< save a number of articles from the wreck of the ship. What makes the book so fascinating, and so famous, Is that it answers in great detail a question every reader asks himself: “How could a civilized man survive all alone under such conditions?" Crusoe builds a snug fort for himself, makes clothes and furniture as well as pottery, plants grain and generality lives as if he were king of his tiny but cozy empire. Then, one day, he finds a'single human footprint in the sand. He is thunderstruck—this means there are others on his island. But later, he saves a young native, whom he names Friday, and who becomes a trusted servant. After 29 years, Crusoe and Friday are finally rescued. Miami, Chicago Will Bid for '68 GOP Convention GOP Out to Alter Broadcast Bill WASHINGTON (AP)-Repub-licans on the House Commerce Committee hope to revise the Senate-passed bill for a nonprofit public broadcasting corporation to insure its . freedom from governmental—and especially presidential—control. * ★ ★ Rep. William I. Springer of Illinois, ranking GOP committee member, made this clear in an interview today as the panel prepared to hear initial testimony from John W. Gardner, secretary of health, education and welfare. ★ ★ ★ Springer said he supports the concept of a public, nonprofit educational broadcasting corporation and that he expects the committee to approve “some kind of bill.” But he added, don’t think it will be the Senate bill.” * * * The administration’s proposal, not changed much by the Senate, is supported strongly by committee Chairman Harley 0. Staggers, D-W. Va., who is keeping control over the legislation by holding hearings before the full committee rather than a subcommittee. The Senate bill, passed by voice vote May 17, would create a public corporation to establish one or more noncommercial radio and television networks to distribute educationals programs. # ★ ★ ★ It would be directed by a 15-member board, nine members named by the President with Senate confirmatiop and/six appointed by thosei nine. 7 Springer said Wijiiig in the bill would keep the President from appointing all members from the same political party and added he feels having “the President appoint all nine is a I * He ^hid lie favors dividing the membership between the two major parties as is done for the independent regulatory agencies, where no party can have more than a bare majority. Japan Flood Toll Is 289 TOKYO (UPI) - About *,-10 rescue workers today dug for bodies buried in mud from landslides triggered by Japan’s most djsastrons flood in a decade. Latest figures showed 289 people dead, 73 missing and 452 injured in the catastrophe triggered Saturday by Typhoon Billie’s torrential rains. The hardest-hit cities were the World War H atom bomb targets. In and near Hiroshima, 137 people died, and another 43 were killed at Nagasaki. A shortage of drinking water plagued the 20 prefectures in western Japan where damage was greatest. ♦ ★ St Huge tank trucks moved slowly through the mud to carry water to housing areas where dwellings were crushed like matchboxes in hundreds of slides. Train tracks were blocked in 55 places by mud and debris, but air travel was resumed by today in most areas. Rescue workers worked yesterday and today under a bright sun in many of the flooded areas. (Advertisement) I think the commissions have worked well,” Springer said, with a sizable minority able to check up on the majority- MAJOR CONCERN His other majpr concern, he said, is the administration’ plan to create the corporation this year without any decision on how the project will be financed. President Johnson said in proposing the corporation he will propose financing in 1968. ★ * * Springer said there are only two realistic methods of financing: Direct Treasury appropriations, or a manufacturers’ excise tax of 2 to 5 per cent on television set sales. * * * He said the decision should be made now and that he hopes to get information at the hearings on the two financing possibilities. ★ ★ * The only money the corporation would receive under, the Senate bill is $9 million to set it up. Hie Carnegie Commission on Educational Telvision estimated the broadcasting corporation’s annual budget would start at $56 million and eventually reach about $100 million. 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A GOP spokesman said both are very much in j the running. The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights says evidence points to abuses in Cuban prisons, including firing squad executions and poor facilities for women. Prime Minister Fidel Castro has denied the group permission to make an on-the-j spot examination of the prisons, a commission announcement said. The Federal Communications Commission reports political candidates paid $32 million for radio-television advertising the 1966 campaign, a new high for. a nonpresidential election year. Democrats spent1 $18.5 million, Republicans $12.2 million. Third party and nonpartisan candidates spent the rest. The United States has lifted | ’restrictions on travel to Leba-l non. 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Old outdated side-by-side double or triple Nu-Sash Kushion-Aire® sliding windows give window units are hard to drape, look terrible, a picture-window view, glide open quy with give no view, make ventilation a problem, a feather-like touch, look ultra-modern. 1 Ar^-4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 11, 1967 Home Owners Kee9° Reappraisal Viewed Approximate Route Of Road (Arrow) That Dooms Trees Walled Lake School Board Boosts Fine Arts Program WALLED LAKE — The board of ed-«.ucation here last night gave tentative approval to an authorized application for a federally financed Tile III project which would provide a unique fine -arts program for students from kindergarten to senior high school. Walled Lake and Waterford School Districts have joined in preparing a proposal seeking federal funds for an opera-theater program combining all of the fine arts. Total cost for the three-year pilot project, reportedly the only one of its kind in the country, is expected to be approximately $300,000. It will be shared equally by both school districts. Andrew Zerban, Walled Lake vocal music and dramatics instructor, told the board that the program, when, approved, would be 100 per cent reimbursable with federal funds. If Walled Lake’s proposal is submitted before the Jan. 1, 1968, deadline, the program could be put into execution by the following September, Dr. George G. Garver, schools superintendent, informed the board members. ELEMENTARY DRAMATICS Elements of the program include dramatics within the elementary curriculum and course additions to the secondary curriculum as well as extracurricular activities. Objectives of the program, Zer- School Board in Rochester Elects Officers ROCHESTER — The school board last night elected its officers for the coming ...school year. Robert Ludwig of *789 Wilwood, Avon Township, was chosen as board president. He has been a board member for the past two years. Also elected were James Ludwick, vice president; Mrs. Gail Kemler, secretary; and Martin McMurray, treasurer. The board appointed Dr. Robert Williamson of 315 William, Rochester, to serve as the board representative to Oakland Schools. Williamson has been a board member for the past year. Mrs. Dorothy Beadihore of 213 Nes--bit Lane, Avon Township, was appointed board representative to the Michigan Association of School Boards. WORK PROGRESSING In other business, Schools Supt. Douglas B. Lund reported that construction work on the new Long Meadow Elementary School is progressing on schedule and should be complete by Nov. L The new auditorium at Rochester High School Js expected to be finished by mid-November, he said. The completion date had originally been set for February of next year. Work on the new swimming pool at the school will probably not be done before the February date, however, according to the superintendent. * * 4 Lund reported that the library and activities room at Woodward Elementary School should be ready for use early this fall. Construction work is still in an early stage on the new activties room at “ " 11 Elementary School, he said. ban said, “are to provide a new cultural environment in the community and to develop creative minds in our young people.” brother business,the board honored-five, retiring teachers who have served a total of 114 years in the Walled Lake school system. Retiring as principal, of Walled Lake Elementary School is Floyd D. Chowen who first came to the school district in 1938 as a junior high math teacher. He was principal of the elementary school since 1944. DECKER SCHOOL Two teachers are retiring from Decker Elementary School. They are Mrs. Charlotte H u 11 o n, a second-grade teacher, who has taught in Walled Lake for 11 years, and Mrs. Dora Wood; who graduated from Walled Lake High School, and returned to the school system to teach from 1927 until her retirement June 16. Mrs. Grace Churchill retired as a a fourth grade teacher at Union Lake School where she has taught for a total of 21 years. Esther L. Nelson finished 14 years with the Walled Lake system teaching fourth grade at Glengary Elementary. The board was also expected to hear reasons for a transfer of property from the Huron Valley school district by a group of residents but their .representative did not appear. The parents have requested the transfer because, they claim, the schoqls in the Walled Lake school system are closer than the ones their Children presently attend in Huron Valley. The Oakland County Intermediate School District is expected to again consider the request at a special meeting Thursday. Burglars Get $500 in Shelby Break-In SHELBY TOWNSHIP - Township police said the Star-Lite Inn at 52685 Van Dyke was broken into early this morning and robbed of at least $500. The thieves pried open the door, police said, and took the money from the cash register and several vending machines. The robbery occurred between 1 and 2 a.m. police said. Owner , of the inn is Remo Simi of Warren. Church Tower Blaze Ignited by Lightning SPRINGFIELD TOWNSfflP — Lightning ignited a fire on the tower of Davisburg Methodist Church, 823 Broadway, about 1 a.m. today, Firemen reported. The blaze was fought by the Spring-field and Holly departments. Rev. Henry Powell said the firemen' were able to stop further damage to the church. Many shingles had to be torn away, however. He said the repair job would probably be expensive, because the tower is difficult to get to. Delay Plans to Improve Road BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP - Hie Oakland County Road Commission has delayed its plans for a road improvement project that would mean cutting down a line of old trees along Square Lake Road. The delay was obtained by members of home owner groups near the right-of-way. They claim 135 old trees along the proposed route would be cut down unnecessarily. The road could be widened toward the north, a relatively untreed area, rather than along the south, they claim. John A. Kaichen of 2674 Lamplighter, a lawyer and president of the Concord Green Association, said he met with a road official yesterday oh the issue. * ★ ★ A meeting has been set for July 21, at 8 p.m. at the Bloomfield Township Hall with all interested parties-invited to attend. TO DELAY CONTRACT Meanwhile, the road commission is to delay awarding a contract to remove the trees and construct paving and drainage ditches, according to Kaichen. The unpaved stretch of Square Lake is west of Adams and runs parallel to 1-75. The homes, most of them relatively new, are on the south side, set far back from the right-of-way. However it would appear as much as a third of the front yards wduld be taken Including the line of trees, according to a line of surveyor’s, stakes set along the route. '!C~ -k ' 4™' ' "★ The protesting group claims this would be “wasteful, shamehil and an unnecessary sacrifice of roadside beauty.” ALTERNATIVE The group claims most of the property that would be involved in the alternative of placing the road to the north belongs to the state and to the Bloomfield Hills School District. They would provide the land, the group claims. Oneofthecompkininfi fact, the school district. The Adams Square Home Owners Association; Kentmore Property Owners Association; and Fox Hall Association. Whats Your Homes Value? KEEGO HARBOR — This city is cur-re.'.ly engaged in a two-month reappraisal of every piece of property within its limits. When completed, the reevaluation will bring up to date every property assessment in the city with the result that the current taxload, now believed by city officials to be in great imbalance, will be redistributed according to the new property values. To understand how property valuations are determined, W. M. Meier, president of the firm which has been contracted to perform the reappraisal, explained ’ the process of reappraising a typical Keego Harbor home. The total land and building values determine the total tax bill. In the sample case, Meier determined that the land itself should carry a value of $1,048. After the appraiser finds the total land valuation, his first step in finding the valuation of the building is to find out the age of the house. AGE ESTIMATED Since the present owner likely does not know (he may be the seventh person to have owned the house), the appraiser estimates the house to be about 37 years old. Hearing on Zoning Continues Tonight WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP-The Township Board and planning commission tonight will continue last week’s public hearing on a proposed new zoning ordinance and map. They will meet at 8 in the Township Hall. Some 80 persons attended last Tuesday’s meeting, during which only minor objections were, raised against the proposed revision of the township’* 1955 zoning ordinance. Many of the objections, Supervisor James Reid observed at that time, “had to do with the wording of the ordinance.” ★ ★ ★ Among questions raised were; how will tax rates be affected by the new zoning, what action-would be taken (in ~non-conforming property and to what extent will property owners be protected without their participation in composing the ordinance. OTHER CONCERNS Residents were also concerned with minimum lot requirements, disposal systems such as septic tanks, and certificate of Occupancy . ★ ★ ★ The zoning ordinance, recommended for approval by both the township planning commission and the Oakland County Co-ordinating Committee, now awaits final approval by the Township Board.. Pontiac Press Photo EAGLE SCOUTS—Harold Schoff (left) and Dennis Pine last night were awarded Eagle Scout badges from Troop 105. 2 Youths First in Troop to Be9Eagle Scouts CLARKSTON - Dennis Pine, 19, of 6121 Waldon, Independence Township, and Harold Schoff, 16, of 38 N. Holcomb, Clarkstoh, last’"night were made Eagle Scouts at a Troop 105 Eagle Scout Court of Honor. ★ ★ .★ The two are the first to be named Eagle Scouts in the six-year history of the troop. ★ ★ ★ Pine is assistant scoutmaster of the troop while Schoff. is a jwtior assistant scoutmaster. He also is a Pontiac Press carrier. ★ ★ ★ They have been working to reach the Eagle Scout standing for about four years, they said. (EDITOR’S NOtE—This is the conclusion of a two-part series on Keego Harbor’s first complete land reappraisal in its 18-year history as a city. Today’s article concerns how to determine the age of a house in computing property values.) His estimation is based on signs of aging that he recognizes. The house has never had any extensive remodeling done and the appraiser decides the structure has deteriorated approximately 45 per cent. * He then makes a few general notes on the type of structure: residential, wood frame, cement block foundation, lap siding (wood), asphalt shingle roof, insulation in ceiling only, dry wall interior and one 3-piiece bath. HEATER MAKES DIFFERENCE All of these meet the general specifications for a class D house. However, the house is heated by an old oil space heater which knocks off $400 from the cash value. This amount is the approximate difference in cost for re- placing the old heater with a modern unit of today’s requirements. A sketch of the floor plan of the house is then made showing the shape of the house and its dimensions. This house has a total area of 810 square feet plus another 68-square-foot area in two porches. The appraiser consults a Michigan State Tax Commission table to find the unit cost, or cost per square foot for a house of this size and construction. DETERIORATION DEDUCTION Hie table shows a unit cost of $8.54 for a one-story house with approximately 800 square feet of area. However, because of the condition of the house, the appraiser deducts 5 per cent for deterioration plus another 50 cents per square foot for having no basement. This leaves a unit cost of $7.63. The unit cost is then multiplied by the number of units (square feet) to derive the basic value of $6,180. From this basic value, $400 is deducted (for the oil heater) which gives an adjusted total of $5,780. Physical depreciation, which the appraiser guessed to be 45 per cent and the state tax commission estimates to be 46 per cent for a 37-year-old class D house, is also deducted. The depreciated total is $3,121 to which the appraiser adds another $73 for the value of the two porches, making it now ($3,194. . ....... . %.........„ | This would be the true cash value of the house but because the latest state tax commission tables are three years old, an economic increase factor of 107 per cent must be used. The economic increase factor adjusts 1964 costs to today’s market with its increases in cost of materials and labor. The cash value of a house for assessment purposes is the cost to replace it today. 1 TRUE CASH VALUE The true cash value of the house then computes to $3,417. Added to this figure is the value of the land ($1,048) to give the grand total valuation of $4,465. ★ ★ ★ The total assessed’ valuation (or the part for which you are taxed) is found by a formula prescribed by state law. ★ * * The state dictates that all property assessments be made at the rate of 50 per cent of total land and building cash values. UNIFORM SYSTEM This is intended to assure a more uniform system of taxing. Taking 50 per cent of $4,465 gives an assessed valuation of $2,232 which is rounded off (for easier bookkeeping) to $2,200. Local taxes are levied in mills. One mill is $1 of tax per $1,000 of assessed valuation. * ★ * *Xt present, Keego Harbor levies 18 mills, or $18 per $1,000 valuation. The owner Of the house in this case would pay $39.60 of property taxes next year if the city’s levy remains the same. .............★....*......... In addition, Keego Harbor residents pay 5 mills for the Farmington interceptor sewer, 2 mills to cover the municipal building fund, a 33.2-mill school tax, a 1.40-mill tax for Oakland Schools, 5.40 mills for county operating funds, .108 for county debt and 1-mill for the Oakland Community College. School Board Girds for 2nd Millage Try HOLLY TOWNSHIP - Hie Holly Board of Education was mustering its forces last night, hoping to win the second attempt to have voters approve a 10-mill levy. The issue was defeated June 15 by a narrow margin, 3i28 to 377. Involved is about one-fifth of the school’s budget money. Hie board sought a 7-mill renewal of an expiring operating levy and a 3-mill increase in total levy, both in a 10-mill package. The attempt will be made again on July 25. Meanwhile, a series of meetings are being set up in the district to seek voter support. ★ ★ ★ If the vote is defeated again, a third election is planned with a tentative date of Aug. 31. REASONS FOR INCREASE The board has given these reasons for needing the three added mills: • Additional teachers arle needed to add courses and decrease class size. • Increased salaries are needed to ti»3torsirom leaving tne district'” • Costs of supplies have gone up. • Some 150 new students are expected in th'e fall at an additional cost of $63,000. The board is studying an emergency plan to cut back broadly on education programs if the millage votes fail. However, they did not release details of the plan. The board elected officers for the com- ing year last, night. New officers are: William Darnton, president; Lloyd H. Good, vice president; Robert S. Brum-meler, secretary; Robert C. Barner, treasurer. Avondale Board Names Assistant to School Chief The Avondale School Board, at a special meeting last night, appointed Hobart H. Jenkins to the post of assistant to the superintendent for instruction and personnel. Jenkins, 43, of 2377, Walton, Avon Township, succeeds Charles L. Johnson, who resigned from the post last month. Jenkins hofds a bachelor’s degree in education from Wayne State University and a master’s degree in education from the University of Michigan. For the past year he has served as superintendent of schools in DeWitt. ★ ★ ★' He was given a three-year contract by the board. Salary will' be $15,811 a year. OTHER BUSINESS In other business, the board voted to reelect all of its present officers to another one-year term. Reelected were Ray H. Isanhart, president; Thomas Galloway, secretary; and Herbert Miller, treasurer. William T. Marzolf was named to the post of assistant principal at Avondale Jr. High School. He has been chairman of the department of mathematics at the school for the past year and has seven years teaching experience at the school. He is the holder of a bachelor’s degree in education from the1 University of Detroit and has a mastler’s degree,in business administration from the U. of D. hjEW DORM PLANNED—Ground-breaking is expected to take place in September on a new 90-resident women’s dormitory at Michigan Christian Junior College in Avon Township. U.S. Sen. Philip A. Hart yesterday announced that the Department of Housing and Urban Development has reserved $310,000 in loan funds 'for the project. A third story to the building, not included in this architect’s sketch, has been planned. MCC President Luden Palmer said the building should be ready for use by September 1968. Land Auction Slated LANSING UR — Some 27 parcels of land in six counties will be on sale at two public auctions this month, the Sjate Highway Commission has announced. Land in Macomb and Oakland Counties will be auctioned July 17 in Mt. Clemens. Excess land in Kent, Muskegon, Oceana and Ottawa Counties will be on sale at an auction July 20 in Grand Rapids. THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 11, 1967 A—a IVY and NO-BELT STYLES Great' buy! Great with your blazers and sport coats. Qreat when you travel. sport coats. Qreat wjhen you travel. They even unpack smooth and wrinkle-free. Choose Dacron® polyester plus wool worsted ... or Dacron with Orion® acrylic. Crisp bengaline weaves in today’s top colors. Sizes 29-42 Bonds The Pontiac Mall ON SUPERB ummer <2)c ave Oh flacks SHAPEHOLDING DACRON BLENDS NOW REDUCED TO A SMASHING LOW 2 pairs $17 Aviatrix Sifts Bills After Circling Globe SALINE (UPD — Ann Pelle-greno is sifting through her bills and laughing about the weather. The Michigan aviatrix, whc returned to her home in Saline yesterday after taking a 28,000-mile trip around the world, said nothing much had changed since she left . . . including the weather. “We flew all around the world, and the worst weather we had was in Michigan,” she said, with a burst of laughter. “Our takeoff was delayed when we left,. and visibility was down to about 300 feet because of heavy rain when we got back. “The weather in Detoit was bad ... but it was fine everywhere else.” The 30-year-old former schoolteacher started the unpleasant task of figuring out what her round-the-world trip cost today. AROUND $40,000 “It’s somewhere around $40,-000,” she said. “I’m in debt up VAULT To store your valuables, protect records, keepsakes at home. IT'S A SAFETY DEPOSIT BOX for the Home • Wall Models • Portable Models • File Models From *1*75 MIDWEST TYPEWRITER MART 88 N. Saginaw Street FE 4-5788 (Next to Simms) to my neck. None of it has been paid. I have bills for gas, insurance, expenses, food and miscellaneous things. “But the trip was fun. Mrs. Pellegreno, who made the month - long trip to commemorate the 30th anniversary of the flight by Amelia Earhart, was greated at Willow Run Airport yesterday by over 100 friends who braved Showers to see her arrive. The well-wishers ranged from her 91 - year - old grandmother, Mrs. Bessie Dearing of Parma, to her 8-week-old niece, i little Gale Grobliki. GALE CRIED Little Gale cried. And Grandma Dearing Just smiled. “I remember when my husband used to tinker around trying to make a car before they were ever built,” Mrs. Dearing said. “I’m really happy that Ann made it in that contraption.” That contraption was a 30-year-old Lockheed Electra, plane almost identical to the one Miss Earhart used on her flight in 1937. “The plane performed just beautifully,” Mrs. Pellegreno said. “T don’t have one complaint about it.” State Capital Happenings. •y Th« Auoclatad Prtu PLANS PRECEDED EARHART—Forty years ago, Mildred Doran, 21, irpm the Flint area, tried to make aviation history, and failed. She vanished in the Pacific in a race to be the first person to fly the 3,000 miles from California to Honolulu. She was a schoolteacher in Caro at the time. Aiming at Flight History, She Was Lost, Forgotten By the Associated Press | Miss Doran, Pedlar and Volas FLINT (AP) — Forty years R. Knope, a navigator, took off ago a slim, pretty young school- with four other planes Aug. 16. teacher from the Flint area tried ★ ★ ★ Only two planes made it. Arthur Goebel and William Davis won the first prize and Paul Schulter was second. to. make aviation history, and failed. Not only was Mildred Doran, , lost at sea,'but her name has become lost to the public. Amelia Earhart, who vanished 30 years ago over the Pacific on an afound-the-world flight, is well-remembered. But Miss Doran, who died in the same ocean, is virtually forgotten. Injured Boy Dies MUSKEGON (AP) «■* Richard K. Nawrocki, 17, of Grand Rapids, who was injured July 2 when his motorcycle hit a car, died Monday in Hackley Hospital in Muskegon. Miss Doran’s ship and the other two were lost forever in the Pacific.' ~ Miss Doran, who taught the fifth grade in nearby Caro, had been bom at OtisviUe and educated at Flint and Ypsilanti. For a time thousands of words were written about her loss. School-j children tossed letters and flowers in the tide as a memorial. In a race to be the first person to fly the 3,000 miles from California to Honolulu, Miss Doran showed a grand lack of concern over details. She couldn’t fly very well, her But today, her name is not phme was having spark plug in the World Almanac. trouble, she had no radio, andj _________________________ she couldn’t even swim. The schoolteacher took her first airplane ride, for $2.50, in 1925. She met a pilot named Augie Pedlar, who was teaching ler how to fly. Then the Dole pineapple company of Hawaii ahnoimced a 125,000 first prize to the first airplane to fly from San Fran-:isco to Honolulu. She and Pedlar found a backs', Willian Malloska, a Flint oil dealer, and the Buhl Aviation of Marysville built an air-)lane. City in Iowa Is Quiet After Race Trouble WATERLOO, Iowa (AP) Waterloo began to relax a bit today after passing the first night since Friday without a major disturbance in its predominantly Negro north side. Police, who allowed Negro leaders to try to control rowdy youths Sunday night, clamped on tight restrictions Monday night. Streets in the riot-scarred area were virtually deserted. Along Fourth Street, where there was a wave of looting, window breaking, burning and rock throwing Sunday night, plywood covered many store windows. Most businesses... in the area were closed, including pool halls and bars. Mayor Lloyd Turner nounced Monday afternoon the area would be sealed off at 8 p.m. but no such action came for two hours and then police put cars only at each end of Fourth Street. Unchecked access from side streets was easy. CURFEW ANNOUNCED Police also announced a 10 p.m. curfew for all “young people,” white or Negro, covering the entire city. A crowd of Negroej, mostly young men, gathered in the area early in the evening, and argued among themselves whether to continue the riots. By late night the crowd was gone and only a few individuals were on the streets. Debate continued among Negro leaders and city officials on the cause of Sunday night’s outbreak, estimated- by police to have involyed up to 80 Negroes with many more as onlookers. BLAMED POLICE Dr. Warren Nash, a physician and head of the local NAACP, blamed police. He said they herded Negroes out of the area without bothering to check whether any had a part in the disturbance. Nash said he was pushed. around by police while trying to quiet the disturbance. Some other Negro leaders said police violated agreements to give them a chance to try to exert control and to keep out of the area a police officer that some Negroes consider particularly objectionable: ’ Mayor Turner said there was discussion of assigning the officer elsewhere “for his own safety.” Now On Our Shelvot! PLAZA PHARMACY Your Family Pharmacy 3554 Pontiao Lk- Rd„ Pontiac, Mich. PhOnO 673-1217 *4 Hour, A Day Service' FREE DELIVERY MtlMJT Offer* IlMlWI Wr. mature Sandert Candy Vow Hay Pay 411 Utility Bills at Plan Phanaaey m CHILDREN OUTGROWN THE WAGON, BICYCLE? . . . SELL THEM WITH A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. EASY TO USE. JUST PHONE 332-8181. ' STEREO THE CORTEZ STEREO CONSOLE If this ad were five times larger, there still would not be room enough to properly describe the true beauty and superior sound - quality of this, the General Electric CORTEZ. OPEN EVENINGS Til 9:00 FRAYE FREE SERVICE DELIVERY 588 Orchard Lk. Ave., FE 4-0526 - 1108 W. HURON, FE 2-1275 All year we’ve been saying: 21 Oldsmobiles below $2920. But check our prices now! There nevW waSv a better time to buy^k beautifully engineered^ 4-4-2 and F-85—they’re all priced to put extra saying^ in your Rocket-Action Olds than right now-during your Olds Dealer’s * pocket. So see your nearest Olds Dealer today. Hfc’s saying annual Year End Sale! Selection’s great. And the savings, are Y.E.S. to every reasonable offer. Drive in quick and take your even greater.Toronado, Ninety-Eight, 88, Cutlass, Vista-Cruiser, pick. Drive out with pride-in a young-spirited 1967 Olds! Voice of the People: THE PONTIAC \ 48 West Huron Street TUESDAY, JULY 11, 1967 Proposes All-Out Attack on Crime Reflecting a growing “get tough” attitude on the part of the Oakland County judiciary, Circuit Judge Ar-thur E. Moore offers a 13»^oint program to combat the criminality t h a t is slowly engulfing thej community. The jurist’s pro-1 posals are encom-j______ passed in a commu- MOORE nication to municipal officials inviting them to a meeting Monday to consider and back crime-control measures. Indicative of the social emergency represented by the sinister specter of creeping crime is Moore’s declaration that “crime 1 is all about us — increasing, frightening, almost uncontrolled, and of disastrous volume.” While pointing to and condemning „ public apathy as contributing to the The Press has long advocated and commended the local bench on decisions reflecting a * stern concept of justice. We are completely in accord with Judge Moore’s crime-busting program and urge its full support by public officials and the public at large. Tarring Whom? David Lawrence Says: Service Stations Blending Harmony With Utility N. Viet Bombing Not Key Issue No American “needs to have his attention called to the vast improvements that have been made in automobiles over the years. But how many have noticed what has happened to the auto industry’s biggest companion industry — the 200,000 gas stations that service the Nation’s 95 million cars? Time was when strict economics governed gas station building and operation. Not any more, says Highway User magazine. The trend today is toward the residential type of service station that blends harmoniously into a neighborhood and is an aesthetic asset rather than a defacement. Now. most companies employ the,, best architectural consulting services in order to make both their new and remodeled stations attractive. At least one oil company has abandoned the use of banners at its stations and does not condone displays that give a “circus” atmosphere. Each year about 6,000 new stations are built. At the same time, some 5,000 marginal stations become obsolete and are eliminated. In addition, some 4,000 older stations are refurbished and modernized. Thus, about 10,000 stations a year are getting the “New Look.” Scientist Airs Views on Airline Stewardesses A sociologist at the University of Chicago suggests that men who ride airliners might be happier if stewardesses were symbols of motherhood instead of being". . . well, as they are. As you may have already guessed, this sociologist is not a man. She is Dr. Alice S. Rossi, a director of a newly-formed group called the National Organization for Women. (It has called stewardesses “airborne bunnies.”) Airlines, Dr. Rossi avers, assume that men prefer stewardesses who make it possible for them to “indulge their fantasies.” She further avers that these men might be more secure if they were served by motherly women. With no desire to dispute a lady— certainly not a lady sociologist—it must nevertheless be stated in the interest of factual reporting that there doesn’t seem to be overwhelming evidence that male passengers attended by unmotherly young stewardesses are desperately homesick for their mothers. These men may, of course, be able to repress such maternity yearnings by reminding themselves that if they do feel the need to be more secure, they can always fasten their seatbelts. VietProblems W By JAMES MARLOW AP News Analyst WASHINGTON — The University of Michigan’s Graduate School of Business Admin-I s t ra t i o n He used to be president of the Ford Motor Co. and he has a brajn like a computer, Everybody says sb. He can rattle off any time an astonishing list of.facts and figures; But he has streamlined the Defense Department And there’s no doubt it’s McNamara, not the gen-erals, who runs the place, about the first1 time a civilian has ever been able to do that. : Shortly he will return from his ninth trip to Vietnam in six years, an inspection trip in keeping with his present line of weik, which is quite different from trying' to figure out the prospects for the new 1968 model hardtop. Never in his life did he run into the kind of competition encountered in Vietnam. Over there if is not computers but bombs and bullets which tally profits and losses. Dollar signs don’t count. AMERICAN LIVES Profits are in a few yards gained in any one day, a few of the enemy killed. The losses are in American lives, weapons, materiel and effort. Now about 465,000 Americans are engaged in the war with the Vietcong and the North Vietnamese, or 31 times the 15,000 U,S. troops who were there three years ago. Rut a strange, thing has happened. While we kept pouringv in more men, so did the enemy. They seem to have an inexhaustible supply. But it costs North Vietnam a lot less to fight a war. And the Soviets have supplied North Vietnam with weapons, some of them very good, which, from a business view, makes North Vietnam look like a Soviet distributor. STILL MOVE McNamara has conferred at length in Sajgon with the American commander,' Gen. , Wifliam tl. Westmoreland, who wants still spore men. t As any good businessman would, McNamara * has probed and pressed to know if the best possible-use is being made of the men already there. When he returns he will report his recommendations for or against to President Johnson. Westmoreland said last week: “We are slowly but steadily winning.” This indicated some progress, for when McNamara returned from Vietnam in 1965 he said the Communists were tripling their jate of infiltration but “we have stopped losing." * ★ ★ Nevertheless, over the weekend Hanoi radio, disputed Westmoreland about slowly winning. It said the war is, a stalemate right *now. WASHINGTON-Maybe the American, people sooner or later will come -to. understand the pertinent facts about the Vietnam war. But those individuals, including some members of Congress, who are offering plans to stop American bombing of North Vietnam certainly are not aware that this is the least relevant of the i n f 1 u e n c es which can bring peace.-For the real struggle is not in North Vietnam at all. It1 is in South LAWRENCE Vietnam where the Vietcong — the revolutionary faction, aided by the Communists and North Vietnamese—is struggling to get possession of the entire area. To put it another way, the South Vietnamese are fighting* to preserve their independence, but the enemy — including infiltrators, numbering more than 100,000-are trying hard to get control. How many Americans know, for instance, that the United States has only 88,000 combat infantrymen in Vietnam out of the total of more than 460,-000 persons in America’s armed services in that war zone? * * ★ Of the 75,000-Marines, there are only 18 combat-maneuver battalions. LOGISTICS ESTABLISHMENT It takes an enormous logistics establishment to support fiot enly the American troops and those of South Vietnam but also those of South Korea , and the other Allied nations. Merely to stop the bombing around Hanoi would not necessarily affect the outcome in South Vietnam. Infiltration of North Vietnamese into South Vietnam runs about 6,500 a month. Despite losses, the Communists still have available for battle around 50,000 North Vietnamese troops and about 60,000 main-force, Vietcong. .*- * * All this points up the need for more American troops. SUMMARY The foregoing summary was derived from a copyrighted interview in “U.S. News & World Report” this week with Wendell S. Merick of its sttiff, who has just- returned here seize territory from the enemy and hold it. As matters stand today, he says, the combined armies in South Vietnam have effective control of not more than 25 per cent of the area. That is why more troops, maneuver battalions and helicopter units have become essential. But a ray of hope is indicated by Merick in his interview. He refers to the probability that the South Vietnamese government which is to" be elected later this year may get together directly- sdlh the ' Communists and work out a settlement. Rumors are current that the South Vietnamese have been in communication with the Vietcong as well as with the Hanoi regime in an attempt to reach some form of agreement among themselves. At least, conversations have begun. Bob Considine Says: Birdhouse Gave Start to Top U.S. Architect NEW YORK — Come along with me to the scrumptious town house of Edward Durell Stone He’s an i. • . -i _______u iicid juot lCLunicu iiere this is all p pretty gl^W/or a brief visit after a lengthy business for Mr-Nama™ >^Jeriod ^ Vietnam. He declares that the military, operations could-be carried on more intensively if the United States had a total of 7M,0M troops instead of 440,M0, and that the additional men are needed to business for McNamara. THEN WHAT? Suppose he decides Westmoreland needs 100,000 men or more and President Johnson sends them, and then the North Vietnamese pump in more men to make up the difference. Then what happens? Does McNamara make another trip in a year or so and does Westmoreland say things are looking a little better but he ^ and Mr*- AKred Froede needs more men? And if that of Chula Vista, Calif., formerly happens, how long will it of Pontiac; keep on happening? 56th wedding anniversary. CONSIDINE New Delhi, National Geographic Society Building in Washington, and the makings of the new General Motors Building on Fifth Avenue, you may agree. Interesting cuss, big fellow oat of Fayetteville, Ark. Went to the University of Akansas, Harvard Architectural School and MIT’s School of Architecture. Hit New York at the worst possible time: November 1929. In that first month after the stock market crash peoples weren’t building ■ buildings. They were jumping out of them. ★ ★ *. How does a fellow get in the architectural dodge in the first place? BIRDHOUSE STARTED IT “Well, though nothing was expected of me, I entered a birdhouse prize contest in .. Fayetteville, that hotbed of tranquility. “The other kids chose to build multiple dwellings. I . Elected to build a single domicile for a bluebird. “I went into the woods to watch how the bluebird himself did it, used his sassafras branches, measured the size of the entrances he wanted and built a bluebird’s house. ★ * * “The ornithologist and the carpenter who made up the selection board gave me the prize. Two bucks. MONEY AND GLORY "It was announced in the Fayetteville Democrat; which I also happened to deliver. When I found that there was not only money but glory in architecture — well, that was' my Undoing.” There’s been a lot of both money and glory since then: teaching posts at NYU, Yale, Princeton, Cornell, MIT, and Columbia, honorary degrees that threaten the’ very memory of Nicholas Murray Butler, and more awards and trophies than he can afford to keep polished. “It’s a shame to take money for my work in architecture,” the master said. “It’s such fun. ★ ★ ★ “It hag been said that the blessed man is the man who "Has found HisTfgfit work in* life. “I truly would, work for nothing, for the sheer joy of creating something new and perhaps different. But my ex-wives insist that I must have an income.” Stone is doing the J. F. Kennedy Cultural Center on the Potomac. , It- will be pure Jewel: AH tfc» arts, sciences, meeting places, Japanese cherry frees, restaurant and bar. He likes his design but will always prefer instead the Lincoln Memorial. -<*'■ Verbal Orchids Smiles A shield that the slings'land arrows of outrageous fortune can never penetrate is a sense of humor. ___it,-.-,-*. The odd thing about happiness is that you can only receive it when you give it. ★ ★" ★ Mini-skirts are giving og- lers a break. They don’t have to stand on windy street comers to get eyefuls. ★ ■ * * A neutral is a person who sits on a fence and gets shot in the pants by both sides. * ★ ★ Style hint: For mini-skirts to be worn in winter, choose colors that will not clash with' blue knees. / / ‘ Taxpayers Should Vote to Ban State Income Now that the Michigan Legislature has deprived the voters and taxpayers of their constitutional rights of referendum on the income tax act, the one last hope of those who cannot afford the tax is to pass a constitutional amendment prohibiting all state incom? taxes, flat-rate or graduated. ★ ★ ★ Any precinct delegate who does not circulate petitions to get this amendent on the 1968 ballot, so the voters can decide, is failing in his responsibility to those who elected him and should be dumped by the people next time around. This applies equally to Democrats and Republicans. ARNOLD R. JONES 672 LINDA VISTA ‘Ambulance Sirens Are Disturbers of Peace' I’ve been told that not one life in 10,000 is lost or saved by the 90 seconds an ambulance cuts off by rushing headlong through traffic and screaming every foot. ★ ★ ★ Let’s shut up these disturbers of the peace. JAKE ‘Can Gypsy Shed Light on Sports Article?’ f read your sports section with interest and I have always felt the reporting exceptionally good. I was surprised when I read Bruno Kearns' column regarding the now defunct Pontiac Arrows. If there had not been a Lisle Wells Would there have been a Pontiac Arrows? Why is Mr. Kearns so disturbed that he would write an entire column berating Lisle Wells? Perhaps the “gypsy”, could shed some light on the subject. CLINTON PLYMPTON 2265 DORCHESTER TROY (Editor’s Note; Mr. Kearns’ column was in rebuttal to ajiqgss release issued bj Mr. Lisle Wells.)' ' ‘ ‘Question Developments in Keego Harbor’ I question the motive of Wayne Vogelsbulg, chairman of the board of tax review of our city, to use his position to try and force our tax exempt, nonprofit corporations to pay taxes. It is a new precedent and for the first time we are singled out to be discriminated against. I also protest Mayor Milliorn using his position to usurp properties that have a long established usage and under the guise of good government turn them into public usage just prior to his reelection. ★ ★ ★ After many years of hard work of building and maintaining these parks Mayor Milliorn would Uke to make them open ■ to the public. The hard work and materials did not come from city funds or labor furnished by the City of Keego Harbor. ROSCOE L. McGEHEE 2063 WILLOW BEACH KEEGO HARBOR ‘Taxes and Costs Burden the Workingman’ With a new State income tax, property taxes going up, Federal Income Tax and groceries going sky high, what does the working man have to look forward to? We barely squeeze through now. Who is going to start paying our dental and medical expenses — Romney? WORRIED Citizens Have Both Duties and Privileges The right of free speech gives us as many duties as privileges. One privilege is to speak out in condemnation of the politician, the grafter and the dishonest government official. ★ ★ ★ . One duty of citizens is to speak in defense of the honorable representatives and true public servants. Another duty is to aid in the removal of the men who have been mistakenly given positions of trust, and the prevention of others from, gaining governmental offices. C. E. HAGLUND, A REPUBLICAN 9535 LISTERIA COMMERCE ‘Modern Dolls Help Stress Material Things’ Regarding the editorial about“deluxe playthings,” these super-female dolls are not sold to be cuddled or loved, they simply teach our girls about our material ways. Many parents who rushed ofot totrade in the old doll wilf he surprised twenty years from now when their girls are more interested in material things than concerned with their family and human needs. But then, what seeds of love and compassion were planted? H.K. ‘Let’s Make Our Home Town a Great One’ Security is having a home town (according to Charlie Brown). Let’s make it a great one by taking advantage of the U. of D. research. R. L. TULL » 81 OTTAWA Reader Discusses School Needs for Pontiac I’ve read ofHhe controversy over the school boundaries for attendance in the school districts. The courts have ruled >. school boards cannot change same just for the benefit of cer-/ tain races. In the past the Pontiac school board has spent more money per person for schools in the south end than anywhere else. « . ★ * ★ ' There is nothing wrong with Pontiac Central High School that cannot be rectified. It is,up to the parents, black and white. It is a privilege to attend high school. Students are there to gain knowledge and unruly elements should be expeUed. Building new buildings to put this unruly element in is not the answer. W. S. DOWNES 1801 OPDYKE Question and Answer Every now and then I hear reference to all the money John D. Rockefeller gave away. Is this just part of his folk-, lore or are there figures on the actual amount? TIGHTWAD REPLY \ Rockefeller lived to be almost 100 695^ Designed for today's tempo of living. You'll find this 15-Piece Specially Priced Grouping at DOBBS for a Limited Time Only. Come in Today and take advantage of this Tremendous Savings. 6-Pc. Bedroom Reg. $370 SALE $249 5-Pc. Dinette Reg. $140 SALE $129 15 Pieces Reg. *1018 Sale *695 BUY THIS 15-PIECE GROUPING OR SALE PRICED INDIVIDUAL GROUPS: Flexsteel Sofa of Sturdy Lifetime Construction With extra arm caps in Nylon solid or print fabrics. Scotchgarded for extra durability, Reg. $229> SALE $188 Mr. and Mrs. Chairs and Ottoman upholstered in Scotchgarded prints or fine correlated Nylon idecorator fabrics, 3 PCS., Reg. $279,, SALE $225 Contemporary Dinette, Sturdily Constructed, includes Round Walnut plastic-top Table with extension leaf and 4 matching Chairs with black vinyl seats. 5 PCS., Reg $140., SALE $129 Bedroom Suite, beautiful decorator designed, in Gunstock Walnut finish includes Mr. and Mrs. Dresser, Mirror, Chest# Full Size Bed and an $89.95 Deluxe Quilted Serta Mattress and Box Springs. 6 PCS., Reg. $310*, SALE $249 "t., _ . , „ , , . . Terms To Suit You , Professional Design and Interior Decorating Service 2800 WOODWARD, BLOOMFIELD (■■■■■■ftbteriMM nr. Square Lake Mm U 8-220$, FE 3-1031 OPEN 10 A.IM1 P.M., Wed., Thurs., Fr., Sat. (Mon., Tues. til S P.M.) A B—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 11, 1967 DONALD C. AUTEN ~¥uSUlihlAL, CoAffb otuL Gat TttthL *"D/tape/u AUTEN FURNITURE 6605 Dixie Hwy. Clarkston 625-2022 Pros and Cons of Paying Off J335X* Sommer Special! COMPLETE SCISSOR HAIRCUTTING OUR SPECIALTY Beauty Shop Hiker Bid*., FE 3-7186 FrasPsrtfcis m tarikNH 1st NEW BABY IN THE HOUSE? Start building for hit or hor future security — NOW I By MARY FEELEY Consultant In Money Management Dear Miss Feeley: We expect to inherit an amount close, to the balance of our mortgage. I feel strongly .about getting bid of this bur-id e n. B u t my j husband feels it i would be better |to invest in other fields. We have $5,-^•^a»000 in a savings sr, account and $2,000 in stocks. One child is sophomore in college, the other in junior high school. Any advice you can give us will be much appreciated. Mrs. R. L. G., Bloomihgton, 111. Dear Mrs. G.: It’s easy to argue either way about paying off a mortgage — because part of the question is emotional and part is financial. The first steps to take, before you get down to the one, two, three’s are: Find out what the net cost of carrying your mortgage actually is:-r how much interest can be deducted from income tax. If you have an old mortgage at five and a half per cent, maybe you’re paying only the equivalent of five per cent or less after deducting the interest allowed from your tax. Next, determine your niain objectives in this “shall we or shall we not" situation. Is the objective to satisfy an emotional need for outright home ownership? Do you intend to continue to live there while your youngest child is growing up, and even long after that? , OR —is your objective to accurriu-J late money at the best possible interest rate as soon as you lean? Is there a special purpose for such increased funds:, to put the youngest child through college, to build up savings for security in retirement? Let’s consider some of the pros for paying off fhe mortgage now: If you relieve your current income form mortgage payments, living standards for the family could be raised to a noticeable extent — perhaps long-range There’*, a need for Cosmotolo);isl»! PREPARE \OW FOR A CAREER Paramount Iraitv Srliil E\ROLL ISA COURSE TODAY 26 W. HURON ST., PONTIAC FE 4-2352 or Com.- In house improvements could, be made. Perhaps travel or entertaining that would, be advantageous from a business or personal point ,of view would be justified. Perhaps assistance to your older son as he starts out on his own could be handled easily if there were no more monthly mortgage payment. Or you and your husband could start a retirement program or increase the one you have now. Then there’s the emotional security of owning your own J MRS. NEWBERRY Silk Organza Is Selected for Wedding A A-line styled gown of silk organza with lace and pearl appliques was worn by Hazel Lin Newmarch. She became the bride Saturday of Larry Dwayne Newberry in the Waterford Community Church. ★ ★ ★ Her gown also features a full cathedral train and natural waistline. An appliqued flounce accented her elbow length sleeves and a cap of seed pearls and lace secured her double veil of illusion. Ste-phanotis and white and yellow roses were! carried in a cascade arrangement. ATTENDANTS Mrs. Terry Lancaster was honor attendant with bridesmaids Penny Poorman and Mrs. Larry Newmarch. Best man was Douglas New-1 berry with ushers Jerry Newberry and Larry Newmarch. Parents of the couple who later greeted guests at a church reception, are Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Newmarch of Dixie Highway and the Farris Newberrys of Airway Road. The couple are honeymooning at Niagara Falls. home, with no shadow of debt and uncertainly hanging over Its roof. Another angle couples should consider: if retirement age is just around the corner, and the income then will substantially reduced, paying off the mortage is a good idea indeed. Now consider some of the cons: Continuing to pay your monthly mortgage costs with 1967 inflationary dollars gives you an “invisible subsidy.”-.When the mortgage loan was granted years ago, it was done on the assumption that repayment would be made in dollars of equal purchasing power. But the 1967 dollar is worth considerably less than it was back there in, say, 1955. So now you’re paying back in less dollar value than you contracted for. If you feel there’s a chance you’d want to sell the house at some point in the reasonably near future, a good mortgage would interest a prospective buyer — because, presumably, the interest rate would be attractive (less than a probable six to seven per cent in today’s market). And if he could pick up the mortgage by agreement with the. lender, with no liability to you, both you and the prospect could see eye to eye. One family I can cite, who raised the same question your letter does, decided against paying off their mortgage. They. preferred to invest an Wine on Rocks Is Favorite Drink of Connoisseur SYDNEY (AP) - Thomas Hardy, an Australian wine expert, says the favorite drink at his house is “red on the rocks.” -“Some wine snobs would say it was sacrilegious to drink wine with ice,” said Hardy, president of the Australian Wine and Brandy Producers’ Association, to a group of newsmen. * ★ * “I wouldn’t, of course, do it with a classic table wine. But for an average red wine I think it is a happy way to drink.” inheritance in a well-planned investment program rather than to pay off this remaining mortgage balance in a lump sum. Capital gtains from their investments are earning much more than the interest saved on mortgage payments — more gratifying than simply knowing they’d written finis on the mortgage contract. ♦ ★ ★ (For Mary Feeley’s “Make Every Dollar Count” booklet, send $1 to her in care of The Pontiac Press, Dept E-600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056. Organizations wishing to have their programs in the forthcoming Cultural Calendar are reminded that deadline for their submission is Saturday. All material should be sent to Cultural Calendar at the Pontiac YWCA. at Open House Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Rufn-mins of Clarkston were hosts at an open house Saturday, honoring the Bartlet Wagers who were married recently. They were assisted by their daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Phillips. GUESTS In addition to former coworkers frmm Pontiac State Hospital, guests were present fro mthe Pontiac area, Saginaw, Highland Park, East Lansing and St. Petersburg, Fla. Assisting at the tea tables were Dorothy D. Roe, Marguerite Parrish, Clara Gaylord, Lulu McGregor, Helen Travis, Linda Duman and Joette Schultz. * * * Others were Mesdames: John Braid, Martin Wager, C. T. Crowley, P. V. Wagley, A. Fortunato, Elbert Burns, Earl Clark, Harry Ba-shore and James Scribner. The betrothal of their daughter, Sandra Kay, to Leonard J. Nowak, is announced by the Carlyle E. . Bragens of Auburn Road* Avon Township. His |;parents are Mr. | and Mrs. Felix Nowak of Gaylord. He is a senior at Wayne State University. Laureate Is Bard DALLAS, Tex. UD—‘The bard of Texas is just that— a Bard. William E. Bard, 75, Who has three p u b I i shed books of poems, was recently named as the 21st poet laureate of the state. Save 20% Sale S MADE-TO-YOUR-MEASURE DRAPERIES Lined or Unlined DRAPERIES MADE JUST-FOR-YOUR.WINDOWS FROM YOUR PERSONAL CHOICE OF FABRICS AND COLORS . . . TAILORED WITH DETAILS OF QUALltY AND BEAUTY. Look at these low 20% off prices for draperies made to fit your windows. Ns. of Width! each side-*- | I m 2 2% 3 3tt 4 4% S FINISHED OVERALL PLEATED WIDTH IN INCHES LENGTH $ INCHES ▼ 32-48 48-72 64-96 30-120 96-144 112-166 126-102 144-216 160-240 Up to 36 7.62 11.75 15.88 20.02 24.14 28.21 32.41 38.55 40.69 37-48 8.09 12.46 16.83 21.18 25.56 29.94 34.30 38.80 43.04 49-63 8.57 13.16 17.70 22.40 27.00 31.61 3622 40.83 45.44 6441 10.42 16.03 21.58 27.11' 32.71 38.27 43.73 49.36 54.95 ,. 62-90 11.11 17.47 23.49 29.53 35.56 41.60 47.84 53.67 59.71 •1-106 13.32 20.32 28.90 34.28 4126 4820 552$ 5224 69.22 YAUNDE LENGTH 2W 32-41 3W 48-72 4W 6446 SW 10-120 6W 06-144 ' 7W !! 112-160 iw 126-102 •w 144-216 10W 160-240 UP TO16* 6.06 9.02 13.02 16.44 19.66 2327 26.69 30.11 3153 Limited Time Only — 2 Week$ Delivery! 1666 South Telegraph JUST SOUTH OF ORCHARD LAKE ROAD Quality Carpet and Draperiet Since 1941 FE 4-0516 Molls Polly's Pointers Two Methods Used DEAR POLLY - My Pointer] is for the reader who has sweating walls and windows in her home. My daughter had the same trouble in rooms where there was just a crawl space and no basement underneath. She was told'to put painters’ heavy plastic dropcloths, overlapping one another, over the ground in the crawl space and bring them up tight against the foundation, weighing them down with bricks. A few days later the sweating had all disappeared. This was done some time ago and the walls and windows are still dry. — BERTHA DEAR READERS — An architect told me that gravel spread all over such a covering is ^lso good for holding down the material that is keeping the moisture from coming up from the ground into the house. — POLLY DEAR POLLY — How do you Secretaries in Toronto Two members of the Pontioak chapter, National Secretaries Association (NSA) International, are in Toronto, 22nd annual convention which ends Saturday. The two, Mrs. Roberta Trayer and Mrs. Theresa McVeigh are delegate and alternate respectively. Both are past presidents of the chapter. ★ ★ * The NSA convention has as its theme “Difficulties Mastered are Opportunities Won." President Lyndon B. Johnson has tendered a special message of greeting acknowledging the 25th anniversary of the organization. get ink out of white jeans' have tried washing them but with no success. — DOUG DEAR POLLY — When it was necessary to use a hospital bed I pinned a shower curtain hook to the bar toehold a paper bag for soiled tissues and it moved | easily on the bars with the side rails up pr down. A nail with scarcely any head was put in the wall close to the bed and the tissue box pushed back on the nail to hold it in place close to the bed, where the patient coujd reach it easily. This left the table top free for medicines and other needed things. D.M. You will receive a dollar if Polly uses your favorite homemaking idea, Polly’s Problem or solution to a problem. Write Polly in care of The -Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P.O. Box, 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056. New Courses Set for Gals at 'YW' Two classes, “The Art of Self Defense” and “Yoga,” are being offered at the YWCA. The Self Defense class will be for beginners only and will meet evenings once a week for five weeks beginning Monday. ★ / ★ ★ The Yoga classes which began Wednesday will continue through Aug. 9. The 1 p.m. class is for advanced students and the 2:30 p.m. class tor beginners. There have been requests to set up a summer Powder Puff Mechanics class but mere enrollees are needed in order to offer the course. No date has been set for this. Easy Mending of Buttonhole When a button is torn from work overalls it leaves a hole in the garment. To remedy this, cut a button from a discarded pair of overalls with a piece of material a little larger than the hole left on the good garment. Push button up through the torn Overall, leaving the cloth attached to it on the underside. Stitch the cloth down around the edge of the torn place and your work is done. FE 3-7028 Make a Start Now 'Toward a Rewarding Career in Business! Secretarial. Accounting ..." Business Administration * Office Machines , Clerical Yon can prepare quickly for a position in business, where you will earn a good salary, have unusual opportunities for advancement and enjoy job security. You may start a course at the beginning, or on on advanced level, depending upon whether you have had previous ' business ''"■training. ■ »' ., . ■ You will progress swiftly toward a definite , career goal. Every subject you take at PBI will have practical use in. a business office. Experienced teachers will take a .personal interest in your-progress. You will make - new friends among the business leaden^ of Mid-Term Opening July 24 (Day School and Evening Division) 18 W. Lawrence Pontiac Towns Boost Kissinf Lanes for Lovers TERNI, Italy (AP) - A couple of cozy kissing lanes in two medieval towns in the Umbrian hills are claiming the title for the narrowest street in Italy. Oddly enough — or is it? — bojh streets pre named Kiss The-Women lane. ★ ★ ★ . First claimant was the town of Spoleto. which Insisted its Bacciafemmine lane was the tightest squeezed Itqly. The street is about six yards long, and at one point only 27 inches wide. Then came little Citta del Piave to boast that its Baccio-donne lane, although 20 yards long, narrows down at one point to 21 inches. NAME’S THE SAME Despite the slight difference in. names — Bacciafemmine and Bacdadonne — both mean’ the same thing: Kws The Women. ■■ ★ * And times have not t o o greatly changed. Both lanes stiH'are popular with youthful strollers. (nj juwukWlitfGi . Make richly pleated pillows of velveteen, corduroy, satin to dress up a bed or sofa. Make pillows for gifts too — quick, easy to smock on reverse side. Pattern 740: pattern pieces; directions pillows 12-inches round, square Fifty cents in coins for each pattern — add 15 cents for each pattern for lst-class mailing and special handling. Send to Laura Wheeler, The Pohtiab Press, 124 Neediecraft Dept., Box 161, Old Chelsea Station, New York N.Y. 10011. Print Pattern Number, Name, Address, Zjp. New 1967 Needlecraft Catalog — 200 knit, crochet fashions, ■ embroidery, quilts, afghans, toys, gifts. Plus 2 free patterns. Send 25 cents. Afghan lovers, send for new Book of Prize Afghans —• 12 complete patterns to knit, crochet. Value! Only 50 cents. 12 Unique Quilt Patterns — Museum Quilt Book 2. 50 cents. Special! Quilt Book 1 — sixteen complete patterns. 50 cents. •#im«e.ae4»eeeeeeaw»ean'ir**»eeeieeeeeee« HASKILL STUDIO Has Photographed Over 2,000 Weddings May We Make Yoti£ Pictures? ’115 Mrs* John C. Connell L Mt. Clemens St, Price Include*: \ • Picture for Press < e Just Married Sign J e Wedding Guest Book j e Miniature Marriage < Certificate J e Rice to Throw ^ “Everything but a WILLING MATE!” J FE 4-0553 | B—8 TUB'-PONTljAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JULY 11, 1967 WNFGA Group Box Luncheon Includes Guests Brookside Branch of the Woman’s National Farm and Garden Association met re* cently for a box puncheon at the home of Mi*s. Robert E. Bratton on Lanelake Road. ★ ★ * Mrs. Harold Milliken of Birmingham was welcomed as a new member. Guests included Mrs. Philip F. Hoops of Chicago, Mrs. Jerry Martin of New 'Orleans, Mrs. Elmer Pettengill of Holly, Mrs. Raymond Raupp and Elsa Garcia of Ecuador. A floral arrangement contest was won by Mrs. Clifford F. Dick and Mrs. Edward P. Sammut. Mrs. Sammut was a winner, along with Mrs. Sherwood Nye, in a contest for fresh flower hats. Six Area Couples Are Planning Nuptials Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Raglin of Elizabeth Lake Road, White Lake Township, announce the engagement of their daughter, Donna May. Her fiance is James Joseph, son of the Everett Josephs of Lockhaven Street. Car Windows Not Meant for Garbage ELIZABETH L. POST At this time of the year, when very shbrtly we will all be taking to the country, the. parks and the beaches, it seems appropriate to discuss again our national disgrace — littering. ★ ★ ★ What is it that makes people who are ordinarily tidy, and wouldn’t think of dropping empty beer cans or tissues or sandwich wrappers in their own front yard, blithely toTstlbse articles out of car windows or at random all over their picnic site? Even worse are the bite of broken bottles found all over our beaches. The probability of causing injury to swimmers and other picnickers makes breaking glass a truly criminal act. There can be no answer but sheer thoughtlessness. If these litterbugs were asked why they did it, they would undoubtedly ■ay, “Oh, one little piece of paper isn’t going to ruin the scenery!” True, but the cumulative effect of thousands of little pieces of paper is destroying the view on every highway in the United | States. What can be done about littering? Ibe campaigns to improve the situation seem to have done very little good. Probably the most effective means found so far is to hit offenders where it I hurts i| most in the pocket-1 book. There is no doubt that on the highways where signs read $50 or “$100 fine for littering’’ the situation is better than on those where the fine is five or 10 dollars. The obvious weakness in this system of control is policing it. There simply aren’t enough highway patrolmen to spot the '■ innumerable offenders. , City, state and federal agen-' ties, as well as private organizations interested in landscape beautification, can also help by providing more receptacles for trash in public places. It is a further demonstration of our faek, ef-*appreciation~of our surroundings that the tfash cans which ape provided are often mutilated or stolen. In spite of that, beaehes, parka; -and picnic areas which have plenty of receptacles available are better condition than those which don’t. The greatest problem is to educate people to use the facilities that are available. If'each, of you would insist that your children put thfiir trash In the receptacles provided at, picnic sites, rather than leaving it on the table or, the ground, you would be starting the younger generation in the right direction. Youngsters learn by example: If you insist on picking up all your picnic leavings and see that they are taken home or properly disposed of, you will plant the seed in your children’s minds. February tenth has been chosen as a wedding date by Site P. Brandenburg and Spec. 4 Anthony L. Evans currently stationed at Fort Bragg, N.C. Parents of the couple are the Joseph P. Brandenburgs of Longworth Street and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur C. Evans of Talmyra, Tenn. * — jFb. HU 1 kS| The John L. Sterlings of Williams ‘fake“Road, announce the engagement of their daughter, Barbara Lee, to Thomas Patrick Micham. He is a Central Michigan University senior and the son of the Harold Mic-hams of Frankfort. Linda Joan Sly and Vernon W. Roberts are planning late October vows. She is a former student of Pontiac Busi- v ness Institute. Their parents' are Mr: and Mrs. Ward E. Sly of West Huron Street, William W. Roberts of Preston Street and the late Mrs. Roberts. Suspect Physical Basis in Emotional Problems By MAX JENNINGS CHEYENNE, Wyo. (UPI)-A child who can’t catch a ball thrown by a playmate might be amusing to watch, but in truth it is no laughing matter. Ask the Educational Diagnostic and Planning Center in Cheyenne. That one failure could lead to poor grades in school, serious emotional problems, even to dropping out of school. The 15 specialists at the federally-financed center — psychologists, counselors,* education specialists and others — know that even such a seemingly simple thing as poor physical coordination can cause big problems. ★ ★ ★ The center is serving the Cheyenne schools n o w, diagnosing and providing therapy for the students that need it. The children being helped have come from all age groups, and from all social and economic levels. The acting director of the center, George Storey, remembers one boy in particular who was having serious problems in school. IMPAIRED “He was quite impaired as far as coordination was concerned,” Storey said. “He had very poor relationships with children of his own age. He was constantly picking fights on the playground because of his non-acceptance by these youngsters,” Cobi 'Photog&apluj &y V/vofmiml Coin, Featuring Full Color ten by • ten Inch photographs complete with album. Also ask to examine our engraved Wedding Announcements end Accessories. Coll 338-9079, Anytime The boy simply couldn’t join in the games with his playmates because he could not compete with them. ★ ★ ★ “He wanted very much to participate,” Storey said. “But the behavior he exhibited on the playground only made the children dislike him more." A counselor at the center, Ted Gloeckler, remembers talking with the boy. “In the counseling sessions with me he broke down and cried,” Gloeckler said. EXERCISE . The boy then was started also on an exercise program to improve his coordination and his ability to participate in ghmes. “We will continue to work with him,” Storey said. “We find that progress is very slow. We have no indication right now as to how long it will take.” ★ ★ . ★ They said ala||dy the boy which several youngsters with coordination difficulties are brought together. “He’s slowly learning how to get along with people,” Glock-ler said. An educational specialist is helping the boy in three subjects; troubling Him at school. PHYSICAL BASIS “Some of the theorists believe that readying, particularly, has a physical basis,” Gloecker said “We’re finding many, many of the children we’re working with that have academic problems also have these motor problems — to such an extent we can’t overlook it as coincidence.” At times the counseling and testing center finds itself working almost as much with the parents as with the children themselves. _—* - —- Parents are asked to come in for interviews. With the staff members of the center, who are not introduced as doctors, or psychologists, but as someone to help their child, the parents 'go over their child’s test scores, and medical and psychological histories. Rev. and Mrs. Arthur Maglott. of Northfield Street, announce the engagement of their daughter, Linda Kay, to Michael LaVern Khibbs. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. LaVern Knibbs of Jamm Road, Orion Township. He is a senior at Dayton Bible Institute, Dayton, Ohio. November 11 vows are being planned by Theresa Lynne Tunny and PFC MP Ian Harding of Lacklin AFB, Texas. Their parent are the Allen J. Tunny’s of Neurport Street and the John C. Hardings of Briggs Street. Coin Works as Cap Saver When taking a cap off a bottle you wish to reseal, place a coin on top of the cap before applying the bottle opener This will keep the cap from becoming dented, enabling you to reseal the bottle, making it air-tight. A badly dented cap cannot be resealed, so it pays to take a little care in removing it. (Advertisement) Mommy! Mommy! There isa form of iodi ne that helps fight infection, but doesn't sting or bum like tincture of iodine. Apply ISODINE ANTISEPTIC to children's cuts, scrapes or bums without upsetting them. Some antiseptics may kill some germs, but ISODINE ANTISEPTIC kills all types... even vifus and fungus. Ask the pharmacist for the "gehtle iodine” — ISODINE ANTISEPTIC.__________. New * • Materials • Ideas Fresh from Hobby Trade Show Comm In and Browse• | CLOSED ALL DAY Sot. During July & Aug. iCLEO’S’ ES 366 Oakland Ave. | FE 8-3361 PONTIAC MALL Invites You and Your Family To BrWednesday Nighters Enjoy Tender, Golden, Deep-Fried COMPLETE CHICKEN DINNERS ■ 20 Children flCfi Under 10 JJ Jj Only CHOICE OF POTATOES OR VEGETABLE DINNER SALAD OR DESSERT ROLLS AND BUTTER COFFEE, TEA OR MILK SERVED EVERY WEDNESDAY NIGHT PONTIAC MALL CAFETERIA ONLY 4:30 to 8 P.M. tifam's Jo£y DESIGNER FURS Regular to 2750.00 A sweeping variety including traditional and fashion-furs, coats, jackets, three-quarter coats, stoles, capes, capelets. CONTINENTAL ROOM Suits - Dresses - Ensembles - Knits - Coats - Formals regular 50.00 to 175.00 Vz to * off Summer Dresses Washable, easy care in casual and dressy styles regular to 30.00 *10 to *20 Summer Sportswear Skirts, tops, coordinates ' regular to 30.00 *3 >.*20 J<4 •Siu>€' -Sofe Andrew Geller . . ... * reg. to $30 DeLiso Debs . . . .........reg. to $22 Caressa-Mr. Easton . . ‘. reg. to $n Town & Country Dress . . . . reg. to $16 California Cobblers Stack . reg. to $14 Capezio . . . . . reg. to $18- Penobscot—Cover Girl California Cobblers town & Country Casual . . ... . . . . . . . 1890 1390 ll90 890 890 890 690 ENTIRE STOCK OF ITALIAN SANDALS 490„ Q90 CANVAS OXFORDS - StIPONS By Ball Band 288 - 388 HURON at TELEGRAPH THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 11, 1967 ILOOMHEID MIRACLE MILE SH0PPIN6 CENTER A enneu ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY m (Ill's Jmico Sits Sizes 3 to 6X |22 Sizes 7 to 14 |44 Cool twosomes for big and little sister! Jamaica shorts paired with pert tops, all in crisp care-free cotton. Gay summer colors in stripe, check and print combinations. 1 LIKE IT? CHARGE IT? Mess's Short Slsiss Buss Shirts 2 m *5 Let the dryer do the ironing. These tegular collar white Penn-Prest® • polyester/cotton shirts are tailored to Penney1* exacting specifications for outstanding quality — your assurance of satisfaction. Com-plot* size range 14 to 17. S. TELEGRAPH RD. AT SNARE LAKE RO. PAINTER PETE SEZ: Don’t brash off these paint bargains COOK & DUNN'S Major Semi-gloss White PVA Latex Wall Paint Color Hues Dripless Latex Flat FengarOil Base White House Paint SALE PRICED at . . . *33.3 Then For Fun-In-The-Sun When The Work's All Done Ufa Preserver Jaokats.. $555 9’x9’ Thermos Wins Tent $89°° 12’x12’ Thermos Wing Shelter Complete with poles, tlAQgg stakes and rope........ uCl Car Top Carrier $g88 Basket Type Regular 9.98 Q GOLF CLUB SETS Men's or Ladies'—4 irons, 2 woods, J putter, with1 bag. o a oa oddody CcmMNPbShft/ 00080 000000 0/ JULY CLEARANCE SLIDE PROJECTORS .... FROM 34.95 SUPER S MOVIE CAMERAS___________ 49.95 Other Low Prices on Electronic Strobes, Enlargers, Tape Recorders, Projection Stands, Lenses Bring In Your Films for Developing and Receive Hite Photo Bonus Photos from All Kodacolor Films Fie Welcome Michigan Bankard or Soeurliy Charge Telephone 334-5992 * Remember The Day... in Picture* ANNUAL SUMMER SALE 30% to 50%; • Dresses • Suits •Polos • Mini Shifts • Shorts •Blouses •2-Pc. Sets •Slacks MANY, MANY MORE Open ’til 9 • Michigan Bankard • RE 4-4766 Free Personal Checking Accounts Available at All 12 Offices of Pontiac State Bank Pontiac State Bank Main Office Saginawat Lawrence=Open fA.M. Daify 12 Convenient Qffices Member Federal Depotit Insurance Corporation GREATEST SELECTION RCA 8-TRACK STEREO TAPES for your AUTOMOBILE RCA VICTOR MwKstd SOLID STATE* MINIKIN TV iWCenlck ELECTRONICS INC. One tube rectifier. Complete with Matching Tripod Stand Both for only. 119“ 1 SHOP at “EASY-TO-RET-TO” Miracle Mile Country &qutre &Jo§ SEMI-ANNUAL Clothing Sale SAVE. .. on Austin-Leeds Suits, Michaels-Stern Suits, Cricketeer Clothing, Eton Style Clothing, Daks Slacks, Jaymar Slacks and MANY OTHER FINE NAME BRANDS MICHIGAN BANKARD WELCOME HERE Miracle Mile Store Only! Wed., Thurs., Fri. Only! Use on floor, table, or in window. Circulates 4,600 CFM. Rotary switch and handle on top. Safety guards are chrome-plated. Regular Price LIKE IT! CHARGE IT! AT KRESGE’S 20 2-SPEED BOX FAN $||66 WE TEACH ALL See Huge Display of Musical Instruments at VENICE MUSIC CEHTER FE 4-6000 MIRACLE MILE CARDER SHOP now T*;,;:;»££ £ l R| OPEN Friday and Saturday...9 A.M. to • P. We Offer the Beit in Barbering Service, J. B. Gibbt, Proprietor SAVE TIME! SAVE MONEY! MIRACLE MILE ECON-O-WASH FE 5-0725 NEW FEATURE | STEAK & EGGS | Choice Cilt Steak, 2 Eggs, Hash Brown Potatoes, Toast $4 69 and Jolly. I SPECIALS 4-9 P.M. ONLY Mon. & Tue. “5353® 1.59 Wei&mui$.^£a*U89 tyoMA W TESTED IN 30 SECONDS REPAIRED QUICKER, BETTER RETURNED WITH A CHART PROVING ITS ACCURACY You ora Invited to have your watch totted without charge IN 30 SECONDS iTht WticNMiim | makes a scientific record |ot watch performance. Reasonable Prices! -, Expert^ craftai Fast Service I m of experi- RINGS, Use Michigan Bankard Bloomfield Miracle Mile Near Cunningham’s Ladies Spring Coafs regular to 4000 S10J20 A|l weal, fully weight, laminated styles. Monam] MEN'S WEAR 10 A.M. to 9 P.M. JULY CLEARAHCE SALE 20X011% Prom Oor Regular Prices MEN'S SUITS (Selected Group) FAMOUS BRANDS... SUCH AS WORSTED-TEX, CLIPPER CRAFT TIMELY, RALEIGH and BROOKFIELD •41-’72 Regular 49.95 to 89.95 FREE ALTERATION Um Your Security Charge or Michigan Bankard PEGGY’S SPECIAL PURCHASE SALE Famous Make BERMUDAS Regular f7°° Values 490 Plaids, Solids, Prints Sixes 8 to 18 —’TWo escaped h High Schools in southwest Pon- rate will be $2 after 24 hours. Turpin said new members x>f, the human relations committee; I storage rooms will be raised , . i , , . H _.. H from $35 to $45 monthly and »irP“rt Jan' 1 from the W ol the rates for tie-down space - ontiac_______ i (field storage) will go from j $10 to $15. Terminal ramp parking rates presently are $1 per day after the first 24 hours. Beginning in September a $1 fee will be charged for parking from six to 24 hours and the per*day • ,, .. i day. I their capture in a Westphalia row at Hopcroft Funeral Home,, surviving is his wife, Mary, jiumber yard by sheriff’s depu- Safe Robbed in City Home for Florida Beating j Hazel Park, with burial in Oak- SANFORD, Fla. UP) — A San-[view Cemetery. Donald D. Slavin ford civil engineer was fined: Surviving besides her parents! $500 Monday after pleading no^f grandparentsh'0XF0RD TOWNSHIP reported by pol- . . . U . Donald Cowell of Rochester and Graveside service for Donald, is* p^ned fr0m th« contest to charges that he at- Mr Fred Goujd oI Hazel Park; ~ __ *^1*“ t0 bave escaped from th® Gerald Hill, 19, of Ceresco and James Timmons, 18, of Kal- tacked a Seminole County great-grandmother Mrs. Minnie school official last summer be- Cowell of Rochester; and'a sis-cause his daughter was as-1 ter, Deana Marie, and brother, signed to a Negro teacher. Donald, both at home. Judge Karlyle Householder to a possible bond levy in November. Supt. Dr. Dana P. Whitmer explained that two months ago the board had decided to make a decision this month on whether to rehabilitate the existing Central High School or construct a new one on a new site. He said this decision has been pushed back in order to allow citizens to participate in the planning. * ★ ★ It is possible that an BIS-million project to build two senior high schools in three years may be put to the voters as a package in NovembSP: “ TO REVIEW NEED Citizens will review the need for new junior or senior high school facilities on the east side of the district, the future of Central High School and financing plans for construction. ★ ★ * Whitmer has said it appears that the school district will have to undergo “an extensive capital improvement program during the next five years." Tomorrow’s school board meeting will be: held at 7:30 p.m. in the Central Administra-. tion Building, 350 E. Wide Track. Money, a camera and a bank book were stolen from a com- passed sentence after William * * * j bination safe in a Pontiac man’s I Leffler changed his plea In o t h e r business, airport j home, it was reported to city jmanager J. David Vanderveen j police early today, from the Whitfield and Irvingj reported that airport revenue Reuben Bronto, 60, of 330 N. elementary school areas areiddrjng tbe fjrst sjx months 0f Saginaw told investigators $50 enneerned gg'how the Integra- this year was $54,296, or $2,159 ‘ Bert W. Hallett WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN- Slavin, infant son of Mr. outside dormitory of th® ■ and Mrs. John F. Slavin of 1540! formatory at about 5 a.m. Mon-N. Lapeer, will be 4 p.m. today day at the Eastlawn Cemetery, Lake * * * Orion. Arrangements are by| a sheriff’s deputy found them Flumerfelt Funeral Home, Ox-1 hiding in an empty school bus fofd. I in the lumber yard about 4:30 The infant died Saturday. Monday afternoon. He said the through his attorney from inno-jSHIP—Bert W. Hallett, 64, of! Surviving are his parents; a|pajr ran off when he ap-cent. . (7791 Pontiac Trail died yester- brother, Jeffery at home;jproached, but gave themselves iday. His body is at the C. ,I.|grandparents Mr. and Mrs. John:up after he fired a shot in the tion is handled." ,auu, IP oc<„ c R| Whitfield and Irving school jy^*c °°,,K Imately $100. children would go to the pre- c_c | Entry was made through an dominately Negro Jefferson EXPENSES HIGHER . | unlocked window, according to Junior High School under the! Expenses for the first five! officers. They said the safe had proposal. |months-of this year at the air-! been pried open. Leffler was charged with, beating former Seminole school ! above the same period last camera was valued at approxi- Supt R T Miiwee after Lef- fler’s daughter was assigned to a class taught by a Negro. The teacher still is assigned to the school. No. 3410, Aerie No. 2887, Waterford Township, a member of the Hilltoppers Mens Bowling League and a volunteer fireman for the West Bloomfield Township Fire Department. Surviving are his wife, Ethel; five brothers; and one sister. Mrs. Charles Lowe “ I AVON TOWNSHIP — Service Thieves broke into a PontiacI The burglars who made off f0r Mrs. Charles (Carol J.) CHICAG6 (UPI)—Nine men,'and Patricia Jean, 24, who said [home yesterday and made off with a cash register in a break- Lowe, 34, of 2843 Midvale will including . two from Michigan, she lived in the apartment. |With items, valued at more than L at a Waterford Town- be Thursday at the Gault-Pat- and two women were arrested | * * * | $160, it was reported to city sbj service station must have | terson-Hardell Funeral Home, ! H I Wautoma, Wis., with burial Godhardt Funeral Home, KeegoiJ. Kolak Of Ironwood; and Mrs. air Harbor. Eleanor Slavin of Ironwood. A gardener at the Pine Lake Country Club, he was a member Baby Boy Wurm of the Fraternal Order of Eagles Chicago Police Arrest 11 at 'HQ for Cycle Gang' Items Worth $160 i Stolen From Home Little Cash for Thieves Police Action i Pontiac police officers and Oakland County sher-| iff’s deputies investigated 1 some 84 reported incidents | the past 24 hours. ; A breakdown of causes 1 for police action: I Arrests—11 [ Vandalisms—11 Burglaries—10 Larcenies—14 Auto Thefts—4 Assaults—7 Disorderly Persons—4 LiVt» * > yesterday in. a raid on a swastika-decorated___apartment which police said served as the headquarters of the Chicago branch of the Outlaws motorcycle gang. Police said they found marijuana, “pep pills," five pistols; fireworks and an SS dagger in the North Side basement apartment. Vice squad detectives said the apartment had been under surveillance for 11 days, following complaints that the occupants were terrorizing neighbors by racing their motorcycles through the streets and-setting off fireworks. The detectives said they had waited until they were sure 'marijuana was on the premises. * j The Outlaw members had ■ just returned from a conven-| tion of .motorcycle gangs- in a field outside Danville, 111., poll lice said. PAINTED SWASTIKA Police said the littered, three-and-a-half room apartment was decorated with a hand-painted swastika and a picture of Adolph Hitler on a motorcycle. Many of the inmates were bearded and long-haired, and one of the women was wearing only a man’s shirt, they said. 11 Charges of possession of h marijuana or dangerous drugs |jwere placed against Harold |J Henderson, 22, and Ronnie Jqin-| er, 21, both of Gary, Ind.; Rob-ilert Wolsey, ^4, Milford, Ohio; ... . . I police. |. - ,. . . , . M.,.,|w#uwuia, WJS., wiin uuruu W!!l „C.harg^ Wth! Beatrice Van Kleek Of 423olbeen dlsaPP°inted when they I from there. Arrangements were' dism^riy- -effliduet: ^^?iette;' Wairrrord 'T6^ship, ^ ...*4.....fw .......jby the flaroltf R. DavisFuneral chided Mrs. Kathleen Bretz, 26,^^ offjcers a portable televi- * L3 A ! Home, Auburn Heights. an nf rhiil'on" iS10n P a television stand and1 ReP°rted stolen yesterday^ Mrs. Lowe died Sunday in an ard havette, zj, ail ot cnicago, |a purse were stolen from aifrom Augie’s Gulf, 7700 Cooley j auto accident. MkS ChafleTRitter’,22^Ga^fylvan^H Z the cash register con-; Surviving besides her husband Gerald Walters, 24 Biirkley^ L said toey couW I tamed oniy $5.70. j Mich - and Rir-harri Rorhp 9q inot determine the burglars However, the cash register is Koclle’ A method of entry. worth $197. AVON TOWNSHIP — Service for Baby Boy Wurm, 1-day-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Wurm of 270 Maple Hill, was to be 10 a.m. today at the Pixley Memorial Chapel, Rochester, with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. The baby died Sunday. Surviving besides his parents are a brother, Mark at home; grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Pur-den Wurm of Troy and Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Chamberlain of Lake Orion; and great-grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Purden Wurm Sr. of Florida, Mrs. Hazel Tubbs of Lansing and Mrs. JtiHa Cbamberlam ef Remeot COMPLETE HEARING EVALUATIONS AIDS FITTED TO PRESCRIPTIONS OF • REPAIR OF ALL MAKES Thos. B. Appleton Certified by the National Hearing Aid Society Main Floor, Riker Bldg. 35 W. Huron 332-3052 FREE PARKING j Algonquin, 111. END OF A SHAGGY TALE - Shaggily clad Ronald Joiner, 21, Gary, Ind., along with'a wonfan companion, Kathleen Bretz, 26, Chicago, await questioning yesterday in a Chicago police station after their arrest in a dope and weapons raid in a Chicago basement apartment. Joiner, a member of the Outlaws'motorcycle gang, was charged with possession of dangerous drugs. Mrs. Bretz was charged wth disorderly conduct. 2 Men Sentenced in School Burglary Two young men who burglarized the Avondale High School last winter were each sentenced yesterday to 1% to 10 years the state prison at Jackson by Circuit Judge William J. Beer. *The pair, Billy *R. Stone of Highland Parkland Ronald J. Ball of Detroit, both 22, were apprehended by sheriffs deputies as they left the school building Feb. 23. They had pleaded guilty to the breaking and entering! charge on June 7.t Former Exec Dies GROSSE POINTS FARMS (XT*) — Abram VanderZee, fnrmer director and vice pres-of Chrysler Carp., died Monday. He was 73. VanderZee, who retired in 1956, had served Chrysler for nearly 30 yeajs. He began Ms auto industry career with Chevrolet of-General Maters in Flint. udecauAe mu caAe YOU WANT ONLY THI FINEST. BECAUSE OURS IS A TRADITION^*" OF UNDERSTANDINO SERVICI- We caAe too/ Spaiks-Griffin FUNERAL HOME 46 Williams St. Outstanding in Pontiac for Service and Facilities FE 8-9288 11 * ' ..............n THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 11, 1967; B—7 Romney-Signs Fishing License Fee Boost Into Law I4NSING (AP) - Fishermen will pay more for the privilege of casting their lines into Michigan waters after Dec. 1. Fishing license fees for Michigan residents go from $2 to $3 on that date, under provisions of one of several bills signed Monday by Qov. George Romney. The bill also provides that the nonresident fishing license fee be raised from $5 to $6. The license entitles the holder and spouse to fish for species other than trout or salmon. The fee for trout stamps also is raised from $2 to $3. They’re for nonresidents only. EXCEPTIONS Under the bill, residents over 65 may purchase licenses for 50 cents. These cover all species of fish. Those persons in military service and home on furlough continue to be exempted. The governor also signed into law a bill to permit state legislators to attend the state political, convention of their party as delegates-at-1 a r g e from the county in which they reside. A third bill signed Monday provides that township officers will take office Nov .20 following their election, instead of April 10 as is the p r e s e n t procedure. Also signed Into law Monday were bills to: • Authorize the governor to take action necessary to secure benefits available under the Federal Highway Safety Act of 1966. • Make major changes in the Highway Condemnation Act. Allow the director of the State Department of P u b 1 i c Health to establish minimum sanitation standards for bathing beaches open to the public in any city, county or district. Authorize the conveyance of the Copper County Sanatorium to the Houghton County and a parcel of land in Flint to St. Paul’s Lutheran Church for the Deaf. ties to operate ambulance and I inhalator service either alone or in conjunction with another mu-' niclpality. • Provide that a person who has had a chauffeur’s license iii another state must provide a copy of his driving record in that state before he can obtain a Michigan chauffeur’s license. • “Clarify the definition of ‘conviction” in the Motor Vehicle Code to include the payment of a fine or a plea of guilty so that points may be assigned when there is no trial in a Bill 136, which places a six-year limitation on damage suit |Pension Act to cover “spouses” rwomen now being recruited can instead of just wives so thatjhave their husbands covered. ^532333^) Frigldalr* Appliance* KEASEY ELECTRIC 4825 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-2601 Save Now on World’s Most Glamorous Awnings! SWIVEL ROCKERS and FOOT STOOLS Patchwork and Brown cover reversible foam rubber cushions, solid maple trim. CHAIR.............888.00 STOOL.............821.95 Limited to supply on hand — careful free delivery. Remember—you always get the most for your money at MILLERS - Closed Wednesday Afternoon! One of Oakland County's Largest Selection of Chairs! 144 OAKLAND B1MWSB FURNITURE Park Fro* — Lot Just Around the Comer on Clark Street Add law enforcement officers to the list of persons who are required to report evidence of child abuse. • Authorize a city comp- , . ... . , j trailer to approve the payroll^ again,st an arrchltect or Profes-!bills, accounts and claims of U- S10n® ■*, + brary commissions in cities over . Permit the state elevator 250,000 population. jsafety t0 adopt * * * safety standard without obtain- • Reduce the number of sig- jnR legislation. natures needed on the first peti- • Allow a magistrate to action to establish and construct cept a plea in traffic cases with-a drain. The number is reduced out having a signed complaint, from two-thirds to one half of| « provide that a PKU test the adjoining property owners. ;shall be given by the physician • Increase the surplus lines) in charge of the care of any insurance agent license fee | newborn infant or the physician from $25 to $100. j attending the birth if there is • Requirb boards of educa- no physician in charge of care, tion attempting to discharge a| * * ★ tenure teacher to notify the • Provide that children bom teacher in writing of his rights. |0f a marriage later ruled to be * * * | void shall be deemed legitimate. • Permit bailiffs to retire af- • Provide that a child over ter 25 years of service, regard- the age of 16 who is self-sup-less of age. porting for six months shall not • Allow a county board of|be considered a dependent unsupervisors to pay jury commis- der the death benefit section of sioners more tha $10 a day. |the Workman’s Compensation • Update the provisions of! Act. the law relating to the power; of appointment over property. ( • increase the length of time * * * j between an election and the fil- Require that all persons liv- ing of nominating petitions in ing within 300 feet of property involved in a zoning dispute must be given notice personally or by .registered mail of an appeal of any decision in the dispute. • Require a private trade school to give evidence of surety to indemnify its students if the institution closes. • Provide authority for a community college district. • Enable the state racing commissioner to designate the stewards of racing as his special deputies for any particular racing meet. • Accept certification by the National Board of Medical Examiners for licensing of physicians in Michigan. • Amend the State Police NEVER SPEND ANOTHER ON CHECKS. Chief Pontiac has come up with a new service that lets you write checks free. It's called CHECK III. 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PATIOS • PORCHES • CARPORTS ALUMINUM WINDOWS and DOORS RAILINGS • ALUMINUM SHUTTERS COME IN... OR CALL US OPEN SUNDA)T 10-6 P.M. DAILY 8-8 P.M. LEADERSHIP. , .built on customer satisfaction Ca)| FE 5-9462 I m if i i7yr~>uau,t • 77m vw26400 w- Ei?ht MH| Rd‘ IK Mile West of Telegraph East Side | DETROIT ( Downriver I Birmingham-Southfieldl Toledo I Petoskey PR. 14810|444-1212 | AV. 5-3595| Royal Oak EL7-2700|CH. 8-426113474462 T11E PONTIAC IMtKSr TUESDAY, JULY II, 1907 B—8 Citizen Panel Will Get Police Dispute CHAPTER 2« Woman Guilty DETROIT (AP)—Negotiators discussed the Detroit police- j men's dispute for four hours j Monday, then indicated it soonj would be turned over to citizen! fact-finders. Only noneconomic matters vv Anne de Viliemont jui were discussed. S starting down the staircase, . . .. j. pressing close to the banister to Pay rates, including a stay clear of the men dragging mand by the Detroit Police 01- garden hose up the steps, it ficers Association for a $10,000 wouldn’t be long before the annual top salary, compared fire was under control and with the present $8,335, are ex- Claude de Gonde would notice pected to be referred to the w*i»t else was going on around . , r - 'him. Following Anne down the fact-fibers for recommenda-^,^ &t « disUnce a]1 x tions. A panel of three Met- couid do waa pray that Matilde finders is to be named. Vosiers would have the car out- side on schedule. | I saw the headlights sweeping around the driveway. Then, as the gleaming whiteness of the GRAND RAPIDS (APi—Mrs. Ferrari pulled up before the Julia Brady, 24, convicted by a door with a screech of brakes, Circuit Court jury Monday of1 was jolted into action, second-degree murder stabbing of her husband, Ron-^ Jggig;, and now we were aid, 24, is held at the Kent outside the building and the car County jail to await sentencing, was only a few steps away. Brade was stabbed three times I, opened the car door and with a butcher knife and died pushed Anne into the seat. I April 24 in Blodgett Hospital. |Jad ^ car rollinS along the _________________rK.... driveway, picking up speed as it entered the avenue of cypresses. “Listen to me," Anne said. “It’s too late for this!" . I disregarded her, keeping my 'eyes on the rear-view mirror, la glare of headlights moved up behind 'us. I “Let’s get one thing straight," II said. “The police want-me on ia murder charge that I can’t beat without Paul as my witness. And nobody in your gang intends to go along with that because they know it means the end for them. “So now you and I are going to Venice to get Paul. It’s as simple as that. But if you try any more tricks along the way, ' I’ll take my -chances on going straight to the police, no matter what it costs me or Paul, i Unless you’re with me in this 'all the way, there’s nothing else 11 can do.” "You can do what Claude wants you to,” Anne Said. “Go ■to South America—” i “Sure by way of Valence, 'which is where you and I are .supposed to be found dead in an accident tomorrow. Neat, isn't it? A' murderer gets his weak-minded lady friend to help ]him escape the law, and they :pile up their car in the attempt. ;Too bad for her, say the police, I but it serves him right.” I “Ah, no,” Anne whispered. But the look in her eyes as they stared wide-open at the j brutal truth made it plain that she believed me. | “Do you have your passport with you?” I She pressed a hand against II h e pocket of her cardigan. l"Yes.” Intrigue-suspense at its best ^ HOUSE OF CARDS by STANLEY ELLIN Copyright © 1 #*T g Features Syndicate. I Fro INSTALLMENT No. 26 "Remind me to thank Djilana for that. Do you know w[ Paul is?" “No. But Claude said he with his grandmother and that they’d meet me in Saint-Tro-pez at the end of the week." "Just in time for the funeral. Look, Vosiers happened to mention they were in yenice. Does that sound plausible?" “Yes. the Montecastellanis have a summer place there on Torcello.” Anne’s voice broke. “But they’ll take him somewhere else if they know we’re trying to get to him, won’t they?" "If," I said. To the north lay Paris; to the south Dijon—Milan—Venice. I swung the Ferrari north to Paris and bore down hard on the gas. The big limousine trailing us clung to us like grim death. Then at least 1 was on a deserted stretch of highway where the car could give me everything it had. The speedometer rose to the two-hundred-kil-ometer mark, passed it and kept rising. Then the headlights of the other began to dwindle smaller and smaller until they were dots of light that finally disappeared completely. This was what I had been waiting for. “Brace yourself!" 1 shouted, and as Anne thrust her hands-against the dashboard I ruthlessly jammed on the brake, the car skidded lengthwise across the road, the smell of burning rubber pungent in the air i didn't have lime to study the terrain. I simply picked an opening between two trees and headed for it. The car rqcked, bounced, and nosed downhill, coming to rest with the front wheels in a drainage ditch that ran along the foot of the low embankment on which the trees had been planted. I switched off the lights and scrambled up to the head of the embankment, where I threw myself flat to watch the road. The Other car had not been as far behind me as I had thought ; it roared past almost at once. 1 slid down the embankment to the car and jockeyed it uphill in reverse. “Now what?” Anne said as we turned south toward Dijon. “Italy?” “Yes." "We'll never make it. They’ll be watching for us along every road across the border. You don't know them the way I do.” “That’s a safe bet.” I reached a hand behind me and felt the outlines of a valise propped against the seat. A cheap valise. It seemed to be made of cardboard. I lifted it and placed Embraced by Film Companies Road Show Finally Catches On By BOB THOMAS |area. And a hit doesn’t have to ling of the Shrew” and “A Man AP Movie-Television Writer 'be a critical success. Some of for All Seasons.” Now in pro-HOLLYWOOD — That grand the biggest attractions were duction: ‘‘Funny Girl" and ‘ old movie tradition, the road blasted by highbrow critics: “McKenna’s Gold.” She did, “Clothes, toilet show, now appears to things, money and a railroad permanent fix-ticket. But what good is Just j„ fj|m ^"What good would the other I dustry econom-be without a passport to go lcs-along with it ? How much The road money is there?" show, also Anne switched on the dash- knovfri as the board light and riffled through L d orj the banknotes. “A hundred1!’ .... , . francs ihard-Ucket pic- So Matilde had kept her partlture, dates bacRj of the bargain after all. Some]as far as “Birth] day, if my luck held out, 1 0f a Nation.” might still pay her back byl-j^g policy of rs,.B£,rb*na “ ““ I said to Anne, “Do you have|vance<* Pnces for special attrac-fhp Bulce.” “Kharl money with you?M j tions has bc^cn attempted over No " the years with varying success. ^ gotiabie? ” " ?n. y. _irY ™ v... A formances of the winners. 'Only my wedding ring. The successful road show THOMAS a'“Hawali,” “The Bible,” "Mil-] Disney — The company is . jlie” and "The Sound of Music.”|iaunching its first road show, I TOP GROSSER “The Happiest Millionaire;” It was “The Sound of Music1',” imay “Blackbeard’s Ghost." | of course, that led the way. The MGM—“Doctor Zhivago” has I [industry’s first $100-milUon[almost played out in roadl grosser demonstrated how a show, “Grand Prix” is in resingle film, properly road lease. Upcoming; “Gone With shown, could buoy the fortunes;the Wind” in its first hard-of a company, Twentieth Cen-|ticket release; “Far From the] tury-Fox. To a less degree [Maddening Crowd” with Julie! “Doctor Zhivago" did the same[Christie. Peter Finch; “2001: A for MGM. j Space Odyssey.’’ There also have been misses:I Paramount — For this fall:] Battle of “Half a Sixpence,” with Tommy the Bulge," “Khartoum,” “The Steele. Hallelujah Trail ” But these|.ROAD-SHOW COMPANY’ Any’ jewelry, anything ne-Only in recent years has the e Per| Twentieth Century-Fox — The i |jfej|| device been embraced by ali formancesrf the winners. “road.show company,” has , I -The road band from her finger, and 1; * , „ nffore a rwrfont situation for a ,n a *eW Jlar”"t*Cket s,tua- said, "No, hold on to it. We ill “It’s a sign of the times, offers a perfect situation for a |jons pjU8 “The Sand Pebbles” cash it in if we have to, but says a theater owner. “People company, says a studio sDOkes- and Bible >> Later this) even with what we can get for!don i>y •(!* BOX . . . the DOCKET . the DARREL: High Principle I Costs Fortune LONDON (AP) — As a matter j 3 — Put up storm shutters or! $2:1 Million of principle, a rich British busi-j board up windows. , _ . .w i | The government expects that nessman refused to make legal 4 — If you are advised to! tOf rOVerty vVOTK|despite the war, its new publici-1 arrangements to avoid huge, evacuate, do so immediately, i ty campaign will keep up the death duties, his, widow said * A * | WASHINGTON (JR - T h e flow of visitors, jtoday. ■ 5 — Get away frbm beaches [Office of Economic Opportunity * * ’ * . I As a result, his executors are [and all low-lying areas likely to]has approved over $2.1 million| “Business is already picking paying the tax collector the] be swept by hurricane tides and [in grants to help finance special |up, and by September we should equivalent of $3,648,640.40. His j high winds. , summer antipoverty programs! have a boom on our hands, | widow, son and daughter will 6 — It is best to stay in a'in Michigan. a travel agent. “The war share only $571,200.. [brick or concrete building and Wayne County is to receive never go outside during a storm. !$88,999 for an office at Eloise; “My husband was a man of 7= Keep away from the win- Monroe County. $27,742 for Eco- nomic Opportunity, Inc.; Muskegon County, $20,299 for Community Action Against Poverty, Inc.; Calhoun County, $26,752 RHIMES DELICATESSEN AT NYE DAIRY Featuring Our Famous Koshar Comad Boot SPECIAL LUNCHF0N EVERYDAY great principle and would npt dows. entertain the idea of doing any-1 w * w thing to evade taxation,” said 8— If. the “eye” of the hur-Elsie Sykes. [ricane passes overhead, there Charles Sykes died at 95 in I will be a deceptive calm that for Calhoun County Community April. ;may last over a half-hour. Don’t Council, Inc.; and $51,344 for the * * * Ibe misled by the lull; stay [Capital Area Economic Oppor- “He knew all along that the [where you are. jtunity Commission in, Lansing, death duties would be fantasti- | cally high, but he said it was not! aroused a great wave of emotion among Jews all over the world. Now they all want to visit Israel.” right jo try to avoid paying the] duty,’ - Mrs. Sykes explained. ! Working Man’s Buffet Every Tues. thru Fri. $125 Choice of Two Meats EVENING BUFFET Thur. and Fri. * 5:3Q,to 7:30 P.M. $]69 Breakfast Menu Daily Till 11 A.M. AIRPORT SKYROOM Open Daily 7-6 P.M, 6500 Highland Rd. in Airport Terminal Building WE SPECIALIZE IN LARGE QUANTITY ORDERS! ] For parti**, picnics, m**tingt, social i groups or a quiet dinner at home. 1 FREE Day Is LADIES' DAY. TO THE LADIES ONE WEEK ONLY! Your Choice' ONE DOZEN DONUTS With Purchase Of CHICKEN JOY Barrel or Bucket DAWN DONUTS Around The Clock a( Open 7 jDays — S A.M. To 12 Midnight 93 NORTH TELEGRAPH BETWEEN TEL-HUR0N AND THE PONTIAC MALL 335-2444 PHONE 335-0101 jt 9 ft ft 0000000900909011898 8 9.0 Q i 8 DRIVE-IN THEATRE UNlCN LAKE *t HAGSERTY RD. EM 3-0661 - Show Starts at Dusk Adults t|.25 ^ Children Umtar 12 Fra# NOW SHOWING! • • • = KIN VIOLENCE IS THEIR CREED^ JSmR SMAIW FEATURE SHOWN 1st N1TELY - MAIN FEATURE SHOWN 1st M1TELY g MAIN FEATURE SHOWN 1st NITELY 5 i s’ ShirleyMacLAiNE = MICHAEL PETER =, : CAINE Mi SELLERS = E #& S - M and &£t«! I i MAIN FEATURE SHOWN 1st NITELY S ROBERTGREGORY HOBiN: Csuperb... NEWSWEEK 5 MyaNDTriEi '%HOODS=| q TECHNICOLOR* SI 1 Lon uren MastroianniE G(ennfotd lj cotor Marriage i steju steven^ | ........ wp. ■■■■.................... .. Italian Style f *f%‘~ = -PLUS- % i Spy Satellite: C, Needed CAP® KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) — Last March, during a visit to Tennessee, President Johnson said he often had been criticized for spending too much money on space exploration. Answering these critics, he said: “If we got nothing else from the space program than the photographic satellite, it is worth 10 times oyer the money we’ve spent. Without the satellites, I’d -be operating by guess and by God.'But I know exactly how many missiles the ehemy has got.’’ show with clarity objects on earth down to the size of a manhole cover. Even the less clear pictures relayed electronically by weather satellites have considerable military value. The Air Force recently reported that its bombers were being guided to cloud-free targets in Vietnam by daily photographs received from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's EssS and Nimbus weather satellites. space age. Details about them are a tightly kept'secret, but it is known that several times each day at least one American spy satellite makes photographic passes over the Soviet Union, Red China and other countries. Soviet observation satellites also fly regularly over the United States. Both nations place strong emphasis on a military space pro-1 gram. Of 4SS U.S. satellites sent into earth orbit through June 1 346 had military assignments such as reconnaissance, missile * * * detection, navigation, mapping Th eXDerimenta. techninue To date, the United States has mjile targets, communications of™ WMjb a spent nearly $40 billion on mili-and ^search. so-called multispectra! system, tary and civilian space pro- * * * _. . . , ,, . grams. Even Johnson’s reckon-l The Soviet Union orbited 224 _b®art °f the system is ing, that the photographic I satellites in that period, at least ™.u ^ban‘J. Ph°t08raPhy- satellites alone have been worth 98 for military purposes, ac-^b e® 0 *our c° or pbo^ nearly $400 billion, might be, cording to U.S. sources. sensitive b«h how maCnvSm£?ekS t0 k , A ,arge nu™ber of fefei'visibte or neaHnfrared fr^uem 58®®" SN-'ft1 Uto‘r1"l5 came, sri-£ cs ns£ *-• ;pTnl5i r -t missile gap of Unilad SUWs is tatfniL |jpS§ In>m radio »aves, "K. Ml ™ • grave fe,r|»“ that the Soviet Union had a tre-| other data to earth, enabling the f ... . ’ p mendous lead in long-range I payload to operate r several to”Urav°!et a"d * W 2 missiles, and the United States months, or even years. Us/ng ‘hfJo1 ect*on °fnnstru' nnnrwi Kminnc inte. „ ments, NASA is developing a CRM liter P[t°gr™ ^PLICATION DIFFICULT (satellite capable of measuring learned that there had been no! Sources reP°rt that an opera-.temperatures and density any-P3 „ Itional system might be two or (where in the atmosphere and (three years away. It’s difficult, I down to a depth of 200 feet in ACHIEVEMENT i they say, to duplicate the clear Lthe oceans. The satellite will The development of recon-quality of pictures developed report on water resources in* naissance and surveillance sat-, from film returned to earth. eluding the location of under* ellites has been one of the most These photos, taken from 150| ground rivers, the movement of significant achievements of the to 300 miles in space, reportedly1 schools of fish, an inventory of forests including the health of individual trees, soil fertility, and the location of minerals It’s easy to see how the Defense Department could use such a satellite to spot submerged submarines, to sight enemy soldiers in deep foliage, or to identify a missile silo buried underground. The possibility that the Russians will develop such a satellite is causing concern about the security of the Navy’s Polaris submarine program and about the Air Force Minuteman ICBM silos. Defense experts are reexamining a plan, once junked as unneeded, to mount. Minute-man missiles on trucks and trains that constantly move about the country so they would not be “sitting ducks." French producers turned out 86,887,944 bottles of champagne last year, a 10 per cent gain DURING EXPO '67 HOSTEL DOWNTOWN MONTREAL $4.00 PER DAY Add More Pleasure To Outdoor Living! A soft, glowing gas lamp adds a nostalgic touch wherever it is placed! THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JULY 11, A handsome gas post lamp adds beauty and charm to any home. Its soft, everpresent radiance provides a warm welcome to guests-and a reassuring protection against intruders. GAS LAMPS ARE AVAILABLE IN SEVERAL STYLES, FROM THE GAY NINETIES TO ULTRA-MODERN SEE YOUR DEALER APPLIANCE ltfs easy to be an expert PATIO CHEF with a smart GAS GRILL The smart new gas grill is clean, economical. It's ideal for backyard, patio, or even your porch. Now you can enjoy the wonderful flavor of outdoor cooking without the mess and fuss of starting and waiting for a fire. Ga§ MAKES LIFE MORE ENJOYABLE - INDOORS AND OUT B—10 THE I’ONTI AC 1’llKSS. TUESDAY, JULY 11. 1967 Walled Lake Is Emerging as Progressive Community a self-contained city within its present boundaries and the other broadens the scope and, Everything Is Offered, From Recreation .... To Industry, Such As Ex-Cell-0 Corp. Indians Played Part in History of Area By JANICE KLOUSER i Both systems have been WALLED LAKE - A city on Panned so that they can serve .. ,, an area of Commerce Town- 1 the move — thats the new ' . .. . , ship and the entire village of image being Wolverine Lake if the pro- projected jOHH posed annexations of the two by Walled Lake. become realities. Nn..l0ng!!SH ^he council originally was comm uTitv iiven two proposals to com 5 . , sider,” said Downey. “One known only iorHH would have kept Walled Lake the nearby^^^^^ r........... a m u s e m ent park bearing its name, uie incorporated some areas city is begin- Miss Klouser L^rce Township to ning to emerge as a vital, pro-K the siZe A ft, S acres. gressive community in tune1 * * * with modern times. ! Complacency is starting to H the village of Wolverine fall before the ambitious plans [Lake is eventually annexed to which are either on the drawingjthe city, the size would be inboard, in construction stagesjcreased to 13*4 square miles, or already realities. Hopefully imore than four times its' they will all be completed byjpresent size, the end of 1968. j COMPLETE REZONING j “When the master plan was The entire city has now been) originally drawn up, we knew |rezoned. we had two directions In The fjna, ,.ezoning was forj which to grow,” said Royce .^ree apartment projects along, Downey, the city’s forward- L^e jajy? whjch will house 652j m looking manager. I families and add a total of $13; “Because of our small size ■ (3.7 acres), in order to survive , ■ we had to have an industrial rjk' tax base, and to be a complete community we had to have a fli | downtown shopping area, and ap provide a place for people to r ** live and to get enjoyment out k Ijf \ il of life. '■ “They all had to start at the same time and progress together," he said. CITY HALL City officials set up a priority list which included building a new city hall, constructing a sewer and water system, rezoning the entire ritv, * completing the master plan, and promoting industrial, commercial and residential development. The new city hall was re-£ cently completed and consolidates all city departments — the fire station, the police department, the city manager's office, the municipal court and the city library. Next on the list, the items which are making all the others possible, are sewers and water. million In new construction to the city. “The beauty part of this," said Downey, “Is that everything has been developed to meet the criteria for State and i federal aid, but it hasn’t been j necessary because private i1 developers have done it. | “And this has all been done! without disturbing one single family.” The industrial tax base came about when a 690-acre industrial; park was created near Maple j and Ladd roads and the Grand! Trunk Railroad. 5 NEW PLANTS ; So far, five new plants havei ibeen built in the area, and nine more are currently negotiating for a spot in thej park, according to Downey. I As for the downtown shop- | j ping area, 39 acres of vacant i land have been rezoned to tie together the strip shopping along Maple and the lake-front shopping area to create a 120-acre downtown to serve the 4,200 residents. GEORGE G. GARVER School Superintendent Indians played a large part’in the history of Oakland County, and Walled Lake is no exception. In fact, the Indians may have been responsible for the name; of the lake although there are! differing versions as to its origin. One theory is that the Indians built the wall-like for- ! mations on tbe lake's shore as protection from other warlike tribes which roamed the ; trails between Pontiac and Detroit. The olher version is that the walls were naturally lormed, leading to the obvious name of Walled Lake, The first recorded white settlement was in 1825 Several pioneers followed thereafter and were prominent in the early history of Commerce Township of whrrlF Walled Lake was then a part. A TAVERN One settler, Jesse Tuttle, lo- cated in the heart of town and built a kig cabin;-.which he later-! I converted into a tavern “to meet the wants of the sparse and struggling settlement, the Indians, and the few travelers that found their way by the Indian trails of the wilderness.” An Indian trading post was soon established and became a favorite resort of the In-■ dians. ; In 1840, a hotel, the Pioneer Inn, was built at the Coiim -East Main and Liberty street; and became famous for the Oakland County history refers to as the “floatihg' dance floor.” j TTie 'first TojTsflMWVllwiuse was built in 1833 and destroyed hv firtv'fn' T836. It was !rObuilt and lasted until I860 when it was moved. It1 was later replaced with a new two-room building On the western edge of town In 1832, the first post office was built with the route by horseback running from Farmington to Walled Lake, Construction permits have been received for the citywide sew'er system which it will share with the neighboring , village of Novi and for which it received a federal grant to cover 24 per cent of the cost. WATER SYSTEM The water system expansion program has been approved and wells are being drilled to supply the entire city. Downey said that the developers, Gray Graham Associates, ihave commitments from 19 "triple A" firms* to build I there, j “This has also spurred other business, already here, to upgrade," he said. THREE PARKS An 11-acre park, the first o( three planned for the city, is also under construction. All of this has increased the tax base by 34 per cent in the last 18 months. The assessed valuation jumped i from about $7 million last ^ - year to more than $12 million , this year and what has now j been approved for construe-I tion will add another $10 million in assessed valuation, Downey said. Because the city is now assessing at 50 per cent of true cash value, the tax rate was reduced this year from 17.5 mills to 10.5 mills. As the (city progresses, the school district, which serves the city and surrounding areas, is experiencing its own growth. 1.500-PUPIL INCREASE In ’ the fall, about 10.000 pupils are expected to be enrolled in the district’s 12 schools, an increase of about 1,500 over this past year. This includes the Dublin School District which was recently annexed to' Walled Lake. Within the next three years, the district will have a new high school, two new elementary schools and a type R facility for special education children. In spite of the growth, the district has managed to remain KELLOGG one of the lowest in the county in terms of taxes, according to or School Supt. George Garver. ★ * ■* The district's taxpayers are paying $27.20 per $1,000 of slate equalized valuation, ORDERLY GROWTH "AM of this shows what can be done when a community works together toward a common goal,” said Downey. "We are going to grow in an orderly manner and be aesthetically beautiful. “This is going to be a blend of the old and new. Every community needs roots and depths and we have 140 years of continuous progress on which to build a foundation,” he said. EILEEN VanHORN City Clerk ROYCE DOWNEY City Manager Walled Lake, he said, will be the hub of a wagon whepl out of which 25 more years of progress Will spread throughout the area. Pontiac Press Photos by Ed VanderWorp City Hall Is First Project Completed Under Plan Shopping Center Will Become Part Of New Downtown THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JULY II, 1967 B—11 Mad Bird Strikes Again MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) The mad mockingbird of Miami Beach was at it again Monday, but sorehead residents had to put away their air rifles and slingshots. Almost all of Florida is a bird sanctuary and the menacing mockingbird is protected. The latest attack was just sneaky as those of the past two weeks: a swoop out of the sun and a nasty little knock on the back of a woman’s head. Miami Beach police say they have no power to battle the bird. The county Animal Control Department says it deals only with dogs. Kennety McRovern of the humane society just suggested that everybody keep a cool and covered head. * * * He said.the attacks were most likely a seasonal thing, "the birds are nesting now.” He said that to remove the bird, permission would have to be received from the Fish and Wildlife Service, U.Sp Department of the Interior. The U. S. housewares industry had a record-shattering (11 billion in retail sales volume in 1966. Highway Safety Bureau Names AF Test Veteran UP THE DOWN CHUTE — A prize-giving gum machine turned the tables on David Larose, 6, of Holyoke, Mass., when it caught his fingers in its gears as he turned the handle, with his left hand far up the chute from which the prize was supposed to exit. After being trapped for over an hour, David was freed, uninjured, by Holyoke police and firemen who had to saw off the top of the machine to release him. Wounded 17, Reenlists for Viet WASHINGTON (AP) - Air Force Col. John ip. Stapp, 57, survivor of a series of punishing rocket-sled test rides, was appointed chief medical scientist of the National Highway Safety Bureau Monday. In that post, Stapp will be key figure in the bureau's program to try to reduce the death and injury toll on the nation’s highways. ★ ★ Stapp made more than 29 deceleration and wind-blast experiments in testing bodily crash-force tolerances and safety-belt applications during nearly a quarter of a century of research for the Air Force. In 1954, at'Holloman Air Force [Base, N.M., on his final rocket- sled mission, he endured a peak force of 40 G’s — 40 times the force of gravity — while slamming to a stop within 1.4 seconds from a speed of 632 miles an hour. * * ★ In comment on his new position, Stapp said in a statement: ‘‘The ^ir Force down through the years has spent on accident prevention research an estimated (100,000 per air accident victim, while hardly 25 cents per victim has been spent on pilots who were killed in crashes of .their own autmobiles.” The total number of commercial dairy farms in the country has declined from about 648,000 in 1964 to 500,000 in 1966.1 Eimp&Ori/ 21 DAYS $807 Complete Our Vagabond Group Loaves Detroit Sept. 21 — Returns October 121 • 11 Countries • Jet and Motor Coach • let Class Hotels • Conducted • Marvelous Dining ^ubuidmT/uwd £emc& Corner University Dr. and Main, 651-7762 Rochester CHILDREN OUTGROWN THE WAGON, BICYCLE? . . . SELL THEM WITH A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. EASY TO USE. JUST PHONE 332-8181. C H A R L O TT E, N.C. (AP) [high school, said that he will] — Leonard Smith Jr., who won finish high school in the Army. "It might take me some time,” he said, “but I’ll pass the high school equivalency exam and get my diploma, because then I can put in for officer candidate school, and that’s what " want, bad.” a Purple Heart as an Army paratrooper just after turning 16, has reenlisted in the Army and hopes to go back to Vietnam. Smith, now, 17, had enlisted illegally when he was 15. , He was awarded a Purple Heart for shrapnel wounds in !2‘ Smith, » «**« -H 152 PM*, ft. . ’ u ^ , said he had volunteered to go back t0 Vietnam and hoped to 2* & “after my 18th birthday on fhree vears ' Au«' 9‘ M let ™ "McNamara and Westmore-!untl1 then ” land were on TV from Vietnam and they said that we were losing the war and needed 100,000 more men, 25,000 this month and 27,000 next month, and I wanted to be part of that," the youth said. _______________ The hunting of dolphins In rARMY DIPLOMA Russian waters has been for- Smith, who would have been a [bidden by the Soviet. govern-senior this fall at a Charlotte ment. "It’s what you see in Vietnam that makes you want to go back,” he said. "You fight communism, and if we don’t go over there and stop it, then it will spread over here.” The Stroh Brewery Company, Detroit, Michigan-48226 turn off Gag... turn on StraUs Easiest wgy yet to get at fire-brewed flavor • in six packs and eight packs • no deposit, no-return 12-ounce bottles • use opener if youprefer FIRE-RREWEO FLAVOR PRICES SLASHED ON ALL l%7 MODELS ijjjl SIMMER LAUNDRY SA •SB ft TO SELL HURRY! ALL BRAND NEW-IN FACTORY CRATES! FRIGIDAIRE S 1967 Jet Action Washer spins clothes faster, drier than any other brand! FRIGIDAIRE a 1967 Jet Action Washer gives you 2-speeds at a rock-bottom price! 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Keeps new no-iron fabrics looking the way they’re supposed to... creases in, wrinkles outl *Save Say farewell to ironing with this lowest-priced Frigidaire Dryer! • DPC keeps the press in Durable Press fabrics! • No* stoop lint screen! •Timer lets you set exact drying minutes! *Save Frigidaire Dryer with Por-celain Enamel drum won't snag delicates! • Dries even sheerest fabrics safety! • Special setting on Timer for no-iron fabrics! • No-heat cycle for airing, fluffing. $Save .Hsu This Frigidaire Dryer figures drying time for you! • Automatic Dry Cycle stops dryer when dothes are dry! • Fabrics Selector matches drying heat to the fabric! • No-stoop Decron lint screen. *Save M “where quality furniture M I wPi. wl ” P™**1 right” 2133 ORCHARD LAKE ROAD... PHONE: 33*7917 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JULY 11, 1967 Drop in Illegal j of Hippie Drug Told SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - Illegal sales of the mind-bending drug “STP” are rapidly declining, according to Dr. Frederick H. Meyers, a University of California drug expert. But, he said, an “awful lot of counterfeit junk,” including fake LSD is being sold In its place. STP, potentially the most dangerous craze of the hippie generation, caused the hospitalization of at least a dozen persons in California late last month and sent about 20 others "right out of their heads for three or four days” with wild hallucinations, said Meyers, professor of pharmacology at the UC Medical Center in San Ftancisco. The death of a southern California man is also suspected of having been caused by STP. % “The use of the drug now appears to be falling off very rapidly, but a huge variety of stuff is still being peddled as STP,” Meyers said. “Heaven knows what it is.” ★ * * j The Federal Food and Drug Administration’s Bureau of Drug] Abuse, which has launched an investigation into STP use, said the substance may come from mescaline, a cactus plant derivative once used by American Indians to induce religious visions. Meyers and a colleague, Dr. David H. Smith, said, hoWever,! that chemical analysis of the "real thing” indicated STP is re-1 lated to known drugs of the atropine family, a medically useful ] drug derived from the common jimson weed and normally used in the treatment of asthma. “Actually, what it turns out to be is not really very important,” Meyers said. “The crucial thing is that we know | it produces terrifying hallucinations and often convulsions. And we know doctors should not use standard anit-LSD treat- with entry form* to: Pontiac Pratt Sport! Department or Pontiac Recreation Department, City Hall o°e"^w/SI [Twins Sailing GelsReprieve With NeW Pilot Sabre Title for Russians I MONTREAL (AP) - The Soviet Union defeated Hungary 9-6 Monday night to capture the men’s sabre team championship at the 32nd world fencing championships here. ANAHEIM (AP) - The controversial cleat-type baseball shoe introduced by speedster Maury Wills and banned by National League President Warren Giles three months ago will be permitted in the major leagues next spring, the Pro Baseball Rules Committe said Monday night. The rules committee, meeting on the eve of the All-Star game at Anaheim, decided to permit the use of the unconventional spikes on an experimental I basis, only in the majors, be-I ginning in spring training next Charles Segar, chairman of i the committee, said the matter would be reviewed no later than i|hem to 20 victories in 31 during the 1968 All-Star break to,gan,es. The surge has Ufted determine if the present rules|Minnesota into third place, one-governing footwear should be half game behind Detroit and j changed. only 2i^ games behind the Wilis, of the Pittsburgh Pi-[American League leading Chi- CHICAGO (AP) — Cal Erm-iMele, says ‘.‘I: made the switch er, mild-mannered and still rel- because I thought our club was] atively unknown, has the Min- enoh to win the nesota Twins moving toward *ant and |am wasn.t doingHthe what might be the American L_b League pennant. , , . „ | .7? „ , _ . , Ive had my eye on Ermer When Cal Griffith announced L , Ume and felt he could do Ermer would replace Sam Mele the Now Fm certain we[ as manager of the Twins last I Jwjn the t - m°nt^ , Unanim°USly Griffith isn’t the only one! was ’Cal Who? who thinks s0 Most o( the| * * * Twins think so including Kaat. Some fans still aje hard who has done a complete turn-pressed for an answer when about. Kaat had a 1-7 record asked suddenly ‘‘Who’s the earlier in the season and now manager of the Twins?” [has won seven of his.last eight The name is Cal Ermer and decisions to even his record at all Ermer has done since tak- 8-8. ing over the Twins is direct GO I EDWARD Am erica's Largest Selling Cigar * MIDAS TRANSMISSION SPECIALISTS THIS IS WHAT YOU GET FOR ONLY • Remove tho pan • Clean the screen • Replace pan gasket • Renew the fluid • Adjust the bands • Adjust the linkage • Road test / $|99 1990 WIDE TRACK DR. W. At the South End of Wide Track IN PONTIAC Phone 334-4727 Open Monday thrki Friday 8 to 6—Saturday 8 to 2 FOR MUFFLERS • PIPES « Race Results, Entries [rates, was ordered by Giles to [change back to conventional spikes after wearing the new shoes — which resemble track shoes and, do not have a triangular metal plate attached — dur-exhibition games last spring. cago White Sox. The Twins'did it with a double victory over Chicago Sunday, 7-4 and 5-1. as pitchers Jim Kaat and Dave Boswell! came through with key hits. | ■ “What a difference those two J |games make,” murmured Erin-! 5 Northville Entries Ith—51400: Conditioned Ti tth—(1000: Conditioned Pace, 1 G. Banfield No' Driver Rochester Hurlersi Hazel Park Results MONDAY 4th—(1000; ( Worthy Emi I*t—(2500: Claiming, «' * 5th—(1500: Claiming, 1 Colleoni Lady The rulebook prohibits the j er. “If we’d have lost those two' attachment of anything otherjwe’d have been 6(4 games out. I than the metal plate. iNow we’re only 2Vi out. It! '■-" —• [doesn’t take much.” BOOTED AWAY When the Twins came to Chi-1 “i Ci . [cago they were riding an eight-[ I OiOp UpponentS; 'game winning streak. They i, •60| r r* , |lost 2-1 Friday night when the " •to Tie TOT Second [sox scored both of their runs 'with two out in the ninth on a; I t boot by shortstop Zoilo Ver-j Randy Hinds and Don Love- follow^g day Toml •w I lace combined for a two-hitter John shut thenf out § J • yesterday as Rochester ran its th'ee bjts record to 6-1-with a 4-1 victory “They ' certainly out our •“ °''er |?a?les i?30 *n P°nhac backs against the wall,” said jClass D junior baseball action, j grmeri “but jj was great to see The triumph moved the Roch- OUr boys bounce back. I’ve said, ester crew into a tie for second aii along that this team is def-i in the Class D rate. itely a contender and there’s, Stan Babluk collected a cou- nothing I’ve seen to make me pie of hits to spark the Roches- change my mind.” ter effort at the plate. Griffith, who shocked the In a Gass E .outing, Roger baseball world by naming the! White gave up only three hits!43-year-old Ermer to. replace •oolas Lake Oakland (3-1) whipped! 4 the T-Birds (2-3) in a Class E " contest. .20j PONTIAC JUNIOR BASEBALL Will Your Car Pass INSPECTION? 'No point ln|Woitiny 'til you're caught . . A mechoni required by law and it's our pledge to keep your car tafe ati-wayg. If you'rs In doubt, make an appointment now with.. S NUMBER ONE , AUTO SAFETY CENTER NEW FULL 4-PLY feftr WHITEWALLS - (20.50 - 521.50 Report Yachtsman III in Pacific Race The Yankee C Star foiley SEE MIDAS MUFFLER I 435 South Saginaw • at wide track • SHOCKS.—— FE 2-10101 ( J Zielarl INNEICOAIING STOPS I0ST in the of your car that is not .protected by.undercoating i LOS ANGELES (AP) - A1 iU.S. Navy vessel was steaming j I Monday night to the yacht Blue [Belle, whose owner-skipper was] reported ill in the Trans Pacific] : yacht race to Hawaii. )mur | The yacht Chiriqui, communi-] . snook] In rather wet Waterford soft-1ton Appliance (7-10) snappedicationS vessel for the race fleet, rD winn'iball action last night Spencer Buckner Finance’s (6-115 win- rep0rted jbat Morgan M. Patti-] yJ^jF loor Covering (15-2) downedjning streak, 10-4. v. |son Jr., skipper of the Blue Teams Slosh to Triumphs tth—(TOO; Claiming P B. Foster F. Roloson the Waterford Merchants (l-16)f ClarRston put the game on ice!Belle from Santa Monica, Calif.,I by a score of 5-1. with five hits and six runs in has been under treatment onj Spencer won the game in the the fourth inning. Harvey Keith board for an abdominal ailment, second inning when doubles by slammed three safeties while Rushing to the aid of ""the T Chuck Graves and Maurie Stack Murray Snow, Rev. H a r o 1 d stricken skipper was the U.S. I and a single by Floyd Hicks pro-iH u g h e s and Mike Applegate naval ship Longview, which ex-duced a 3-0 lead. |each had two hits for the win- pected to reach the Blue Belle’s] In the second game, Clarks-|hers. I position Monday night. Northville Results MONDAY 7th—$1009: Claiming H FREE ESTIMATES On All Types of Modernization CALL SOW FE 8-0747 Call Anytime Day or Nite Detroit Call 538-8300 00N8TMCTI0NIUPBSTBIES19115 W. 7 Mile Bd. TuBSkSKS. “Wouldn’t You Really Oather Own a BUICK?” IS67 HICK DEMI Still s370300 Plus Tax and Transfer *4376°° Plus Tax and Transfer *3639°° Plus Tax and Transfer s330800 Hus Tax and Transfer s3014oo Plus Tax and Transfer LeSabre 2-Door Hardtop Power Broket, Automatic Transmission, Power Steering, AM-FM Radio (Stereo) Air Conditioning, Whitewalls, Tinted Glass, Tilt Wheel, Vinyl Top, Plut Many Other Feafuret. Electra 225 2-Door Sport Coupe AM-FM Stereo Radio, Whitewalls, Ride and Handling Option, Automatic Climate Control, Tinted Glass, Rear Defroster, 6-Way Power Seat, Power Windows, Automatic Trunk Re- Wildcat 2-Door Sport Coupe Automatic Transmission, Power Steering, Power Brakes, AM-FM Stereo Radio, White walls, Tinted Windshield, Tilt Steering Wheel, Plus Accessory Group. Sport Wagon 2-Seat Automatic Transmission, Power Steering, Power Brakes, Radio, Tinte'd Windshield, Deluxe Covers, Wood Groin Applique, Power Tailgate Window. LeSjabre 4-Door Sedan Automatic' Transmission, Power Steering, Power Brakes, Radio with Rear Speaker, Whitewalls, Tinted Windshield, Plus Custom Moldings. ALL WITH FACTORY WARRANTY 7 Others to Choose From FINE SELECTION OF NEW CARS IN STOCK VANDEPUTTE B0ICK & OPEL 210 Orchard Lk. Ave. at Williams FE 2-9101 For the SMOOTHEST RIDE You've Ever Had, LET US I TRUE BALANCE and TRACTION IZE YOUR TIRES WITH OUR KEMSWAY TIRE CONDITIONER 1 FRED GAULKER President MOTOR MART SAFETY CENTER Our chassis engineering service offers the best in quality automotive work-manship at the fewest pos-| stble cost. Our staff of expert mechanics pledge to .keep your car in true, safe [running condition the year 12 MONTH TERMS MOTOR MARTS 123 East Montcalm FE 3-7145 « i C—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY II, 1907 EEK & MEEK SURFS UP! MAN! IS IT 1 W: EVERI r ' «j 1*7 NIA, W.'t m. ,'n U1 OH & i r~u / THAT'S THE V THIRD FIGHT > HE'S LOST THIS WEEK 3 OH, DEAR, SLUGGO IS GETTING LICKED j —AGAIN - J||g| y THERE'S ONLY KIND OF A FI<71- you'D STAND A CHfi of • ~—wrnm TIGER By Bud ] THE PQNTIAC PRESS; TUESDAY, JULY 11, 1967 C—■-3 MARKETS The following are top prices covering .sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by thim in wholesale package lots Quotat ns are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Monday. Produce FRUITS ^ppln, Delicious, Red, bu. Apples, Delicious, Red, C>„ t Apples, Northern Spy, bu. Apples, Northern Spy, C.A., I Apples, Steele Red, bu...... Apples, Steele Red, C.A„ bu. Strewberrles, 16-qt. Cnt... VEGETABLES Beets, topped, bu. ........ Broccoli, dz. bch. 1.50 Cebbeoe, Curly, bu........ Onions, Green, dz. bch..... Strength in Industrials, Rails y ^ Pgjg^jj Stock Market Continues Rally Aid to . NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market continued to rally early this afternoon as Industrial blue chips and rails showed strength. Advances topped declines by better than a 3-to-2 ratio, trimming the earlier proportion of 2-| i-l. As the session continued, however, the average improved as high quality, pivotal stocks did better. At noon the Dow Jones industrial averages was up 3.70 at 879.22. The average was approaching the rally peak of 885 posted June 16. If the market can penetrate resistance at that level, analysts said, it should have; a green light for further advance. Auto stocks were apparently dampened by the start of negotiations with the United Auto Workers Unipn but General Motors held steady while Ford, Chrysler and American Motors yielded fractions. Hie Associated Press average of 60 stocks at noon was up 1.4 at 330.5 with industrials up 1.5, rails up 1.4 and utilities up .2. ★ ★ * The ticker tape ran a few minutes late in early trading on the New York Stock Exchange. ★ ^ ■ It was another active day on the American Stock'Exchange. Hie ticker tape ran as -much as 16 minutes late and the trend was generally higher despite profit taking in some recent gainers. Kohlrabi, dz. bch. ....... Onions, Oroen, dz. bch. Pariloy, Curly, dz. bch. Parsloy. Root, dz. bch. Peas, Green, bu........... Radishes, Red. dz. bch. Radishes, white, dz. bch. Rhubarb, Outdoor, dz. bch Squash, Italian, Vt bu. Squash, Summer, Va bu. The New York Stock Exchange Leaders in Congress Upset by Congo Help Developing Program Commerce Chief Busy At least four! WASHINGTON (AP) - The Johnson administration rejected rebellion-torn Nigeria’s request for militai-y aid just as edgy congressional leaders began ^ ope fuming that such help, coupled p with earlier dispatch of U.S. planes to the Congo, could invite Communist meddling in Africa. A congressional uproar Monday greeted Sunday’s announcement that three transport planes and 150 men had been sent to the Congo, torn by a mercenary-led rebellion. By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst WASHINGTON - The new Secretary of Commerce, Alexander Trowbridge, would feel a lot more able to fulfill the de-| partment’s role an adminis-l tration link with business if ,he could draft aj few industrial-! about to open in the Commerce Department. And These conferences will .be held | not always been permitted to Trowbridge, 37, therefore, is|in the Commerce Department j function in tjiis role, spending a lot more time staff- j building and ideally will include i Reports persist, however, that ing his department than he Gardner Ackley, chairman of Trowbridge will be more of an would like. | the Council of Economic Advis-| economic adviser to _the Presi- Hours later, just as Capitol Hill began sounding off against a hint that such aid might go to Nigeria, too, the State Department turned down Nigeria’s request, saying its rebellion was purely internal. ★ * ★ In almost the same breath that some congressmen expressed'fears of a Vietnam-type involvement in Africa, they discounted the optimistic report from Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara that the military war is going well in Vietnam. MORE TROOPS SEEN Some said they expect McNamara’s visit to result in dispatch of more troops to Asia and a tax increase to pay for them. tempting to develop a personal rapport with the business community, which likes to believe the department is its voice in administration councils. For a man of Trowbridge’s articulateness, graciousness and ability, this might not be as difficult a job as forecast. The new secretary—he was designated acting secretary in January and promoted in May— has planned a series bf conferences with industrialists, the first of which was with those in the metals industry. Another is scheduled later this month with the chemical executives, way of fulfilling the department’s charter of giving responsible representation of government to business and of representing business in government. Such conferences, when held in the past, have been known to tone down considerably the critics of administration economic policy. And by putting the meetings bn a regular schedule, Trowbridge hopes to magnify the result. There is at least one other major role for any secretary of commerce, and that is to be a presidential adviser. But Commerce Department heads have Nevertheless, the athletic-looking former oil executive is developing a program that associates say he hopes will produce results, not through fanfare but from a steady, low-key attack ers apd other key administra- dent than was John T. Connor, tion figures. jhis predecessor, who felt fnis- ‘There are lots of different ways of doing this job, and this is one of them,” Trowbridge interview in his of- by working an 8:15 a.m. to 71 fice. “Our purpose is to talk in a p.m. day. dispassionate way about indus- The first problem under at- try’s problems. And we try also - ... l tack, and perhaps the most im- to discuss our broad-scale eco- j Economic advice, he says, is portant, is delations with busi-|nomic problems.” rot t0 exck,cled from my du- trated by his relative lack of influence on economic policy. Trowbridge is noncommittal on the subject. He says merely that ‘‘the President said he wants me to sound off and speak up in policy councils.” Trowbridge is at-! This, Trowbridge says, is o Grant Awarded to Oil Professor fo Find Writers Chrysler, AMC End'67 Runs I man, ties.. A particular interest of Trowbridge is in formulating a policy for what he believes is a billion-dollar opportunity for American business, the attack on public problems by private enterprise. An Oakland University Eng-| lish professor today was awarded a $3,000 federal grant to; discover new literary talent ini the Midwest. The grant will provide 1T Car Plants Down, Fight Invited 7 More .o Shut Soon) fcySfafeCourf DETROIT (AP) — Chrysler Thomas Fitzsimmons, noted for and American Motors this week LANSING (AP) — The State his translations of Japanese become the first U.S. car firms Court of Appeals is inviting in-poptry and his own poetry, to wind up production of 1967 terested parties to join in an-with funds to seek out and con-j models. other legal battle over one-mah fer with unknown writers and E,e , f the industry’s one'vote apportionment of Mich-students who have undiscovered assembly plants closed out their j?ans county boards of super-literary ability. 1967 worV,ast week with seven v In announcing the grant fromL With both Vietnam doves and hawks criticizing the Congo action, the Senate Armed Services and Foreign Relations committees summoned Secretary of State Dean Rusk for a private explanation today of the admin- in announcing me gram iromim„ro H „„ , ... istration’s position. the Office of the. National En-!™re to g0 down by th,s week’ dowment for the Arts, Congress- [ Chairman J. W. Fulbright, 13-Ark. of the Foreign Relations Commtitee challenged a State Department spokesman’s tention that the United States is obligated to uphold the “territorial integrity and unity” of Nigeria and the Congo. Plotter Gets 2nd Jail Term A Livonia man, sentenced to prison last week for attempting to conspire with his parents to a witness to a robbery, today was sentenced to another prison term for the holdup. Oakland County Circuit Judge Frederick C. Ziem ordered that Jules V. Soma, 25, be sent to the state prison at Jackson for 4 to 20 years. Last Wednesday Sorna, his father, Jobh, and mother were sentenced by Circuit Judge Farrell E. Roberts for an attempted plot to have Mrs. Virginia Gogates of Detroit murdered. Mrs. Gogates was the operator of a party store Farmington Township which was robbed by Jules Sorna, i Jack McDonald, R-19th Nameplates whicji already pro- mu: t „i,„ *„ iduction include the Marlin, Bel-fvedere, Fury, Chrysler,,mper. DisWcl, said it IS the first gelus, Lake Angelus, will report his findings in three months to a panel in Washington, which will decide if any of the authors’ works will be published. New Hearing Slated for Hoffa ial, Coronet, Polara, Thunder-bird, Lincoln, Riviera and Tor-onado. Due to join them on the sidelines by Saturday are Ambassador, American, Rebel, Valiant, Barracuda, Dart, Charger, Mercury, Chevy II, Corvair and Corvette. FALL SHORT Auto output came to 131,006 cars last week but is expected CHICAGO (UPI) - Teamsters Union President James R. Hoffa will get a day in court July to fal1 some 25,000 units short of 19 to try to prove the govern-1that this week as the industry ment convicted him of fraud by |heads into th« final weeks of using evidence obtained by wiretapping. ■ U.S. District Court Judge Richard B. Austin yesterday dered Hoffa brought from the federal penitentiary at Lewis-burg, Pa., to attend the Chicago hearing. News in Brief output of 1967 models. Ford Motor Co. will wind up its 1967 output on Aug. 16 at its Metuchen, N.J., plant, w ★ ★ Chevrolet, bread and .butter division of General Motors, will wind up its 1967 output on Aug. 1. Through last weekend, the 67 model output had reached 7,-377,565 compared with the 8,-of the 1966’s at the comparable point. visors. The court plans to hear oral arguments in October on whether a state law passed in 1966, requiring that each county be divided into between five and 35 equal-population districts violates the State Constitution. Also at issue is whether the State Constitution conflicts with the U.S. Constitution in tile area of county apportionment. Backed by a State Supreme Court advisory opinion that the 1966 act is unconstitutional, Ontonagon County Supervisor Carl Mybren asked the Appeals Court to review his county’s apportionment plan. The Appeals Court agreed, and invited labor groups, other counties, the attorney .general's office and other interested parties to file briefs on the constitutional questions. Meanwhile, said ' Bernard Apol, assistant state elections director, 46 of Michigan’s 83 counties have filed reapportionment plans as required by the controversial law. Treasury Position tion oi .... .. responding del Balance—^Wly $ 5,668,4 Deposits Fisca Ithdrawais F The larceny of $40 during a F break-in at Spic ‘N Span Laun-| derette, 4696 Dixie, Waterford The calendar year count I" Township was reported to town- climbed to 4,176,392 compared I x~TotaW«ML n ship police yesterday: .... [with 5,079,172 at the like pointj^lS^f^. in 1966. ; x-inciiKto*'*M2,o loct to ftotutory II 2 Ballet Stars Are Arrested SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Dame Margot Fonteyn and Rudolf Nureyev, the world’s most famous ballet dance team, were among 18 persons arrested early today at a wild hippieland party in San Francisco’s Haight-Ash-bury district, police said. All were charged with dis-Rtrbing the peace and visiting a place where narcotics (marijuana) were being used. j Dame Margot, wearing a S*,_.cfi*no* white ermine coat with black horizontal sleeves, fled to a neighboring rooftop as police arrived and was arrested there, police reported. A toolbox, an air driver and parts — total yalue of $172 — were reported stolen yesterday pfc from Concrete Step Co., 6497| «, M59, Waterford Township, ac-cording to township police. lijpj ***<+$* t Rosielle LaGrone, 40, of 520 Highland told Pontiac police early today someone pried open the rear door of her home and stole a television set valued at $75. MOM’s Rummage': Thursday, 9-12. Indianwood and Baldwin Rd. - —Adv. Successful'Investing S % w * * H # ■ 466.8 176.3 150.6 321.2 . 473.0 200.7 159.1 '33/1 ;f . 413.4 159.4 146.9 292.1 ., 537.9 213,9 170.5' 369. 388.0 143.9* 130.2 269.< Rescue Try Is Off1 (EDnpR’S NOTE: The viem expressed here are solely those of the miter for which this newspaper assumes no responsibility.) By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “I have owned Cosmos Industries and Official Films for the past six years. I have large losses in both. Should I sell them to offset gains I have taken?” C.B. i ! . Q) “What is wrong with A) There is always p ques-. Southwestern Public Service? tion in my mind as to the tim- It’s quite; low in price now. ing of tax sales. It fs some- Do you recommend it?” P.C. times advantageous to hold a|j g is nothtag wrong With this stock. It is suffering jof it. Cosmos Industries, which is in military electronics, has nearly doubled in price over the past two months. In view of this strong action and the nature of the company’s business, I believe you would be better off to postpone Sale of the stock. When and if you sell, I would not go back into this situation, because of the lack of sufficient information. Rail* Ind Util Fan L Net Change j w • BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) — p™ lay’ As Monroe Auto Equipment North Central Airline* "■ Satran FrlntlnB ............ Scrlpto . Wyandotte Chemical ..... MUTUAL FUNDS Afflllatod Fund . Chemical Fund .............. Commonwealth stock ......... Dreytu* ..........• —„• — Keystone Income K-l ........ Keystone Growth K-2 ........ Meet. Invertor* Gi Me**. Inbortors “ Putnam Growth Television Electronics Wellington Fund ... Windsor Fynd ...... ■' An attempt by a U.S. Air Force C130 transport to rescue white hostages from the Congolese city of Kisangani was called off today, reliable sources in Brussels reported. Si Week Ago 70.8 91.5 New York 15 Utilities . 65 Stocks 0-10 cents BONDS: .. 51.36 +0.18 40 Bonds . 52.78 + 0.16110 Higher grt 265.02+2.73 . 132.70+0.--325.62+1. . 80.25+0.03 70.93-V.05 . 81:97+0.05 . 82.31+0,13 . 05 JO... stock for a while longer rather than sell to register a loss. Official Films operated at a deficit in the six months ended Dec. 31, 1966, and Cosmos reported a small profit for the 12-month period ended May 31, 1966. I can find no information about this year’s operations on either company and when this situation exists, it is usually well to let tiie market tell the story. from a slowdown in growth last year wjiich I regard as purely temporary^ It is also affected by tight money conditions, as all utility stocks. The area served in Texas and Oklahoma is capable of considerable expansion and dividends have barn increased aiuiuaUy for move than a decade. There seems little likelihood of appreciation iri Official Films has done little I the near future but I do recom-this year from a price stand- meni the stock for income and point and I would take my loss long-term growth, now in this stockj and keep out! (Copyright, 1967) C—6 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JULY 11, 1967 NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE ♦011-3101 Oil July 17# 1967 at 9:43 a.m. at 34i Auburn Ed.# Auburn Haight*. Mlchlgai a I960 Hoover Washer, Serial No. 603 •peeled at above address. GENERAL MOTORS ACCEPTANCE CORPORATION 233 N. Talegrapi Pontiac. Mlchlgai July 1) and 12# 1967 REQUEST FOR INSURANCE Bl CITY OF PONTIAC MICHIGAN Sealed bids will be received at tt flea of the Purchasing Agant, City 430 Wide Track Drive, East, In tha of Pontiac, Michigan, up to 3 (E.D.T.) Monday, July 17, 1967, tor nishing Public Liability and Pro . Damage Insurance Covering fleet of City owned cars and vehicles. Limits for Pu1' lie Liability are $ioo,ooo.oo/*300,000.00 ai t20.000.00 for. Property Damage. AI Workmen's Compensation Insurance ! Waste Collection and waste Dlspos Death Notices larold (Esther) Van Edward (Rhoda) Mrs. AI (Mlldrad) Ottawa Park Cemetery. Mrs. Ader-hotdt will lie In state at tha Coats Funeral Home, Drayton Plains, attar 7 p.m. tonight. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 3 and 7 to 9.) CHEYNE, WILLIAM; JULY 9, 1967; 6400 Prarielawn; age 73; beloved husband of Mary Cheyne; dear father of Mrs. DeWeyne (Mary) arad may be obtained from Floyd D. Smith, Director of Purchasing, City Hall. The City reserves the right to accept any lives are requested to bid on both Pol Envelopes containing bids should b plainly marked “Bid for insurance." OLGA BARKELEY City Clef... July 11, 1907 CITY OF ROCHESTER NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS GARBAGE AND RUBBISH COLLECTION Tha City of Rochester, Michigan, will receive sealed bids until 3:00 P.M. Wednesday. July 19, 1967. for the collection, transportation, and disposal of garbage and rubbish from within the corporate limits of the City, at which be in sealed envelopes, plainly m “Sealed! Bid—Garbage and Rubbish lection , accompanied by a car check or bid bond made payable ti City Treasurer In the amount of 31,000.00 and are to be delivered to the City Cler' 400 Sixth Street, Rochester, Mlchigen. The Bid deposit or bond will be r turned to the unsuccessful bidders with to the successful bidder, upon satisfactory > held Wednesday, July lyton Plains. Mr. Cheyne COWELL. DARLINDA JEAN; J 3, 1967; 3363 Orion Road, L 11, 12 SINCLAIR (♦^Manager y of Oakland tery. Baby Cowell will i DICKSON, WILLIAM _STT" 1967 ; 221 W. Dartmoi Michigan; age 7i lome, 135 South Street, with Rev. Kyle Ballard Interment In Ortonville STATE OF MICHIGAN Circuit Court for the ORDER. TO ANSWER File No.' 67 31026 Yvonne Merrlam Stevenson, Plaintiff, vs. William O, Stevenson; Defendant. On January 4. 1967, an action was filed by Yvonne Merriam Stevenson. Plaintiff, against William O. Stevenson, Defendant, In this Court for Judgment of divorce] and other relief, and it appearing by i Sheriff's return and plaintlff'4 affidavit on file that Defendant's present residence address Is unknown. It is hereby ordered that the Defendant, William O, Stevenson, shall answer or taka such other action as may be permitted by law on or before August 23. 1967. Failure to comply wttlv this order will result in a ludgment by default against such Defendant for the relief demanded in the complaint filed In this Court. Date of Order: June 28, 1967 Plaintiff's Attorney: Donald McGaffey .........................j Dodd. Mrs. Elva Templeton, arid Milton Galbraith; also survived by eight grandchildren and 10 great-grand- tery. Mrs. Galbraith will lie in state et the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and GULLETTETllEWiYTjOLYTlW; Mrs. Donne Cowley, Mrs. Geneva Fortune, Mrs. Bonita Green, Mrs. Marylou Wacker, and Charles GuL Wednesday, July 12. at 11 a.m. at the SparksGriffin Chapel. Interment In White Chapel Cemetery. Mr. Gultette will lie In state at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 3 and 7 to 9 p.m.) HALLETT, BERT WILLIAM) July . Godhardt Funei Circuit Judg :REDE.RICK C. ZIEM Oakland Couidv^Clerk-Register of Deeds By J, Timothy Patterson night. (Suggest: low¥!~ca~roU J. I, 23 and Aug. 1, 1967 tha Michigan Department of Conservator concerning boating problems on th« waters of Gerundecut Bay, Cass Lake In Waterford and West Bloomfield Townships, to be held at Lambert School, 3376 Cass Elizabeth Road, Waterford ~ ship, Oakland County, Michigan on day, July 27, 1967 at 10:00 a.m. Adopted by resoluti Waterford and Wesl Bloomfield Town- , 1967 Sk an. Interested. 233. Brendel Heights Subdivi vn as 7110 Highland Road (A er of Sunset Drive. Section ons interested are requested t. A copy of the Zoning M with a list of the proposed cl file at the office of the To1 CHARLES HARRIS, NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Notice is hereby given of a put hearing to ^be held by the White ^Ls U. except M-S9 Hwy. kndWn as 7749 Highleno Ro*fl."3KTWr2r:----- presen?n,A,’copy of the Zoning *Map tc fketo*r fMeha? the offfee olMhe Townsh* Interested. CHARLES HARRIS. Chairmen of the White Leki Township Planning Commlssloi JACK D, ROSE. r mother of N I, Gerald, and C White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. the funeral home. (Suggested visit-ihg hours M ' ' I ‘ ‘ ' SPEC. 4 JULY 4 of Sharon McCurry; beloved of Mr. and Mrs. Joe McCur beloved grandson of^Mr^and A Debra, and Robert McCurry. day, July 13, at 1 p.m. at Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home, ferment in Perry Mount P a Cemetery. Mr. M’cCutry will 7 p.m. Tuesday. (Suggested v THOMLINSON, JA 1967; 568 Mt. CIS _ 63; dear brother of Orrln Thom-linson and Mrs. Sara Clancy; also ; age h S 2® 32' 20" G 3 CHARLES HARRIS, irman of the White Lake ilp Planning Commissior JACK O. ROSE, To Buy, Rent, Sell or Trade Use Pontiac Press WANT ADS Office Hours: 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Cancellation Deadline 9 a.m. Day Following First Insertion NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Notice Is hereby given of a public hearing to be held by the, White Lake Township Planning Commission at the Town- Card of Thanka 1 THE FAMIlV OF BONNIE MAY preciatlon for t h*e kindnesses I to Commercial ! filings) Zoning Map. From AgrlcUl R-ll (Multiple The S 60 ;____________I _____ 11 the NE 14 of Sec. 20, White Lake TWp., excepting therefrom the S SO leaf In highway M-89, also a parcel of land beginning at a point west 24 jt. and north 80 tt. from the S.E. corner of MW SW Va o* the NE V, of .said faction 20, thence N 306.5 ft., thence Mf 148.5 ft., th s 586.5 ft,, th E 140.5 ft. fo the point of beginning, also ex-OW Detroit Edison property, the s 400 tt. to be zoned commercial, and the north portion remaining R-ll. Persons interested are requested to bi present. A copy of the Zoning Map to gather with a list of the proposed change: -Kg* file at the office of the Township Clerk and may be examined by those tr teresfed. .'CHARLES' HARRIS. Chairman of th JACK O. ROSE. Iune'27, July 11, 1967 Your memory it With which we vi Though God has y< Ing We still have you liquids. Only 90 i Bros, Drugs. CABANA- CLUB' HAS OPENINGS. Writ* Pontiac Press Box 097, Pontiac. BEST AID. INC., '710 RIKER BLOG FE 2-0181, Refer 1o Credit. Ad-visors. 16-A Announcements . OR 3-5202. FE 2- | BOX REPLIES I | At II a.m. todaj there \ | were replies at The | Press Office in the following buses: 3, 4, S, 12, IS, 20, 21, ] 27, 28, 29, 31, 37, 47, 51, i S3, 62, 72, 81, 82, 85, 08, i | 99, 193, 110, 112, 113 \ Funeral Directors 4 COATS FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS__674-0461 C. J. GODHARDT FUNERAL HOME Keego Harbor. Ph. 682-0200. QONELS 3N-JOHNS Funeral Home "De»|gned for Funerals" Huntoon . Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME. 332-8371 Established Over 40 Years Cemetery lots 4-A 1 LOT WHITE CHAPEL AN GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING a friendly adviser, phone FE i-i.22 before 3 p.m. Confidential. your scout _group, _church, Followed i NOW FOR Sheldon and Floyd Mlnnlch. Memorial service Is under the auspices of Moose Lodge No. 182 at 7:30 p.m. tonight. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, July 12. FOUND IN N. ROCHESTER AREA, large brown and white mala abort haired dog, looka Ilka hunter. 451- WEIMARANER, OXFORD 628-3672, YELL O W PARAKEET, jirport. Reward. OR 3-5348. GIRL'S CLASS RING, IN-i. Reward* 482-0788. °" °° jfcf = MINIATURE Idwln and Wal-f) REWARD — MO.____ —VA WATCH A . Reward. FE : GERMAN SHEPHERDT~sTl--grey. 125 lbs. Answers to m.“ REWARD. OR 3-2717. 5280 GERMAN SHEPHERD FE -644-4604. Help Wontod Mala 6 $400 FEE PAID PUBLIC RELATIONS TRAINEE 21-35 high school grad., no exp. nec. ^INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL TOO W. Huron 334-4971 $450 UP “ CLERICAL 21-28. High school grad. Type 40 INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1880 5, Woodward B'hem 642-8268 $500 PLUS CAR SALES TRAINEE 21-30 Some College ^INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL A NEW COMPANY. HAS~3~PART-fTme openings, married men 21 to 35 to work evenings, guaranteed J50^wk. Cell 335-5323, from 6 to A Pcrtt-Time Job A married man, 21-34, to work 4 hours per evening. Call 674-0520, 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. tonight. $200 PER* MONTH A-l MECHANIC. DIESEL PRE- I. Good t benefits. Call AAA-1 COMPANY ACCOUNTANT Expending medium - sized CPA firm with diversified industrial clientele. The partners invite applicant^ presently In Industrial ac- portunities in pubShTaccounting and specifically our firm. Send resume lo Janz & Knight, CPA's, 1100 N. Woodward, Birmingham, Michigan. , Replies will be held In absolute ilant. Exc. opportunity. Send r< ime to Pontiac Press Box C-tl sontlac, Michigan. agents-coLlectors I. Permanent posil more. Fringe I __. necessary. Ca,.. Scherschun, 338-4650. 0:30 a.m. to Pontiac Press Want Ads ' Bring Advertisers and Prospects. Together , just call 332-8181 DEBT AID, INC., 710 RIKER BLDG. DEBT CONSULTANTS OF PONTIAC INC. 814 Pontiac States Bank Bldg. FE 8-0333 STATE LICENSE D-BONOEO ___ Open Saturday 9-12 a m. ON AND AFTER THIS DATE JUL* _ Michigan. ON AND AFTER THIS DATE JU0.Y 11, 1967 I will not be responsible for any debts contracted by any other than myself. Thomas A. Norths/, 7770 Detroit Blvd„ Walled Lake, Michigan. Ide through fields, woods, •paghettl dinner. For reservations, UPLAND HILLS FARM available. 33819079 anyilme. __ GET OUT OF DEBT 3N A • -LANNED BUDGET PROGRAM MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS 702 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. IMp Wontod Mala AGGRESSIVE YOUNG MEN 18-26 i ...... ___,„l grad' „ 2.50 per wk. Call Mr. - 8-0359 9:15 A.M.-1 P.M. nOfO BODY MAN. ALL NEW Pl-ciiitles. Plenty ot work. Contact Larry, VanCamp Chevy, Milford. 684-1025,_________• • AUTO GARAGE >ORTiR Needed Immediately. Contact Mr. i Track, , 1950 V Pontiac automatic gun welders^fOr production welding. 83.50 per hour. Paid Insurance plus fringe benefits. G A W Engineering Inc.. 2501 Williams Pr„ Pontiac, Mich. BE A FORD CAREER SALESMAN ou°r?ePl*at oF*d'nMotor Our demo plan, paid Ir JOHN McAULIFFE FORD BROWN AND SHARPE OPERATOR fenced bumper. Clean, modern si SIDE LINCOLN - MERCURY. COLLEGE STUDENTS HIGH SCHOOL GRADS DIRECT SALESMEN WANTED - Leads furnished_FE 5-5130.. DRAFTSMAN, FOR CIVIL ENGI-neerlng and land surveying. Office HR. Exc. benenis. Co. car, 05.900. Call Tom Walls, 3362471, Snalling A Spelling,_______________________ DRY CLEANER WORKING MANAGER Must be able to operate top quality plant, apply Drayton Martin- izing, 4716 Walton Blvd. ___ DUCT INSTALLERS AND BENCH workUt Mile Rd., Oak Eyenings Part-Time men needed Immediately for . Call 674-0520, URGENTLY NEEDED EXPERIENCED TREE SURGERY ilssions, time and half over f town moving expence. The EXPERIENCED MILLING Chine operator, steady work, time full paid Blue Cross fringe benefits. Brine West M%9. ( EXPERIENCED CARPEN-ters wanted. Must' be In Union. Call 334-6744. or 353-9191 eves. bet. 5:30 and 10 p.m. . ■ EXPERIENCED AUTO BUMPER Needed In GM Dealership, immediately. Lots of work, and a Guarantee! Contact Frank Hopper at Body Shop — Vondeputtt 1950 S. Wide Trade, Pontiac.__ FLINT, MICHIGAN DRY CLEANERS We are an aggressive growing company looking for a plant man-fSST "i,h experience In a 8300,000-5500,000 per year, operation. You must have a successful background in both shirt laundry and D.C operations. Wo havt both petrole--•Wicrllf We are willing »o pay top dollar tor the right men. Contact: L. C. Dortch. Ph; 742-2300, Flint, Mich- cai expert n Mushroo Rochester, 651- GUARDS Full and part-tlma immediate City' *"'* Suburban |ob openings. Mt. ““ ana Birmingham E1BBBB1 DWFuvd Guard Services, I E. Grand Blvd., Detroit — LO Clemens, HARDWARE CLERK Full or part time. Pleasant wo hig^ conditions. Fringe benefits. V "a. L. DAMMAN CO. , Bloomfield Plaza / Telegraph arJ I-- A 6-3010 IF/YOU CAN HANDLE PEOPLE, , ‘wlll wont hard, and expect more • money for the work you do, call for Interview. 332-6186. JANITOR FOR MEDIUM-SIZED office building, references required. Reply tq Press Box C-ll. LICENSED HEATING MAN, steady work, salary. Contact Mr. SOIvador, 682-1661,___ LIGHT DELIVERY-WORK FOR 2 men. Must have car and know city. Full pr part time, 330-4244, MALE COLLEGE STUDENTS, leed a Job? Guaranteed S600 i month. OR 3-8447 after 6 p.m. ter eoftener and delivery of appliances. Must have own handtools. Able to furnish references and be over 25. Apply. CRUMP ELECTRIC 3465 AUBURN ROAD AUBURN HEIGHTS I collect In Detroit. Of 1-3424. Htlp Wantod Mnto 6 Mechanical-Electrical § Draftsman, required. Experienced draftsman required for wbrk Involving mechanical, structural and electrical designs. Applicants should have. et. least 5 years experience In relatgd fields. This Is a permanent position with prepaid hospitalization benefits. We are an equal opportunity employer phone Mrs. Hal-bach at 647-1304 for appointment Space Defence Corp. middleagbd man for yIaS replies to Pontiac Pres Box C-3, Pontiac. Mich. NEEDED AT ONCE Experienced mechanic for GM Dealership, Pontiac*. Chevrolet* and Buicks. Apply to Mr. Ernst at Homsr __High! Inc., Oxford. ^ OPPORTUNITY PLUS The Clark Oil t, Refining Corp. has available a service station management or dealer franchise: We specialize In gasoline sals* For additional Information and In-terview call LI 8-7222 or 549-9324. ORDER bESK AND STEADY OF- 3111 Paulson rvlew. FE 5-4101 PART TIME Mornings oi H E L P, WANTED'. guaranteed 8200. Easy I PART TIME — $40 TO $00 PER to work evenings. 674-2218._____ PART TIME Earn and learn. Good Income, Learning a new profession. 10 to 30 years of age. Car necessary, New Subsidiary of Alcoa. Phone FE 5-9952. POSITION AVAILABLE. FOR MAN experienced taking care of horses. Replies to Pontiac Press Box C-45, Real Estate Salesman Due to hte expansion et the Mall. I need 3 more energetic salesmen. will train. VON REALTY GEORGE VONDERHARR, Realtor In the Mall MLS Room 110 ____________682-5807 $75 weekly experience preferred, apply in person. 1255 West Silver-br II Rd, ROUGH CARPENTERS, UNION, year round work. 332-9121. __ ROUTE SALESMAN' For established route, above average darnings, sales background SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE TRAINEE Nationally known corporation I looking for young man 21 to 2 Interested In building a caree and enloy public contact wltl out telling. Mechanical aptttudi basic electronics. Car nacastan many fringe benefits, full pa whlla training. 333-7040 — 9 to 4 SHOE SALESMAN la Shopping Center, Radford, 27320 Grand Rlvtr Clawson, 65 S. Main STOCK MAN. 25-55. APPLY 2397 TRANSPORTATION SUPERVISOR WANTED MAN TO TRAIN for managers position in Carry out food store, must have some food experience and able to furnish good references. Starting salary $150 weekly plus bonus, Call FE 5-9878, for appointment. WANTED: GARDENER. FULL-time salary. Must have own trans-. portatlon. Call 683-1214 after 6 p.m. WELDERS, FITTERS AND PRESS BRAKE OPERATOR EXPERIENCED Excellent1 fringe benefits. Artec, Inc. 3020 Indlanwood, Lake Orion. 692-2631.______________ ■ YOUNG MEN 13 TO 25 of a permanent | - Able to learn quickly 2 Move average earnings 3 Rapid advancement 4 Exceptional company bene For personal interview call: Bruno — 338-3218 - 9 Hfllp Wantod Ftmala 5 WOMEN NEEDED $325-$400 GENERAL OFFICE Receptionist, typists, accounting clerks. Many varied positions, Fss paid. Mrs. Piland. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL M* — 642-8268 INTERNATIONAL PE8 $240 PLUS GENERAL OFFICE Filing, phoning, tight typing PERSONNEL 234-4971 ___MH I _______________to complete our staff In Pontiac office. Must be 18-26, -single and high school graduate., Salary of 3123 per wk. Call Mr. Wayne, FE 1-0350 morning, < fling: for a n year via compel and earning $804120 weekly? F sit ions In ul*f end I----------- Call b Cor ... Ml 2-7363. Assistant to Managar to hostess and supervise dinli room. Need a mature woman wi has th# ability to supervise. Goi wages - plus benefits. Big Bi ATTENTION MOTHERS! Evenings frae? Tha Playhouse Co., Inc. (one of the world's lorgsst toy distributors) ^s looking for women No exp. necessary — We train you. No collecting — no delivery. , Exc. Commission PLUS valuable bonus gifts. Please call) BETH WEBER FE 3-7377 or 632-1774 baby sitter, light hoOsT- work, exc. solary and maols, prly-ata TV. Must Hue In. 731-7015. BABYSITTER WANTED CALL AF- for 6, 402-8242. __________ BABY SITTER, LIVE IN, WAttR-ford ares, 623-0849. BAKERY CLERK, DAYS, 2S-40 yrs. age. Apply in person Auburn Bakery, 3337 Auburn Rd. Auburn Hots. BAR AAA 10, DAYS, FULL TIME, good waogs, sxp. helpful, EM 3-0611 or EM 3-2249 after 11 a.m. o Town Si Country Restau- BEAUTICIAN, MODERN SHOP. 60 per cent, excellent clientele. OR 4- 1101,____________ BEAUTY OPERATOR - ALBERT’S Suburban Hair Fashions, 6760501. BEAUTY OPERATORS SI00 guaranteed. Steady, good hours. Andr« Beauty Salon, 11 N. Saginaw, FE 5^257. BEELINE FASHIONS—NEEDS YOU FOR HOSTESS OR STYLIST— ' 8S2-4131 BOOKKEEPER THROUGH TRIAL balance. Avn Canter Hospitals Mrs. Hausman. 651-9381._________ CAR HOP FOfe NIGHT SHIFT. *5 to 12, Reels Drive In. OR 3-7173. CASHIER Night shift — age between 25 end 45. Must *be able to work weekends. Apply at BIG BOY RESTAURANT Telegraph 8> Huron cXSHiER~AND DRUG CLERK With or without experience lor full or part time. Day and evening, Cafeteria Hostess Ted's of Pontiac Mall has an Im-madlate opening tor a hostass. •xc. working hours, no Sundays or holidays, day shift, hospitalization and Ills Insurance and tick pay benaflts. Apply In person only, TED'S _______PONTIAC MALL CLERK-TYPIST, FOR ARCHITECT-ural firm, full tlma, exc. working conds. profit sharing, give experience, refs, and rate desired In first letter. Reply to Box 289 COOKS FULL TIME COUNTER GIRLS PART TIME, EVENINGS AND SATURDAY HUDSON'S PONTIAC Is now Interviewing for our New Store. You wouW enloy those bone- ____30 Discount Life Insurance Overtime beyond 40 hrs. Feld Holidays Liberal Vacation Policy Paid Training Period Many other Benefits Apply In Person Employment Office HUDSON'S Pontiac Mall DENTAL HYGIENIST , PROGRlrS- Experienced Secretary THE BeNDIX CORP. Research Laboratories Dlv. Southfield, Mich. An Equal Opportunity Employer EXPERIENCED WOMAN F6 R weekly cleaning. Long Lake-Wood- oortatlon end references. 646-3076. FASHION SALES Full and pert time schedules to suit your needs In Hadley's Specialty -Store In new fashion 'wing of Pontiac Mall. Please apply Mon. GENERAL OFFICE WORK, PULL or part time, send resume Pohtlac Press Box C-12 Pontiac, Mlch- GENERAL OFFICE, LIGHf TYP- gFneral office billtatlon & Conva., Woodward Pontiac. HOUSEKEEPER. . HOUSEWIVES- Earn 12 to S3 par hour In your spare tlma. Pick up and dollvor Fuller Brush orders. For Interview phono OR 343X8, Housewives — Part Time We need 6 more housewives, 2548. to work port tjmo\ond represent' US fo 0 DEBORAH DOW Forty Plan Busfooss. Showing beautiful low priced costume {ewelry- Highest Profit and Bonus to those who qualify. CeU today. 3364132 or 625-2917._____________ LEGAL SECRETARY $128' PER weak, includes some Saturday work Sand resume to Pontiac •*“ ■>“ C-55. Pontiac, Michigan. LICENSED PRACTICAL NURSES. Full and part tlma. Choice of shifts tor extended cere facility. Cptl 333-7146, LIKE PEOPLE Our friendly neighborhood office nenfo a person who Ilka* to talk salary, paid vocations, and other outstanding benefits. Liberty Loon Corp.. 1224 W. Maple Rd., Welled Help Wanted Female Phone 642-7573. doctor's office, i MIDDLEAGED WOMAN WISHING to work port time end experienced Reel Estate secretarial work. Recommendations necessary. Ask tor 4:30 except Saturday. Warren Stout, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5-81i _____________Pontiac MOTHERS WOULD YOU BELIEVED * Tha Toy Chost 'offers easy IS easy work demonstrating toys. Vi will train. No investment, delivei or collection. Please call 682-1833. . Good working Cenler HospItal. 631-9381. OAKLAND UNIVERSITY Secretaries eted r*at °?he "Sniverstty, raqulr- .— ------,lnce(J Mcretar|e5 with better t d typing a positions will provide foterasting work, excellent work environ- Oakland University Personnel Department Rochester, Michigan FE 8-7211 Bet. 8-12 1-5 PROOF OPERATOR Full time Immediate opening experienced preferred apply at the Birmingham Bloomfield Bank, 1025 East Maple, RoMI. Birmingham. An equal opportunity employer. RECEPTIONIST •' ' Part time. Weekends — evenings. Flexible hours. Dependability an absolute necessity. Woodslde Medical Rehabilitation 4 Convelescent. 845 S. Woodward. Pontiac. Apply RELIABLE MIDDLE^ AGE^ WOMAN transportation. OR 4-0311. sAcrItary. television, raoio Advertising Dept. Mature gel. Exc. hours, benefits. $400. Coll Hofon Adams. 3362471, Snalling S> Snail-Ins-________________________ SECRETARY. SHARh. WOULO YOU STEN0S AND TYPISTS SENIORS BOTH THE BEST TO YRb^^H HELP FILL UP Y-- VACATION COFFER I ANYWAY — COME ON IN. KELLY SERVICES Switchboard Operator (Organ Lk„ Lk. Oakland. area. Experience necessary, an hour. 272-5358. _____________ TYPIST AND GENERAL OFFICE work, must bo fast and accurate. Steady lob. Apply Osmun's, 51 N. Soglnow St.____ WAITRESS WANTED, FULL TIM®, Harbor Bor, Keego Harbor, 612-0320. ___ WAITRESS. GO-GO TYP’ET'BOB'S Restaurant. Keego Harbor. 682-9857 before 5, 682-7872 after 5._. WAITRESS WANTED. JOES CONEY Island, 1651 S. Telegraph. 338-8820. Villa Chaff Restaurant. 6150 M 59. West of Bog la Lika Rd. 887-9934. WANTED OFFICE GIRL ' SOME experience necessary to -type, call — 5-0571. Shop, 1280 S. Milford e south of M59. Help Wanted Female Help Wanted Female 7 WANTED: MATURE LADY TO WESTERN OAKLAND COUNTY School District needs secretaries In areas Of elementary and control office, typlns and shorthand Rocco's, Drayton Plains. ■ ■“"■ I(N TO cLIXir---- i reconditioning sl^ comb's 3123 Lopoor Rood. (M24 and 1-75). WOMAhi TO BE TRAINED AS beauty consultant for Individual demonstrations, age 18 to 5S, must be well groomed, pleasing personality, Coll for Interview. 332-6186.__________ WOMAN TO BABYSAT, MUST-HAVE Holp Wanted M. or F. 8 i Pontiac. For counter BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED II RH Positive 87.30 II RH Nog. With positive Wed. 1 p.m.-7 p.m. 939 W. Huron St., Eotmoro Ros- t hive maintenance references required, i apartment. Reply to EXPERIENCED SHORT ORDER LABORATORY TECHNICIAN ! Moncher, 651- HUDSON'S working part tlma days* or part lima avanlng*, visit our Employ-mant Of tie* now. Apply In Person Employment Office Basement » HUDSON'S * Pontioc Moll RELIABLE PARTY FOR ADDED INCOME FOR PART OR FULL TIME WORK WE SECURE LOCATIONS FOR TESTERS Mala or female, wanted for this area to service route for Sylvanla Si R.C.A. TV and radio tubos sold through our letoet i •mployment. To qi lave $1,747.50 to 81 foil immediately fc TUBE-O-MATIC ELECTRONICS CORP. >267 Natural Bridge Ave. Pine Lawn "“shoes . MEN'S CLOTHING HARDWARE and FINE JEWELRY HUDSON'S p Paid Holidays ] ^5 Many ether benefits Apply In person Employment Office Basamant HUDSON'S Pontiac Mall WINKELMAN'S OPENING SOON PONTIAC MALL INTERVIEWING DAliY MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 4:30 P.M. SOUTH END PONTIAC MALL WINKELMAN'S i Wantod M. or F. j Wantod M. er F. VICKERS 15 Mile and* Crooks Troy, Michigan Has immediate -openings for qualified KEY PUNCH OPERATORS Second^ shut. HI Liberal employei sistence program. REM. RAND EXPERIENCE REQUIRED High School graduates with recent Key Punch « Including Pension i Call 576-3411 far Appointment 8:15 A.M.-5 P.M. , Hn Equal Opportunity Employer \ ■ n THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JULY 11, 1967 C—7 » Wanted M. or F. | Sales Help, Male-Female 14 I AM LOOKING FOR A PERSON who hoi management ability, plan, to work hard and wishes a potential Income of f “ Call 335-4022. SHOULD YOU Make an employment change? 1 NOW IS THE TIME I Michigan Btll 2 EXPERIENCED REAL ESTATE . Salespeople to replac Vickers IS Mila and Crooks Troy, Michigan Has immediate openings for qualified Tab Machine Operators ■ second shift. 1-3 years experience data processing machine Of beral employee benetlts Including pension and educational Call 576-3411 for Appointment, 8:15 A.M.-5 P.M. An Equal Opportunity Employer Soles Help, Male-Female 8-A ION REAiL ESTATE CO. NEEDS 2 more salesman for Utica office. Exp. unnecessary, will train hoa- CAN YOU SELL? 1 ^"making Work Wonted Mole k-1 CARPENTER WORK OP kinds. OR 3-0516, ACtOUNTAfjT. OFFICE MANAGER, s. experience. FE 4-7629. Realtor’, MLS, 4900 W. - OR 44)358 - av EXPERIENCED CHAUFFEUR, / S work. 363-5445. LIGHT HAULING. AN 6 MGVING, ----- ind weekends. Call altar JgAfiSL LIGHT HAULING DONE REA- sonably. FE S-82»._ LIGHT KAULING.~HAND DIGGING, tnstructions-Schools RIDING DAY CAMP. RIDING AND swimming Instructions. Also stable management.' Klentner Riding AeeJZwu IMA UIIUp Dd 363-0009. Academy. UOQ Hlltar Rd. Work Wantod Male -YEAR-OLD, WILL thing, lender--- etc. Gas sti RELIABLE JOURNEYMAN MEAT- 11 Work Wanted Female ROUGH and CARPENTER. Want Ads Pay Off Fast BABY-SITTING 10:30 ataMfH Aluminum Bldg. Items l-A ALUMINUM—VINYL SIDING Awnings — Storm Windows . FHA - Joa Vallely - OL 1-6623 alcoa Aluminum siding | immediate Installation — Licensed] and bonded. Marcell Construction, PE 1-9251._ ALUMINUM SIDING, ROOFING IN-1 stalled^ ^by ^"^SuperH)^^ - ^ ^our Asphalt Paving roadways. Sams location since 1920. Also selling asphalt and sealer, awn Arbor Construction Co. MAple Excavating IpKI^ I. Plumbing & Heating Jon—FE 8-2555 j ALL CAST IRON SEWERS, WA-ter services. Condra. FE 8-0643. t BACKHOE, TRENCHING, FOOT-1 Larry'Lotan ^______________ 425-5433; Ing. Septic repairs. 624-1130._____t \ BULL DOZERS. DUMP TRUCKS, basamants. back tilling, sand-graval-ttc. Shelby': Rental Equipment WALLPAPER STJEAMERS RUG CLEANER-POWER SAWS 95S Joslyn_______ RENT ROTOTILLERST SEPTIC FIELDS, D... TRENCHING, DIGGINGS. Waterford Sawyer .Const, 11 Wanted Real Eitate NEED CASH? Moving out of state? Need casl settle dabts? Need cash to another home? Want cash ... your home? Caah for your equity? We will buy your homejhr BOY 11, WANTS JOB mxim. CHAIN LINK PENCES. INSTALLED UL 2-1748 I E L D S AND LAWN mowed. 335-3997. Apartments, Furnished 37 s. rate,. FE S-2724, , Pontiac area, 3330392. EXPERIENCED DAY WORKER, days week, preferably same hom< FE 5-4535. HOUSEWORK. NEED TRANSPOR-tatlon. 335-4251. RONING5 IN MY HOME — PON-tlac area. FE- IRONINGS DONE, S3 334-8059, mornings end eves._ IRONINGS, PICK-UP AND DELIV- IRONINGS. WEBSTER -CROFOOT GET OUT OF DEBT AVOID, GARNISHMENTS, REPOSSESSIONS. BAD CREDIT, HAR-RASSMENT, BANKRUPTCY AND __naged, organized progi_____ US CONSOLIDATE YOUR DEBTS WITH ONE LOW PAYMENT YOU CAN AFFORD. NO limit amount owed and number ol .. — tors. For those who realize, "YOU CANT BORROW YOURSELF OUT TV, II iwl : Lake^R MALL FARM OR WOODS WITH pond, tor small lake, or hunt CUB. Write BILL JiNNINGS, 37411 Grand River, Farmi«»w-MlChlgan or call 474-5900. to out down, 4234W88, FOR YOUR EQUITY, VA,____. OR OTHER. FOR QUICK ACTION CALL NOW. HAGSTROM REALTOR, OR 44)351 OR EVENINGS BEDROOM, ON LAKE ORION. 2-ROOM HOUSt, StO bfebOSIT, S25 par wWk, 4123745. ______ ____ BIRMINGHAM AREA — SMITH Street, 1 bedroom, S135 mo. Rat., call FE 3-7513 after S p.m. FREE RiKlT, SMALL NEW FURN-Ishad house, plus wages. B«t couple In exchange for part -BEDROOM APARTMENT. , ROOMS AND welcome*. $25 per dap.. Inquire at 1) ROOMS. LOWER. PRIVATE. NO drinkers. FE 2-9434.____ ROOMS AND BATH. BEAUti-futly decorated, carpeting, draperies, etc. No children sr pets. deposit. 474-158). 2 ROOMS IN PONTIAC. UfiElYltS turn. Deposit required 052-1975. 2 ROOMS, SINGLE QR 2 ADULTS. UPPER 5 ROOMS AND B A Sale Houses BEDROOMS, Rent H#use$,Jfurnished 39 l-BEDROOM, MODERN, ( north Poptlec area. Separata dining room, carpeted living room, full basement and . garage. No money down to qualified Gl or $400 on F HA" farms. - NORTH OF PONTIAC 3 bedroom ranch with carpeted living room, encloted breezeway, 2-car garage, situated on large lot with city water. Full price only $13,500. 3450 down on FHA terms. C. SCHUETT FE 3-7088 MA 3-0288 RANCH ON CASS LAKE. S125, 1 Pelham. 1-521-2054. ROOM, 2-BEDROOMS, GARAGE, basement, with lake privileges on Middle Straits Lake. $10,000. 343-7924. 5-BEDROOM HOME PLUS SEPA-rate Income, lake privileges. Out Orchard Leke Rd. 402-1040. rooms — Redecorated country near i Clarkston — Couple — 1 child — sioo sec. — $25 af 425-5405 or 625-5015. FURNISHED OR UNFURNISHED, bedroom home. Breezoway. 2 ca SMALL HOUSE, ELDERLY COU-pie, no children. No drinking. Working couple preferred. Call aft- 2 ROOM BASEMENT APARTMENT everything furnished, prlvati trance and bath suitable for wntown. No children or pets. 3! n brick, l’/i baths, gas h iment, $150. 673-4339. Rent Lake Cottages 41 CABIN AT GRAND MARAIS ON Lake Suoerior. $35 a week. OR 3-1421. ____________LEWISTON, SANDY beach, housekeeping cottages. Al-772-0106. LAKE FRONT, 2 BEDROOMS, MOD-— boat, safe beach. Off Round Rd. 9443 Mandon. 343-3139 or LAKE FRONT, 'GOOD BEACH Modern, clean, sleeps 6, Sand Pol: — near Caseville, week, month, i season, 105 w—*" ^ 3 ROOMS. WEST SIDE. NICELY ' private entrance and FE 2-0944. * Sl*«lly iSS1 3 ROOMS AND BATH ~iN LAKE k | r ' i Orion, completely furnished LAKE FRONT COTTAGES) SLEEPS 7, 20 mi. from Pontiac. 343-9304. garage, Farmington Twp Shown by appf. 474-2435. 10% DOWN NEW HOMES 'BUD" 'BIG" FAMILY HOME 4-bedroom split-level, exeallen neighborhood, extra large let, 2 car attached garage, paved drlw — Includes carpeting and drape In living room and dining room family room,with wall flreptaci 2W baths, gas hot water heal softener, calcinator. Intercom -large closets, fenced play are. GAYLORD JUDAH LAKE ESTATES. 3 bad- gage with low payments. Nice lot. Call MY 3-3021. FE 0-9693. LAKE FRONT 4 room aluminum ■ Fireplace, Drapes a * 5 foot lak" __ ___ terms. ( Y 2-2821, FE 0-9493. BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP Two (2) tip-top building site desirable Colonial Hllla S« vision, sewer and water, nice level, 94'x200' each, Priced $4,000 each. ■ NICHOLIE-HUDSON 49 Ml. Cleans offer 6 p.m. FE 2-3370 3-BEDROOM BRICK -BEDROOM COLONIAL, 2V4 baths, alumaview windows, 2d condition. 2 full baths. Car-Ivlng room and family size n. IOO'xUO' let. Terms can mi FHA plus closing costs. B. HALL REALTY 4549 Dixie Hwy. 9-9 Daily 625-4116 I, double lot, make a HANDY MAN SPECIAL • C. SCHUETT JFE 3-7088 MA 3-0288 home, 3-bedrooms sP___________„ room, 3 pc. bath, basement, gas furnace^ & water heater, alumjj tot. Needs decorating and minor „ repairs. Seller's equity $1,665.00, balance 035 monthly on land contract. Mixed neighborhood. e ti Paddock St. — Clark Real A Rare Opportunity igh^on 25. 332-0001 after * p.m. USED TVs .................... Color TVs ..................... Used refrigerators ............ Sweet's Radio and Appliance, ..... W. Huron___________________334-5477 A-I COMPLETE HOUSEFUL $295 Sofa, chair, 3 tables, 2 lamps, place bedroom, S-place dinette stove and refrigerator, *295. Term *3.25 week. Call Mr. Adams, F 4-0704. WORLD WIDE (next K mart). AJR CONDITIONER, POLAROID camera, stereo, color TV, many mlsc. Items. 330-1571_________ Slack wrought iron dinette set .with extra leaf, *50, 474-06*0. Slond MAHOGANY 4 P 1 eTce bedroom set. 1150. Easy electr' EASY TERMS FE 2-2150 WROUGHT IRON TABLE At Hg *45. 444-0440. Antiques BRONZE OR CHROME DINETTE tala, BRAND NEW. Large r-J email sin (round, drop-leaf, 1 tangular) tables In 3-, 5- and 7 PEARSON'S FURNITURE »)0 E. Pika FE 4-7— BRAND-NEW END AND COFFEE tables, S5.I5 aa. Little Joe's, — 2-4*42. ________________ BUNK BEDS Choice of IS stylos, trundle b Hi-Fi, TV l Radios CHEST OF DRAWERS (NEW) DAMAGE L> IN SHIPMENT bedrooms and 3 living room *07 aa., Little Joe's - FE 2 , DINETTE SET *30. DINING ROOM SET, REFRIGER- DOUBLE BOX SPRINGS AND MAT-tress, very clean. FE 0-1307. 6RYER, *35; WASHER, *25; APT. G. Harris, FE 12744.'____'___‘ ELECTRIC STOVE, *25, GAS STOVE er5'M»,e,^nmr Washer°P*40,r*G. Harris. FE 5-2761 Gas stove, double oven, ro- : tlsserle, griddle top. *75. 625-5589. °*45 wi00^ yrs. «'<* m « TUB ENCLOSURES, GLASS ONLY $25. G. A. Thompson. 700S M59 W. TV. PIANO, 1956 DESOTO. Call 334-9002. UTILITY tRAILER 5'X7', EXCEL-legtt ^condition $125. 55 So. Tos- 21" USED TV ~ Wollon TV, FE 2-2257 U E. Walton, cornet $270. 335-2679 after 4. <4 rotor $45. HX-20 1125. SX-100 . Hy-Galn 20 mtr. beam *45. 37 *225. SX-111 *130. WAtLTD. 8884. Fur Sole Miscellaneous 67 t-A ALUMINUM-VINYL SIDING Awnings, storm windows. For A quality "The Old Reliable Pioneer" no AUTO REPAIR GARAGE, SELLING i |»me nf * r^NKS OF TROPICAL FISH, lock, >30. 673-5332. ' CAST IRON SEWER PIPE. 99 cents per foot. No lead required. G. A. Thompson. 7005 M59 W. YEAR CRIB WITH LIKE~Ww Oiling tl 6.0 Tile -------- pieces, . — ... 959 PONTIAC CATALINA, *225 TOP condition; 1967 Montgomery Ward 4 h.p. roto-tiller, $125; 1966 12 1962 BOLAN TRACTOR, _______ ____ ANCHOR FENCES , HOUSEHOLD SPECIAL 1N0 M0NEY P0WN______ 0 A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OF ANTIQUE ..FURNITURE _ INC L Up- 1, 2 table I 7pi "x 12' rug Included. ' Ing old clocks,, oriental rugs, c tables*0?! St'^Brrmfnoham. P Tips and I AQUARIUM — 10 GALLON ST/ less steel lighted hood, filter. dresser, chest, full size bed with I and tropical fish. >20. EM 3-9078. Innerspring mattress and matching BASEMENT SALE TUES.-THURS. box spring and 2 vanity lamps. , ,g_6 pm exc buys, mlsc Items, piece dinette set with 4 chrome 1)S9 Dudley. Herrington Hills chairs and tabte. All tor *399. Your subdivision, off Bay Street. FE credit Is good at Wyman's. 5.3794. W) MAN I BUCKET SEATS FOR 1962 BONNE- FURNITURE CO. E 5-1501 HOLLYWOOD I Chest PS; Mahogar., ------- --- Pi _Lounge chair, $15. Call 673-5777. KIRBY SWEEPER EXCELLENT CONDITION—$50 FULLY GUARANTEED Kirby Service & Supply Co. 1617 DIXIE HWY. 674-2234 IMPORTED PERSIA c» St., FE 4-7881. CAFETERIA TABLES, FORMICA BLVD. SUPPLY 500 S. Blvd. E. FE 3-7081 CASE GARDEN TRACTORS, 10 | 12 horsepower, all auto. Sea DRAFTING BOARDS A Drayton. OR 3-9767. MAYTAG WRINGER WASHER. ^llL_67A*3702. MODERN 9 .....* SOFA, GOOCTl^H qirion. 363-6056. _ MOVING: MUST SELL LIKE-NEW drapesf $21 6824316. * ***'_ MUELLER OIL FURNACE 80.000 BTU, with 225 gallon fuel tank, good cond., FE 2-6719. NECCHI DELUXE AUTOMATIC Zlg Zag sewing machine — cabinet model — embroiders, blind hems, buttonholes, etc. 1963 model. Take over payments $5.90 PER M0. FOR 9 MOS. OR $53 CASH BAL. Guaranteed UNIVERSAL CO. FE 4-0905 NEW 1967 ZIG ZAG, | machines Hijlton Sewing Machine CO.__ NYLON SOFA, GOOD CONDITION, complete blond mahogany bed room set. Rees. 451-0685. ~pfaFf AUTOMATIC ZIG ZAG Sewing machine — deluxe fee- For The Finest In Top-Quality Merchandise Shop At Montgomery Ward Pontiac Mqll 5025 I 12, 13 or RUMMAGE SALE, 3303 &RAPTON. vi vii vara ana new mu, nil typewriters, adding machIMa drafting tablas, etc. Forbea, 45 Dixie, Drayton, OR >0717. 4‘x8‘x*t" particle board, S3.75 OO. 4'xBxM" partldo board, S4.95 oa. 1025 Oakland_______________FE 4-4595 THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE 111 W. LAWRENCE ST. Everything to moot vour no____ Clothing, Furniture. Appliance* Hand Tools—Machinery 68 • 1 METAL LATHE. V VAN TRAILERS, CAN BE USED on the road or Ideal for storage. Blvd. Supply 333-7081 500 S. Blvd. JR COMPRESSORS, LUBRICATION equipment, hydraulic lacks, steam cleaners, etc. Pontiac Motor Porta, 1014 ML damans St. FE 2-0106. WHITE LIMESTONE, C ____________ and 10-A stone, road gravel, mason sand, fill sand and topsoil. American Stone Products. MA ECTRIC TIRE aw, *200. 428-3254. | FORK lift truck 3,000 lb. *850. -■ _ Supply 333-7081 500 S. Blvd. E. LORRAINE CRANE ON RUBBER. 693-6840. _______________j Cameras • Service BELL 8i HOWELL SM >NE SMM MOVIE CAMERA .... ..-Plector, $85. 674-2709. NIKROMAT CAMERA, F-2 LENS, Ift *190. Call 343-0245. POLAROID CAMERA WITH AUTO-matlc wink light. Black and and colored, FE 8-8498. Musical Goods SIZE 120 BAS! CLARINET, 1 YEAR OLD, SUM. 474-2709.__________________ FENDER SUPER REVERB AMF Excellent condition $300. Gibson amp with 12" speaker. Only mos. old. $100. Elk amp with 12's and In excellent conditior *195. FE 2-28*6 or FE 2-5796 afte AIREDALE PUPPIES. PROTECT FENDER JAZZ BASS GUITAR, Ampeg B-15 amp. Must sell fast, 673-5488.________________________________ IF YOU WANT TO ! YOUR HmmilPML_______ - GRIN- NELL'S Pontiac Mall. 682-0421 AKC SIBERIAN HUSKIE PUPPIES. KRANICH AND 1968 MODEL THOMAS 'owner.r?)R'3-2030.* ° PLAYER PIANO AND ROLLS, SILVERTONE AMP, TWIN b and tremelo. OR D PROGRAMS FORMICA COVERED VANITY CAB-I net to receive 18" round basin, $44.95. G. A. Thompson, 7005 M59 , POKER TABLE USED PIANOS. CHOOSE FROM Uprights, grands, spinets, and consoles. Uprights frgm $49. ED CONN SPINET ORGAN Sale priced at *795 co. ON Seebaldt, oN V I $5 PER M0. OR $49 CASH BAL. UNIVERSAL rC0.8ran FE 4-0905 PINK LEFT-HAND GIBSON, FROST- REFRIGERATOR, Bronze, 2-door, No call, 363-5309. REGULAR SEWING , Ing Machine Co. REPOSSESSED Black and white TV's (3) All In Good working condition hUMMAGE SALE THUR.,FRL Set. July 13-14-15. » a.m.-5.30 p.m at till Brown Rd., off Joslyn. SINGER DIAL-A-MATIC Zlg zag sewing machine -r In modern walnut cabinet — Makes designs, appliques, buttonholes, etc. Repossessed. Pay off. $54 CASH OR $6 PER M0. PAYMENTS UNIVERSAlTo^FE 4-0905 SINGER ZIG ZAG Sewing machine. Cabinet model. Automatic "Dial" Model" makes blind hems, designs, .buttonholes, etc. r^^Vf- Or Payments Of $6 Per Mo. UNIVERSAL CO. FE 4-0905 SCRATCHED REFRIGERATORS Any R8**onabla Price LITTLE JOE'S ., ■- Ift MM2 GARAGE SALE — CLOTHING AND HOSPITAL BED, 2 ROLL-A-WAY beds and mattres M gmf ra-fa?|tf6j^^iaS HOT WATER HEATER. 30 G A WURLITZER AND THOMAS ORGANS AND PIANOS INSTRUCTIONS ANP INSTRUMENTS JACK HAGAN MUSIC 469 Elizabeth Lake Rd. 332-050 0192 Cooley Lake Rd. CAPE, EXCELLENT KENMORE WASHER, GOOD CON-dltion. 3 cycle, lint filter, 150. 5 custom made bar stools, hardwood with padded seats, $35. 682- KITCHEN CABINETS FOR. SALE dock, FE 5-6 large selection of cabinets with without lights, sliding doors. Ti rifle buys. Michigan Fluorescei 393 Orchard Lk., FE 4-8462.-36. wrapping — selling des mirrors and vanities. 1 glove ■682-0906. __________________________ MOWERS USED, 592 MT. CLEM-— Lawn Mower Service. OIL FURANCES, FAIR CONDITION suitable for temporary heat $15. Blvd. Supply_____. ■ FE 3-7001 OUTDOOR FURNITURE SALES — The old fashioned picnic table and lawn swing, 1461 N. Parry. FE PICNIC* TABLES '5 S “ c'ngs, outdoor omi is and lolces. Llba... ______ t. 3265 Pixie Hwy. OR 3-9474. PLASTIC WATER PIPE, per hundred, 1" tUj ” m", 810.01. G shower stall* with trim,. *39.95) 2bowl sink. *2.95; j— OUk *20 wtdjMd|m| RESALE STORE. CLOTHING, MISC-, — s. men’s work clothes. 294 Bald- R#TAINING WALLS AND BREAK-waters, complete Ittffallatlon*. Stee filling, Guinn Construction Co. 334- UNUSUAL BARGAINS IN PIANOS AND ORGANS From *139.95 and up Lowrey, Hammond, Conn and Gutbranson Used pianos from *25 and up , Cabel a Grlnne New Pier... . ... Shop early and sav< GALLAGHER'S 1710 So. Telegraph FE 4-0566 V, mile south Of Orchard Lake R' Tues., Wed., Thurs. at.-S p. Music Lasscns 71-A OfficB Equipment . OFFICE DESK Steel d large c____ hide-a-way ment, exc. condition, S40. 682-0725. PAPER FOR THERMOFAY . MA-chine, pies. Mels. 905 S. Vermont. Los ^Angeles, Calif; 90001 THERMO-FAX MACHINE, condition. 333-7741 " Store Equipment display units, glass snrives, a wim wire basket type shelves, National Cash Register, wrapping paper cutter, large table, sign maker kite, Elliot addressing Machine, floorlight fixtures. 363-2991 or 887-5101. SALE: DRtVE-IN EQUIP- ment, 10 spit Bar-B-Q, try»rs< neon sign, soda fountain, motor*, freezers, carburetor, paper prod-ucts. Fenton. 429-7504._____ Sporting Goods , 74 28' DOUGHBOY, COMPLETE ATTENTION GOLFERS t of Pow I 8> B.. Matched t golf dub* by 2 thru gutter. Bag am) ba piayed”with lust one season. Cali OR : . *135 GENE'S ARCHERY-714 W. HURON . BUY — SELL — TRADEj 5V Guns—720 W.. Huron—FE 74 CiUlNIVAL 1-A SAND AND GRAVEU ___________ areas delivered. 623-1367* Water* 1-A BLACK DIRT Stata tested; alto topsail* _______ and oraval* fill. Butldtra supplies. Bud Ballard. 6231-1410. * 394-0042* 117—10 yds. Delivered.” ”673.uT6 y woift. . BOB MARTIN FARM TOPSOIL, *15; FILL DIRf, tend, gravel, del. FE 4-8964, FE 6-9756. _________________ ILL, SAND, AND GRAVEL HAUL-Ing. Also finish grading. FE 4-5322. GOOD TOPSOIL AND BLACK E 5-0214. 391-3432, 391-1317. RUSS LEMON, SAND, GRAVEL — ^Wl, grading. FE 4-6862. WEEK OF JUNE IS. WE you. OR 3-8935 4-8 e, Pets—Hunting Dogs 79 POODLE CLIPPING, S3 BEAUTIFUL BLANKETED CHEST-nut^ Appaloosa gelding, 4 white broke to pleasure^'sacrlfice *450! 693-6355,----- DACHSHUND, PUPS, AKC, ESTELHEiM KENNELS, 391-1889. DOUBLE D RIDING STABLE HAS Open 7 day*, 8 1-A POODLE CLIPPING, 83-UP. I Sarasota. FE 8-8569. POODLES, NO PAPERS, ALSO HORSE .JAMMING AND SHOE- HORSES AND TACK FOR SALE or trade, 625-4597, or 634-3015. KLENTNER RIDING ACADEMY, and renting available. MATCHED PAIR OF BELGIAN POODLE CLIPPING, *3 UP, tlso miniature p o o d I a pups, wormed and shot*. FE 5-4095, Hoy—Grain—Feed I Jordan, Pontiac., WKS., AKC. ELK HOUNDS, GERMAN SHEP-herds, other puppies. Fish and supplies, dog trimming. Charlie's Pet Shop 332-8515. trained. 332-0901. I GERMAN SHEPHERDS, 10 WKS. Old. 628-2488. After 3, FE 8-3476. GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS WITH without papers. UL 2-1657. MALE SIAMESE SEALPOINT KIT-housebrokert, -12 weeks, $15, NORWEGIAN ELKHOUNDS, AKC POODLE GROOMING, S Romeo 752-9134. POODLE,. BEST black mlnl-toy. 3V broken. 332-5173. POODLE. STANDARD FEMALE, champion sired, exc. quality. FE 2-2903. __________________________ POODLE BEAUTY SALON Clippings—AKC Pups—Stud Servlet Pet Supplies—682-6401 or 682-0927 POODLES. CHOICE. AKC. Black ( ‘ REGISTERED COLLIE PUPPIES, 7 old. Lassie type, wormed, x>rary Immunization. 887-4313. EM 3-6824 or FE 2- RfGISTERED APRICOT I WEIMARANfR PUPPY 7 WEEKS Pet Supplies—Service 79-A EXQUISITE POODLE GROOMING b^ appointment only. 332-878$. OR EVERY FRIDAY ...... 7:30 P.l EVERY SATURDAY ... 7:30 P.l EVERY SUNDAY ...... 2:00 P.l Sporting Goods — All Types Door Prizes Every Aucllon Buy — Sell — Trade, Retail 7-day Consignments Welcome N-9287 Hartland Rd., Fenton Details her* on Thursday Parkins Sale Service Auctioneers Swartz Creek__________ 635-9400 STAN PERKINS-SALES-SERVICE Auctioneer Swartz creek_________ 435-9400 t & Supplies 82 POR SALE, 47 DIFFERENT I $60. OR >3496. Livestock CHESTNUT PONY ! man* and tail, 6 yr. ol pony maro, 1-9 yr. oil gelding horse. 363-0202. abt*. Romool 752-2047. By Diek Turner Mobile Homes Demos at a giant savings. Wi not b* knowingly undersold. ______ delivery up to 300 miles. Free PARKWOOD av*llabl# 'hOlK'PAS Open 9-9 7 days a wei MIDLAND TRAILER SALES 57 Dixie Hwy. 338-0772 10 Auburn Rd._____________852-3334 “Every time tight money loosens a little Mom buys 'something that makes Dad tighten it up again!” 83 Travel Trailers I ENGLISH OR FOR SALE 2 PONIES yr>Q0O9. broke. 4-wheel buggy* also 2-governors cart for pony. Call Dryden, 796-2285.___________ torses boarded OTS OF BALED ALFALFA AND Timothy hay at 35 cents in field. 2422 Hosner Rd.* 3 ml. east of Oxford. 628-1837. No Sunday sales* Farm Produce RED CURRANTS AND GOOSEBER- RED RESBERRIES FOR SALE Farm Equipment__________87 NOW IS THE TIME TO MAKE HAY! id IHC No. 46 PTO baler, $495. New IHC No. 16 side de New IHC No. 16 PTO chopper with corn head. S1595. MANY OTHERS COME IN NOW AND SAVE CLARK'S TRACTORS AND MA-chinery. 100 used traders, loaders, dozers, backhoes and trucks. Between Holly and Fenton. MA SPECIAL SALE ON WHEELH0RSE TRACTORS FE 4-1662 Pontiac_________ Travel Trailers electric, *400, Call 8S2-1942. ' 3,000 m AIRSTREAM LIGHTWEIGHT TRAVEL TRAILERS Since 1932. Guaranteed (or II1 Sea them and get a demons! tlon at Warner Trailer Sales, 3 W. Huron (plan to loin nn* Wally Biyam's exciting c APACHE CAMP TRAILERS ve up to $400 on brand new 19so camp trailers, over 15 models of new ana used camp trailers on display at all times. 8195 up. Open dally until 7 p.m., Saturday and Sunday until 5 p.m. Apache Factory Hometown Dealer. BILL COLLER, 1 mile east of Lapeer CENTURY YELLOWSTONE WHEEL CAMPER Visit our complete and beautiful 0 play of travel trailers and ti campers. A size and price to •very budget. TRAILER ACCESSORIES STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. I Highland (M59) ---- Rant Trailer, Space >, NATURAL GAS DON'T BE A (STAY AT HOME) FAMILY Get out end en|oy the outdoors in an Apache camper. The Rama-, da offers such standard equipment as comfortable sleeping- tor 8 people, cabinet' with and range. Ice box and a flMHP size dinette which converti easily Into an extra bed. At only 81,495. EVAN'S EQUIPMENT 6507 [Dixie Hwy. PICKUP COVERS. S245 UP. 10'6" cabcovers, 81,295 and up. T 8. R CAMPER MFG. CO. OAKLAND CAMPER lOpen for your Inspection KARIB0U KAMPER Tour-A-Home — Sleeps 6 Only 8895 Baldwin < Motorcycles 5-SPEED DUCATI Scrambler, 30 h.p., 240 lbs. Full price, *795, easy farm*. ANDERSON SALES 8. SERVICI 645 S. Telegraph_____FE >7 PHOFNIX AND WINNEBAGO CONVERTIBLES 4x8 sleepers MOTOR HOMES REESE AND DRAW-TITE HITCHES Sold and Installed HOWLAND SALES AND RENTALS 5255 Dixie Hwy.___ OR >1456 1965 250 DUCATI, S325. 1966 450 1965 HONDA 305, GOOD CONDITION - >350. Call 693-6423. 1965 HONDA SUPER 90, GOOD TRAVEL QUEEN CAMPERS MUM!IT FIBERGLASS CO"~|| (8"-27"-35" covers) MMdaaMNMMpLBilH FE 2-3989 rel Coach I no. , Holly ME 4-ly - Sunday - Travel With Quality Line Travel Trailers BOLES-AE RO-TRAVELMASTE R FROLIC-S KAMPER TRAVEL TRAILERS Your dealer for -LAYTON* CORSAIR ROB INHOOD* TALLY HO 20 new and used tellers in stock NEW SERVICE DEPT. Ellsworth Trailer Sales 6577 Dixie HWV. ________625-4400 89 k 50x12' NEW 2 BEDROOMS RICHARDSON-WINDSOR HOMETTE-UBERTY-HAMPTON COLONIAL MOBILE HOMES E 2-1657 ___________ 623-1310 pletely furnished, nice shape, practically new tire*. S8S5. Call 673 0x41 great lakes, 8x24 CABANA, Exc. condition. Skirt. Lake oriv. FE 369S5. . 335-5105, 10-3 f 1960 GREAT LAKES ...... ... nished or unfurnished. New carpeting. Exc., condition, on lake 5:30 FE 5-3200. . condition, on l 1965 RICHARDSON 12 X condition. 852-3891. DETROITER—KROPF Vacation Homes t. wide with large expanding ... rooms and large expanding living room only *2995.00. Free — livery In Michigan. Also S ft.. .. ft. and 12 ft. wldas at bargain i 10, 12/ 20 and 24 ft. > BOB HUTCHINSON, INC. 4301 Dixie Hwy. (U.S. 10) irayton Plains OR 3-12 XJ350 Telegraph R Open dally till I p. LEAVING STATE, MUST SEI_____ once, 1966 Champion, 52'xl2', no reas. offer for my equity refused. CAMPING Private lake, safe sandy beach. 16 flush toilets, hot and cold showers, fishing. Half mile south of Orton- LOOK AT THE REST THEN BUY ONE OF THE BEST WATERFORD MOBILE HOMES 6333 Highland Rd. Across from Pontiac Airport 6733600 McFaely Resort 627-3820 weekends MARLETTES ^AmariatRa .Baf|V light welghff'wi'nnebago Trailer. OXFORD TRAILER SALES V Indale dally. Models Uon* display' at' the now Cranberry Lake Mobile Home: Village. "Country Club living at it: best ” 9620 Highland Rd. (M59, tw< miles west of Williams Lake Rd.! 363-7511. Hours: Weekdays 12 to 8 p.m., Sun—r •- Town & Country Mobile Homes Proudly Presents . "The Westchester" See It today. ALSO FEATURING THE 12'x50 HOMECRAFT AT $3*995 DELIVERED AND SET UP > 24" GIRL'S BICYCLE, MM FE 5-600S 1 I Boots — Accessories ? SCOTT MOTOR* $85 TROJAN 22' 190 h.p. 50 hrs* MA 4-2134. 7 AQUA CATAMARAN SAIL BOAT Pontiac Mobil* Hi Rd. Near 1-75 and h Auto Accessories 91 TWO SNOW TIRES* 650 X 13 ON the rim* two regular 613 rim* like new. $50. 363*7059. on the Auto Service 93 1250 Oakland . Excel Paint and Bump, 1964 TRIUMPH $650 l YAMAHA 80CC* EXCELLENT 15' FIBERGLASS* 4 W SWIT2ERCRAFT. Js EVTR- 305 HONDA SCRAMBLER, t sell. 651-4428. 1966 HONDA 150 DREAM. LESS 1966 HONDA 160 SCRAMBLER. 2300 mi. $475. 394-0115. 1966 HONDA 160CC* GOOD CON- 1966 YAMAHA IDOCC* 852-2451 / payments, OR 3509S, weekdays,'Sat., Sun., all day Shell Service o 57 YAMAHX BIG BEAR ! bier, metalic red* 2 mo. ol condition* 8550. 673-9859 i BRIDGESTONE The lion hearted ones are here Street — Trail — Racers Complete parts and service Suitaco Royal Enfield, Hodaka Competition Cycles "* **’ DUCATI, 1966, 250 CC SCRAMBLER, h friendly Bafsonnei, 664-8872. MINI CYCLES; GO-CARTS HODAKA ACE 90 HELMETS AND ACCESSORIES. MG SALES & SERVICE 4667 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains ----Montcalm,__________Pontiac NEW 1967 50 CC Suzuki ammtftiHtt cc suzuk 60 CC Yamal _ . ____ ____ >0 CC Yamaha . USED 1965 90 CC Honda .. USED 1966 150 CC Suzuki . USED 1966 250 CC Suzuki . FREE HELMET WITH THE PURCHASE OF EACH NEW SUZUKI CYCLE. 50CC-250CC. Rup_p Mlnl-bikes aS low as $139.95. Complete line of cycle accessories. Take M-59 to W. Highland. Right on Hickory Ridge Rq. to Demode Rd. Left end follow signs to Dawson SALES AT TIPSIGO LAKE. Phone 629-2179. SALE - SALE! Ml used motorcycles marked down Buy now and save. Easy terms. ANDERSON SALES t SERVICE 1645 S, Telegraph , FE 37102 SEE THE NEW SUZUKI X-5 SCRAMBLER A FULL LINE OF ALL NEW, Suzuki Cycles & Accessories MG SALES and SERVICE Draytan Plains YAMAHAS ALL MODELS AVAILABLE IMMEDIATE DELIVERY K. & W. CYCLE SALES 8. SERVICE free pickup on all ma|or repair 16 Auburn . Utl (E. of Pontiac nr. Motercydas TROTWOOD BIG IN SAFETY — COMFORT — ECONOMY — INDEPENDENT WHEEL SUSPENSION JOHNSON'S Walton at Joslyn Boots — Accastariaq 97 JUST RECEIVED The famous 4-1 Sport boot by Grumman. While they lost — Stop GRAND RIVER BOAT SALES , MEMBER OF MMPA Wl CARRY THE FAMOUS Franklins—Crees Fans—Monitor Travel Trailers Holly Travel Coach 15230 Holly RdS^ JHotty.jVE 4-6771 WOLVERI Nt TRUCK C AMPERS and sleepers. New and used, >395 up. Also rentals. Jacks, Intercoms, telescoping, bumpei racks. Lowry Cf“ S. Hospital Rd., 1 Camper Sales. 1325 M0NICATTI Boats pnd Motors UTICA 731-0020 5250 AUBURN RD. (M59) Bicycles 96 A-1 BOYS, GlRLS, USED BIKES. TYPHOON BICYCLE, GLASS CRAFT OUTBOARD WOOD BOAT AND 1 FOOT LONE STAR BQAT, Horse outboard motor, Tee-N ' FIBERGLASS RUNABOUT* 35 horse Evinrude electric* very condition* $650. OR 3-9757. w $595. Call 682-0173. FIBERGLAS. 60-HORSEPOWER itor. 334-7782. . MOTOR, 1 LONE STAR FIBERGLASS, 18 t p" Evinrude, electric or trailer, $750. Call a FE 5-5316. FIBERGLASS RUNABOUT, e Scott elec., start, auto., bi convertible top, many extr. Ing $1250. AAA 32058. V CHRIS-CRAFT SPORTSMEN. 220 HP Gray Marina. Tandem trailer. 20* alum, cover. "lUgi Roy Ct„ Orchard Lk. I-A-BOUT, MARK 5 17' CHRIS CRAFT UTILITY, FULL er, convertible top and trail-105 H.P. Nice $950. Call 692- pald, $1,350. 674-06 "Xu lDnB...Star cruiser, includes 2 twin 35 " ~ Evinrude Electras, trailer, ac Good cond. 651-5628. 5 75 h.p. Evinrude n TSIHor *1295. USED 1964 15' f fiberglas runabout, speedo, seats, controls, battery Si 1964 40 h.p. Evinrude elec. $795. Glasspar & Steury fiberglas boats — Mirro Craft alum 1—1| — ski barge — Grumman c signs to DAWSON SALES AT TIP-SICO LAKE. Phone 629-2179. I, 8850. 879-6657. Harrington Has Everything! Just In! State Approved Swim Markers Dealer Distributor for LARSON Boats Specializing in Grumman Canoes and Fishing Boats Aluminum and Wood Docks Do it yourself—easy to install. We will show you how. HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS 1967 MERCURY 39, : BIG SALE AT TONY'S MARINE ON ALL BOATS, CANOES, PI TOONS AND SAIL BOATS. Your Johnson Dealer , 2695 Orchard Lk. Rd. Sylvan JOHNSON BOATS AND MOTORS CHRYSLER BOATS AND MOTORS DUO FIBERGLASS BOATS SILVERLINE-I-Oa Pontoons-Canoes-Prams-Sailboats Aluminum fishing boats Complete line of fishing tackla Scuba diving equipment Little League baseball supplies Hunting supplies and general sports Many fine used complete outfits of PAUL A. YOUNG, INC. 4030 Dixit Uwy.* Drayton Plains ft 4-0411 * • At !_oait Laic hd NEED-TRADE-INS it carry all Chrysler Lone Star, Glastron, MFG boats, and sail boats. Riviera cruiser pontoons, complete service of outboards — Mercury outboards 3.9 to 110 h.p. and Merc-Crulser authorized dealer. Cypress Gardens skis (all * ^RUMMAN CANOES DEALER Fiberglass canoes ........ $169 3.9 hTp. Mercury Outboard $169.95. Tradel Cliff Dreyer's Gun and Sports Center 15310 Holly Rd. ME 4-6771 Open Dally and Sunday* SAILBOAT, 14' JET AND TRAILER, molded Mahogany plywood, exc. condition, asking S525. 651-8993. SPECIAL ’ Carver boat with top-Skl bar-cover and 9a^S9. 75 h.p. John- Heavy °duty trailer with spue* wheel end tire. Only *1495. CRUISE-OUT, INC. . ______mm Jeeps 2. T elec. Pamco trailer .. 9' Troian. Sleeps 2. Toilet. Full complete ,...............$1295 22' Owens Express Cruiser 96 h.p. hardtop. Stand up head, trailer. Complete ..................... S169S 3' Troian Express Cruiser. Full Canvas. V-S engine. Newly painted. NIC# .................... S2395 MANY MORE USED BARGAINS -Outboard, speed boats, cruiser* - ,r-'tORIZEO — *■ — Airplanes LTE g____________ let starting July 11, AD . . ..lac Airport, we feel v offer you the best tralnlr faculties: Sign up n Wunttd Curs-Trucks 101 DOWNEY Oldsmobile Used Cars TOP DOLLAR FOR CLEAN USED CARS 3400 Elizabeth Lake Road 334-5V67 338-0331 EXTRA EXTRA Dollars Pa4 FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Car "'Check the re m get the best" at Averill Gale McAnnally's OSALES Oklahoma, California, Ttxas and parts watt. Top dollar paid! Shop mo last and get the best deal haralll 1304 BALDWIN FE S-4525 Pontiac State Bank HELP! stqta market. Top dollar paid. MANSFIELD AUTO SALES 1104 Baldwin Ava. FE >5900_______________FE 8-8825 STOP HERE LAST M&.M MOTOR SALES Naw at.pyr nawJfiSaflon _ __ we pay more lor sharp, Tate model cars. Corvettes needed. 1150 Oakland at Viaduct £ TOP $ PAID for oil sharp PONTIACS, AND CADILLACS. We are prepared to make you a better offer!! Ask for Bob Burns. WILSON CRISSMAN "TOP DOLLAR PAID" GLENN'S We would like to buy late model GM Cars or wilt accept trade-downs. Stop by today. FISCHER BUICK 544 S. WOODWARD 647-5600 Junk Can-Trucke ALWAYS ^BUYING JUNK^jC A R S COPPER, BRASS; ' iAOMTOiBI ------ ^K^jenerators, C Dlx- ■JNK CARS *m> TRUCK*. W«1 Used Aute-Truck Puts 162 sr1 c—io THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY,\JULY 11, 1967 Usad Auto-Truck Port* 102 CTO cam. 111 693-2857. After - 6 p.m, ,___________ FORD 352-390 ENGINE AND OTH-ari. 327 Chevy Bell housing, -*' mlsc. trlpowors-slleks. h&n teles. Oft 3-3200 Nbw and Used Truck* 103 19M 1-TON DODGE. EXCELLENT SISol "&2-7514. J__ _ 1959 CHEVY EL CAMINO PICK I —- -19 Chevy eng, FE 2-7172. » FORD % TONHEAVY DUTY springs, 35,000 ml., 2 owner truck. FE 8-6842.___. _ 1961 CMC SPECIAL 1-T0N PICKUP GMC Factory Branch Oakland e* Cess_FE 5-1 1FORD ECONO VAN. Foreign Cart 105 KING OF THE ROAD 12 Countries Cen I^Wrong $1798 GRIMALDI 900 OokTand**1 FE 5-9421 TOM RADEMACHER New and Usod Cart IM ALA C p: 2 TOPS, 327 EX- inty. ^ $1195.^ On^US 10 el Mil Now and Utod Cars 101 ADKINS AUTO SALES 738 OAKLAND ___ LL2'6230 __ ■' BANKRUPT? CREDIT PROBLEMS? We Can Finance You— Just Ceil 965 ELCAMINO Pickup V8, automatic, deli p., block. 463-5156. HAROLD TURNER 1963 DODGE D-200 CREW" CAB, JEEP, WITH SNOWPLOW *M50. efter 5. 628-3606. 1965 FORD 6 PICKUP. WjbE 1966 Chevy Vs ton Fleetside Pickup, with radio, healer, V only 11,000 miles. Blue and whll $ave HOMER HIGHT 1966 GMC Pickup AS Ion pickup, V-6, radio, heater fleetside. like newl Only— 81595 BILL FOX 1967 FORD RANGER built special tor ca..„— . -. radio, overload springs and shocks, Oversized 8 ply tires, rear step bumper, tinted glass, west coas mirrors, only 1900 ml., lust like new. 673-0677 before 6:30 p.m._ SPECIAL $1875 FULL PRICE New 1967 Jeep Universal ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP XM 3-4155 or EM 3-«l5< Auto Intoraace Marine 104 Mini-Cost Homeowners Ins. for quality horr Auto risk Insurance Mini-payment plan (Budgall BRUMMETT AGENCY Miracle Mile____ FE 661 Foreign Cart 115 19*9 AUSTIN HEALY, SHARP NO rust $393. Cell 682-0)73._ 1939 VW MICROBUS, 3300. CAN be seen at Wayne’s Super fjg| Ice, Cass Elizabeth and Cast 1962 MGA 1600. GOOD CONDITION. 8850. FE 4-9740.____ 1964 VOLKSWAGEN 4-SPlED, RADIO AND HEATER, WHITE-WALL TIRES, FULL PRICE $895. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Assume weekly payments ol 57M CALL CREDIT MGR.' Mr Pd at HAROLD TURNER FORD, 1965 OOL 1965 MG C0l0r' $795 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymoufh 0 $. Woodward________Ml 7 IMS CHEVY VAN, 950 /682-SS43 i CHRYSLER SUNBEAM \N " ‘ pndltlon. $900. 625-16 COME SEE OUR TOOTHLESS TIGERS Powered by Ford '67 SUNBEAM 1 (Tiger Demo) $2295 GRIMALDI Imported Car Co. ^900 Oakland FE 5-9421 PaMIly FUN SEEKERS '67 FIAT 1100 D $1498°00 GRIMALDI IMPORTED CAR CO. geo Oakland_________FE 5-94H 1966 VOLKSWAGEN, LOW MILEAGE, **“'* - —— ------ CHEVI 2735. ©at "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland_____ fe 5-4 FUN SEEKERS Join the IN-trowd '67 SPITFIRE Mark II $2099.00 GRIMALDI IMPORTED CAR CO. FE 5-9421 FOR THE BIG MAN .* LUXURY FIRST 767 MGB-GT $2988 GRIMALDI Imported Car Co. 900 Oakland FE 5-9421 VW CENTER 85 To Choose From —All Models— -AH Colors-—All Reconditioned— Autobahn Hbr«. I BIRMINGHAM DON'S UStD :ars Small Ad—3i*j Lot 50 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM We buy or will edliist your pa 677 M-24, Lk?5 Orion"* V* CMY 2-20 KELLEYS USED CARS 756 OAKLAND FE 2-5335______ NEED A G00D USED CAR???? See or Call "MAC" Mdnnes, "Cy" Owens - Oakland Chrysler, 724 Oakland. 355-9436._________ it® buick convertible, runs good, best otter. F EJf 2155._ 1962 BUICK CONVERTIBLE! condition. Nothing down end weekly payments as low es $7.24. KING AUTO SALES, M-59 and ELIZA' BET-H_LAKE ROAD. FE 8-4088. 1962 BUICK LaSabre ^2-do^r hardtop, ^adlo, haat-tlonally nice. ^ BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymoufh 60 S. Woodward Ml 7 3214 964 BUICK CONVEStiBLET Power steering. Auto. Snow tires In-eluded. Exc. condition. 363-4315. 964 BUICK SDECIA\ 2-DOOR WITH bucket seats, $1095 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham. Ml 4-2735, 1966 BUICK Electro 225 4 door hardtog^air^ condltlon-DN^I5 et^7/Vnterchenge” $3395 BILL FOX 1940 CADILLAC $400. Call 673-~CO NVERTIBLE h white a . $695 t i ELIZA- nothing $7.24 weekly peyme AUTO SALES, M-59 BETH LAKE ROAD. FE 964 CADILLAC SEDAN DeVILLE, 4-DOOR hardtop, full power, air-rondltlon, $2095 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham. M I E MODEL CAOilLACS ON HAND AT ALL TIMES JEROME MOTOR SALES Now Is The Time To Save On A Newer Model MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES 631 Oakland Ave. FE 4-4547 f954 CHEVY SflCK, GOOD tRANS-portatlon. $65. OR 3-8959. F56 CHEVY VEL AtR, $50. RUN nlng. 673-2785 after 6._ 1957 CHEVY 2-DOOR, AVERAGE 1959 CHEVY STATION WAGON, 6, ~ -Mo, auto., $135 — 334-3229.__ 4-DOOR BISCAYNE' CHEVY. I960 CORVETTE. 2 TOPS, ffl (Condition. FE 4-7684. _ 61 CHEVY CONVERTIBLE. FULfc power. Best offer. 332-0287. _ '62 CORVETTE 340, 4-SPEED, 2 tops, $1395. OR 3J018._ 1962 CHEVROLET NOVA CONVERT-ible $495 with nothing down and weekly payments of $3.12. KING AUTO SALES, M-59 and Elizabeth LAKE RD. FE 8-4088. 162 CHEVY II CONVERTIBLE, $595 at „ MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham. Ml 4-2735._ 1962 CHEVY Sedan ranjg^ aH ^financing. Call Mr. Da Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM Just east of Oakland_ fil CORVETTE, 327, GOOD SHAPE best oiler over $1,250. 628-19,” M 1962 CHEVY pREENBR'lAR 9 963 CHEVROLET STATION WAGON, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND HEATER, WHITEWALL — | 1963 CHEVY II NOVA ] Ve handle and arrange all fihar .ng. Call Mr. Dan at FE 8-4071. Capitol Auto tlSev e«c. condition. Mi 4-4570 el 1965 chevy 2 Boor auto!! i full price $995 no money down end $11.15 per week. Standard Auto. »t "A BETTER DEAL*' at: John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ave._______FE 5-4101 1965 CORVAIR, 2-DOOR HARl t6>, automatic $1395 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham. Ml 4-2735. 1965 CHEVY’ $1,000, Call 651-0245 between 6-9 p.m. 1966 MONZA J-DOOR AUTOMATIC, $1595 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham. Ml 4-2735. 1966 CHEVY IMPALA T - ^DOOR air conditioning. Burgundy with black Interior. $2095. VANDEPUTTE BUICK-0PEL 1966 CHEVY IMPALA V-S LOW ml. exc. condition. Best otter. 335- 966 IMPALA, 396~2-bb6R7>OWER, iow ml.^exc.^ond.. 625-4732. 966 MALIBU HARDTOP. "W I T H maroon finish, V8, automatic.^ pow- warranty.,$^895neW ' Autobahn ~2~DOOR HARD- MIKE SAVOIE Birmingham's New CHEVROLET DEALER 1104 S. Woodward Ml 4-273S 1954 CHRYSLER 4-DOOR," 8-CYLIN- der. Full power. 625-4189._ 1964 CHRYSLER 300, 4 DOOR hardtop, all power, lake over pay- New and Usad Cara !MARMADUKE By Anderson and Leeming New and Usad Cara 106 Get "A BETTER John McAuliffe Ford | Oakland Ave._________FE 5-4101 FOR THOSE WHO HAVE CREDI ~“■jlems. get reestablished again LUCKY AUTO 1940 W$ Wide Track Ff 4-1006 or FE 3-7854 Pretty Ponies 1965 8, 1966 MUSTANGS SEVERAL USED MUSTANGS TO CHOOSE FROM CONVERTIBLES HARDTOPS 2 PLUS 2's FULL EQUIPMENT Priced From $1295 As Low As $39 Down And $39 Per Month HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM__Ml 4-7500 ►65 T-BIRD WITH FACTORY AIR, and priced at only $2495. BOB BORST LINCOLN • MERCURY SALES. “Gangway! We’re movin’ our clubhouse * to Ronnie’s backyard!” New and Used Cars MERCURY 'ARK LANE CON-n automatic, radio, steering and brakes, reclining seats. et "A BETTER DEAL" a John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 965 MERCURY COMMUTER STA- tion wagon, $3~ * --- " ments. 335-3674. 1965 FALCON 2 DOOR. AUJOMAT-BORST SALES . ____ 965 T-BIRD LANDAU beautiful champagne fin black nylon top, full po factory air conditioning, looking for top quality , . market price — See thl $2,588 full price, $88 don Get "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford ) Oakland Ava.____ FE 5-4101 Kessler-Hahn CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 963 DODGE POLARA HAROTOP, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND HEATER, WHITE- HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM . $2295 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymoufh O S. Woodward___Ml 7-33 KESSLER'S DODGE CARS AND TRUCKS Sales and Service mm pa 8-1400 5 FORD GALAXIE 5 e» "A BETTER DEAL" at{ John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ave. _. FE 5-4101 MUSTANG HARDTOP, HIGH FORD STREET ROADSTER. 1 FORD, - NEEDS OIL PUMP kes. FE 5-3549 before 3. I FA .CON STATION WAGOft, . Automatic, i price $395. /’■(■■MR 13 Dixie Hwy. FE 8-0159. TOM FtADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 16 MERCURY MONTEREY HARD-with automatic, radio, 7 r steering, brakes, solid >et "A BETTER DEAL" at John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ave._____FE 5-4101 BEEN BANKRUPT? BAD CREDIT: NEED A CAR? Call FE 8-4088 anc 1959 OLDS POWER STEERING, BEEN BANKRUPT? BAD CREDIT: “-ED A CAR? Call FE 8-4088 anc _____for Mr. White. King.,, 1966 OLDS 88, VERY CLEAN, $2100. Opdykc Hardware. FE 8-6686. tOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1966 OLDS Dynamic 88 4 d 1966 OLDS SUBURBAN OLDS HOME OF Quality One-Owner Birmingham Trades AT LOWEST PRICES 63515* woodward __ 647-' I966“0L0S "442" HARDTOP Wl 966 MUSTANG 2-OR. HARDTOP. malic, radio, whitewall tires, sharp and priced to sell ROSE RAMBLER SALES, UNION LAKE. EM 3-4155. JACK LONG FORD SALES Rochester^ Newest ^Ford Dealer 963^GMC SUBURBAN WAGON, t ■mwer hr*^e|'ha*J’’pm I LINCOLN CONTINENTAL SE- SHARP 1951 MERCURY, S -N-MERCURY SALES. 479 _5-507T.___ STAR AUTO WE FINANCE LOW WEEKLY PAYMENTS '62 Ford Convertible $497 '63 Comet Convertible $597 '59 T-Bird . ............$497 '62 Pontiac Hardtop . $697 63 Chevy V-8 Stick . .$697 63 Chevy Convertible $497 '63 Porttiac Wagon . $897 '61 Mercury Sedan ....$297 m - ‘ $297 $597 1962 COMET S-22, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO HEATER, WHITEWALL Tl------ FTnir PRICE $595. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume weakly payments of $5.92. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks al HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. '62 Rambler Sedan . '64 Corvair 312 w: Montcalm, fE 8-4071 EASY CREDIT (Just east of Oakland) ARRANGEMENTS TOM RADEMACHER * 962 OAKLAND AVE. CHEVY-OLDS 1963 CHEVY Impale 4 door hard- , FE 8-9661’ . top; with V8, automatic, power steering, brakes, air conditioning. 1943 GALAXIE 500 2-DOOR. 8-automatic $795 at MIKE SAVOIE whltewaUs, only $1295.^On US 10! CHEVROLET, Birmingham. Ml 1903 IMPALA CONVERTiBLtrcON. sole, bucket seats. 052-4101. 4-2735. 11963 FORD STICK SHIFT. FULL 1964 CHEVROLET 251 Oakland. FE 8-4079. steering, rack. 3 COMET. CLEAN. RECENTLY verhauled. 678-2161 after 5:30. 1964 MERCURY HARDTOP, AUtO-MATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES, FULL PRICE $1195. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume weekly payments of S7.92 CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, ‘ 4-7500. VALIANT CONVERTIBLE, PLYMOUTH FURY STATION 1965 PLYMOUTH 4 DOOR, Wl V8, automatic, radio, heater, conditioning. Really a fantastic b at Only $1388 Full Price^with I "It only takes a minute" to Get "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Aye. , FE 5-4 HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-751 SAVOIE CHEVROLET, 1966 PLYMOUTH jry II wagon. Radio, heater, matlc with power, low mill vacation apec^l tor^only. BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymoufh 3 S. Woodward Ml 7 THE NEW AUDETTE PONTIAC ’ NOW SERVING Troy--Pontiac—Birmingham Aral 850 Maple, across from Berz Alroi 642-8600 HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-7500 1964 IMPALA 4 OOOR HARDTpP. 1964 CHEVY IMPALA hardtop. Auto. Powe brakes. Tilt wheel. P 332-5410. T-BIRD 1963 CONVERTIBLE. EX eeiient condition. Full power. Original Owner. MA 6-6620. , i 1963'FORD 4-DOOR SEDAN. V-8, AUTOMATIC, REAL CLEAN. $695. COOPER'S AUTO SALES 874-2257 4278 Dixie Drayton Plains I FALCON STATION WAGON, SALES, M • S9 and ELIZABETH LAKE RO. FE 3-4088. 1964 FORD 2-DOOR. AUTOMATIC, 4 FORD, 2-OOOR, 6-CYL. I ew tires, runs and took iew. 6730477 before 6:30. .. ------ 2-DOOR 8895 AT MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET. Blr- _________________________ mlngham. AM 4-2735. SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Blrming- 1964 FORD 2-OOOR, 8 — AUTO- i ---- -----------f M|KE sa. W4 IMPALA CONVERTIBLE, AU--power $1495 at MIKE §VPr>l »>—>— I • I .CORVAIR 2-DOOR SEDAN, i 10 sett. ROSE RAMBLER] SALES, UNION LAKE, EM 3^155. 1*1 Wtata* CONVERTIBLE. "4-1 VO IE r cIievroSt,* Birmingham. BEATTIE FORD 1965 Ford^ , 1964 Ford Galaxie 2-Door 500 with V-8, s"ck- 0nlv~$995 1963 Ford' j automatic, radio, heater. Only $1195 1964 Dodge 1 Galaxie 500—4 door sedan, with V8, automatic, power steering, °"'y_ ’ $109$ 1964 Buick 4-speed, dual ^wheels, - and will maka a good wrecker unltl Only $1195 1963 Chevy Station Wagon. V-8* automatic* er^Only— $1195 radio* heater. Only— $995 1965 Mustang 2-Door Hardtop with 42 Ford Gall S2 Chevy Sta. Wagon •it7... 59 Bonneville Hardtop $499 . '64 Corvair Monza Coupe 9 HALF-DOZEN CARS AT $99 EJ 0PDYKE MOTORS 2230 Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke FE 8-9237______________FE 8-1 1961 T E M P E ST. SHARP B4 blue. A real bargain at only $149. MARVEL MOTORS, 251 Oakland radio, alum! whac . Exc. cond. FE 1964 PONTIAC 9 PASSENGER WAG-on, rack, full power, sharp. $1,550. OR 3-0691, 1964' BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE. AUTOmanc, vrrr run price. LOCKY AUTO 1965 BONNEVILLE. GOOD CONDI-tion. Rtasonabla. 608-5449, Evas. 1965 PONTIAC CATALINA CON-VERTIBLE, , automatic with power $1695 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEV-ROLET, Birmingham. Ml 4-2735. • 1965 PONTIAC CATALINA :ON- ; PONTIAC CATALINA TEN-ra, 421 H.O. 4-speed, tow bar l?y clean*' runs "for S3S' ^ New gild Used Cars 106 REPOSSESSIONS New and Used. Cara 106 1964 RAMBLER STATION WAGON. 6-cyl. stick, S597 full price. LUCKY AUTO I FINANCE REASONABLE! ' H Rambler and f63 Fiat .. $97 uj 3 '58 Cadillacs Full Power . $291 “5 Ford and others .... $97 ur Chevys 59-61 and Wgns, 5 VW $395 & takr ayas Dodge -nd . .. _ _ ____ ECONOMY USED CARS r payments. 1965 RAMBLER^ $1395 'BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth 860 S. Woodward ____Ml 7-3214 OVER 30_ 1967 R AMBLER^ _ LtJCKY auto 1966 PONTIAC DEMO'S | m.a, xi.ono All with full fae-i power steering 1966 TEMPEST 2 DOOR HARD- er?' new V?ir*sl 0,meta'nic green, 100 per cent warranty. $1995. Autobahn v* 1nffi°Nor?h'of^ Telegraph 1765 S. Telegraph_Ft 8-4531 HAUPT PONTIAC ewalls. Only—$795 1962 PONTIAC 4 SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICK 055 S. ROCHESTER RD. 651-5500 961 PONTIAC STAR CHIEF, door, hardtop, hydramatic, powi steering and brakes, 1 owner, re. good3 mechanically, only $475. 27! Z#n'.erWi:h,,t 1962 PONTIAC. 2-DOOR HARDTOP. LUCKY AUTO 1962 PONTIAC, CAT ALINA, 4-DOOR - Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM Just East of Oakland TEMPEST, 1942, 4-CYLINDER, 12 TEMPEST STATION WAGON, 2 PONTIAC, EXTRA CLEAN ■ow mileage. S750. 674-3840, 3 PONTIAC STAR CHIEF, REAL 1963 TEMPEST 4-DOOR, mafic/ $795 at MIKE S: CHEVROLET, Birmingham Ramblerville i USA 11963 RAMBLER WAGON $895 1964 OLDS 4 DOOR SEDAN Midnight blue beauty 1962 RENAULT Real transportation special 1963 LaAAANS. CAM. QUAD, RE-S9Mb'or3best*offer°33^55h' S,iC,(S' 1963^ PONTIAC 2-DOOR HARDTOP, 1965 PLYMOUTH I r a n s., power steering, Automatic. V-8 quoise with matching interior. $995 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth . Woodward________Ml 7-3214 OR 1965 PONTIAC CATALINA. K>r sedan, all power, good rub-, one owner, low mileage, call 1964 BONNEVILLE 4-DOOR HARD- COOPER'S AUTO SALES 4728 Dixie Dray $1125; 1965 RAMBLER AMERICAN j ■ $1050 1966 FORD FAIRLANE $1175 VILLAGE j RAMBLER j 666 S. Woodward Ave. | BIRMINGHAM $1595 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE IWrfiSmr ---- -Top Quality Used Cars- $1045 1964 FORD Fairlane 500 Wagon With V-8, automatic, power steering, brakes. Vacation special at only — $1095 1963 CHEVY Impale Wagon, with V-8. auto-matifc, power steering, chrome/ rack, whitewalls, radio. Only— 1964 OLDS 98 4-Door Hardtop. V-8, automatic, power steering, brakes, windows 1965 MUSTANG 2-Door Hardtop. V-8, automatic, radio, whltawalli. Only— $1495 1966 FORD Galaxie 2-Door Hardtop with v-8, automatic, power steering and brakes, radio, heater, white-walls. Still in warranty with only 8/000 miles. $1895 1965 COMET- 404 2-Door Sedan with Y-S, automatic, whitewalls and radio, $1045 1963 T-BIRD 2-Deor Hardtop Landau Only— $1295 1965 DODGE Polara 2-Door Hardto black finish, white I steering and brakes, matlc, radio, whitewalls. Only— $1495 1965 DODGE Polara Convertible. V-8, bulo-rhatic, power steering, brakes end windows, tow mileage. Only $1545 1965 VW 2-Door with whitewalls, radio and real low mileage. Lika newl Only—' $1195 OAKLAND. Chrysler - Plymouth 724 OAKLAND AVE. FE 5-9436 HI-PERFORMANCE 4-SPEED SALE — Spot Delivery— Full ASKING PRICE - $1595 1965 TEMPEST LeMons 1965 PLYMOUTH Sport Fury ' ( 2-Door Hardtop us--, oood(es f. $95 down. FUII ASKING PRICE - ■ ’ $1395 1964 CHEVY Super Sport 2-Door Hardtop full factory equipment. Showroom condition. 4:speed. With c own. Full ASKING PRICE - « red# with $95 down. Full ASKING PRICE - $1095 No Payments Till September, 1967 - > SPARTAN DODGE 855 Oakland FE 8-1122 THE HEART OF OUR BUSINESS IS THE SATISFACTION OP OUR CUSTOMERS 1965 CHEVROLET 1964 FORD $1695 j Fairlane 500. 2-doOr hardtop. ' 1966 TEMPEST $1195 rage-klpt beauty! 1963 PONTIAC radio, heater. A ge $1795 1965 CHEVROLET^ J ver steering. Needs a $ 695 1964 CHEVELLE ^ ^ ^ j $1595 1965 MERCURY^ teauty with V-8, auto- $1295 1963 0LDSM0BILEa i 1 $1395 1963’/2 FORD lop. Automatic, power $1095 1965 CHRYSLER i"er^Gorgeous.390 \ $ 995 powe/steering^md Sr'aM^N. iw °car awaVranty?n'n^. $2195 LINCOLN-MERCURY 1250 Oakland , 333-7863 - HOW'D THE OLE CAR MAKE-OUT ON THE 4th Not So Good? Then Let Us Trade You A BETTER ONE! 1964 CATALINA Sedan^ |v^ ^ .. ( ... *.. $U95 1962 FORD Galaxie . ^ • t 1964 OLDS Hardtop ..................................$1295 2-Door with radio, heaters whitewalls, black with a white interior. 1964 CADILLAC Hardtop .............................$2595 Fleetwood, with full power, and silver glaze, radio, oversized whitewalls. Extra sharp! Air conditioning. 1963 RAMBLER^ Classic ^ - g;. ■wh|te;a||j' $795 1963 RAMBLER Wagon ................. .........., $ 895 Classic with 6-cyllnder engine, automatic, whitewalls, radio, haater. Burgunidy finish. 1965 RAMBLER Classic ....................... ..$1595 770 2-door hardtop, with radio, heater, whitewalls, automatic, V-8, power steering, brakes. Factory air conditioning. 1962 CORVAIR MONZA .................................$ 695 Sports Coupe. Whitewalls, radio, healer, 4-speed, bucket teats, blue 1964 CHEVY Impala .......... ............. .$1495 2-Door Hardtop with V-8, automatic, power steering and brakes, radio,,heater and whitewalls. Extra Super Beautiful!! P0NTIAC-R AMBLER Opan Daily 'Til 9 P.M. On M24 In Orion MY 3-6266 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 11, 1967 C—U -Television Programs— Program* fumishod by stations listod in this column ans Subjoct to change without notice Channel,: 2-WJWC-TV, 4-WWJ-TV, 7-WXYZ-TV. 9-CKIW-TV, 30-WIQD-TV. 36-WTVS TONIGHT 6:00 (2) (4) News (C) (7) Movie: “The Giant Claw” (1967) Jeff Morrow, Mara Corday. (R) (SO) Superman (R) (C) (56) Mfsterogers 6:15 (56) Children’s Hour 6:30 (2) News—Cronkite (C) (4) News—Huntley, Brink-ley (C) (9) Flintstones (R) (C) (56) What’s New 7:00 (2) Truth or Consequences (C) (4) (Special) All-Star Baseball Game—American League vs. N a t i o n a League. (C) (0) Bat Masterson (R) (50) Munsters (R) (56) Spectrum 7:30 (2) Daktari — The step TV Features ALL-STAR p.m. (4) SPOTLIGHT. 8:30 p.n SUMMER CITY, 10 p.r IN THE i. (2) ‘KHRUSHCHEV IN EXILE,’ 10 p.m. (4) CBS NEWS SPECIAL, 10:30 p.m. (2) hunts for Clarence whose blood is needed to save a dying cub. (R) (C) (7) Combat — Sgt. Saunders is trapped behind enemy lines after escaping from a POW camp. (R) (C) (9) Secret Agent—A colleague is held prisoner in a - Communist embassy. (R) (50) Make Room for Daddy. (R) (56) Eric Hoffer 0:00 (50) New Breed—A sniper has a psychotic hatred for Catholic Church. (R) (56) Changing World — A report on the International Indian Ocean Expedition. 1:30 (2) Spotlight—Shelly Berman, Shani Wallis and Engelbert Humperdinck are featured. (C). (7) Invaders — Aliens blackmail David’s girlfriend. (R) (C) (9) In Person 9:00 (9) Spotlight On! (50) Movie: “God Is My / ' Co-Pilot” (1945) Exploits of the Flying ’ngei*s." Dennis Morgan, Dane Clark, Raymond Massey. (R) (56) Turn of the Century 0:30 (2) Petticoat Junction -The son of a temperance lecturer runs away from home. (R) (C) (7) Peyton Place (C) (56) Circus! 10:00 (2) (Special) Summer in the City—A look at young Detroit’s fun spots. (C) (4) NBC News Special — “Khrushchev in Exile — His Opinions and Revelations Today” presents the lonely life and political opinions of a world leader banished to oblivion. Films show Khrushchev’s early life and rise to power. (C) (7) Fugitive—A professor has found the one-armed man, but the professor’s wife recognizes Kimble. (R) (C) (9) Expo This Week (C) (56) Art and Man 10:30 (2) CBS News Special — An analysis of the liberal, moderate and conservative factions, of the GOP party at the gubernatorial level. (C) (9) Inside Quebec 11:00 (2) (4) (7) News (C) (9) News (50) Joe Pyne (C) 11:30 (2) M o v i e: “The Man With a Cloak” (1951) Joseph C o 11 e n, ....Stanwyck: .(R> (4) Johnny Carson (C) (7) Joey Bishop (C) (9) Movie: “Lady Godiva Rides Again” (English, 1947) Diana Dors, Kay " Kendall. (R) 1,:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) Untouchables (R (9) Window on the World 1:30 (2) (4) News (C) 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (9) People in Conflict 8:30 (7) Movie: “Say One for Me” (1959) Bing Crosby, Debbie Reynolds. (C) (9) Take 30 9:00 (2) Merv Griffin (4) Living (C) (9) Romper Room 9:55 (4) News (C) 10:00 (4) Snap Judgment (C) (7) Girl Talk (9) Hawkeye (R) 10:25 (4) News 10:30 (2) Beverly Hillbillies (R) (4) Concentration (C) (7) Dateline (9) Hercules (50) Yoga for Health 10:55 (7) Children’s Doctor (C) 11:00 (2) Andy of Mayberry (R) . (4) Personality (C) (7) Supermarket Sweep (C) (9) Sunshine Canada (50) Dlckory Doc (C) 11:30 (2) Dick Van Dyke (R) (4) Hollywood Squares (C) (7) Family Game . (9) Luncheon Date in Connecticut” (1945) Barbara Stanwyck, Dennis Morgan (R) 12:45 (2) Guiding Light (C) 12:55 (4) News (C) 1:00 (2) Love of Life (C) (4) Match Game (C) (7) Fugitive (R) 1:25 (2) Jackie Crompton (C) 1:30 (2) As the World Turns (C) , ' (4) Let’s Make a Deal (C) 1:55 (4) News (C) 2:00 (2) Password (C) (4) Days of Our Lives (C) (7) Newlywed Game (C) 2:30 (2) House Party (C) (4) Doctors (C) (7) Dream Girl (C) (50) Love That Bob (R) 2:55 (7) News (C) (9) News 3:00 (2) To Tell the Truth (C) (4) Another World (C) -(7) General Hospital (50) Topper (R) (9) Matches and Mates (C) 3:15 (56) Mathematics 17 3:25 (2) News (C) . 3:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) You Don’t Say. (C) (7) Dark Shadows (9) Swingin’ Time (50) Capt. Detroit (C) 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) Bozo the Clown (C) (7) Dating Game 4:30 (2) Mike Douglas (C) (7) One Step Beyond (9) Fun House (C) 4:55 (4) Eliot’s Almanac 5:00 (4) George Pierrot — “East Africa Safari” (C) (7) News (C) (9) Huckleberry Hound tC) (50) Alvin (C) 5:30 (7) News — Jennings (C). (9) Stagecoach West (50) Little Rascals (R) 5:45 (56) Friendly Giant TOMORROW AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) News (C) (4) Jeopardy (C) (7) Everybody’s Talking (9) Communicate (50) Dialing for Dollars 12:25 (2) News (C) 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (C) (4) Eye Guess (C) (7) Donna Reed (R) (9) Movie: “The Despa-rado” (1954) Wayne Mor-1 ris, Beverly Garland. (R! (50) Movie: “Christmas TOMORROW MORNING 6:15 (2) On the Farm Scene 6:20 (2) News (C) 6:30 (2) Spectrum " (4) Classroom (7) Seven Seas (C) 7:00 (2) Woodrow the Woodsman (Cj (4) Today (C) (7) Morning Show ' 7:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry Go-v Round Court Upholds Execution Stay SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - A U.S. Court of Appeals refused to interfere with a temporary ban on executions in California, at least temporarly sparing the lives of 58 condemned men. including one scheduled to die today. Hundreds Escape Injury as Storms Hit Kentucky Fair BOWLING GREEN, Ky. (AP) - A severe thunderstorm accompanied by winds estimated at 75 miljes an hour swept over Southern Kentucky Fair Monday night. A large tent was blown down but scores of persons in it escaped serious injury. Twelve persons were hospitalized but released later. None was ously hurt. About 1,500 persons were at the scene when the storm hit. One man in a small tent housing a food concession said he “was thrown around like a cork on a fishing line.” The Weather Bureau flight service at the city-county airport recorded 1.1 inches of rainfall in 28 minutes. 2 Senators OK Allowance Hike WASHINGTON (AP) - Michigan’s two U.S. senators, Republican Robert P. Griffin and Democrat Philip A. Hart, both voted for an amendment Monday to increase allowances for staff help by $23,400 for each senator. The amendment, which _ 48-31, is part of a $275-million appropriations bill to finance the operation of Congress and related agencies during the fiscal year that began July 1. Mixture Anawar f Pr«vtou» Russia 35 Manifest derision 38 Levantine S Pamper «£&^ S Mournful sound 38 ACROSS 1 Tenth of » U.s. cent 14 Gaelic 15 Close IS Hail! 17 Lock of hair protective > covering 41 Important metal 42 Artist’s frame 47 MB_ 49 Father (familiar) | liSrffi SksU. ' 5BKBSJ ??StygejnafcrieiMthlt -Nightclub singer Lena Storm his knee.’ did her usual leap into a customer’s lap, snuggled up close sang into his ear: “If you love me.” mMimiekers «siw» ™'»i »» 26 Natural fat « fftorSfl home ”?equ r?* 28 Opposed to lee 56 19 Simulatio MS.) DOWN 20 Patriotic 29 Consumed food 1 Regards with 23 Style of type 30 Three-toed attention (print.) sloths 2 Fancy 25 Placard 31 Southern hero 3 Andean 27 Fetid air 32 Obtained ruminants 28 Droops 33 Twinkle 4 Brythonic god 33 Temporary Encountered 37 Pirates,, for 9 Makes a speech 10 Fall flowers 2 r~ r~ 5” 6 7 12 16 15 16 18 46 a 26 31 3T 34 38 41 4T 46 61 52 5r 55 Nine days later the customer, Richard Taylor, is still hobbling around on crutches, his left knee stiff and sore. His lawyers have written to the Gaiety Bar that Taylor can’t go to work as bus driver. Taylor, 45, joined the act ati the Gaiety when Miss Storm called for a volunteer to join her im stage. ST 56 56 11 Buddy Hackett Going West in Wake of TV Production Volunteer in Singing Act Injured by Leaping Lena BLACKPOOL, England (AP) with rile. I’d no idea he’d hurt “I don’t blame the girl,” said Taylor. "I may have been sitting a bit awkwardly when she landed in my lap. ‘My'left knee is'still stiff and sore. I could hardly get off the stage afterward.” Sherriff-Goslin Co. Pontiac's Oldest Roofing and Siding Company Free Estimates 332-5231 HARASSMENT? REPOSSESSIONS? BAD CREDIT? GARNISHMENTS? . Lot us help you solve any of those problems. We can get you O fresh start by consolidating otl your debts Into one weekly payment you coo afford. No limit to the amount owed or number of creditors—Not a loon. Debt Consultants of Pontiac, Inc. 114 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDOh TELEPHONE 31S-M33, State Licensed ond Bonded OPEN SAT. I A.M. to 12 NOON BUY, SELL, TRADE - - - USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! I sat him on a chair as I do | with a volunteer every night,” j said the singer, who is 5 foot 1, | and weighs 113 pounds. SONG’S FINALE '“Then I sort of leaped.onto his knees and sat on his lap and j he finished up singing the song: SUSPENDED CEILINGS in ■j&d 14 MODERNIZATION Commarcial — Residential Doctor Thinks JFKWas Ailing No Money Down—5 Yrs. to Pay 18 Yrs. Local Exparionee All Work Guaranteed in Writing CARLES CONSTRUCTION By Science Service WASHINGTON - Sleuthing the part of a pathologist at joj University of Kan s'a s D| Center had convinced the him that the late/ President John F. Kennedy definitely hadl Addison’s disease, and that the ■fact was concealed in the president’s autopsy report. By EARL WILSON NEW YORK — The Buddy Hacketts are beginning their search for a permanent home in California—which will be an: other serious loss to the New York Show Business community. They’re also selling their beautiful and cele- ^ brated home in Palisades, N.J. Buddy rushed to Las Vegas the other day to sub for Dinah Shore, who suffered a bron- §| chial attack at the Sahara and went to a hospital. Mrs. Hackett joins Buddy shortly in Los Angeles to comriience the house-hunting. We’d end this with a joke except there’s nothing funny about so many stars leaving N.Y. for L.A. because TV went thataway long ago. The sleuth, Dr. John Nichols, assembled his case on the basis of an article he found in an old medical journal, and newspaper reports on surgery the late president underwent for a spinal injury in 1954. WILSON The court’s action yesterday means that San Quentin Prison’s green gas chamber will remain sealed until at least Aug. First beneficiary was Edward L. Arguello, 57-year-old San Diego. carpenter whose death had been scheduled for today. The three judges for the ninth Circuit Court denied a petition brought by the state attorney general’s office to set aside the execution ban ordered by a U.S. District Court judge. The state had petitioned that the ban be set aside on grounds that the federal judge should not have halted capital punishment “with a single stroke of his pen,” especially since many of the condemned men had not exhausted all their appeals in state courts. George Jessel was in 21 boasting about a new girlfriend, actress Julie Redding of Hollywood, but he confessed still feeling deeply for a recent fiancee who, he said, “left me to go back to her brother—it turned out her ‘brother’ was really her boyfriend all the time.” George said his ex-fiancee “left me with a wedding ring.” A pal inquired: “You still got it? Let me have it. I can hock it.” Flash from Hugh O’Brian in Vietnam: “Our ‘Gnys & Dolls’ has played to 150,000 service men. We haven’t been able to stop long enough in one place to have costumes cleaned. We therefore have added a new dimension to the theater—smell-o-vision.” The original injunction, issued by Judge Robert Peck-ham, was requested June 27 by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and several local attorneys. ARGUMENTS \ ^They argued, among other points, that California juries are “stacked!’'because opponents of capital punishment are excluded from juries fixing penalties; that prisoners have inadequate legal representation for t h e ‘ appeals; and that the death sentence is “cruel and inhuman punishment.” temporary stay was issued Inst Wednesday, pending arguments Aug. 3. THE MIDNIGHT EARL . He found that another doctor, Dr. James A. Nicholas of Cornell University Medical j College, who reported on the I president’s surgery at the 1955 American Medical Association: convention, had also published! article on an unnamed, victim of Addison's disease whot had, coincidentally, been the | same age, in the same hos-1 pital on the same three dates and for the same surgery as! the then Sen. Kennedy. The hospital, the Hospital for Speciia Surgery in New York, knows of no other identical or similar cases there at the times j of the Kennedy surgery. ASPHALT PAVING RasMantial - Commercial - Industrial DEEP STRENGTH ASPHALT PAVINR • Driveways Resurfaced • Seelcote Penetration Fino Quality Materiali Workmanship at Compstith PONTIAC ASPHALT CO. FES-6983 FE 8-6511 562 S. Paddock ALUMINUM It’s definite that trumpeter “Doc Severinsen will replace I Milton DeLugg on the “Tonight” TV’er in October. Doc was in the band when Skitch Henderson led it . . . Raquel Welch’s career’ll get a boost—she’s Frank Sinatra’s leading lady In “Lady in Cement.” (Her current film’s “Fathom”) . . . Barbara Streisand’ll sing “My Man” as the big finale in “Funny Girl.” ‘The Hound of the Baskervilles” will.be a TV special, with Sir John Gielgud as Holmes, Robert Morley as Dr. Watson (packaged by Tony Ford) . . . Dizzy Gillespie and Miles Davis, co-starring at the Village Gate, are making cracks. Davis, after a wild trumpet solo: “Dizzy who?” Gillespie: “My pupil has to learn some respect!” TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Sid Allen’s car broke down on the highway in the July 4 traffic—and it was a half hour before he realized it. WISH I’D SAID THAT: In one generation our music "has gone from Hal Kemp to Unkempt.—Lyle Kenyon Engel. REMEMBERED QUOTE: “Except for women wrestlers, theroishardlyany.^ AmeripaiLleleyisigo,” •Robert Morley. EARL’S PEARLS: A film producer said it: “In Hollywood every idiot you meetj^eems to be a genius.” Woody Allen told an interviewer he’s only five feet six inches, “but that's normal for my height.” . . . That’s earl, brother. Syndicate) PONTIAC’S F-l-R-S-T Wide-Oval RETREAD SIDING Detroiter Faces Perjury Charges Radio Programs— DETROIT (AP) — Eugene Ayotte of Detroit, who had charges against him of conspiring to bribe two Detroit policemen dropped last week, today faced trial on perjury charges. Ayotte, 39, was hound over for trial on four counts of perjury Monday by Recorder’s Court Judge Gerald W. Groat. Ayotte wpS accused of lying to Circuit Judge , George Bowles, the WJR(760) WXYZG 270) CKLWQOO) WWJfOSO) WCAR(1130) WPONQ 460) WJQltf 1990) WHFHtM(04.7) grand juror, when he denied telling an auto salesman, accused of selling a car illegally, that he cOuUh have the case fixed. 4i< CKLW, Nows, Tom Iknmwn wpon, News. Sport* WMFI, Unc’t Joy Show , WCAR, Nows, Jack Sanders WXYZ. News-cope WJBK, News, Toler • • WWJ. News, Emphasis :SS—WWJ, News, Carlson WPON, News, Music WJBK, News, Musi* wcar, Rod Ml |pr. News, CKLW, News, Duke Windsor mimk dlnjtar Contert ■ WJR, News.-----kg** MS—WXYZ, 7:JO—WJR, News, Miulc 3:00—WPON, pontine City Commission WXYZ, News, Dsv* L hart 3 ick Puller 11:00—wwj, News, Sports. Overnight. WJR, News, Spt>rts. Musk WPON—Arizona Weston WEDNESDAY. MORNING 1:00—WJR, News. Suimysidt fits—WJR, News, Htrrls CKLW, Joe van WCAR, News, Jim Davis Neighbor IS:IS—WXYZ, Breakfast Club WHF'. B:n Boyle WJBK, News, Patrick WJR, News, Music WPON, Nows, Music lltfb—WJR, News. Godfrey WXYZ, Denny Teyter Shew WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON 2:00-wjr, News, Farm , WPON, NEWS, Music WXYZ, Haws, Music WWJ, ftavMp News; Men- CKLW, News, Devs Shafer WJBK, Stews, Patrick 1S:St—WWJ, Marty WHPl, News, Encore 1:00—WPON, News, MUSIC WJR, News, Linkiettnr WXYZ, Dave Prince Sho* JrtO-WIR, Music Hall 3:B»- WCAR. Naws. Jack v^ff'i&ws.. Tolas * cicLyy, Nsssjaj.Tem Shanon 12SI -' QUALITY REPAIRS HOME IMPROVEMENT IS MY BUSINESS HEARING AIDS Loanert Available “SY” No Salesman’s Commission—No Middleman Profit! V G DORMERS • REC ROOMS a GARAGES FAMILY ROOMS iow’as *1,295 .(OTCHOtil v o BATHROOMS • ALUM. SIDING a FREE PLANNING NO PAYMENTS TIL AUGUST 1967 Mambolr Pontiac Chambor of Commerce FREE ESTIMATES (No Obligatioii) 328 N. Pott/i PONTIAC PERSONAL AND DIRECT SUPERVISION ON YOUR JOB, CALL FE 8-9251 FE 8-9251 7 C—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 11, 1967 Board Approves Two Street Lighting Districts The Waterford Township Board approved two special assessment street lighting districts following public hearings las night. * it * To be installed are three lights each on Richmond Street and Lola Court. No objections were raised at die hearings. The total annual charge for the Richmond Street project will be |126, with residents paying 6113.10 and the town- | ship 612-60. Based on 18 assessments, the cost per assessment will be 66.30 year. Lola Court home owners will pay 6129.61 of a 6144 annual charge. The township will pay the balance. ANNUAL RATE ■ STOP as You ^ |H^shopP The annual rate for each of the 13 assessments will be $9.97. In other business, first notices were read on five rezoning requests previously considered by the Township Planning Commission Highway from light industrial jtiple dwelling property on Scott to general industrial for an auto Lake « Road parts yard will be up for action . for apartments, and from general business to single family residential property at Wat-kins Lake Road and Scott Lake Road for a church. Tabled one week was a pro->osed three-year lease purchase of a copying machine being used on a trial basis. Monthly pay- a n d at the board’s July 24 meeting’ apartments, ahd from restricted office to extensive business property at Hadrill Court and The other four proposals will Telegraph for a restaurant, be considered at next Monday’s . , board meeting. The remaining requests are to rezone from single family INCLUDED REQUESTS residential to multiple dwell- Included are requests to re-1 ing property on Sashabaw be-Oakland County Coordinating |zone from single family to mul-l tween Pom r oy and Midland Zoning and Planning Commit- |-------------——----------------------- tee. A request to rezone property Ion Warren Drive near Dixie at Alliance for ments would be 6165.98. Tire machine is worth 65,975. A request by the Detroit Edison Co. to operate a mobile customer service office at Drayton Shopping Center on an interim basis was referred to the zoning board of appeals for action. Discussed by board members j|| in the Relaxing ■ Atmosphere of the 6 LMy I line Opposes t\ Rail Merger Cocktail Lounge Right in the Heart of Downtown Pontiac 85 N. Saginaw Tho Eternal Truth U now coma. Ho hath lifted op tho amigo of Powor, ond Is now shodding upon th* world Hi# uncloudod Sptendor of Hi* ‘ mo lot ion ... On. Qteanbigt) BAH’IS OF PONTIAC 334-4449 MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (AP) —The Soo Line Railroad foresees a loss of some 65 million! in revenues if the Chicago &j North Western and the Milwaukee Road merge without certain safeguards for the Soo’s competitive operations. Ray H. Smith, assistant vice president for traffic of Soo Line, outlined his firm's position Monday at a hearing before Interstate Commerce Commission examiner Henry Darmstadter Jr. The Soo continued its objections to the proposed merger, which it said would particularly hurt its competitive posture in Wisconsin. Smith said that about 58 per cent of the Soo’s traffic, or 6481 million in annual revenues, last night was the proposed installation of a sanitary sewer line south along Scott Lake Road to service the new Charles S. Mott High School scheduled to open in September 1968. To be financed by the school district, the sewer would be connected to the Jeffrey Manor Sewer system. Sewage would be processed at a nearby treatment plant until the Clinton-Oakland interceptor is completed. The project is subject to Michigan Department of Health approval. Also last night, the board approved a permit lor an Aug. 11 circus near Pontiac Mall, to be sponsored by the Drayton Plains Lions Club, and passed resolutions to vacate two alleys at Sashabaw and Letert and behind Donelson Baptist Church. ★ ★ * The first notice was read on a request to transfer stock interest at Adler’s Food Town, Inc., an SDM-licensed business. Delightful Entertaining If your expecting guests from out of town, treat them to an evening at Bedell's. Makes entertaining much easier for you in an atmosphere that radiates charm ffom every corner. Cocktails and dinner... what a delightful way to spend an evening. 2395 Woodward at Sq. Lk. Rd. 334-4561 CHILDREN OUTGROWN THE WAGON, BICYCLE? . . . SELL THEM WITH A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. EASY TO USE. JUST PHONE 332-8181. BEATING THE HEAT-Philadelphia fireman Tim McAllister, fighting a downtown fire yesterday in high temperatures and in-business that either North West-1 tense humidity, found the preventive to being em or Milwaukee Road, or both, could handle. overcome by the heat. He turned on his own portable showers—a spray bath from his company’s pumper. NAACP. Convention Opens Congress, Rights Lag Are Hit PLAY IT SAFE...BE SURE THAT INSURANCE IS ON THE JOB BOSTON (AP) - With a plea for “something more than punitive passion,’’ Roy Wilkins opened the 58th annual convention of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People on a note critical of both Congress and the progress made by the civil rights movement. The NAACP’s .. executive! director went before more than 1,500 applauding delegates in a hotel ballroom Monday night to charge congressmen who vote against civil rights bill with "creating the atmosphere inj which an outbreak of violence j can occur.” * ★ ★ The convention turns today to > reports on slum projects in Buf-» falo, N.Y., and in east Harlem, l New York-City, and the possibil- > ity that President Johnson will J fly here for a major civil rights > address. ★ * * It also will award its Spingarn Medal to Massachusetts-Republican Edward W: Brooke, first Negro popularly elected to the U.S. Senate. The award is presented te Negroes for outstanding achievement. TED KENNEDY SLATED Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D— Mass., is scheduled to make the presentation. Wilkins told the convention Monday night that congressmen who support the antiriot bill now under consideration by the House but oppose the 1967 civil rights bill, also pending, “profess not to realize” the climate they create. ‘Too many people want to intake the Negro behave,” the 66-year-old executive officer said, “but do not want to give him justice. They think riot prevention consists of crackdown laws and crackdown police.” Wilkins said neither riots nor “summer handouts to check inobs” are the answer. ON MILITANTS complex issues, they have shaken up Negroes and whites, both of whom badly needed the treatment,” he said. “Their service outweighs by far their disservice.” ★ * ★ Instead of directly attacking the idea of black power, as he did in a news conference Sunday, Wilkins said, “The important thing is not the color of any other abstract attribute but the effective exercise of power for good purposes.” He called the movement’s for-He said the service of civil ward progress “undeniable, but rights militants “should not be painfully inadequate,” and underestimated.” urged all other civil rights “In spite of their raucous ac- groups to “roll up .their sleeves, tivity, their shock techniques, land exploit the breakthroughs and their oversimplification or that have opened up.” ORAL ROBERTS CRUSADE STARTING TODAY DETROIT, MICK Cobo Convention Center Arena One Washington Blvd. 2:00 & 7:30 PM All Prayer Cards are FREE—Given at Afternoon Services Only R. F. OeWeese Vep Ellis Afternoon Speaker „ Minister of Musk Final Service-Sunday 2:00 PJKI It’s clean up time TEST ntice A CHRYSLER AUTHORIZED DEALERS Right now, during our big year-end close-out you can get a great deal and wind up with a beautiful full-size Chrysler besides! Others are doing it in record numbers. So why not you? Our model selection is still good. But going fast. Stop in now. Test price a Chrysler. Vyhenyou-See how much you save—and how much car you save it on—you’ll make your move up to Chrysler right on the spot. CHRYSLER MOTORS CORPORATION Newport Custom 2-Door Hardtop OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTft, INC. 724 Oakland Avenue , Pontiac,. Michigan KESSLER-MAHN CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH, INC. 6673 Dixie Highway Clarks ton, Michigan ;1 t Giant Domed Stadium to Plans tor a giant domed sports and entertainment stadium at the Michigan State Fairgrounds are expected to be announced this' week. ★ ★, ★ , The public announcement revealing details of the proposal probably will be made Thursday by a citizens committee. The stadium reportedly would be built on the assumption that the Detroit Tigers baseball team and the lions football team would play in die stadium and pay rental fees. , * Designed to seat 70,000 spectators under a permanent dome, the stadium is estimated to cost at least 934 million. It May, one of the major figures behind the recreation complex, Alfred Glancy Jr. of Detroit, told The Pontiac Press that a decision on the stadium was forthcoming. URGED PLAN , Last Janiiary, Glancy urged the sev- eral groups studying the stadium to work together on a unified plan. It has been Glancy’s contention that the 100-acre fairground site is the best for any sports complex. “There are very few cities with a tract of that sort inside the city limits,” Glancy said in May. “Its primary function is to house the State Fair once a year.” Glancy was unavailable for comment today on the anticipated announcement. SIMILAR PLANS Similar plans for a stadium have been suggested in recent' years, usually in connection with the Olympic Games. ■ * V 1 The stadium would be used on a year-round basis as a site for such events as rodeos, circuses and other events too large to be held in CObo Hall. The Weather U.S. Weather Bureau Forecast Showers Tonight Cooler Tommorrow (Detain an Page 1) THE PONTIAC PRESS VOL. 125 — NO. 188 ★ ★ ★ ★ * PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. TUESDAY, JULY 11, 1967 —82 PAGES un.tu^OTte^JSSiomal 10* Measurable precipitation probabilities in pm- cent are: today 50, tonight 40, tomorrow 10. • The low in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a m. was 68. the 1 p.m. reading was 81. 20 People Were Looking For Space Heaters “A Press Want Ad really started things going. We could have sold 10 more,” advises Mr. J.C. Whoopee Sirens Lose Warble City officials and representatives of the two ambulance companies in Pontiac agreed yesterday that those high-pitched, warbling sirens will have less pitch and less warble in the future. Meeting with 0ty Manager Joseph A, Warren and Police Chief William K. Hangar were Floyd Miles Jr. and Richard Rudlaff, president and vice president, respectively, of Fleet Ambulance Service, and Clyde Marshbanks of the General Ambulance Service. Warren noted that f(glowing city com- mission criticism of the use of the comparatively new electronic “whoopee” sirens and tiie resultant publicity, time had been a decrease in the use of the sirens in the city. . -r« General and Fleet are the tyro major, Companies which provide ajnbulence service in Pontiac. A third, loaded just outside the city, North End Ambulance, 2661 [Opdyke, wifi be contacted and asked to‘volunteer a reduction in the use of Ihe electronic sirens, i The ambulance company!' owners stressed, however, that electronic sirens are here to stay. Rudlaff noted that most law enforcement agencies in Oakland County have cars equipped with electronic sirens. PENETRATING NOISE Miles said this is because there is ,a definite need for a penetrating noise which other motorists will react to and because the newer sirens do not strain a -vehicle’s battery or electrical system as much ah the regular sirens. Fleet has nine ambulances operating from four stations in Pontiac, Independence Township, Rochester and Com-move Township. Seven are equipped with the electronic sirens, he said. General operates 14 ambulances throughout Oakiabd County, one of which has an electronic siren. Marsh-banks said this will Ohange, though, because he intends W equip the vehicles with etaetronte sirens. Nothing heats up the buying urge like a PRESS WANT AD Dial 3324181 or 334-4981 McNamara Said in Favor of Smaller Troop Increase SAIGON UR — Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara will not recommend sending all the' additional troops the U.S. Command in Vietnam told him it needs to prosecute the war fully, a high American source said today. WWW McNamara, on his ninth trip to Vietnam, also reportedly ordered Gen. William C. Westmoreland’s command to cut away the fat from the 466,000-man American military force and step up the effectiveness of the U.S. fighting machine. With 88 American maneuver battalions, the U.S. Command normally has only about 40,000 to 50,000 combat troops available for operations. The secretary was reliably reported to have pressed for limited integration of Vietnamese troops into American units to get the Saigon army to handle a bigger share of the fighting, now done mostly by American battalions. W #f W However, some additional troops are expected to be sent following the sec- retary’s repot to President Johnson. Westmoreland was reported to have asked for 100,000 to 140,000 men to prosecute the war at an optimum speed. He also submitted studies of what Washington could expect with various smaller amounts of troops. Before be left this afternoon for the United States, McNamara told newsmen of Washington’s troop policy since mid-1965, “It was then, it is now and I expect it will be in the future to provide tiie troopx our commandos think necessary.” However, he qualifed this, saying: “What is necessary depends on the extent to which we are using the resource* we have available to ns.” He noted the allies have over one million men under arms and said: “There are many ways open to increase the effectiveness of those mot if we set our minds and hearts to it.” He added that in the , rapid buildup to date, U.S. commanders had overlooked means of getting the most use of their forces. City Finance Panel Favors Income Tax A united Citizens Study Finance Commute last night voted to recommend that the Pontiac City Commission impose a city income tax for the next fiscal year. Included in the recommendation is the proposal that the commission lowo: the property tax levy from the charter) limited 10 mills to 7 mills. Several committee members said they felt — 1 per cent for residents, one-half of 1 per cent for nonresidents — an income tax was more equitable to all persons involved. The motion to recommend an income tax was made by Dr. Beauregard Stubblefield, associate professor of mathematics at Oakland University. Die resolution was backed by the 21 members at tiie meeting. The total committee, headed by Robert R. Eldred, executive vice president of Community National Bank, numbers 44. The group discussed alternatives to meeting the forthcoming financial crisis in municipal spending for more than two hours before voting to suggest the income tax. In Today's Press A 3-mill property tax cut would mean loss of $1,242,600, go the city would end up with an estimated $1,571,000 if the citizens committee suggestions are followed. Walled Lake Community a “city on the move” — PAGE B-10. McCarthyism “Witch hunt” reportedly drove key N-scientists to China — PAGE A-7. Waterford News Board approves two special assessment street lighting districts — PAGE C-12. Area News ........ .A-4 Astrology .............. C4 Bridge ................ C4 Crossword Puzzle ..........C-ll , Comics ................. C4 Editorials ........ ..A-4 Markets ................ C4 Mystery Series .........B-8 Obituaries ......... ...B-8 Sports ..........C-I—C4v Theaters ............. B-8 TV ami Radio Propams . .C-ll Wilson, Earl ........ C-U Women’s Pages ----. B-l—B-3 Setting of a city income tax is governed by state regulations. Die commission is called on to impose the tax, but petitions calling for a referendum vote could force a public vote. Warren said that to effect an income tax next year the commission must adopt an ordinance by Nov. 1. Petitions for a referendum can then be filed until Dec. 15 and a vote would then have to be held between Feb. 3 and March 20,1068, he said. (Continued oh Page A-2, Col. 1) UAW Demands Key Sovief-Arab Talks Set After Aid Vow Taken to Ford AP Wfrephete MODEL ‘MOON’ LANDING—A model-of tiie Surveyor 4 spacecraft, which will attempt a gentle touch-down on the moon, goes through tests by engineers at Hughes Aircraft Go. in Los Angeles. Die latest Surveyor will carry a new tool—a tiny magnet—to determine whether the lunar seal contains magnetic particles. The Hughes firm builds Surveyors for NASA. DETROIT t/fi — Die United Auto Workers union took their demands for enriched labor cot tracts — inducting profit sharing — to Ford Motor Co. today as the opening round of negotiations moved to the nation’s No. 2 auto maker. UAW President Walter Reuther launched 1967 bargaining yesterday by telling General Motors, the industry leader, that the union wants a slice of the profit pie every year from now on. CAIRO UB — Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Jacob Malik returned to Cairo today in the wake of a visiting Soviet task force commander’s promise to help the Egyptians “repel any aggression” and 6f conferences by top Arab leaders in the Egyptian capital. Egypt’s official Middle East News Agency said Malik would hold “important talks” with Egyptian officials today and tomorrow, then visit other Arab capitals. Many Egyptians interpreted the promise of help, from Adm. Igor Molochov as a major change in the Soviet Union’s cautious Middle East policy. Considerable significance also was attached to the arrival yesterday of the Soviet Warships — eight of them at Port Said, at the northern end of the Suez Canal, close to the area where Israeli and Egyptian jets and artillery fought Saturday. Describing the demand as “equity sharing,” Reuther said workers should get a bonus based on profits at the end of the fiscal year just as company executives get bonuses to supplement their basic salaries and stockholders get extra dividends. Malik visited Cairo with Soviet President NikOlai Podgorny June 23 after the Ajrab-Israeli war. There has been no sign in Moscow, however, of any change in the Soviet Union's policy of confining its aid to the Arabs to political moves and replacement of some of the arms they ‘What we’re proposing,” Reuther “is that workers be given the same consideration — no more, no less — than the executives and the stockholders.” A recommendation to ask voter approval of a charter change which would allow a 13- or 14-mill property tax limit was discussed at length. Louis Seaton, GM vice president for personnel, declined to take a position on the profit-sharing proposal or any other UAW demand. ONCE OPPOSED But he told neswmen that 20 years ago the union was firmly opposed to any profit sharing plan. Left up to commission discretioh was .whether to hold an advisory vote of the public before calling for the tax and whether to tie the property levy Cut to a charter amendment. The citizens committee, at the opening Of tiie meeting, gave unanimous endorsement to a resolution which states “the committee recognizes the need to raise $1.6 million” for general fund operations for the next fiscal year. City Manager Joseph A. Warren has estimated that an income tax would yield $2.9 million but would cost $87,-000 to adminster the collections. In asking the auto industry to share its profits with workers, Readier was malting an oM request in new trimmings by calling it “equity 'sharing.” But there had been very little emphasis placed on tiie idea tills year prior to yesterday’s opening talks. The UAW has had a profit sharing — dubbed ^progress sharing’ — agreement with American Motors since 1961, but since the company has been operating (Continued on Page A-2, Col 3) SOVIET ADMIRAL ARRIVES — Soviet Adm. Ashur, governor of Alexandria, Eg} the arrival of a fleet of 12 Soviet said the fleet is ready to cooperate aggression. after ficer any "Number of Leads Left" in Trustee Slaying “We still have a number of leads to follow” on the DeConick murder case, said West Bloomfield Township Super-visor John Warren today. beaten and shot. She lost an eye but is recovering in a Pontiac hospital. Supervisor warren said “We are still checking out dues. You never can tell.” He said his 13-man police force has been on an almost round-the-clock schedule since July 3, the night of the killing. The reward offer, for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the siayerp, stands at $6,000. Putting up the money in the Detroit News, $5,000 and The Pontiac Press, $1,000. DeConick was killed by three Negroes and an apparently white woman, all in their 20s, according to descriptions supplied by his sister. Edward Emmett DeConick, 63, of 5847 W- Maple, a township trustee, Wat slain by four intmders at his home and his sister, Kathleen DeConick, 72, Aiding the West Bloomfield investigation are law officers and experts from the state, county and FBI. They were all well-dressed and may have left the scene in two cars, one of them With a bad muffler, according to police. t lost in the war with Israel. Kremlin leaders have beat reported urging the Arabs to adopt a moderate course. MILITARY OBSERVERS Egypt agreed yesterday to the UJN. Security Council’s decision to send military observers to the Suez area to try to prevent further breaches of the ceasefire. Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban is dne in New York tonight to deliver Israel’s decision whether it would accept UN. observers on its side of the trace Ifam. It was believed Israel would refuse to recognize such observers as a continuation of the U.N. Truce Supervision Organization set up by the 1949 general armistice. ' Israel replied last night to a UN. General Assembly demand that it rescind its annexation of the Old City of Jerusalem, wrested from Jordan in the June 5 war. UNITY ‘IS IRREVOCABLE’ Although the reply was not made public immediately, the Israeli government has said repeatediy that unity of the formerly divided city “is irrevocable,” and Moslem members of the United Nations Were expected to submit a new resolution to the General Assembly’s emergency session on the Middle East demanding again that the annexation be annuBed. Lower Hu Due Tomorrow Thundershowers . during the night brought some relief to Pontiac-area residents as temperatures dropped into the mid-60s. Mere than eight-tenths of an inch in rain drenched the downtown area last night. Warm and humid with skies overcast and a chance of showers or thundershowers is tiie forecast far late today and tonight. The i ! tomorrow will be partly cloudy and less humid. Mostly sunny and mild is tiie outlook for Thursday. / Mfj mo 3M m TTTTC PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JULY 11, 1P6T House Boils as Senate Broils in Sun LANSING (I) — Meeting until midnight an « hot, sticky night the Home Monday passed appropriations bills spending $150.4 minimi and boiled because the Senate took the day off. The Senate, a bare quorum oi 20 out of its 38 members present, met for about 20 minutes in fte afternoon and quit for the day. A number of House members angrily made it plain they also wanted to adjourn. The spending bills were ap-: proved after reputed agreement with the Senate. They are expected to reflect final 1967-68 appropriations for the three state agencies involved. ate version would appropriate $240.2 million. The House upped that figure to $255.7 and added a $39 million school aid ease. Irked House members complained that talks on the education bill were stalled because The Conservation Department was appropriated $12,64 million; Department of Agriculture, $6.53 million, and Mental Health Department, $113.2 million. The mental health Mil, next to education the largest single spending item, represented a________ victory for the House in a week-[all three Senate negotiators— - ' ... a_j___a. b eu. /law. long battle with the budget-slashing Senate. ★ 4 The Senate originally passed a mental health appropriation of only $128.5 milHbn, 'compared with $137.45 million recommended in February by Gov. George Romney. The original House figure was $132.9 million. The big higher education bill remains in conference. The Sen- Frank Beadle, R-St. Clair, Garland Late, D-Flint, and Charles Zollar, R-Benton Harbor— spent the day relaxing at a cabin on the Au Sable River. ‘They feel the state can do without the budget for a few more weeks, apparently,” said Rep. George F. Montgomery, D-Detroit, a House negotiator on the education bill Montgomery tried to adjourn floor leader William Hampton, , R-Bloomfield Hills, suattifoliy ! opposed the motion, although noting: “I certainly don’t condone the actions of a few senators.” ■ The House considered another appropriations bill to give $15.97 million to three state departments. But it put off a vote after debating one section which would change real estate brokers’ license fees. ★ ★ * Beadle, chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee, introduced a bill earlier in the session to raise the cost of an original associate broker’s license from $10 to $30. The | House defeated the measure 41- 55. The Senate then wrote.the same provision into the appropriation bill for the department of licensing and regulation. WWW With only about 84 of the 110 members present, House leaders feared they lacked the votes to pass the bill with that provision in it. I ★ hi,. it Rep. Alfred Sheridan, D-Tay-lor, failed in two attempts to boost the salary of Liquor Control Commission Chairman Stanley Thayer to $19,$00. Thayer, fonder Republican state sepator from Ann Arbor, now gets $18,500. He would receive a $500 raise under the bill in its present form. City Finance Panel Favors Incorfie Tax (Continued From Page One) If the tax survives a referendum vote it would go into effect hi July 1968. An advisory ovte could be set by the City Commission any time prior to OcL 15, he said. In discussing Hie relative merits of an income tax as opposed to a property tax hike, city officials have said there is little Afference between paying income tax or property tax for • a “typical Pontiac resident.” The typical resident is one who earns $7,500, supports a wife and three children, they said. A new income tax would mem $45 more per year, but a three-mill property tax cut would lighten the total load to an extra $26.19 per year, they A 4-mill hike in the property tax rate—considered necessary to raise $1.6 million — would mean an extra $24.20 per year for Ae “typical” resident. Committee members noted that the income tax would be spread to the estimated 40,000 plus persons who work but do not reside in the city. ★ ★ ★ The committee admitted that a terrific selling job is needed in order to win citizen support for a city income tax. SOUNDLY DEFEATED A proposal to hold a public advisory vote this summer and a property tax millage bike election in the fall was soundly defeated by a vote bf the committee. They reasoned that it would be better to concentrate on only one proposal because it might create confusion in voters’ minds if more than one method to raise money was panned at Ae same time. . Following are members of Ae committee present for last w' ’s meeting. All voted in favor of Ae proposal. Wally SchroA, Julian Cook, Mrs. Sol Newhouse, Dr. B. Stubblefield, Mrs. B. B. Roush, Henry Price, Meyer Simon, Charles Yeager, Jack Douglas, Robert CharM Tucker, Howard Dell, Albert JCauffacher, Mrs. R H. Benter, Rev. Jack Clark, Robert White, Jack Harrington, Galen Sets Hearings Day Members of the committee who were not present last night were: E. Eugene Russell, $elen R. Hagstrom, Jim Jenkins, Phil Sauer, Dale Carney, Monroe Osmun, Mrs. Charles Billings, Mrs. David Saks, Charles Mills, Mrs. William C. Wright, Jerome Barry, Albert M. Wilmot, Dr. Joe R. Grayson, Dr. Robot R. Turpin, Rev. Arlond Reid, Tom Chavez Jr., Wyman Lewis, Jack Mitchell, Don Johnson, John ~ May, Richard F. Aust, Robert Critchfield ' and Charles R. Elliott. Constitution Panel LANSING (AP) - Michigan residents will have a chance to sound off later this month on the new state income tax. The House Committee on Revision and Amendment of Ae Constitution plans a day of hearings on Ae tax, lotteries and sweepstakes, judicial appointments and ballot designations. The meetings will open at 10 a.ra., July 31, in the Supreme Court chamber of the State Capital The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Cloudy wiA fog this morning. Variable cloudiness, warm and humid with chance of showers or thundershowers this afternoon and this evening. Turning cooler and becoming partly cloudy and less humid tonight and Wednesday. Lows tonight 62 to 68. Light variable winds this morning and sowAwest to westerly winds 19 to 17 miles this afternoon, becoming northwesterly tonight. Outlook for Thursday: Mostly sunny and mild. Measnreable precipitation probabilities in per cent: Today 50, tonight 49, tomorrow 10. Direction: Variable Sun Ufa Tuesday at Sun rises W ----------- t rises Tuesday at 19:17 a.m. Downtown TeintMTbturM Highest and Lowest Temperetures This Mbs in 75 Yuan 101 In 1736 50 in 181 One Year Ago in Fentiac Highest temperaturn ..............M L await temperatura -------------.73 Highest temperature , 75 Lowest temperature ........... .71 Mean temperatura ..................73 Weather; Dey, showers; night, thunder Escanaba Or. fteplds Houghton Marquette Muskegon Pension M »Chart 76 *4 Fort Worth 78 77 62 Jacksonville 88 SI 65 Kansas City 75 75 76 59 Los Angelas 87 66 S3 68 Miami Beach 85 37 75 67 Omaha I S. Francisco i NATIONAL WEATHER—Showers and Aundershowers are forecast tonight from the central Plains eastward to Ae Appalachians ted the Gulf Coast states. Showers we also expected in the Rockies and Ae northern portions of Ae middle Atlantic states. It will be cooler in the north central reften of Aq country. BEATS THE HEAT — Brooklyn model Michele Michaels had Ae perfect way to cool off in Manhattan’s 90-degree heat, which hit Ae New York City area yesterday. A photographer happened to spot Michele peeling off her cloAes for the occasion. Of AP Wirepheta course, everything was proper. She “just happened” to have a bikini under her minidress for her short swim in Central Park’s Belvedere Fountain which followed. There wasn’t a policeman in sight at Ae time. to recognize and honor aircraft owners ted pilots. Various types of aircraft will be displayed for Ae public, according to Hudson, and facilities at Ae airport will be open for Inspection all day boA days. ★ i* ★ Located at 6500 Highland, Waterford Township, the airport was owned by the City of Pontiac until last Jan. 1 when it was purchased by Oakland County. ★ ★ ★ The three - member airport committee was selected by Ae County Board of Supervisors as Ae policy-making body for Ae airport. J. David VanderVeen I the airport manager, and I. Joseph Davis is assistant manager. Lurleen Starts Her Recovery From Surgery HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) - Gov. Lurleen Wallace of Alabama began today a fwo-to-three-week period of recovery in a hospf1 ’ from an operation which doctor says may rid her of can-sr. A malignant tumor in Ae lower abdomen was removed during 4% hours of surgery Monday. One of her physicians said afterward, “We found nothing that would prevent complete recovery.” * ★ ★ It was her second operation for cancer in 18 months. The nation’s only woman governor was kept under sedation. She is expected to remain at M.D. Anderson' Hospital and Tumor Institute for two or three weeks before returning to her home at Montgomery, Ala. HUSBAND ELATED Her husband, former Gov. George Wallace, whose concern for his wife’s health had become increasingly visible, said he was “elated” and “very .thankful” for Ae doctors’ encouraging prophecy. He will stay at his wife’s bedside “as long as she is in Ae hospital.” 3 Convicted Murderers Get Chances for Parole Three convicts serving life jprison terms for two murders in Oakland County were J their freedom yesterday. ★ ★ ★ Circuit Judge William J. Beer ave each reduced sentences, which will allow Aem to receive immediate consideration for parole. T h e y are Alexander GHva, 51; Robert Hearn, 32; and Basil Dupuis, 38, all of Detroit. Gliva has been in the state prison at Jackson for nearly 22 years for killing a Southfield Township real estate man, Arba Hawley, in 1945. ★ ★ Th other two have each served 15 years for Ae stabbing in 1952 of Alfred Jones, 27, during a robbery of a Femdale gas station. RETURNED FOR RETRIALS All had been returned to Oakland County for .new trials last monA after appealing their cases on grounds that Aeir constitutional rights had been violated. Rather than stand trail on first-degree murder, however, pleas of guilty to second-degree murder were entered by each and accepted by the court and Ae prosecutor’s office. First-degree murder carries an automatic life sentence on conviction and no chance for parole. * ★ * The maximum prison term for second-degree murder also is life, but unlike first-degree murder, the court can set a minimum. This was Ae case in each instance yesterday. NEW SENTENCE Gliva was given a 15-30 prison sentence. Since he already has served seven years over the minimum, Ae only thing preventing him from bring released is the paper work involved. ★ ★ ★ The same is true for Hearn, given a new sentence of 15-25 years, and Dupuis, 15-20 years. ★ ★ ★ According to county court officials, prison authorities described all three men as “model prisoners.” UAW Takes Demands Ford (Continued From Page One) in Ae red for the past two years, there have been no profits to share. But Ae automotive Big Three, GM, Ford and Chrysler, thus far have been adamant in Arir opposition to the concept A Labor Department study shows, however, Aat the number of workers covered by profit-sharing plans has more than doubled in Ae past decade to Well over 2 million. The survey also revealed that profit sharing was much more common In nonunion plants. ! - i * i 1 1 lteb? As they opened negotiations, boA the UAW and GM attempted to cool off speculation about the possibility of a strike in Ae industry this year. READY TO BARGAIN BoA Reuther and Seaton told newsmen that Aey were ready to bargain in good faiA and are hopeful Aat there will be no crippling walkouts after contracts expire Sept. 9. ’But boA sides have said privately that several strike issues are In the unions package ef demands which Heather has described as Ae “longest and most ambitions’ list ever presented. They include a substantial wage tri-., crease, a guaranteed annual income, wage parity for. Canadian workers and . a limit on subcontracting, which the . UAW says takes jobs away from its In the opening GM session, ReuAer outlined Ae union’s proposals in general philosophical terms. He spoke for more than three hours, Aen left Ae spelling out of some specific demands to UAW vice president Leonard Woodcock at an afternoon session. SECRET POLL Meanwhile, a secret poll ol UAW members reportedly indicated that higher wages ranked No. 1 in Arir priority list of demands, wiA retirement improvements second and a guaranteed annual income a poor third. Heather scoffed at Ae idea of separating Ae wage increase demand from the guaranteed salary. . “These two things go together,” he told newsmen. “We want mote money and we want it guaranteed. Were hot picking a priority (item). It’s one objective.” ' Reuther added that he believed that to a few years UAW members would be making $25,000 to $30,900 a year. GREATER wealth “As we harness new tools of automation, technology and sdepce, its going to make it possible for one hour oi human labor to create greater and greater economic wealth,* he declared. “And to share that wealth sensibly,' sanely anfi equitably means that workers are going to make higher wages $25,900 is hot beyond the range of possibility.” Air Show Set for Weekend County Airport Will Hold Opon House Birmingham Area News Commissioners Rebuff Judge's Anticrime Plan Oakland-Pontiac Airport will hold an open house Saturday and Sunday featuring airplane and helicopter rides for the public both days and a Saturday afternoon blyby demonstration-by an Air National Guard jet group. ★ ★ ★ Purpose of Ae open house announced by Wallace B. Hudson, chairman of the Oakland County Airport Committee, is to advance public knowledge, interest and education to aviation activities and accomplishments. BIRMINGHAM — An anticrime conference called by Circuit Judge Arthur E. Moore was rebuffed by city commissioners last night. Head Start to Resume on Monday If any of Ae commissioners accept Moore’s invitation to attend Ae meeting Monday, it will be only in an unofficial capacity as suggested by Commissioner Carl F. Ingraham. “His (Moore’s) proposals trample on Ae rights of many people,” said Ingraham, an attorney. “A number of Aem ignore constitutional rights,” he added. Pontiac’s Head start preschool program will resume The program also will serve Monday after a year’s absence, B. C. VanKoughnett, community action director, announced to- The Head Start program was discontinued after last summer because of a deadlock between Ae Oakland County Commission on Economic Opportunity and Local Sirens to Have Less ‘Whoopee' (Continued From Page One) North End Ambulhnce operates two ambulances. BoA have electronic sirens. CAUTION USE Marsh banks said the one ambulance General operates wiA an electronic siren is stationed Farmington now. He said that he will caution drivers to use new sirens only when absolutely necessary. Miles and Rndlaff said Aeir drivers are cautioned on overuse of the sirens. They said the “yelp” feature of Ae sirens will only be used as a last resort. The sirens, Aey said, can be set to operate wiA a regular wail or can be controlled so Aat a vacillating squeal which raises and lowers to pitch results. ★ ★ ★ Chief Hanger said at Ae meeting that Ae city has an ordinance which regulates noise making devices and provides for up to a $190 fine and 90-day jail sentence far violation. WILL BE ENFORCED This, he said, will be enforced if Ae need arises. He said at Ae meeting that he did not think Aere would be any need to do so. “These are two of Ae most cooperative ambulance companies we’ve ever had,” he said. The owners stated that drivers have been advised that Ae electronic sirens, and especially the “yelp” noise, should be used only when necessary, mostly at busy intersections and on rural roads where it is harder to hear. Vtj#• „ $hi. A, Miles said Ae newer sirens are coming into more use because .today’s cars are becom-ing more insulated and containing more arid louder radio, stereo and tape-playing equipment. , £ ft'ft v-The electronic sirens costs run from $159 up for the basic unit attached to Ae dash and $50 up for each speaker on Ae outside of the ambulance. ties. This summers’s $142,854 program for 429 four-year-olds will run from Monday through Aug. 25. Centers will be at Frost, Bethune, Webster and Herrington schools. Pontiac had requested $172,-833 of federal funds to run Ae program but got only $113,214. The federal government through the Office of Economic Opportunity, pays 89 per cent of Ae program’s cost. Pontiac thus will pay $29,440: * * * VanKoughnett said the cub back to federal funds reduces Ae planned number of nonprofessionals, to be employed to Ae summer program, the rate of pay, length of employment and amount of equipment. 34 PROFESSIONALS Mrs. Pearlina Butler, coordinator of preschool education, is assembling a staff of 34 profes-sional personnel, 36 parent-teacher arid community aides and bus drivers and cooks. VanKoughnett said he is hopeful of getting federal funds to continue Ae program through the regular school year. Dental Work for Ike Routine WASHINGTON (AP) - The dental work former President Dwight D. Eisenhower is to hava done this week at Walter Reed Army Hospital is described ps routine arid designed to reduce Ae possibility of pyor-r^eal gum abscesses. Eisenhower, 76, entered the hospital Monday. He, also to scheduled to undergo a routine physical examination. Moore’s plan to combat crime was outlined to a letter sent to all officials to Oakland County requesting that they attend a 3:30 p.m. session to Ae Supervisor’s Auditorium at Ae County Courthouse. SEARCH LAW Among Ae items Moore said would be discussed are plans to give police authority to search all suspicious looktog vehicles for weapons; and a constitutional amendment permitting and Ae Pontiac school board over i requiring interrogation of crim-relative rights and responsibili- inal suspects. Storm Damage Left Some Areas Without Power Storm damage-left some 600 area homes and businesses without power for several hours early today, according to a Detroit Edison Co. spokesman. In Commerce Township. 50 customers in Ae area surrounding Fox and Carroll lakes were left wiAout power from 1:10 to 3:45. Lightning apparently blew fuse on the distribution circuit, according .to an official. Lightning also blew a fuse on a distribution circuit in Highland Township causing a blackout from 3:19 to 9:15-Some 159 customers in and around Highland village were affected. About 400 customers in Milford Township, west of Milford and north of Kensington Metropolitan Park, were wiAout power from 2:57 to 6:20. The blackout occurred when lightning downed a power f A Bell Telephone Co. spokesman said that about 40 customers in the area surrounding Ae intersection of Dixie and Wil-Lake Road, Waterford Township, were temporarily wiAout service this morning, due to wet cables because of rain. Two Supreme Court rulings, Aoee in Ae EscObedo and Miranda cases, said Moore, “have disastrously tipped Ae scales of justice against Ae public protection and favoring the guilty criminal. “They prevent questioning and have killed confessions,” said Moore. • ★ * Two other commissioners, David Breck and Charles Clip-pert, also attorneys, agreed wiA Ingraham.’ INTENTIONS GOOD Brack sajd. Moores intention for the meeting “to good, but not wisely advised.” After Ingraham objected to Ae attendance ef commissioners because * it might be an endorsement of Ae proposals, commissioners decided to have Ae police chief, Darryl B rues tie, attend, but only as a nonvoting observer. In other business, the commission awarded a one-year contract to Ae Oakland Directors Service Co. to provide emergency ambulance service for the city. The Royal Oak Firm won the contract wiA its low bid of $300 a monA. LOWER BID The bid was $700 less Aan Aat submitted by the Birmingham Ambulance Service which has provided Ae service for Ae last 13 years, and $200 lower Aan the second bidder, General Ambulance Service. 6 Armed Men Grab Vessel MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) -Six armed men believed to be Cuban stowaways took charge of Ae vessel Freight Transporter off Miami Beach early today and came ashore in a lifeboat after smashing the ship’s radio, Ae Coast Guard reported. ★ It ft The Coast Guard said it bad received a repo# from the vessel, which had sailed from Miami’s Dodge Island port at 12:30 a.m., Aat Ae men had taken over Ae ship. ★ * ★ At 2 a.m. several persons saw flares fired off Ae beach and then saw six men carrying rifles and other firearms come ashore. * : *- Police recovered Ae lifeboat on Ae beach at 13A Street. City Commission to Hold Zoning Hearings Tonight City Commissioners, wiA an unusually light agenda, will bold public hearings on three proposed zoning ordinance changes tonight. They will also hear reports on a shift of former city public healA services to Ae Oakland government and on negotiations wiA Bell Telephone Co. to trade downtown'parktag lot land to allow Ae telephone company’s expansion. Transferred to the county July 1 ware tike Alcoholism Information Center and open* tioos of three public nnreei. The services were located it aty Hall. Transfer to Ae county payroll saves tb^ city about $21,900 yearly, City Manager Joseph A. Warren estimated. >, -"G rif „ Hie telephone company has., offered to provide the City WiA some 27,000 square feet of parking space in exchange for a city-owried parking lot of 25,000 square feet souA of Ae present telephone company building. The zoning proposed changes would allow an area north of E. Walton east of Glddings to become Residential 3, land connected to General Motors Truck & Coach property to become a parking district) and a parcel next to Varidapjtttte Buick and Opel, toe., 2100 Orchard Lake, to become commercial. THE PONT Pontiac, Michigan 48056 TUESDAY, JULY 11, 1967 48 West Huron Street Proposes All-Out Attack on Crime Reflecting a growing "get tough” attitude on the part of the Oakland County Judlclar Circuit Judge Aa-i thur E. Moore of-| fers a 13-point pro-B gram to combat the V criminality that slowly engulfing the! community, The jurist’s pro-1 posals are enoom-l passed in a commit- MOORE nication to m u n i c i pal officials inviting them to a meeting Monday tb consider and back crime-control measures. Indicative of the social emergency represented by the sinister specter of creeping crime is Moore's declaration that "crime is all about us — increasing, frightening, almost uncontrolled* and of disastrous volume.” While pointing to and comdemning public apathy as contributing to the spread of lawlessness, he suggests a countywide setup directed by a crime specialist to co-ordinate a campaign against crime. Moore also called for a petitionary appeal to members of Congress to initiate (legislation that would free law enforcement agencies of handicaps in dealing with criminal suspects that have been imposed by recent U. S. Supreme Court decisions. He would also restrict the appeal prerogatives of convicted' criminals that now operate to defer and often defeat the punishment meted out by triaj courts, and stiffen qtaximum penalties in all felonies to life im-~ prisonment. The Press has Jong advocated ,■ and commended the local bench on decisions reflecting a stem concept of justice. We are corii-pletely in accord with Judge Moore’s crime-busting program and urge its full support by public officials and the public at large. Service Stations Blending Harmony With Utility No American needs to have his attention called to the vast improvements that have been made in automobiles over the years. But how many have noticed what has happened to the auto industry’s biggest companion industry — the 200,000 gas stations that service the Nation’s 95 million cars? Time was when strict economics governed gas station building and operation. Not any more, says Highway User magazine. The trend today is toward the residential type of service station that blends harmoniously Into a neighborhood and is an aesthetic asset rather than a defacement. Now most companies employ the best architectural consulting services in order to make both their new and remodeled stations attractive. • * At least one oil company has abandoned the use of banners at its stations and does not condone displays that give a “circus” atmosphere. Each year about 6,000 new stations are built. At the same time, some 5,000 marginal stations become obsolete and are eliminated. In addition,, some 4,000 older stations are refurbished and modernized. Thus* about 10,000 stations a year are getting the “New Look.” Scientist Airs Views on A sociologist at the University of Chicago suggests that men who ride airliners might be happier if stewardesses were symbols of motherhood instead of being . . weU, as they are. As you may have already guessed, t.hfo sociologist is not a man. She is Dr. .Alice S. Rossi, a director of a newly-formed group called the National Organization for Women. (It has called stewardesses “airborne bunnies.”) Airlines, Dr. Rossi avers, assume that men prefer stewardesses who make it (possible for them to “indulge their fantasies.” Airline Stewardesses She further avers that these men might be more secure if they were served by motherly women. With no desire to dispute a lady— certainly not a lady sociologist—it must nevertheless be stated -in the interest of factual reporting that there doesn’t seem to be overwhelming evidence that male passengers attended by unmotherly young stewardesses are desperately homesick for their mothers. These men may, of course, be able to repress such maternity yearnings by reminding themselves that if they do fed the need to. be more secure, they can always fasten their seatbelts. Viet Problems Won’t Compute By JAMES MARLOW AP News Analyst WASHINGTON - The University of Michigan’s Graduate School of Business Admin-i s t r a t ion polled 432 businessmen oh who is the C o untry’s greatest ny-ing business e x e cutive. They picked Secretary of Defense Rob- mara.' MARLOW He used to be president of the Ford Motor Go. and he has a brain like a computer. (Everybody says so, He can rattle off any time an astonishing list of facts and figures. But he has streamlined the Defense Department. And there’* no doubt IPs McNamara, not die gen-owls, who, runs the place, about the first time a civilian 1ms ever been able to do that. *• Shortly he will return from his ninth trip to Vietnam in six years, an inspection trip in keeping pith his present line of work, which is quite different from trying to figure out the prospects tor the new 1968 model hardtop. A, ■ Neva* in his life did he run into the kind of competition encountered in Vietnam. Over there it is not computers but bombs and bullets which tally profits and losses. Dollar signs don’t count., AMERICAN LIVES Profits qre in a few yards gained in any one day, a few of the enemy Jkilled. The losses are in American lives, weapons, materiel and effort. Now about 486,080 Americans are engaged in die war with the Vietcong and the North Vietnamese, or 81 times the 15,080 UJ. troops who were dure three yean ago. Bat a strange thing has happened. While we kept pouring in more men, so did toe enemy. They seem to have an inexhaustible supply. But it costs North Vietnam a lot less to fight a war. And the Soviets have supplied North Vietnam with weapons, some of them very go&, which, from a business view, makes Norto Vietnam look like a Soviet distributor. STILL MOVE McNamara has conferred at length in Saigon with the American commander, Gen. William G. Westmoreland, who wanta still more men. As any g Tarring Whom? David Lqwrence Says: N. Viet Bombing Not Key Issue. would, McNamara has probed and pressed to know if toe best possible me is being made of the men already there. When he returns he will report Ms recommendations tor or against to President Johnson. Westmoreland said last week: “We are slowly but steadily winning.” This indicated some progress, for when McNamara returned from Vietnam in 1965 be said the Communists were tripling their rate of infiltration but “we have stopped losing.” ★ Or it Nevertheless, over the weekend Hanoi radio disputed Westmoreland about slowly winning. It said the war is a stalemate right now. So this Is all a pretty gloomy business for McNamara. THEN WHAT? Suppose he decides Westmoreland needs 100,000 men or more and President Johnson sends them and then the North Vietnamese pump in mow men to make up the difference. Then what happens? Does McNamara make another trip hi a year or so and does Westmorland say things are looking a little better but Ike needs more men? And if that bgppens, how long will it keep on happening? WASHINGTON-Maybe the American people sooner or later will Come to understand toe pertinent facts about the Vietnam war. But those individuals, including some members of Congress, who are offering plans to stop American bombing of North Vietnam certainly are not aware that this is the least relevant of the influences which can bring peace. /. For the real struggle is not in North nam at is in South LAWRENCE Vietnam where the Vietcong — the revolutionary faction, aided by the Communists and North Vietnamese—is struggling to get possession of the entire area. To put it another way, the South Vietnamese are fighting to preserve their independence, bat toe enemy — including infiltrators, numbering more than 100,000— are trying hard to get control. How many Americans know, for instance, that the United States has only 88,000 combat infantrymen in Vietnam out of the total of more than 460,-000 persons in America’s armed services in that war zone? h it Of die 75,000 Marines, there are only 18 combat-maneuver battalions. LOGISTICS ROTABLESHMENT It takes an enormous logistics establishment to support not only toe American troops and those of South Vietnam but also those of South Korea and the other Allied nations. Merely to stop toe bombing abound Hanoi would not necessarily affect toe outcome In South Vietnam. Infiltration of North Vietnamese iato South Vietnam runs about 1,500 a month. Despite losses, the Communists still have available for battle around 50,000 North Vietnamese troops and about 60,000 main-farce Vietcong. it it it All this points up toe need lor more American troops. SUMMARY The foregoing summary was derived from a copyrighted interview in “U.S. News & World Report” this week with Wendell S. Merick of its staff, who has just returned here for a brief Visit after a lengthy period in Vietnam. He declares that the military operationscould be carried mi more intenrivdy if the united States had a total of 750,000 troops instead •f 400,000, and that toe ad-‘ men are needed to seize territory from the enemy and hold it. As matters stand today, he says, the combined armies in South Vietnam have effective control of not more than 25 per cent of the area. That is why more troops, maneuver battalions and helicopter units have become essential. But a ray of hope is indicated by Merick in his interview. He refers to the probability that toe South Vietnamese government which is to be elected later this year may get together directly with the Communists and work out a settlement. Rumors are current that the^ South Vietnamese have been in communication with the Vietcong as well as with the Hanoi regime in an attempt to reach some form of agreement among themselves. At least, conversations have begun. (CepyiinM, 1»w. pummmts- Halt Syndicate) ' Bob Cohsidine Says: Birdhouse Gave Start Voice of the People: *Taxpayers Should, Vote to Ban State Income . Now that the Michigan Legislature has deprived the voters and taxpayers of their constitutional rights of referendum on the income tax act, the one last hope of those who cannot afford the tax is to pass a constitutional amendment prohibit ing all state income taxes, flat-rate or graduated. ★ ;• ★ ★ Any . precinct delegate who does not circulate petitions to get this amendent on the 1968 ballot, so the voters can decide, is {failing in his responsibility to those who elected him and should be dumped by the people next time around. This applies equalty to Democrats and Republicans. ARNOLD R. JONES ft 672 LINDA VISTA ‘Ambulance Sirens Are Disturbers of Peace’ I’ve been told tfiat not one life in 10,000 is lost or saved by toe 90 seconds an ambulance cuts off by rushing headlong through traffic and screaming every foot. ★ * * Let’s shut up these disturbers of toe peace. JAKE ‘Can Gypsy Shed Light on Sports Article?’ .1 read your sports section with interest and I have always felt toe reporting exceptionally good. I was surprised when I read Bruno Kearns’ column regarding the now defunct Pontiac Arrows. If there had not been a Lisle Wells would there have been a Pontiac Arrows? Why is tir. Kearns so disturbed that he would write an entire column berating Lisle Wells? Perhaps the “gypsy” could shed some fight on the subject. CLINTON PLYMPTON 2265 DORCHESTER TROY (Editor’s Note: Mr. Kearns’ column was in rebuttal to a press release issued by Mr. Lisle Wells.) ‘Question Developments in Keego Harbor’ I question the motive of Wayne Vogelsburg, chairman of the board of tax review of our city, to use his position to try and force our tax exempt, nonprofit corporations to pay taxes. It is a new precedent and for the first time we are singled out to be discriminated against. I also protest Mayor Milliom using his position to usurp properties that have a long established usage and under the guise of good government turn them into public usage just prior to his reelection. it * ; A After many years of hard work of building and maintaining these parks Mayor Million would like to make them open to toe public. The hard work and materials did not come from city funds or labor furnished by the Cityoi Keego Harbor. ROSOOE L. McGEHEE 2063 WILLOW BEACH KEEGO HARBOR to Top UJS. Arc ‘Taxes and Costs Burden the Workingman’ ' With a new Stat.p inrnmp fur nrnnarfv Iaypc aninor nn NEW YORK — Come along with me to the scrumptious town house of Edward Durell Stole. He’s an architect. The best we have, I think. If you saw his U.S. pavilion at the New York World Fair or have gazed upon his Radio Cftty Music Hall, CONSIDINE U.S. Embassy in New Delhi, National Geographic Society Building in Washington, and. the makings of the new General Motors Building on Fifth Avenue, you may agree. Interesting cuss, big fellow out of Fayetteville, Ark. Went tet toe University of Akansas, Harvard Architectural School and MIT’s School of Architecture. Hit New York at the worst possible time: November 1929. In that first month after the stock market crash people weren’t building buildings. They were jumping out of them. ★ ★ ★ How does a fellow get in the architectural dodge in the first place? BIRDHOUSE STARTED IT “Well, though nothing was expected of me, I entered a birdhouse prize contest in Fayetteville, that hotbed of tranquility. “The other kids chose to build multiple dwellings. I'; elected to build a single domicile for a bluebird. “I went into the woods to watch how the bluebird himself did it, used his sassafras branches, measured the size of die entrances he wanted and built a bluebird’s house. ★ ★ ★ “The ornithologist and the carpenter who made up the selection board gave me the prize. Two bucks. MONEY AND GLORY “It was announced in the Fayetteville Democrat, which I also happened to deliver. When I found that there, was not only money but glory in architecture -- well, that was my undoing.” There’s been a lot of both money and glory since then: teaching posts at NYU, Yale, Princeton, Cornell, MIT, and Columbia, honorary degrees that threaten toe very memory of Nicholas Murray Butler, and more awards and trophies than he can afford to keep polished. “It’s a shame to take money for my work in arcMtecture,” the master said. “It’s such fun. * * * “It has been said that the blessed man is the man who has found his1 right work in fife. “I truly would work for nothing, for the sheer joy of creating something new and perhaps different. But my ex-wives insist that I must have an income.” Stone is doing toe J. F. Kennedy Cultural Center on the Potomac. It will be pure jewel: All the arts, sciences, meeting places, Japanese cherry trees, restaurant and bar. He likes his design but will always prefer instead the Lincoln Me-moriaL Smiles A shield that the arrows of With a new State income tax, property taxes going up, Federal Income Tax and groceries going sty high, what does toe working man have to look forward to? We barely squeeze through now. Who is going to start paying our dental and medical expenses — Romney? WORRIED Citizens Have Both Duties and Privileges The right of free speech gives us as many dudes as privileges. One privilege is to speak out in condemnation of the politician, the grafter and the dishonest government official. ■ ’ ★ it it One duty of citizens is to speak in defense of the honorable representatives and true public servants. Another duty is to aid in die removal of the men who have been mistakenly given positions of trust, and toe prevention of others from gaining governmental offices. C. E. HAGLUND, A REPUBLICAN 0535 LISTERIA COMMERCE ‘Modem Dolls Help Stress Material Things’ Regarding the editorial about“deiuxe playthings,” these super-female dolls are not sold to be cuddled cm- loved, they simply teach our girls about our material ways. Many parents who rushed out to trade in the old doll will be surprised twenty years from now when their girls are more interested in material things than concerned with their family and human needs. But then, what seeds of love and' compassion were planted? ■ H.K. ‘Let’s Make Our Home Town a Great One’ Security is having a home town (according to Charlie Brown). Let’s make it a great one by talking advantage of the U. of D. research. R. L. TULL 81 OTTAWA Reader Discusses School Needs for Pontiac I’ve read of the controversy over the school boundaries for attendance in the school districts. Hie courts have ruled sdtobl boards cannot change same just tor the benefit of certain races. In the past the Pontiac school boanHbas spent more money per person for schools in the south end than anywhere else. ★ ■ * * " There is nothing wrong with Pontiac Central High School that cannot be rectified. It Is up to the parents, Made and white. It is a privilege to attend high school Students are there to gain knowledge and unruly elements should be expelled. Building new buildings to put this unruly dement in is net the answer. w s nnwNER Verbal Orchids Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Freede of Chula Vista, Calif., formerly of Pontiac;^ { l 56th wedding anniversary. so corns » week; where Oakland. Genesee, Uv-MacomU L and -Counties it b. $18.00 a Mr places suits TtTR PONTIAC PONTIAC; MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JULY 11, 1967 He's Not the Kissing Type As our son grows older we will MU him of his real mother’s love for him. I doubt If I could have been as brave and unselfish as she was. Although I don’t know his real mother personally, I pray for her. I pray that this letter may ease the burden of just one unwed mother’s heart, for it expresses that which all adoptive parents feel. A HAPPY MOTHER not it It doesn’t seem natural for a married man not to want to kiss his own wife. I am almost at, the aid of my rope. Ill do anything you say. Please help me. UNKISSED DEAR UNKISSED: LeRoy is the one who needs the help. He .has a “hang up’’ on kissing. And until (and unless) he wants to overcome it, you will either have to learn how to live without LeRoy’s kisses, or you may have to learn to live without LeRoy. By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: I think something is wrong with my husband. He hasn't kissed me since Jan. 10, 1964. That’s the day we were mar-lied. I am 22 and Roy is 23, and we have two adorable children. ■ Everybody in our whole family knows about how Le Roy never . kisses me, and it’s just terrible. Yesterday I went to kiss him, and he turned his head away abby and said, “I don’t kiss anybody.’’ His mother said, “LeRoy, your wife iin’t just anybody.” He shrugged his shoulders and said, 'll just don’t like to Use, so sue me,” and that was the end of ft. I keep myself immaculate, Abby, and my mouth is always dean, so that’s Reveal Soloists for Wednesday Performances DEAR ABBY: Now I’ve seen everything! An obviously pregnant woman ih a mini-skirt! Don’t you think there ought to be a law against people who don’t have any more sense than to go out on the street looking like that? SEEN EVERYTHING DEAR SEEN: I can only repeat the immortal words of Jim Kloubuchar: “Never in the history of fashion has so little material been raised so high to reveal so much that needs to be covered so badly.” AAA DEAR ABBY: I am 19 and have been dating a certain young man a short while. 1 enjpy his company very much, and he seems to enjoy mine. ' Recently 1 heard that be was engaged to another girl, so I asked him for the truth. He told me that he definitely was NOT engaged to anyone, and that he liked me very much. I believed him. Now, again, I heard from a good friend that not only is he engaged, but he gave the girl a diamond last Christmas. I don’t want to date him if he is engaged because I don’t want to start trouble, and besides I’d only be wasting my time. Hie problem is: Who should I believe? What should I do? TROUBLED DEAR TROUBLED: Tell file young man that you heard he gave a girl a diamond last Christmas, and watch his reaction. It shouldn’t be too difficult to learn the truth about an official engagement. Personally, I would believe a person until I caught him lying. DEAR ABBY: It is vary late but something is compelling me to write this letter. After several years of marriage, and nearly as many miscarriages, my husband and I heard of a prospective unwed mother who was willing to give up her unborn baby. ■ We were thrilled, but didn’t dare to get our hopes up just in case something went wrong. Well, everything went fine. We now feel that we lost our babies because God in His infinite wisdom was preparing us for the most precious gift of all—having a chosen child. Abby, never have we known such happiness, such peace and harmony in our marriage. Four talented professional singers have been selected by Robert Shaw as soloists for the Wednesday night performance of Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9 in D minor, to be presented by the Meadow Brook School of Music. Lynda Bird Visits Britain First Time The famed choral director, who is heading both the Orchestral and Choral I Institutes at the Meadow Brook School of Music, will conduct the Meadow Brook I Orchestra, Meadow Brook Chorus, and I Youth Chorus in an 8:30 p.m. concert in the Howard C. Baldwin Memorial Pavilion at Oakland University. - 00$*] Besides the Beethoven symphony, the I orchestra will perform Weber’s Eury-anthe Overture and Webern’s Six Pieces for Orchestra, Op. 6. Soloists for the Beethoven work will be Sophie L. Ginn, soprano; Mary E. |H| Moore, contralto; Oscar McCullough, bass; and Jack H. Coldiron, tenor. * ‘ * * The articles shown with Mrs. William Borcome An assistant professor of music at °f Glanworth Street, Orion Township, and her chil- Bowling Green (Ohio) State University, dren, Ricky and Lynda are just a small sampling Miss Ginn earned lusr bachelor’s and of the things available at the St. Mary’s-ln-The-HUls master’s depeesi at the Juilliard School Episcopal Church 14th Annual Country Fair, The of Music m Now York. " ’ LONDON m - Lynda Bird JohnStm arrived today for a London vacation and be? first trip to Britain- The President’s 23-year-old daughter came on a scheduled airliner and was met at London Airport by U.S. Ambassador and Mrs. David Bruce, with whom she will stay. Wearing a canary yellow coat and matching wide-brim hat, Miss Johnson hurrk?d down the steps of the plane, waved to embassy officials, climbed into theambassador’s ear and rode off. Thaw .was only a small crowd of regular passengers at the airport and most of than did not know who she was. | ■ Miss Johnson was accompanied by two U. ft. Secret Service men who ran dotal file steps of file jet as soon as the doors opened. Security men from the U.S. Embassy and . Scotland, Yard and airport police werealaoonduty. fair, slated for Saturday from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. will feature a variety of booths along with an auction and flea market. Supper will be served from 5 to 7 p.m. and various rides will be available for children. Brace arid Miss Johnsen’s visit was “purely * private one. I did not know until yesterday that she was coning.” Miss Johnson’s trip was not announced in Washington until after she had left New York. McCullough earned his bachelor of •music degree from Baldwin Wallace College aid master of music degree at the Eastman School of Music, Rochester, N.Y. His New York debut recital was at Carnegie Hall in 1963. Coldiron, who teaches at the Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in Fat Worth, Texas and holds a master’s degree from there, is a cum laude graduate of Stetson University. Admission is free to Meadow Brook Festival series ticket holders, while tickets for others are |1. Designed for today's -tempo of living. You'll find this 15-Piece Specially Priced Gtoupkig at DOBBS for a Limited Time Only. Come in Today and take Get Word on Medicare Pontiac chapter No. 7, American Association of Retired Persons will meet Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. in the Continuity Services Building on Franklin Boulevard. There will be a talk on Medicare. 15 Pieces Reg. 'lOW Svle*695 BUT miS 15-PIECE GROUPING OR SALE PRICED INDIVIDUAL GROUPS: Flexsteal Sofa of Sturdy Lifetime Construction with extra arm caps in Nylon solid or brim fabrics. Scotchgardad for extra durability, Reg. $229. SALE $1M Mr. and Mrs. Chairs and OttomanopMfrt»f*d in Scojchgardod prints or fine correlated Nylon docorator fabrics. 3 PCS., Reg. $279. f SALE $225 Contemporary Dinette, Sturdily Constructad, includes Round Walnut plastic-top Table with extension loaf and 4 matching Chain with black vinyl seats. 5 PCS., Rog $140., SALE $129 . 1 Bedroom Suite, beautiful decorator designed, in Gunstock Walnut finish includes Mr and Mrs. Dresser, Mirror, Chest, full«Size Bod anjl on $89.95 Deluxe Quilted Serta Mattress and Box Springs. 6 PCS., Rag. $310., SALE $249 ___ttk- W'.l 1. „ fifn&ls TOims To Suit You Professorial Design ang Interior Decorating Service J Orangey-red double-faced gabardine of "Orion” ,\ An outfit for a fall evening is this Adele ; acrylic and wool by Nattier is newly printed in Bien lame frenchcoat Over a matching dtess- purples on ope side for a full coat path* oblique ^birited coat, with its^ride, notched collar, « closing, Solid, matching red-toned dress beneath MMriMINl in silper, charcoal and fold. The dress in * repeats the diagonal line. The neon-like colorshri is sleeveless .with, a tow V-neck, due to the UnkpHabUUy of “Oilor?’ to take dyes gMemtartdpprogbke flobkedrwel” ,. ' brilliantly. t ft THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JULY 11, 1967 State Hospital Report Shows Use Increase on^rea Police 4. Allegedly Punched ot Fqther, Son Joiled Pontiac State Hospital had an admls- seek medical help. • Local psychiatric facilities, such as. the outpatient clinic at Ppntiac General Hospital, uncover more cases. • Rapid growth of population in this area. increase of 14 per cent sions and 20 per cent in discharges during the past fiscal year over 1965-06, according to statistics released today. ★ jfe . A ‘ Admissions for the fiscal year which ended July 1 were more than 1,600 and discharges approximately 1,950, Medical Supt. Dr. D. W. Martin reported. Three years ago fiscal year statistics showed 883 admissions and 904 discharges. The figures have been Increasing each year. “We don’t know how far this trend toward more and more admissions will go,” Martin said. He gave these reasons for the increases: ly routine accident turned iriio consid-than that for Wa- “We don’t believe the citizens of Oakland and neighboring counties are getting sicker,’' Martin emphasized. ‘It should be stressed that the hospital cannot continue handling this growing caseload at the same level of effectiveness without corresponding increases in budget and staffing. “If budgets are reduced or remain static, services will necessarily decline.” tight was over, had, allegedly d a fattier and Martin explained that the hospital has been able to> eliminate overcrowding by reducing the number of beds because discharges have outnumbered ad- Fire Investigated DETROIT (A — The arson squad today investigated a $30,- marijuana was on the premises. just returned from a convention of motorcycle gangs in a field outside Danville, 111., police said. PAINTED SWASTIKA Police said the littered, three-and-a-half room apartment was decorated with a- hand-painted swastika and a picture of Adolph Hitler on , a motorcycle. Many of the inmates were bearded and long-haired, and ties as they ] building Feb. 23. They had pic the breaking. Pontiac police officers and Oakland County sheriff’s deputies investigated some 84 reported incidents the past 24 hours. A breakdown of causes for police action:! :' Arrests—11' ;r: .* Vandalisms—11 Burglaries—10 Xanieitiai-14 Auto Thefts—4 Assaults—7 ,; Disorderly Persons—4 , PK^e^ Stamage , V Apfciient^-15 ■. Injury Accidents—8 Jag only a ipaA’s shirt, they , .said* . ■ • , ’\ ■ ' " ' ■ Charges/ of possession of ' marijuana or dangerous drugs END OF A SHAGGY TALE — Shaggily were placed against HartM ’ clad Rohald Joiner, 21, Gary, Ind.<, along Henderson, 22, and Ronnie Join- with a.woman companion, Kathleen Bretz, er, 21, both Of Ghry, Ind.;Rob- 26, Chicago, await questioning yesterday in art Wolsey, Milford, Ohio; a Chicago police station after titeir arrest in a dope and weapons raid in a Chicago baseftient apartment. Joiner, a member of the Outlaws motorcycle gang, was charged $th possession of dangerous drugs. Mrs. Bretz was * * “* *’" ■‘iljfi*1— if rged with disorderly qondftct. A i i lerford Township police las' night. Before the i four policemen been punched r~ son arrested. The fattier i— angered, police car driven 1 f legedly was by another Elizabeth near 1----------| shortly before 10 p.m. The pair — Robert Warren, 41, and his son William R. Jr., 21, both of 1275 Edison, Bloomfield Township — ran toward the patrol cars demanding to know who had struck the car of the mother, Glenora R. War- Police said one of the Warren men entered the car of the other driver, James E. Colbeth, 17, of 312 S. Avery, Waterford Township, and punched him, REQUIRES TREATMENT Patrolman John Hood of the Southfield Police Department, who was passing by, attempted to assist Colbeth and was hit in the face. He required treatment at Pontiac General Hospital, as did Mrs. Warren. Also punched were Waterford Township policemen Sgt Alton Doud and Patrolman Milan Stitz and John Hendry, a reserve officer, police said. WWW Both Warren men were taken to Oakland County Jail. Robert was booked on a charge of assaulting a police officer. William is being held for investigation! of disorderly conduct. ARTISTIC NESTING SCENE-A bit of flowery artistry is the result as -this mother mockingbird keeps a wary eye on anyone nearing a nest that she built in an ornamental hanger at a home in Sacramento, Calif. The young birds wait below with open mouths. Hickory Bar B-Q on Detroit’s side Monday, and damaged the W.C. Collins CO., a realty firm next door. Die two-alarm fire erupted after an explosion knocked out the restaurant’s east wall and blew plate glass across the street, ~ Schools Seek Citizens' Aid in Planning A plan to enable citizens to participate in a study of school district needs will be presented at the Pontiac Board of Education meeting tomorrow night. The board feels it is necessary to involve citizens in tjie study of construction and operating needs for Pontiac’s schools prior to a possible bond' levy in November. Supt. Dr. Dana P. Whitmer explained that two months ago the board had decided to make a decision this monht on whether to rehabilitate the existing Central High School or construct a new one on a new site. He said this decision has been pushed back in order to allow citizens to participate in the planning. WWW It is possible that an 118-million project to build two senior high schools in three years may be put to the voters as a package in November. TO REVIEW NEED Citizens will review the need for new junior or senior high school facilities on the e of the district, the future of Central High School and financing plans for construction. Whitmer has said it that the school district will have to undergo “ad extensive capital improvement* program during the next five years,” Tomorrow’s school boar,d meeting will be held at 7:30 p m. in the Central Administration Building’, 350 E. Wide Track. School Board, Panel Discuss Segregation Pontiac’s school board and its uman relations committee, which caused a stir when it proposed integration of two Schools, met last night to exchange views on the proposal. About 30 residents sat in the audience while the members of the board and the committee exchanged ideas. “It was a fairly constructive meeting,” Dr. Robert Turpin of the board said this He said the committee adjourned until September but that the board will continue studying the proposal to integrate die facto segregated Jefferson and Washington Junior High Schools in southwest Pontiac. Turpin said new members of the human relations committee from the Whitfield and Irving elementary school areas are concerned on “how the integration is handled.” Whitfield and Irving school children would go to the predominately Negro Jefferson junior High School under the proposal. Costs to Increase for Area Airport Use Rental adjustments that will boost income at Oakiand-P o n-tiac.Airport about $15,000 per year were authorized yesterday by the airport committee of the Oakland County Board of Super visors. New rates will become effective Sept. 1. Rentals for T-hangars and storage rooms will be raised from $35 to $45 monthly and the rates for tie-down space (field storage) will go from $10 to $15. Terminal ramp parking rates presently are $1 per day after the first 24 hours. Beginning in September a $1 fee will be charged for parking from to 24 hours and the per day rate will be $2 after 24 hours.*’ ★ ★ ★ In other business, airport manager, tl. David Vanderveen reported that airport revenue during the first six months of year was $54,296, or $2,159 above the same period last year. EXPENSES HIGHER ses for the first five months of this year at the air- Chicago Police Arrest 11 at 'HQ for Cycle Gang' CHICAGO (UPI)—Nine mien, i and Patricia Jean, 24, who said including two from Michigan, she lived in the apartment, and two women Were arrested * * * yesterday ha a raid on a* ... __ . . swastika-decorated apartment ««« diarged with ^disorderly conduct. They in- AlnilAil Mm V"nfhlnnn DmaIk OC which police said served a headquarters of the Chicago branch of the Outlaws motorcycle gang.' Police said they found marijuana, “pep pills,” five pistols, fireworks and an SS dagger in the North Side basement apartment. Vice squad detectives said the apartment had been under surveillance for 11 days, following complaints that the occupants were terrorizing neighbors by racing their motorcycles through tile streets and setting off fireworks. The detectives said they had waited until thev were sure eluded Mrs. Kathleen Bretz, Thor Anderson, 32, and Rich-Pavette, 23, all of Chicago; Albert Cyphert, 24, Warren, Mich.; Charles Ritter, 22, Gary; Gerald Walters, 24, Berkley, Mich.; and Richard Roche, 29, Algonquin, fil. port were $8,000 over revenue, VanderVeen said. , He pointed out that the excess over revenue reflects transfer expenses due to the change in ownership and a higher than normal amount of repair and improvement work at the airport this year. ★ ■■ ★ ★ Oakland County purchased the airport Jan. 1 from the City of Pontiac. Safe Robbed in City Home Money, a camera and a bank book were stolen from a combination safe in a Pontiac man’s home, it was. reported to city police early today. Reuben Bronto, 60, of 330 N. Saginaw told investigators $5fl in casfi was taken. He said the camera was' valued at approximately $100. Entry was made through an unlocked window, according to officers. They said the safe ' been pried open. Items Worth $160 Stolen From Home Thieves broke into a Pontiac home yesterday and made off with items valued at more than $160, it was reported to city police. Beatrice Van Kleek of 4230 Lanette, Waterford Township, told officers a portable television set, a television stand and a purse were stolen from a house at 39 Sylvan. Investigators said they could not determine the burglars’ method of entry. dis- FEWER BEDS Pontiac State Hospital has >me 800 beds less than the all-time high of 3,124 beds in 1955. He offered four reasons why the bed capacity can be cut: Moderate improvements in staffing. Earlier and more rapid treatment and thus earlier releases because of the modernization of methods. ★ ★ ★ • Psychiatric drugs permit patients to leave the hospital.;- in toe past they would have to remain. “Increased public understanding and acceptance of mental illness permits more sufferers to live out in the community even when not 100 per cent recovered.”. Racist Dad Fined for Florida Beating SANFORD, Fla. 0B - A Sanford civil engineer was fined $500 Monday after pleading no contest to charges that he attacked a Seminole County school official last summer because his daughter was assigned to a Negro teacher. Judge Karlyle Householder passed sentence after William Leffler changed his pie through his attorney from inn Leffler was charged with beating former Sefninole school Supt. R. T. Milwee after Lef-fler’s daughter was assigned t< i class taught by a Negro. The teacher still is to the school. Little Cash I for Thieves ( The burglars who made off with a cash register in a break* in at a Waterford Township service station must have been disappointed when they opened it. * * ★ Reported stolen yesterday from Augie’s Gulf, 7700 Cooley Lake, toe cash register contained only $5.70. However, toe cash register is worth $197. GOING ALONG WITH DADDY-A South Vietnamese Montagnard Special Forces soldier carries his child in a sling on his back as he walks on the road leading to the Special Forces camp near Dak To, South Vietnam. The camp is located in toe central highlands some 310 miles northeast of Saigon. The soldier wears a “tiger stripe” camouflage fatigue uniform. Deaths in Pontiac Area Mrs. Cornel A. Schmidt Service for Mrs. Cornel A. (Elsie) Schmidt, 77, formerly of Pontiac, will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at Voorhees-Siple Chapel with burial id White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mrs. Schmidt died yesterday. Darlinda Jean Cowell OAKLAND TOWNSHIP—Service for Darlinda Jean Cowell, infant daughter of Mr. and1 Mrs. Donald Cowell of 3565 Orion . will be 9:30 a.m. tomorrow at Hopcroft Funeral Home, Hazel Park, with burial in Oak-view Cemetery. Surviving besides her parents are grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Donald Cowell of Rochester and Mr. Fred Gould of Hazel Park; great-grandmother Mrs. Minnie Cowell of Rochester; and a sister, Deana Marie, and brother, Donald, both at home. Bert W. Hallett West bloomfield town-SHIP-Bert W. Hallett, 64, of 7791 Pontiac Trail died yesterday. His body is at the C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor. A gardener at toe Pine Lake Country Club, he was a member of toe Fraternal Order of Eagles No. 3410, Aerie No. 2887, Water-lord Township, a member of toe Hilltoppers Mens Bowling League and a volunteer fireman for toe West Bloomfield Township Fire Department. Surviving are his wife, Ethel; five brothers; and one sister. are a daughter, Tracy at home; her parents, Mr. and Mrs. La-verne Hansen of Wautoma; and two sisters. Fester Robinson ROSE TOWNSHIP - Service for Fester Robinson, 58, of 84440 Fisher Lake was to be at Longview, Tex., with burial there. Arrangements were by the Da-vis-Cobb Funeral Home, Pontiac. Mr. Robinson, an employe erf the City of Pontiac, died Saturday. Surviving is his wife, Mary. Donalch D. Slavin OXFORD TOWNSHIP -Graveside service for Donald D. Slavin, infant son of Mr. and Mrs. John F. Slavin of 1540 N. Lapeer, will be 4 p.m. today at toe Eastlawn Cemetery, Lake Orion. Arrangements are fay Flumerfelt Funeral Home, Oxford. Die infant died Saturday. Surviving are his parents; a brother, Jeffery at home; grandparents Mr. and Mrs. John J. Kolak of Ironwood; and Mrs. Eleanor Slavin of Ironwood. NASA Slates Voyager Test By Science Servlet WASHINGTON-The National Aeronautics and Space Administration is about to launch a major test flight in a program that the Senate would like to scuttled completely in the newly begun fiscal year. ★ ★ ★ The test, which may come as early as July 18, is the second five comparing different kinds ol parachutes designed to soft-land an unmanned capsule on Mars as the first mission in NASA’s Voyager program. The Senate has knocked out the entire $71.5-million Voyager budget in its proposed version of the space agency’s 1968 authorization. In toe test at Walker Air Force Base, N.M., an 815-foot-high, 26-million-cubic-foot balloon will carry a “flight unit” shaped like a flying saucer to -an altitude of 130,000* feet—almost 25 miles—where the atmosphere is almost as thin as that of Mars. ★ ★ ★ Upon a signal from the round, toe flight unit WU1 be released from the halloon, and eight rocket engines will blast it up another 10,000 feet. There the test parachute, a 65-foot-diameter disc with a ring-shaped segment removed from near the edge, will be deployed, and a 500-pound simulated Voyager capiule will be released from the flight unit to float to the ground beneath toe parachute. Additional parachute shapes are being studied. Mrs. Charles Lowe AVON TOWNSHIP - Service for Mrs. Charles (Carol J.) Lowe, 34, of 2843 Midvale will be Thursday at toe Gault-Pat-terson-Hardell Funeral Home, Wautoma, Wis., with burial from there. Arrangements were by toe Harold R. Davis Funeral' Home, Auburn Heights. Mrs. Lowe died Sunday in an auto accident. Surviving besides her husband AVON TOWNSHIP- Service for Baby Boy Wurm, 1-day-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Wurm of 270 Maple Hill, was to be 10 a.m. today at toe Pxley Memoral Chapel, Rochester, with burial in White Chapel Me-loral Cemetery, Troy. The baby died Stfiiday. Surviving besides his parents are a brother, Mark at home; grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Pur-den Wurm of Troy and Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Chamberlain of Lake Orion; and great-grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Purden Wurm Sr. of Florda, Mrs. Hazel Tubbs of Lansing and Mrs. Julia Chamberlain of Romeo. 2 Men Sentenced in School Burglary | Two young men who burglarized the Avondale High School last winter were each sentenced jyesterday to 1M» to 10 years in the state prison at Jackson by Circuit Judge William J. Beer. Die pair, Billy R. Stone of Highland Park and Ronald J. Ball of Detroit, both 22, were apprehended by sheriff’s depu-left the school pleaded guilty to and entering charge on June 7. Former Exec Dies GROSSE POINTE FARMS (AP) — Abram VanderZee, a former director and vice president of Chrysler Carp., died Monday. He was 73. VanderZee, who retired in 1956, had sowed Chrysler for nearly 38 years. He began his auto industry career With Chevrolet of General Motors in |Hnt. 2 Escapees Recaptured IONIA (AP)—Two escaped inmates of Ionia Reformatory today wei-e back in custody after their capture in a Westphalia lumber yard by sheriff’s depu- Gerald Hill, 19, of Ceresco and James Timmons, 18, of Kalamazoo, were reported by police to have escaped from the outside dormitory of the reformatory at about 5 a.m. Mon- A sheriff’s deputy found them hiding in an empty school bus in toe lumber yard about 4:30 Monday afternoon. He said the pair ran off when he approached, but gave themselves up after he fired a shot in the Baby Boy Wurm COMPLETE HEARING EVALUATIONS • BATTERIES and ACCESSORIES • REPAIR OF ALL MAKES Thos. B. Appleton Certified by the National Hearing Aid Society Main Floor, Rikor Bldg. 35 W. Huron 332-5052 cam YOU WANT ONLY THE FINEST. BECAUSE OUtS IS A TRADITION’*'*" 9F UNDERSTANDING SERVICE- We cate foe/ 46 Williams St. Outstanding in Pontiac for Service and Facilities FE 8-9288 THU PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY/JULY li; 1967 Cheap Test for Gonorrhea 29‘Americans Killed WASHINGTON afflicts a million persons in the United State*. One major obstacle1 to wiping out gonorrhea is the fact that most female carrjeri have no symptoms. They torpor the infection without knowing it. Summer Meetings Set When school's out for the summer, so goes the Parent-Teacher Associations. But for the first time in Pontiac, it will not be so, according to Fred Carter, director of McConnell Community School. McConnell School PTA will By Rev. Robert H. Shelton, Pastor First Baptist Church of Pontiac ‘ . 1 i • - I Pastor She],ton This is the second in a series of messages given at the morning Worship Service of the First Baptist Church. We invite you to attend the services of the First Baptist Church each Sunday. Sunday School 9:30 a.m. Morning Worship 10:45 a.m.and the evening service at 7:00 p>.m. “THE COMING WORLD EULER” 1 In the message last week I concluded with the statement that Israel is looking tor a great world leader who will insure her presence in her “Promised Land.” I would like us to focus our attention upon this coming world leader in our study today. Let’s go bade for a few moments into Israel’s history again. Remember Judah was led off by Nebuihadnezzar ' into Babylon. That was about 000 B.C. DREAM OF NEBUCHADNEZZAR Shortly after that time Nebuchadnezzar had a dream. It is found in Daniel, chapter 2. This dream was from the Lord and ushered into human history what is rafenfed to in scripture as “the times of the Gentiles”. liebud member, dream, you will re-, was of a great imago. “This of fine gold, his breast and his arms of silver, bis belly and his thighs of brass, IBs legs of iron, his feet part of iron and part of day.” (Daniel 2:32,33) Daniel’s interpretation makes it clear that the four parts of the image refer to four great world powers. “Thou, O king, art a king of kings: for the God of heaven hath given thee a kingdom, power, and strength, and glory. And wheresoever the children of men dwell, the beasts of the field and the fowls of the heaven hath he given into thine hand, and hath made thee ruler ova* them all. Thou art this head of gold. And after thee shall arise another kingdom inferior to thee, and another third kingdom of brass, which shall bear rule over all the earth. And the fourth kingdom Bhall be strong as iron: forasmuch as iron breaketh in pieces and subdueth all things: and as iron that breaketh all these, shall it break in pieces and bruise.” (Daniel 2:37-40) So the Babylonian empire was the golden head of the image. It was brought to a close with the downfall of Belshazzar, Nebuchadnezzar’s grandson. Chapter 5, verse 31, tijen tells us that Darius, the Median, took the empire. This brought Media and Persia together, forming the great Medo-Persian empire. This Is pictured In the image as the breast and arms of silver. Several hundred years later, Alexander the Great conquered Medo-Persia and extended the mighty empire of Greece. This empire wbs prophesied in the belly and thighs of brass. The fourth world empire was Rome. As you know, the Lord Jesus made his human appearance during this period. Rome remained a united kingdom tor 300 years after Christ’s birth. Then for 200 more years existed as an eastern and western empire. Thus the two legs of iron in Nebuchadnezzar’s image. So the image in Daniel 2 represents 4 world empires — Die golden head - Babylon The silver breast and arms - Medo-\ Persia The brass belly and thighs - Greece The iron legs - Rome, Western and Easton THE COMING ALLIANCE OF NATIONS All of these empires have come and gone, but there is one part of the image that is yet to appear. It is associated with the old Roman empire. It is pictured clearly in the 10 toes of Nebuchadnezzar’s image, (Daniel 2:40-41) The late Dr. H. A. Ironside wrote, “This brings us to toe last form of tot fourth kingdom; for toe Roman empire, though at toe present in abeyance, has not yet. come to its end. The ten toes on toe feet of the image represent ten kings who are to reign at one time, but who will form a confederacy on toe ground of the ancient empire. This is something which the world has never yet seen.” Dr. Ironside wrote these words in 1911. Such a confederacy was the farthest thing from most minds, but today we see toe formation of these 10 kingdoms into a confederacy clearly prophesied 2000 years ago through a dream God gave to Nebuchadnezzar. 1 grant you there are problems. There is socialism and democracy represened in these nations. They the trying to mix. I believe they are spoken of as iron and clay in toe image — a strange mixture. But the fact is, they will get together for a tone. How will the mixing of these 10 great nations come about? The answer is foupd in God’s Word. Turn with me please to toe book of Revelation, chapter 13. THE ANTI-CHRIST ‘And 1 stood upon the sand of the sea, :and saw a beast rise up out of toe sea, having seven heads and ten horns, and upon Ms horns ten crowns, and upon his he&ds' the name of blasphemy.’^; (Revelation 13:1) The beast here is seen coming out of the sea. Most Bible students -believe this refers to the sea of humanity, toe sea of nations. Actually, he will come out of one of the 10 nations which occupy toe land of the Old Roman Empire. , For a time he will be toe revered leader of this western alliance, Thai he will look for a way to become the undisputed leader of the whole World. I don’t believe he will have to wait long. The Bible speaks of a great army from toe north that will come down upon toe unwalled cities of Israel. Israel Will be unarmed because the beast has guaranteed her safety. But this great army from toe north challenges that guaranr tee. Ezekiel 38 tells us that the Western alliance will contend With this great power from the north, but notice toe strange series of events that will follow. “And 1 will call for a sword against him throughout all my mountains, saitfa toe Lord God: every man’s sword shall be against his brother. And 1 will plead against him with pestilence and With Mood; and I will rain Mm, and upon Ms bands, and upon the many people that are with MM, an overflowing rain, and great hailstones, fire and brimstone,” (Essfcki 38:21J» God could certainly use the powers of the western alliance, but the indication is thee will be judgments from heaven along with some unknown pestilence which will virtually wipe out this great northern army. Remember, it will take seven months for the house of Israel to bury the dead. (Ezekiel 39:12) The nations will eventually know that God did this, but I believe toe beast will sieze the credit for the time bring, for something is to happen that will cause the beast to become the undisputed leader of every nation on the face of the earth. Revelation 13:6 tells us, “And all that dwell upon the earth shall worship him.” Daniel 7:23 says, “The beast devours the whole earth.” Then in Revelation 13, verses 5 and 8, we read, “And there was given unto him a mouth speaking great things and blasphemies; and power jras given unto Mm to coqjinue forty and two months. And he opened his mouth in blasphemy against God, to blaspheme his name, and Ms tabernacle, and them that dwell in heaven.” The 42 months here speaks of the last half of the tribulation period, starting in the middle of Daniel’s 70th week, 3% years after Christ returns for IBs church. This will be the time when Satan will enter the beast and control Mm s» he has never controlled any man ia human history. What will Satan’s first goal he? “And it was given unto him jo make war with the saints, and to overcome them.” (Revelation 18:7a) f ^ Here the beast reveals his fru* identity. He is not the Messiah of JnpeL but an imposter, the anti-christ. He will speak tenderly to braet for toe first 3% years, for then hejtrils them they can have Jerusalem; ftyey can rebuild their temple; and bejjn thrir sacrifices, but in the middle of the week, that is, at toe beginning ofi the second 3tt year period, he reveals Ms true identity and Israel will recogqise him as the man of sin, the great impoajter, toe anti-Christ * i . - What does he do tost causes toe scales to drop from toe'ayes of toe 'children of Israel? 11 ' Paul tells us, “Let ml,mm deceive you by any means: for ,toat day shall not come, except there come a falling away torsi, and that man of sin be revealed, toe son of perdition; Who ®P-poeeto and exalteth Mijnself above all that is called God, or that M worshipped; so that he as God sitteth in the temple of God, shewing himself that he Is God.” .ftll Thessalonians 2:3, A) j it is significant that Israel has now taken Jerusalem. In Luke chapter 21, verse 24 we read, “And they shall fall by the edge of the sword, and shall be led away captive into all nations: and Jerusalem shall be trodden down of the Gentiles, until the times of the Gentiles be fulfilled,” It appears we are quickly coming to the sod of “the times of the Gentiles” for Israel has control of Jerusalem. For toe first time in 2800 years Israel is in control of the “Holy City.” This is the most significant event from the standpoint of Bible Prophecy that has happened in centuries, for they must build their temple. It is conceivable they could lose Jerusalem for the present, but they will have it some day—at least long enough to build their temple. For God’s Word tells us the anti-Christ will sit in the temple and declare himself to be God. In the middle of Daniel’s 70th week “the beast” will break Ms covenant with Israel and the eyes of these blinded people will at last be opened. « “And he shall confirm toe covenant with many for one week: and in toe midst of the week he shall came toe sacrifice and the oblation to cease, and for the overspreading of adominations he shall make desolate. (Daniel 11:31) “And from the time that the daily sacrifice shall be taken away, toe abomination that maketh desolate set tq>, there fhnll be a thousand two hundred and ninety days.” (DpMel 12:11) Jesus speaks of this great event in Matthew 4j*U36 “When ye therefore shall see the abomination of desolation, spoken of'by Daniel the prophet, stood in the holy place. Then let them which be in Judea flee into toe mountains.” Antiochus Epiphanes once offered a swine in the temple. That was, a gteat abomination, but toe anti-Christ will present himself as God. That is an even greater abomination. He will say, “I am your God; look to toe; worsMp me;” THE TRUE CHRIST Yop see, Satan knows why Jesus came. He knows why He went to too cross-He knows why the veil was rent in „ now into toe the Old Testa-____ is ‘.fM - longer God's plan. Satan/knows it alL So toe great imposter mil seek to do away with the sacrifices. The reason God’s chosen people will know he is an importer, they will suddenly realise toe only way the true Messhto could eliminate the shedding of the blood of innocent tomb* would be to present Himself as the of God, to shed IBs own Mood as an atonement for sin. It is torn twain. God that presence ment sacrificial they will realize they nailed toe true Messiah to a rugged cross many years before. For the first time in Israel's history they will understand that Isaiah the prophet was speaking of the Messiah's first coming When be wrote these words: “He Is despised and rejected of men; a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief: and we hid as it were our faces from Him; He was despised, and we esteemed Him not Surely He hath borne our griefs, and carried our sorrows: yet we did esteem Him stricken, smitten of God, and affiked. But He was wounded for our transgressions, He was bruised for our iniquities: the chastisement of our peace was upon Him; and with IBs stripes we are healed. All we like sheep have gone astray: we have turned every one to Ms own way; and toe Lord hath laid on Him the iniquity of us ail.” (Issaiah 53:3-8) The Apostle Paul speaks of this very truth as he writes, / “For He hath made Him to be sin for us, Who knew no sin; that we migM be made the righteousness of God in Him.” (H Corinthians 5:21) The Lord Jestii Christ through His own death ushered into the world a new covenant No mole lambs need to be sacrificed for He, the Lamb of God, “appeared to put away sin by the sacrifice of Himself.” "(Hebrews 9:28) This is„wby the veil was rent in twain as Christ Ming upon the cross of Calvary. No longer do we approach God the Father through the sacrifice of innocent lambs. We can now go directly into His presence through our great High Priest, the Lord Jesus Christ, jfr | * jy;v f John the Baptist *spoke of this truth out day as he pointed to Christ and said, “Behold toe Lamb of God, which taketoawity the sin of toe world.” Friend ri mine, youf>ito tow on Him as He hung on that' eras! Mobs. He died for you, and will give to you Ufe eternal if you trill htit come to Him in child-like God’s chosen people will some day see fids truth and place their trust in toe Lamb of Calvary, THE TRUE MESSIAH OF ISRAEL. IS ext Tuesday, the thirdmes- | :tmz - ■ sage to t if appear, entitled “From Armageddon to Final Judgment.” * - Tune in to StationCKLty at 11:00 each Sunday morning and hear timely messages from the pulpit of tihe First Baptist Church. NEXT WEEK >"FROM. ARMAGEDDON TO FINAL JUDGEMENT" AllKIlUMWlI RULER Drop in Illega Sales of Hippie Drug Told SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - Illegal sales of the mind-bending drqg “STP” are rapidly declining, according to Dr. Frederick H, Meyers, a University of California drug expert. But, he said, an “awful lot of counterfeit junk,” including fake LSD is being sold in its Mace. STP, potentially the most dangerous craze of the hippie generation, caused the hospitalization of at least a dozen persons in California late last month and sent about 20 others “right qut of their heads for three or four days” With wild hallucinations, said Meyers, professor of pharmacology at the UC Medical Cutter in San Francisco. The death of a southern California nan is also suspected of having been caused by STP. “The use of the drug now appears to be falling off very rapidly, but a huge variety of stuff is still being peddled as STP," Meyers said. .“Heaven knows what it is.” * • f* * The Federal Food and Drug Administration’s Bureau of Drug Abuse, which has launched art investigation into STP use, said the substance may come from mescaline, a cactus plant derivative once used by American1 Indians to induce religious visions. Meyers and a colleague. Dr. David. H. Smith, said, however, that chemical analysis of the “real tiling” indicated STP is related to known drugs of the) atropine family, a medically useful drug derived from the common jimson weed and normally used in the treatment of asthma./ “Actually, what it tarns out to be is not really very important,” Meyers said. /‘The crucial tiling is that we know it produces terrifying hallucinations and often convulsions. And we know doctors should not use standard anit-LSD treatment which, with STP* often increases the bad effects and can canse respiratory paralysis and death. “We have got to warn people not to end a ‘bad trip’ on STP with chtarpromazine or thorazine since the combined effects could be fatal.” | Meyers said hippies often carry LSD and STP in one pocket and a remedy for a bad trip in the other. The drugs are usually obtained through the same illegal manufacturer. THE COMING OFFICIALS AND YOUTH-Officials gather at the McConnell School playground before the first of two scheduled ■nirmnor PTA meetings. In the foreground are (from left) William Hanger, Pontiac police chief; Mrs. James Samson, new PTA president; and Isaac C. Prevette, Oakland County juvenile court referee. In the background are (from left) Fred Carter, director of McConnell Community School; Mrs. Frank Benion, immediate past PTA president; and Judge Norman R. Barnard of Oakland County Probate Court. : mer on Thursday and Aug. 18. ; “It was decided it would be a good thing to keep the parents going to the meetings since we had a tremendous average attendance of 180 people with a peak of during the regular school year,’ Carter explained. Speakers at the 7 p.m. meet-nig Thursday will be William Hanger, Pontiac police chief, and Isaac Prevette Jr., Oakland County juvenile court referee. Prevette will be speaking in behalf of Judge Norman R. Barnard of Oakland County Probate Court who will be out of town. < Subject of the talks will be juvenile delinquency and the role of the parents. pasatolt bee*lie current diagnostic tests take as laag ns todays and must be made by highly skilled teehniciaas. Now, doctors report that a relatively new test method accurately detects tile gonorrhea-causing bacteHa, called gonococcus, within 24 hours. It Is simple enough to be done by any laboratory techtadan. Dr. James B. Lucas and his colleagues at the .National Communicable Disease Center, Atlanta, Ga., tested 1,311 women for gonorrhea in a study comparing the accuracy and efficiency of the new method with standard test procedures. “The Thayer-Martin culture technique, developed within the last two years, is definitely the best diagnostic tori,” Dr. Lucas says. “However, it is not yet in widespread use.” Few this test, cervicdl smears from patients are added to a culture medium containing antibiotics that kill off most types of bacteria except toe gonococcus. WORLD Rog. $199.00 Get Ahead. Get a Royal, ELECTRIC!. EASY Trade-in Allowance TONiTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JUDY 11, 1907 THE PONTIAC PREifcKE OlEH PAGES Sandlotters After Pro Jobs Karl Sweetaifs Success Spurs Lions' Rookies THREE STRAIGHT—Second baseman Dick McAuliffe of the Detroit Hgers is a member of the AmericaivLeague Ail-Star team for thethird straight time. Restarted at shortstop |in 1965*86* The American Stars* take on the National League late this afternoon at Anaheim, Calif. ‘ * , Putter Holds Key in British Tourney HOYLAKE, England — Hie best golfers in the world took another look today at only one club in their bag — the putter. Steaming sun and only gentle breeze off the Dee Estuary and the Irish Sea scorched out the 6,995 yard, par 72 Hoyiake course, and the field of 130 started to realize that the 1967 British Open Championship would be won on the greens. Jack Nicklaus, the 27-year-old Columbus, Ohio, holder of both the British and American Open titles, carried five putters with him Monday in practice straight but not too far, then knocks it hi the bole. That's why men like Sanders and De Vicenzo and Deane Beman, the former amateur king recently turned pro, came into the thinking. Beman shot a par 72 Monday and the way be did it exemp-lied where he is good — on the greens. He had 31 putts and that, any golfer will tell you, is five under par. For Beman to imagine he could be the British Open king at the same time the United States Professional Golf Association stUl is demanding that he go to school and learn how to repair clubs, is somewhat titilating. That put his bag at about 18 clubs, four over the limit, but he contended he knew what he was doing. He tinkered around on greens, now lightning fast. Roberto De Vicehzo, the 48-year-old Argentinian whose record for consistency in the British Open can hardly be challenged over the past decide, spent eight solid hours doing only one thing — putting. “My driver is beautiful,’’ said De Vicenza. “That doesn’t matter. My middle irons from the six to the three are . beautiful. That doesn’t matter. My put-ter, oh, ’<> Doug Sanders, of Ojal, Calif., worked on his putting as well. He is rated at 10 to 1 . Nicklaus at 11 to 4 is the clear cut favorite for the championship which Is played over 72 holes horn Wednesday through Saturday. The unbelievable weather in Hoyiake -*- a seaside sanctuary which revels in wind and rain — was more a topic of conversation that the golf-itself. NOT TOO FAR It led the so-called experts around to thinking about the man who hits a ball Fathersf Sons Set to Tee Off Today in Annual Event Southfield Nine Whips Walled Lake, 15-5; Half Game Off Pace Southfield trimmed Wailed Lake’s lead to a half game last night by routing the leader, 15-5, in District 18 American Legion' baseball action. Hie triumph left Southfield with a 13-4 mark, while Walled Lake clings to the top spot with a 144 record. • Lance Pesci and Mike Haley rapped put two hits apiece and knocked hi two runs each in sparking the Southfield victory. Gary Betrus picked up the de-, cision on the mound. The dads and their offspring move into the limelight, today in the annual Golf Association of Michigan Father-Son Tournament. A field of 180 teams will play in the 18-hole event using two ^courses, Pine Lake and Orchard Lake. The field is loaded with some of the area’s leading golfers. Among them is the team of Mike Sou-chak, head pro at Oakland Hills, and son, Mike Jr., along with C. J. St. Germain and son Jim, a sophomore at the University of Houston. Ed Green Joins sons Peter and John, and GAM director Jim Standish III moves off the job briefly for a tour of the links with son Clark. Ochard Lake pro Tommy Shannon and son Gary are among the starters, along with Tony Skover and son Tom of North-ville. One of the area’s top amateurs, Chuck Byrne of Birmingham, joins sons Chuck ; Jr. and Kip. Tom Rex of Plum Hollow tees off with sons Tom Jr. and Bob. Pete Jackson, defending GAM champion, joins his father, Pad, and brother Mike for the 18-hole round. By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press Karl Swee tan, who has become a symbol of success for footbail players with sights on the big time pros, has to take some of the credit (or the blame) for the biggest rookie camp ever assembled by the Detroit Lions at Cran-brook: A squad of 51 players, including nine sophomore returnees, crowded the practice fields at Cranbrook yesterday for light initial workouts. WWW New head coach Joe Schmidt and his staff of six assistants have the task of picking plums from the' grapevine with twice daily sessions scheduled this week. There will have to be a mamouth purge of football hopefuls before the veterans report next Monday. Among the early camp players are 28 free agents, many of whom are look-big for a chance to do what Sweetan did — jump from the sandlots to the majors. Sweetan is making his third appearance in rookie camp, this time, however, more solidly entrenched at the quarterback slot. In 1965 he got through rookie camp after a season in Canada, played half of an exhibition game and played the entire season with Pontiac in the Midwest Football League. He went back in 1966 as a rookie again and by mid-season found himself in a starting role following an injury to Milt Plum. Now he’s back in rookie camp again, partly for more seasoning and partly for the need of having the quarterbacks available to work with the rookies. OTHER CALLERS Quarto-backs also in camp are Pete Mikolajewski, another Midwest Football League graduate from Dayton, and Tim Jones, a sixth draft choice from Weber State. Plum is not expected in camp until next week, although there have been reports that the eight-year veteran does not plan to make an appearance but Wants to be traded. Another quarterback who had a half seasoh stint with Pontiac last year, and who returned to the Lions after Plum’s injury is Tommy Myers. The former All-America from Northwestern is serving his army reserve hitch sind is expected to be in camp in a couple weeks. Personnel scout Carl Brettschneider, who Is also working with the linebackers, bias admitted that the Sweetan success story was a factor in the large number of requests for tryouts by free agents. Many football players from all parts of the country, but mostly from the Midwest area, have admitted in their correspondence for tryouts that they hope to climb the same ladder of success as Sweetan. “It,was impossible to bring them all into camp,” said Brettschneider, “but if - we find just one among those Who are here who can make it, then I’d say it would be worth bringing in such a big squad to start.” The big rookie names in camp of course are Nick Eddy, Mel Farr and lineman Paul Naumoff, all top rung draft choices who will be on their way to Chicago Wednesday to join the college All-Stats. Among the returnees in camp with Sweetan are receivers Johnny Robinson, Bill Malinchak and Warren Wells. Wells was with tiie Lions two years ago and has recently come out of the service. (Continued on Page C-2, Col. 3) TOP ROOKIES—Three of the Detroit lions’ top rookies were ready for practice yesterday when the first year players reported for the opening session at Cranbrook. They are (left to right) Paul Naumoff, Tennessee; Nick Eddy, Notre Dame; and Me] Farr, UCLA. -Eddy and Farr are expected to give Detroit’s running attack a boost Tennis Deadline Is Tomorrow Talent Shift in Grid Mart I Keeps Casey on Coast LOS ANGELES (A — Bemie Casey’s trip from West to East wound up from North to South. The fleet flanker who performed for the San Francisco 49ers the past six years had figured on a trip to Atlanta. Today his address is Los Angeles as the Rams went into the trade mart again and secured Casey’s services as a pass target. Los Angeles sent running black Tom Moore, a seven-year National Football League veteran, to the Falcons to get the 28-year-old Casey, a product of Bowling Greqn. ★ * * To start tiie cycle, the 49ers made Casey part of their deal with Atlanta which gave them tiie Falcons’ draft pick last winter and tiie chance to acquire All America quarterback Steve Spurrier. Los Angeles added to its running back strength in a trade with Minnesota to get Tommy Mason. And Moore, who spent six years of his NFL career at Green Bay after starring at Vanderbilt, informed Coach George Allen that business interests in Nashville wouldn’t permit him to come West this year. Casey, an artist* is associated with a gallery in Los Angeles and viewed the change in travel plans as a decided advantage. 4 t . “I feel like a rookie again,” comment- ed the 6-toot4 210-pounder who has caught 277\ passes for 27 touchdowns during his six years in the league. He’ll report to rookie camp on Thursday to begin learning the Rams’ play patterns. ★ ★ * Moore, a year older than Casey at 29, carried 104 times last year for 272 yards and a 2.6 average. He also set a league record for pass receptions by a running back with 60. ' In the mortgage business, Moore’s firm has a branch in Atlanta and Allen said, “He hinted he would like to play there.’* Play Friday at OU Right-Handers in Starting Roles AL Hopiqg to End Skid in ANAHEIM (IB — Dean Chance returns to the land of Donald Duck and Mickey * * * Mouse today as the American League if hi another game, Rod Kennedy fanned tries.to transform itself from one Snow nine and* gave up only one hit as third- white’s seven dwarfs back into Jack place Waterford (124) blanked Farming* the Giant Killer " S.S.T?: “p tm ■ Chance, the controversial right-hand- tats and drove m both Waterford runs. * *ho „„ a California An|el trim t ., .................... 9 the Angels became neighbors of Dis- neyland last year, was named by AL Manager Hank Bauer to start today’s All-Star game against the National League. ★ ★ * 1 Yacht Trials Resume NEWPORT, RJ. (AP) — The four U.S. yachts yying for the right to defend the America’s Cup were scheduled to resume their observation trials off Newport today after heavy fog forced a two-day ^postponement, f A. Currently leaking a glittering comeback after being traded to Minnesota lasLwinteri (he 26-year-old Chance, 11-7, Ijj second time In as many All-Star appearances. I In his All-Star debut in 1964, -the Ohio farmboy blanked the Nationals on two hits in the first three innings. The NL eventually erupted for a 74 triumph. The loss for the Americans is part of a skid, that has seen them. plummet from a 124 All-Star lead to a 1*47 defi-cit. The Natiqpal League has won 15 of dm last 21 games* eight of tiie last 18 gad the last four. Before denting the National’s superiority, however,. the American League must get post Juan Marichal, San Francisco’s brilliant right-hander who Was named to start for the NL by Manager Hie winningest pitcher in the majors With a 12-7 record, Marichal is making his second start in six appearances and seeking his third victory against no defeats. Young Pro Golfer Causing Problems for Tour Officials SUTTON, Mass Oft — Registration for tiie Ladies Professional Golf Association Championship waS scheduled for today at Pleasant Valley Country Club, with most of the interest centered on the case of 10-year-old Beverly Klass. * ★ * Tournament officials and lawyers planned a meeting to determine the status of the child professional. “We have to check out tiie child labor laws and make sure we wouldn’t he in violation of any statutes,” said Leonard Wirts, tiie LPGA tournament director who tried unsuccessfully to bar Beverly from last week’s $15,000 Lady Carling Open in Baltimore. Wirtz said at that time that the rules were being changed to prohibit any en--grants less foarf 18 years of age, He would not comment on this aspect of the situation Monday night, however. *■ * * Young Beverly and her father, con-- tractor . Jack Klass of Woodland Hills, Calif., were in Hancock, Mass., Monday for a golf promotion and were expected here today. It’s deadline time, tomqrrow, for the eighth annual Oakland Courtly Open Tennis Tournament starting Friday at Oakland University courts. 1 The tournament, sponsored- by- The Press and the Pontiac Recreation De-1 partment, had a record turnout last year : when 162 matches were ’played over two weekends. ★ * ★ 1 Entry blanks are available at the recreation department, Oakland University and at Hie Pressi The printed entry on the sports page can also be used. There is a 58 cent entry per individual per event. Five divisions include men’s singles and doubles, junior Singles and doubles and senior singlesL The latter is for men 35 and over, and two veterans who are already entered include Ralph Alee and Leon Hibbs, two of the top efty players through the years. The seniors’ event will be played commencing at 5,00 p.m. Friday. On Saturday, the men’s and juniors’ Singles Will get under way and Sunday all doubles Will get started. PAIRINGS DUE The pairings will be printed in Friday’s sports section of The Press. Trophies will he awarded tor Mi winners and runners-up. Players must simply one new ball for each match they play. Hie tennis balls will be supplied . from the semifinal round. Balls win be available for purchase at the courts. All players should register at least 20 minutes prior' to their schedule time: The 10 minute, default ride will be in effect. The 29-year-old Dominican has been one of the stingiest huriers in all-star competition, having allowed just one earned run in 11 innings for an 6.82 earned run average. That's not the only tiling that could Dolphins Trade QB hamper the AL’s come-back attempt. * Bauer’s forces have been decimated by MIAMI* Fla. (AP) — Rich in quarter-injuries, primarily to Detroit’s Al Ka- bade talent, tiie Miami Dolphins Monday line awl 'Baltimore’s Frank Robinson, traded away their only seasoned field the two highest vote getters on foe 25-^ signal caller, Eddie Wilson, to the Boston Bonus 'Baby' Lucas Will Rejoin St. Louis - ST. LOUIS (AP) — One of foe last of pro football’s bonus-war babies, Harold Lucas, agreed Monday to rejoin the St. Louis Cardinals, the team be walked out on last year. 1 The ex-Michigan State tackle spanned a reported five-year $200,000 bonus!, contract last season when Coach Charley Winner ordered the 300-pound Lucas to lose about 25 pounds at the National Football League’s summer camp. ; r Lucas was foe Cardinals’ second draft choice in the 1966 college draft, the last draft in which the National and American leagues competedfor the sap* Meat. ' 'J ’ 5* H THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JUI|Y 11, 1967 The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by thim in wholesale package lots Quotat ns are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Monday, Produce FRUITS Apples, Delicious, Red, bu. . Apples, Delicious, Red, C.A., tx Apples, Nomern Spy, bu. .. Apples, Northern Spy, CA» b Apples, Steele Red, bu... Apples, Steele Red, C.A., bu. sfrawberrles.^gl^Cm^.. 2.50 . Parsley, CurfV, PS Parsley, Root, dz. belt. ........... Peas, Green, bu. .... •............. Radishes, Red. dz. bch. Radishes, white, dz. be • Rhubarb, Outdoor, dz. ben........... '-K Squash, Italian, W bu . .............3.50 • squash, Summer, <& bu................ Turnips, dz. bch. ................. Turnips, Topped, bu................ GRIENS gSSariJr-.::::::::::::: Kale, dii. ........................ Mustard, bu. ...................... . Sorrel, bu. ..............;........ Spinach, bu. ............ Turnips, bu.............' ■ LETTUCE AND GREENS Endlva, l bu. ...... ............ Endive, Bleached, bu............... Escerole, % b«L ••................. Escerde, Bleached, U.S. Rejects Soviet Power Seeker Demoted Aid to Nigeria MOSCOW (AP) a Alexander N. Shelepin, former head of the Soviet secret police and long a contender for top power, was named today to the powerless post of Soviet trade union boss. The demotion of the ambitious, 48-year-old leader followed elimination of a number of his proteges from key jobs amid signs of a Kremlin power struggle. ★ * ★ Recent event^Jiave indicated that, from a leading position in the collective leadership that succeeded Nikita S. Khrushchev in October 1964, Shelepin has been progressively isolated within die Kremlin high command headed by Communist party General Secretary Leonid I. Brezhnev. The appointment today left him with his seat on the party’s 11-man Politburo, the committee that runs the Soviet Union. The announcement failed to mention his other key job, party secretaryship. QUIET PURGE Experienced non-Communist analysts long have suspected that Shelepin might lose his Politburo and secretarial posts . In a quiet purge. The new appointment was a step in that direction. , ★ * ★ Shelepin was named chairman of the All-Union Central Council of Trade Unions at the bpening of a council meeting today, an announcement said. ★ * ★ He succeeds" Viktor V. Grishin, an alternate or nonvoting member of the Politburo who had been trade union boss since 1956. The 80-million-member organization of Soviet unions is controlled by the Communist party and has very limited powers to take initiatives on behalf of its members. Shelepin, at his peak just after Khrushchev’s ouster, was a deputy premier and head of the powerful Committee of Party and State Control, a virtually independent group with contacts in every corner of Soviet life. In addition he had his dual party The New York Stock Exchange Leaders in Congress Upset by Congo Help WASHINGTON (AP) - The Johnson administration rejected rebellion-tom Nigeria’s request for military aid just as edgy congressional leaders began fuming that such help, coupled with earlier dispatch of U.S. planes to the Congo, could invite Communist meddling in Africa. A congressional uproar Monday greeted Sunday’s announcement .that three ' transport planes and 150 men had been sent to the Congo, tom by a mercenary-led rebellion. ★ ★ ★ Hours later, just as Hill began sounding off against a hint that such aid might go to Nigeria, too, the State Department turned down Nigeria’s request, saying its rebellion purely internal. In almost the same breath that some congressmen pressed fears of a Vietnam-type nvolvement in Africa, they discounted the optimistic report from Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara that the military war is going well in Vietnam. MORE TROOPS SEEN Some said they expect McNamara’s Visit to result in dispatch of more troops to Asia and a tax increase to pay for them. ★ ★ * With both Vietnam doves and hawks criticizing the C tion, the Senate Armed Services and Foreign Relations committees summoned Secretary of State Dean Rusk for a private explanation today of the administration's position. ★ ★ ★ Chairman J. W. Fulbright, Ark. of the Foreign Relations Commtitee challenged a State Department spokesman’s contention that the United States is obligated to uphold the “territorial integrity and unity” of Nigeria and the Congo. Mm PAGET Commerce Chief Busy CUNNIFF - By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst WASHINGTON -r-Hie new Secretary of Commerce, Alexander Trowbridge, would feel a lot more able to the de-i partment’s role as an administration link with business if hej could draft few industrial-] ists. At least foqrl top-level jobs] are open or about to open in the Commerce Department. And Trowbridge, 37, therefore, Is spending a lot more time tag his department than he would like. ' *. ‘ 4 Nevertheless, the athletic-looking former oil executive is developing a program that associates say he hopes will produce results, not through fanfare but from a steady, low-key attack by working an 8:15 a.m. to 7 >.m. day. Hie first problem under attack, and perhaps the most important, is relations with busi- ness. Trowbridge is now attempting to develop a personal rapport with the business community, which likes to believe the department is its voice in administration councils. For e man of Trowbridge’s articulateness, graciousness and ability, this might not be as difficult a job as forecast. MEETINGS PLANNED Hie new secretary—he was designated acting secretary in January and promoted in May— has planned a aeries of conferences ' with industrialists, the first of which was with those in the metals industry. Another is scheduled later this month with the chemical executives. These conferences will be held the Commerce Department buildilg and ideally will include Gardner Ackley, chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers and other key administration figures. ★ ★ ★ “There are lots of different ways of doing this job, and this is one of them,” Trowbridge said in an interview in his office. “Our purpose is to talk in a dispassionate way about industry’s problems. And we try also to discuss our broad-scale economic problems.” This, Trowbridge says, is one way of fulfilling the department’s charter of giving respon-sible representation of government to business and of representing business in government. TONE DOWN CRITICS Such conferences, when held in the past, have been known to tone down considerably the critics of administration economic policy. And by putting the meetings on a regular schedule, Trowbridge hopes to magnify the result. there is at least one other major role for any secretary of commerce, and that is to be a presidential adviser. But Commerce Department heads have not always been permitted to function in this role. ★ * * Reports persist, however, that Trowbridge will be more of an economic adviser to the President than was John T. Connor, his predecessor, who felt frustrated by his relative lack of influence on economic policy. Trowbridge is noncommittal on the subject. He says merely that “the President said he wants me to sound off and Romney OKs Six-County Transit Unit Lending-Truth Bill Near End of Long Fight WASHINGTON (AP)-Cli-maxing a seven-year fight, the Senate appears ready to pass with little fuss a so-called “truth-in-lending” bill that would require' disclosure of the cost of credit to many borrow-rs. Democratic leader Mike Mansfield said he expected passage ol the bill this afternoon after two or three hours of debate. ★ ★ The bill would cover an estimated $100 billion in annual borrowing—$92.5 billion of consumer credit and the rest in second mortgages on homes. ★ ★ * Under its terms, borrowers would be given the true annual interest rate and the total financing charges in dollars and cents. DISCLOSURE BILL It is wholly a disclosure Ml! with no provisions to regulate the credit industry. fc William Proxmire, D-Wis,, chief sponsor of the i ure, explained its purpose permit consumers to compare the cost of credit and shop the best credit buy. ★ * ★ He emphasized the measure makes no assumption that consumer- credit is bad or that large 'numbers of leaders engage In deceitful practices. ★ ★ ★ However, Proxmire said many borrowers are confused about what they pay for credit and occasionally there are unscrupulous lenders who prey upon die poor. LANSING (AP) - A bill tablishing a metropolitan.transportation authority in six southeastern Lower Michigan counties was one of two i signed into law yesterday by Gov. George Romney. The transportation bill, which takes immediate effect, also allows creation of similar transportation authorities in other parts of the state by a county, or contiguous counties. * ★ ★ The measure was praised by Romney as “a major step for-toward solving Mich-urban transportation problems.” The problem of providing fast, efficient and safe transit for our metropolitan areas has rapidly become a regional problem, cutting across local boundaries,” he said. POWERS The authorities created under the act will have power to plan, acquire, construct and operate public transportation facilities issue revenue bonds for such purposes. ★ ★ ★ The Southeastern Michigan Authority, involving Macomb, Monroe, Oakland, St. Clair, Washtenaw and'Wayne counties, is limited in its first 18 months to acquiring and coordinating existing bus systems and to coordinating such systems with existing rail commuter facilities. Rescue Try Is Off BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) -An attempt by a U.S. Air Force C130 transport to rescue white hostages from the Congolese city of Kisangani wa* called off S’ today, reliable sources in Bros-lie second or* sels reported. >SSS Chrysler, AMC End '67 Runs 11 Car Plants Down, 7 More to Shut Soon DETROIT (AP) — Chrysler and American Motors this week become the first U.S. car firms to wind up production of 1967 models. Eleven of the industry’s assembly plants closed out their 1967 work last week with seven more to go down by this weekend. News in Brief The larceny of $40 daring a break-in at Spic ‘N Span Launderette, 4696 Dixie, Waterford Township, was reported to township police yesterday. A toolbox, an air driver and parts — total value of $172 were reported stolen yesterday from Concrete Step Co., 6497 M59, Waterford Township, according to township police. Rosielle LaGrone, 40, of 520 Highland tokl Pontiac police early today someone pried open the rear door of her home and stole a television set valued at $75. MOM’s Rummage: T 9-12. Indianwood and Baldwin —Adv. i +i.i .‘”ZiS "‘#1' i«'.5 mi »r»y. Day ...... 451.9 199.3 149.8 327.- 1987 Hloh . 193.8 14l.7\ 325.7 471.2 177.6 ISM 323.5 473.9 1993 159.1 331.8 413.4 159.4 18M Jgj «1.6 83.4 HHL, ni "■ §Ti! ■' jg Month Abo 71.3 91J 5J.J 7L0 958 & 92.4 JM ■_____ 70.1 9U 80.9 90.5 83.2 ffii» 2-PSj 8:1 « 90.4 03.7 Nameplates which have been taken out of 1967 production include the Marlin, Bel-evedere, Fury, Chrysler, Imperial, Coronet, Polara, Thunder-bind, Lincoln, Riviera and Tor-onado. Due to join them on the sidelines by Saturday are Ambassador, American, Rebel, Valiant, Barracuda,. Dart, Charger, Mercury, Chevy II, Corvalr and Corvette. FALL SHORT Auto output came to 131,006 cars last week but is expected to fall some 25,000 units short of that this week as the industry heads into the final weeks of output of 1967 models. Ford Motor Co. will wind up its 1967 output on Aug. 16 at its Metuchen, N.J., plant. ★ ★ ★ Chevrolet, bread and butter division of General Motors, will wind up its 1967 output on Aug. 1. Through last weekend, the 67 model output had readied 7,-377,565 compared with the 8,-281,629 of the 1966’s at the comparable point. Hie calendar year count Climbed to , 4,176,392 compare^ with 5,079,172 at the like point in 1966. speak up in policy councils.” Economic advice, he says, “is not to be excluded from my duties. A particular interest of Trowbridge is in formulating a policy for what he believes is a billion-dollar opportunity for American business, the. attack on public problems by private enterprise. These “public-problem” areas include pollution, urban redevelopment, education, transportation, recreation, health care, and poverty.1 In all these areas, he feels, industry can combine the social good with good pro- Many people see these problems as being so big and complex that they cannot be solved without an assault by both private and public sectors,” he says. Regardless of the mix, however, he believes “There are profits to be made.” Trowbridge says we are “beginning to think of our role” in this emerging trend. At the moment, however, the role is being pursued through “exhortation” in speeches, personal meetings and conferences. At present, however, Trowbridge must spend much time defending the recent tariff cuts against criticism and promoting the administration’s program of building trade bridges to some European Communist nations. This pushes into the background the controversial proposal to merge the Commerce and Labor departments, a proposal for which Trowbridge says “the President has not lost his enthusiasm” but which will be “delayed through 1968 and 1969.” Nevertheless, he feels, “it will come up again.” Treasury Position date < 1987 15 t 11,139,299,188.52 t July 1 77 1,110,847,782.63 ■ .•■ohmi^w.84 ~ 1,573,974,292.07 X—Total De W— 328,651,414,791.81 319,965,653,288.86 Gold AxenH- 13,109,200,651.72 13,434,048,028.40 X—Includes 8262,812,554.47 debt not «*b-iact to statutory limit. mm i SuccessfuNnvesting %v'& * # (EDWOR’S NOTE: The views cpressed here are solely those p/ the writer for which this newspaper assumestito responsibility.) By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “I have owned Cosmos Industries and Official Films for the past six years. I have large losses ip both. Should I sell them to offset gains I have taken?” C.B. A) There is always\ a question in nfy mind as to the timing of tax sales. It is sometimes advantageous to hold a stock for a while longer father than sell to register a loss. Official Films operated at a deficit in ttie six months ended Dec. 31, 1966, and Cosmos reported a small profit for the 12-month period ended May 31, 1966. can find no information about thin year’s operations on either company and when this situar tion exists, it is usualfy well to let the market tall the story. Official Films has done little this year from a {nice standpoint and I would take my loss 322.07+1.88 00.13+0.0) 70.92-0.04 . MjH . Sk^+wl now faithls stock and keep out of it. Cosmos Industries, which is in military electronics, has nearly doubled in {nice over the past two months. In view of this strong action and the nature of the company’s business, I believe you would be better off to postpone sale of the stock. When and if you sell, I would not go-back into this situation of tiie lack of sufficient information. * #' * * Q) “What is wrong with Southwestern Public Service? It’s quite low in price now. Do you recommend it?” P.C. A) There is nothing wrong with tills stock. It is suffering from a slowdown in growth last year which I regard as purely temporary. It is also affected by tight money conditions,1* as are all utility stocks. Hie area served in Texas and Oklahoma is capable of considerable expansion and dividends have been Increased annually for more than a decade. There seems little likelihood of appreciation in the near future but I do recommend the stock for income and long-term growth. (Copyright, 1667) homIe owner ATTEND STARTING TODAY DETROIT, MICH. Cobo Convention Center Arena One Washington Blvd. 2:00 & 7:30 PM AH Prayer Cards are FREE—Given at, Afternoon Services Only R. F. DeWeese Vep Ellis Afternoon Speaker Minister of Music ' Final Senrke-Sunday. 2:00 MR' ( KESSLER-HAHN CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH, INC; 6673 Dixie Highway Clarks ton, Michigan 724 Oakland Avenue Pontiac,. Michigan INSURANCE ROBERTS BUDMAN GLASS & SCREEN Nu-Patio frnr Absolutely the finest room enclosure ever built! Sturdy construction. Weather-proof. Rattle* proof. Features built-in gutter for water drainage. Order now and enjoy bug-free comfort all summer long. THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 11, 1967 Board Approves Two Street Lighting Districts The Waterford Township Board approved two special assessment street lighting districts following public hearings last night. ★ * * To be Installed sire three lights each on Richmond Street and Lola Court. No objections were raised at the hearings. The total annual charge for the Richmond Street project will be fits, with residents paying $118.11 and the town* ship $U.60. - Based on 18 assessments, the cost per assessment will be $6.30 a year. ★ * ★ Lola Court home owners will pay $129.61 of a $144 annual charge. The township will pay the balance. ANNUAL RATE The annual rate for each of the 13 assessments will be $9.97. I STOP dff *Tou eopp In other business, first notices were read on five re zoning requests previously considered by the Township Oakland County Coordinating Zoning and Planning Committee.” A request to rezone property on Warren Drive near Dixie Line Opposes Highway from light industrial to general industrial for an auto parts yard will be up for action at the board’s July 24 meeting. ' a * * The other four proposals will be considered at next Monday’s board meeting. INCLUDED REQUESTS Included are requests to rezone from single family to mul- tiple dwelling property on Scott Lake Road at Alliance for apartments, and from restricted office to extensive business property at Hadrill Court and Telegraph for a restaurant. The remaining requests are to rezone from single family residential to multiple dwelling property on Sashabaw between P o m r o y and Midland for apartments, and from general business to single residential property at Watkins Lake Road and Scott Lake Road for a church. Tabled one week was a proposed three-year lease purchase of a copying machine being on a trial basis. Monthly ments would be $165.96. The machine is worth $5,975. ’ * * , ★ A request tty the Detroit Edison Co, to operate a mobile customer service office at Drayton Shopping Center on an Interim basis was referred to the zoning board of appeals for action. 7 Discussed by board members last night was, the' proposed ta-stallation of a sanitary sewer line south along Scott Lake to Service toe new Charles S. Mott High School scheduled to open in September 1966. To be financed by the school district, toe sewer would be connected to the Jeffrey Manor Sewer system. Sewage would be processed at a nearby treatment plant until the CUnton-Oakland intercptor is completed. The project is subject to Michigan Department of Health approval. The Eternal Truth Is now com hath Mtecl up fhs entign of P-- and Is nowshwWing upon tho world ths unclouded Splendor of Hr Rovolation ... (In. (Meaning*) BAH’IS OF PONTIAC in the Relaxing jj I Atmosphere of ^ the t L My H Cocktail Lounge I Right in the L Heart of ■j Downtown ™ Pontiac 85 N; Saginaw mawjp Rail Merger MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (AP) —The Soo Line Railroad foresees a loss of some $5 million in revenues if the Chicago & North Western and the Milwaukee Road merge without certain safeguards for the Soo’s competitive operations. Ray H. Smith, assistant vice president for traffic of Soo Line, outlined his firm’s position Monday at a hearing before Interstate Commerce Commission examiner Henry Darmstadter Jr. The Soo continued its objections to the proposed merger, which it said would particularly its competitive:’posture in Wisconsin. Smith said that about 58 per cent of the Soo’s traffic, or $48 million in annual revenues, is business that either North Western or Milwaukee Road, or both, 60th BIRTHDAY SALE Get Ready to Enjoy Outdoor Living Fun! ALUMINUM PATIOS Larga 7'*9‘ Parma-Sual porch or patio awning. Include* 2 aluminum column*. Fact installation tervice available. Charge it—no money down! MY NOTHING AT ALL TIL FALL news un^Mnlnr and call Budman’sCollgct tliai u peraior no charge to you Congress, Rights Lag Are Hit NAACP Convention Opens BEATING THE HEAT—Philadelphia fire- . ^ wimpiwte man Tim McAllister, fighting a downtown overcome by the heat. He turned on his fire yesterday in high temperatures and in- own portable showers—a spray bath from his tense humidity, found the preventive to being company’s pumper. AUTHORIZED DEALERS CS CHRYSLER IMV MOTORS CORPORATION Right now, during our big year-end close-out you can get a great deal and. wind u£> with a beautiful full-size Chrysler besides! Others are doing it in record numbers. So why not you? Our model selection is still good. But going fast. Stop in now; Test price a Chrysler. When you see how much you save—and how much car you save it on—you’ll make your move up to Chrysler right oh the spot. Also last night, the board approved a permit for an Aug. 11 circus near Pontiac Mall, to be sponsored by the Drayton Plains Lions Club, and passed resolutions to vacate two alleys at abaw and Letart and behind Donelson Baptist Church. The first notice was read on a request to transfer stock interest at Adler’s Food Town, Inc., an SDM-licensed business. CHILDREN OUTGROWN THE WAGON, BICYCLE? . . . SELL THEM WITH A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. EASY TO USE. JUST PHONE 332-8181. BOSTON (AP) - With a plea for “something more than punitive passion,” Roy Wilkins | opened the 58th annual convention of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People on a note critical of both Congress and the progress made by the civil righto movement. The NAACP’s executive director went before more than 1,500 applauding delegates in hote] ballroom Monday night to charge congressmen who vote against civil rights bill with “creating the atmosphere in which an outbreak df violence can occur.” * ★ ★ The convention turns today to reports on slum projects in Buffalo, N.Y., and in east Harlem, New York dity, and the possibility that President Johnson will fly here'for a major civil righto address. * ir ®V It also will award its Spingam Medal to Massachusetts Republican Edward W. Brooke, first . Negro popularly elected to the UiS. Senate, The award is presented to Negroes for outstanding achievement. TED KENNEDY SLATED Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D— Mass., is scheduled to make toe presentation. Wilkins told the convention Monday night that congressmen who support toe antiriot bill now under consideration by the House but oppose the 1967 civil rights bill, also pending, “profess not to realize” the climate they create. ‘Too many. people want to make the Negro behave,” the 66-year-old executive officer said, “but do pot want to give him justice. They think riot pre* < vention consists of crackdown laws and crackdown police.' Wilkins said neither riots nor ‘summer handouts to check mobs” are the answer. ON MILITANTS He said toe service of civil rights militants “should not be underestimated.” “In spite of their raucous activity, their shock techniques, and their oversimplification of complex issues, they have shaken up Negroes and whites, both of whom badly needed the treatment,” he said, “Their,service outweighs by far their disservice.” ★ * *. Instead of directly attacking the idea of black power, as be did in a news Conference Sunday, Wilkins said, “The important thing is not toe color of any other abstract attribute but the effective exercise of power for good purposes.’’ He called the movement’s for* ward progress “undeniable, but painfully inadequate,” and urged all other civil rights groups to “roll up their sleeves and exploit the breakthroughs that have opened up.” It's clean up time TEST prIce A CHRYSLER BE MODERN WITH Heating