WASHINGTON (B — The American tation in international waters involved Yesterday, another Soviet destroyer— other complaint as a result of today’s nificance of the collision yesterday in of tile road” by the Soviet destroyer fMpfatgir Walker iw.ierapll^#^ —■--- " —~ ‘ ^--«*-**— viet wpship a second time about 1:30 am. today in the Sea of Japan, it was with the USS Walker. The scraping caused minor damage to the two ships and no one was hurt, The incident was said to have occurred yesterday off the northern coast of the Japanese island of HOkaido. dent-made several close sweeps toward Sources view the Soviet actions as the American task group, coming as harassment. near as 50 feet On two occasions and The situation has taken on grave tones finally bumping up against the Walk- jn view of the Vietnam war. Russia is er, causing minor damage. a major supplier of war materials to The United States officially protested North Vietnam, to the Soviet government over the first U.S. officials said they would await incident and was expected to file an- details before trying to assess the sig- maneuvering and violation of the rules tensities. the Pentagon said. stroyera and the aircraft carrier Hornet, have been undergoing antisubmarine warfare training maneuvers in the eldest of American and Soviet confron- Sea of Japan, The Weather PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, MAY II, 1067 76 PAGES Killing Suspect to Be Arraigned Thearraignment of 20-year-old Dennis month-old marriage had apparently end- surrendered to officers, according to po-O’Dell, who gave his address as Meta-mora Township, was scheduled today in Monroe County on a charge of murder. The body of his wife, 19-year-old Mary Katherine -O’Dell, was found yesterday morning on a lovers’ lane 500 feet north of the Michigan-Ohio line in Monroe County, not far from the home of her LANSING MB — Nervous clock watchers can relax. There won’t be a time change in Michigan for at least two weeks. It looked for a while yesterday as if Michigan would zip ahead an hour — from Eastern Standard Time to Eastern Daylight Time. -The—State Board—of—Canvassers stepped in with a slowdown, however. The board refused to immediately certify petitions to put the Daylight Saving Time issue on the November 1968 election ballot. Taken to the Oakland County Sheriff’s Department by an uncle, Sgt. Ray West-phal of the Oxford department, he accompanied county authorities to White-ford Township where the woman’s body was discovered at 10:14 a.m. A resulting argument ended with O’Pell allegedly shQQting his wife aix-times with a 22-caliber pistol, which lie Held on a charge of murder, O’Dell has-reportedly - made no statement to-authorities there. P Millie Preu Plwto BUSY NIGHT — Pontiac firemen play a stream of water on a blaze in a coal yard at 142 Bagley as spectators watch the action. This was the department’s second trip to the Bagley address in three hours—one of 10 alarms called in from 6 p.m. yesterday until 1 a.m. today. Fire officials said most of the blazes last night were unquestionably the work of arsonists. Army to Direct Viet Pacification Instead, the board decided to consider the issue May 24. NULLIFY EXEMPTION Atty. Gen. Frank Kelly had argued that as soon as the petitions were stamped valid the state would go on Eastern DkyUght Time. The action would nullify the state law exempting Michigan from daylight time, he said. George Montgomery, state elections director, had alerted state officials that a fast time switch might be fat the offing. Kelley and Montgomery had even agreed on a time for the switch at midnight, which they said would result in the least amount of confiision. Rash of Local Blamed on Arsonists SAIGON (AP) - The United States apparently has decided to assign more troops to help protect South Vietnam’s embattled pacification program. By MEL NjgWMAN Pontiac’s fire equipment was taxed to the limit last night when arsonists started blazes in five locations within three hours. A total of 10 alarms wore called in from 6 p.m. yesterday to i a.m. today. “I was considering calling in off-duty personnel when things really got bad,” said Chief Lee Nye, commanding officer on last night’s shift. He said the department was down to a single engine company and rescue trtick' at one point. • A shed attached to the rear of a former meat packing plant at 49 Turk at 7:28 pm. • A shack in an old coal yard at 142 Bagley at 7:43 p.m. • An auto wreck (to flush gasoline) at 300 Brandt at 8:06 p.m. • Car fire at 339 Branch at 8:34 p.m. (Continued on Page A-2, CoL 1) U.S. Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker an-nounced today that U.S. participation in the program has been transferred from civilian to military control. Henceforth, Gen. William C. Westmoreland, commander of U.S. forces ih Vietnam, will direct the American pacification effort State Civil Service Director Frank Dewald had already started figuring out new schedules for state workers who would be affected by the change. STUBBORN WOMAN But a stubborn woman lawyer, Mrs. Zoe Burkholz of Benton Harbor, swung the board against making any fast moves on a time change. “We should investigate toe many matters raised,” she insisted. “We can’t possibly decide what to do without having a hearing. ,____________Fire Marshal Charles Metz said he had Mrs. Burkholz saidffiat opponents of no doubt arson was Involved; the time change have filed suits in the „„ , ,. „ . .... „ State Court of Appeals and State Su- **5 fi* * f,ve bui,d‘n* fires, on preme Court to prevent elections on the • traceable course in three hours unless question. they are set fires,” he said. Westmoreland, however, will have a. civilian deputy heading up U.S. pacification work. He is Robert W. Komer, 44, special assistant to President Johnson, who is known to have recommended that toe military take over. Bunker, who celebrated his 73rd birthday today, succeeded Henry Cabot Lodge two w&ksago. MIG IN AMERICAN GUNSIGHT—Maj. Frederick G. Tobnan, 34, of Portland, Maine, saw this Commuinst MIG17 in his gunsight while on a tsrike mission over North Vietnam. It was not known whether this MIG was shot down. The picture was taken by a gun-16mm movie camera mounted on a U.S, Air Force F106 Thunderchief. sory and logistics assets in South Vietnam belong to the military. S. VIET RESPONSIBHJTY The South Vietnamese army has been primarily responsible for protecting the villages where' some 20,000 pacification workers are stationed. But security has often been lax, and more than 220 pacification workers have been killed and more than 300 wounded in guerrilla attacks since the beginning of the year. Kelley advised toe canvassers to act on the petitions and ignore pending litigation. —Mrs. Burkholz said, however, that the attorney general had given the opposite advice when the canvassers were asked to certify a vote of the people ratifying toe 1963 constitution. Showers forecast for today will con- late in the day is the weatherman’s tinue tnnight with temperatures becom- prediction for tomorrow. Partly cloudy. toy a little cooler. A low of 40 to 45 and continued, cool is the Outlook for Is expected. ‘ .Saturday. Partly cloudy with a chance of rain * * * East to northeast winds at 20 to 30 miles / today will become northerly tonight. The search for, his family was begun by Lawson after a school principal at Riverside, Calif., had telephoned him that Mrs. Lawson, a teacher, had not arrived at school. Precipitation during the night totaled three-tenths of an inch in downtown Tot Heart Surgery Veteran- NEW YORK (A?) - Erik Agostini Is only six weeks old but he already has undergone two major operations in which parts of his heart were rearr|nged to correct congenital defects. Today he is well enough to go home. ■ “We thought the worst,” said Benjamin Agostini, the boy’s father, recalling the time when doctors informed him and his wife that the boy required surgery. Erik had seemed normal when be was born March 31 but after a few days Ms breathing became labored, bis skia tamed Mue, and his heart was pomp- Pontiac. The low temperature prior to 8 a.m. was 44. Hie mercury recorded 48 at 1 p.m. Flooded Street Residents wait grimly for drainage they prefer — PAGE A-4. Plane Crashes Six are killed ip three separate mishaps — PAGE A-7. N. Viet Raids Critics rap piecemeal bombing, of MIG airfields - PAGE D-1L Woman, 79, Is Killed by Car in Waterford A 79-year-old Walled Lake woman was injured totally last night when she was struck by a car as she walked across Telegraph near Dixie Highway in Waterford T o w n-ship. The victim was identified as Blanche I. Perry of 765 E. Walled Lake. Driver Of the car Oakland Highway ToU in *67 After a week, the physicians began to suspect a congenital heart condition and Dr. Joshua Lynfield, a specialist in cardiology and pediatrics was called in. William G. Serrin Jr., 28, ford Township. THE ROCKEFELLER ' BROTHERS - Govs. Nelson A. in New York last night. It is the first time they have appeared Rockefeller of New Yorif (right) and Winthrop Rockefeller of together since Winthrop was elected- Introducing Winthrop, Arkansas chat at the first annual Brotherhood-in-Action dinner Nelson quipped, ‘This is really brotherhood in action.” Serrin was traveling no^heast on Telegraph. He was not held. $&££ 4im ISIAO 3OTW- t W& BONTIAq^ftESS, mURSDAY, |lr 1867 Senator Asks Data on Deal for 493 Jets WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. John L. McClellan predicted today the Pentagon would pay up to $12 billion to get 1,300 Fill planes in the air — double the cost defense officials once estimated Tor 1,700 of the controversial aircraft. The Arkansas Democrat coupled his prediction with a^e-mand that the Air Force supply details of the $1.82 billion contract it signed Wednesday with - General Dynamics Corp. of Fort Worth, Tex., for 493 of the allpurpose planes, once known as the TFX. McClellan, chairman of the Senate Investigations subcommittee, said the Pentagon originally estimated it would cost $5 billion to $6 billion for 1 ““ News Analysis, Page C-14 planes. “But I do know it -is going to cost from $10 billion to $12 billion to get 1,300 planes in the air,” he said in an interview. The Air Force Fills will cost School Programs Be Expanded Pontiac schools Community Action Programs (GAP) which received over $1.1 million in federal, state and foundation funds this year, are being expanded and modified. The Pontiac Board of Education last night authorized the immediate addition of two new budgeted position titles in the program with the possible increase of two more in the futur The title of Mrs. Pearlina Butler^ was also changed by the board from assistant director of elementary education to coordinator of preschool education. Arsonists Keep firemen Busy (Continued From Page One) • An abandoned house', no address, on Diston at 9:16 p.m. • The shack at 142 Bagley which rekindled about 10:20 p.m. • A false alarm at 120 Rae-burnat 12:57 a.m— No extensive loss was caused by any of the blazes, either because of fast action by firemen or because the buildings damaged wore old and unused. The home at 408 S. Jessie, a two-story frame, was the only occupied building involved and the fire was contained to the exterior of the house, authorities said. Metz said he found no evidence that any materials aside from matches and paper or wood were used for ignition.^ However, Charles Gale, Pontiac police chief of detectives, said a witness reported seeing a youth with a gasoline can at the scene of one blaze. One person will bte hired for 1967-68 to devote half of his time each to the new position of coordinator of elementary and secondary Community Action Programs. not proposed for 1967-68 are assistant director of Community Action Programs and coordin- See Related Stories, Pages A-12, F-6 ator of Community School Programs. 3 Mrs.aButler’s position and the two new and future titles are included in the school budget and costs of positions are written off against appropriate federal, state and outside agency programs. Positions currently being held in the program are those of B. C. VanKoughnett, director, and William Robertson, coordinator of research and evaluation. CAP for the past year has included Schobl Community Action Programs, National Teacher Corps, breakfast program, Community School reading under State Section 12 and those under the Elementary and Secondary Act. It seems likely -that funds will continue to be available from federal, tate and private foundations provided the school district has the capacity to make the necessary contacts, develop the proposals, make follow-up contacts on proposals and implement the program after funding,” Asst.' Supt. William Lacy told the board. VanKoughnett reported to the board that he is still awaiting federal approval of funds for a $273,620 Head Start program for 420 deprived children this summer. $3.7 million each but this dpes elude the engine, weaj. >1 system or electronic navigation systems. MCNAMARA-------- The Fill was ordered developed by Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara as an allpurpose plane for the Air Force and Navy to help save t production costs. The new contract calls for fixed price incentive arrangement allowing General Dynamics a possible nine per cent profit if i t meets a target cost of $1.67 billion. ★ ■ ★ * This would permit a $15 million profit, with the company sharing in savings below the target cost and the government helping absorb any excess costs up to 15 per cent above the contract total. The Air Force said the contract would cover 165 Air Force and Navy aircraft authorized by Congress in the fiscal year ending June 30. Australia would get 24 planes and Britain 50. The remainder of the 493 still lack congressional funding. PROHIBITED McClellan noted Congress prohibited the purchase of production models for the Navy in the year ending June 30. “The Navy version is bogged down,” he said. “They have no engine for it that will do the job and they can’t test a new engine In the plane until next year. The committee chairman said his over-all estimate of the final cost of the planes included research and development items running to about $1.3 billion. He said Air Force models will cost twice the original estimates and Navy models up to three times the first figures. Z-—*—* -— McClellan said he was glad the rnntrnr-f hag hoon signed “because maybe now we will get some idea of the cost if we don’t get the usual half-story from the Pentagon.’’ The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report — PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Rain and cool today with occasional thundershowers. High 50 to 56. Cloudy and cool fonigit with occasional light rain, low 40 to 45. Friday: Cloudy and cool with a chance ofraintoteintoedayrOut-look for Saturday: Partly cloudy and cool. East to northeast winds 20 to 30 miles becoming northerly tonight Wednesday In Pontiac (os recorded downtown) Highest temperature_H JAMES H. GALLAGHER Pontiac Area Jaycees Elect A P o n t i a c Township man, James H. Gallagher of 609 Prov-incetown, was elected president of the Pontiac Area Jtinior Chamber of C o m m e r c e last night at the annual election meeting. Others elected to Jaycee offices include James Peterson of 5022 Shoreline, Waterford Township, first vice president; John Rhoades of 2595 Woodbine, Waterford Township, second vice president; Richard Eldred of 330 Iroquois, treasurer; and David Ogg of 656 Lyndale, Rochester, secretary. Four Jaycees were elected to the board of directors. They are Richard Fitzgerald of 1234 Lake Crescent, Bloomfield Township; Martin Haupt of 405 W. Iroquois; T. Gordon Scupholm of Royal Oak; and Edward Hunter of 6156 Waterfront, Waterford Township. Charles Toby of 2384 St. Joseph, West Bloomfield Township was reelected’to the board. ★ * * Board member terms are two Tearsr----- Gallagher, 34, was formerly internal vice president and is a past treasurer. He will take office as president July 1. He is a general agent at Halsted-John-sOri Insurance Agency, Detroit. BIRMINGHAM— Bids for the construetiori of the $2.6 million new junior high school came in $80,000 under estimated, the school board reports. , Muzzi nand Vincente of Allen Park was the, contract-winding firm. _ Because pf the apparent savings, the schools’ architects, O’Dell, Hewlett and Lucken-bach, recommended installation of air-conditioning of all academic areas, and this was approved by tjie board. The school is expected to open in September 1968 on Inkster 750 students with future expansion planned to accommodate ,000. tr- ★ ★ Academic areas will be built j around the team-teaching concept, featuring a small amphitheater fbr group instruction. School Vote Deadlines Near in City, Deadlines for candidates to file nominating petitions and for unregistered voters to register for the June 12 board of education elections in Pontiac and Waterford township are growing closer. UvfrWrttl lies Record State law requires that school board candidates file nominating petitions by 4 p.m. Saturday and Monday is the last day for unregistered votSrs to register. In Pontiac, candidates can file at the board of education office tomorrow during regular business hours and from 2 to 'Weather: Day, sunny; night, .3 inches I captured. SAIGON (AP) - A total of 274 Americans were killed in action in Vietnam last week and 1,748 were wounded, the U. S. Command announced today. The number of dead equaled the record for the war, in the week that ended March 25. _/ | Eighteen Americans were missing' or captured, the com-| said, bringing the total casualties for the week to 2,040. This was 52 less than the record total of 2,092 during the week that ended March 18. The total _ included 211 killed, 1,874 »I wounded and seven missing or Wednesday's Temperature, Chart I Enemy losses last week were ( 7 reported at 1,903 killed, t 32 frSiana!Si*s 7o 571 marked ..increase from the UM 0 1? Kansas City 79 il 2 30 Los Angeles " |j [ reported a week earlier. 4 p.m. Saturday. The office in the Central Administration Building, 350 E. Wide Track. In the Waterford .Township district, candidates can file from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. tomor-row and 8:30 a^m. to 4p.m. Saturday. Unregistered voters in Pontiac have until 8 p.m. Monday to register. In the Waterford Township district and parts pf the Pontiac district, outside the eity, the deadline is 5 p.m. Monday. Persons already properly reg-lstered~need notreregister, Ver-non L. Schiller, Pontiac Schools business manager, advises.... QUALIFICATIONS To qualify as a school elector, person must be a Atizen of the United States, at least 21 years of age, a resident of the State of Michigan for at least six months and a resident of the school district for at least 30 days prior to the election. Birmingham Area News, School bids$80,000 Estimates pi-.. Imp' ' near Maple. At first it will house Facilities for a,complete physical education program will include a stomniing pool. Movable partitions between many rooms will make it possible for rearrangenlent of clas-room spaces. The annual spring concert of the award-winning Groves High School Band amPOrchestra will William A. PrewOf 23llTWJury, be held at 8 tonight. - The group was recently rated “first division” at the state band and orchestra festival. Tickets will be on sale at the door with proceeds to go for band equipment. BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP - water safety chairmpa for the area Red .Cross, announces an all-day aquatic conference’ will ' be held Saturday at Wayne State University in Detroit, starting at 9,a.m. p * u Topics to be hovered are in all areas of swimmingpoofrTnan-agement. State Dem: Adjourn, End 'Far LANSING (AP) - “Let’s adjourn, this session has been a I farce,” suggested Sen. Basil Brown, D-Highland Park, in the Senate Wednesday. Let all the bills die,” said Brown. “They are nothing but a bunch of cats and dogs any-. way.” Brown’s idea was that the Legislature adjourn immediately. “Then the governor could call I us back into special session to | work on just tax reform," ' Brown said. Brown’s notion was thrown in | during a debate over a resolution to go along with the House J in extending the deadline for reporting bills out of their house I of origin by two weeks. Appropriations bills would be exempt from the deadline. * * * The Senate, on a 20-12 party j line vote, agreed to. allow the House to continue doing what it already is doing by the trick of labeling all bills as taxation bills. The deadline for reporting out j bills was extended from May 12 j tn May 2fi-__■ The 20 votes for the bill were J all Republican. The 12 against all Democrats. Democrats got in some licks | at the Republican control of the Senate during the debate. RAP ELAVATOR Even the elevator doesn’t work any more under the Re- 1 publican administration,” said | Brown, reporting he was stuck for 10 minutes in a Senate elevator. “Next to nothing has been accomplished,” complained Sen. Roger Craig, D-Dearborn. “But we can’t blame it all on the House. Some of the actions to the Senate have been more reprehensible than in the House.” “How can we reconcile that ‘Romney Action Team’ motto with the action we are being asked to take today,” Craig asked. “We could stay here urn til doomsday and nothing would happen.” Sen. Robert Vender Laah. TL Grand. Rapids, noted that at least tt-faiUq passed by the Senate were introduced by Brown. “Were these all junk?" he asked. —— “I ponfess!” cried Brown, raising his hahd. Vander Laan asked sympathy for the House. The Republican party, he said, wanted tax reform by April 1, Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac LOOK! The Money YOU SAVE On These Specials Will Let You Gel Belter Mother's Day Gifts For Your Mother SIMMS DISCOUNT BASEMENT Never, Never Iron Pants Again j PERMA-PRESS Men's Pants In Smart Ivy Styling Mfeather: Afttrnot 10 Pet. Leaving City Schools 6 Lowest Temperatures Search On for Teacher Replacements NATIONAL WEATHER -; forecast tonight i Showers and thundershowers Mississippi. i most areas Showers are expected from the Pacific Northeast through the northern Plateaus with snow mixed with rain in the Mgher elnvatons. It will be milder in the Carolinas and the lower Lakes regie*. A search is on to replace 10 pqr cent of Pontiac’s teachers who are leaving the school system, Asst. Supt; Richard Fell reported last nignt. He announced that there will be 156 teaching vacancies this June compared to 119 last year. Fell cautioned, however, that 58.5 npw elementary and secondary positions are included in the 156 total. Of the total teaching vacancies, 82.5 positions have been staffed for next year with 73.5 positions many, teachers at, this time compared to last year,” he explained. “The available number of candidates has been good, so-we have been pretty selective so far.” ■./" SPECIAL EDUCATION A sufficient .number of interested candidates, though, will probably not be available for certain vacancies such as it special education, Fell said. Eighteen teachers of approximately 100 who are leaving the siystem are retiring. Negro teachers because of the I shortage of housing for them, according to Fell. ★ ★ He said he hopes to give a report within a month on a pilot program whereby the school district would own suitable housing. MAYOR’S COMMITTEE A committfe appointed by Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. of Pontiac is also studying housing for Negroes here. Replacements for principals I teaching position is i time teacher. part- • We have staffed twice as added on the secondary level and 42.5 ia-tl)e elementary grades. , Pontiac is losing many good wll-he~ Francis W. Staley ol Famous makers $8.00 values — slight irregulars — which won't affect looks or wearing quality . . . polyester blend cotton makes 'em easy to care for and no ironing either. Sizes 32- to 42 in a, variety of ^solid colors. Slip-On or Oxford Style Men’s Sport Shoes Men’s Canvas Uppers Tennis Shoes Irr».of$3.49 Canvas uppers, rubber I soles, cushioned arch | L.qnd soles. Sizes to 12 in variety of colors. . $2.95 Values-now Black tennis shoes v sure-gripping soles for. | ^ the -tennis court. 7 to 12 form Boys’ Wash ’n Wear Sport Shirts 00J MEN'S I I Terrycloth Sport Shirts I Shirts for boys W stripes. or plaids. Long sleeve styles or short sleeves : l style and Henley styles too.Sizes S-M-L. First quality shirts in 3-button Henley styles. Washable I srrycloth in ass An Extra Gift Idea For MOM Dacron Pillows j Compare at $3.98 f White, fluffy Dacron I super soft, buoyant, allergy | | ffee, dust proof too. All” I cotton floral covered in | 27 inch finished size.. Ultra soft or ultra medium firm i styles. Hi-Back Style Tubular ALUMINUM Lawn Furniture $6.49 CHAIRS 24-Inch Size Heavy Gauge STEEL Outdoor Grills 2»8 ( $8.98 ROCKERS] 488 kHi-bacKstyle chairs with durable whiteA .plastic webbing. Tubular alum mframe folds for storage^ ______ m ii with adjustable grid for p cooking height. Folds ;for storage and traveling. Get one now foryour ^ Padded Lawn Chair and Rocker ir Reg. $22.98 r-BOTH For Only Central High and David Crawford of Wilson School are expected to be named in two weeks. * Save Vi on this matching lawn chair a«d rocker set... aluminum frame, padded seat and back in stripes. American madei first quality set at savings. - Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, MAY 11, 1907 .WOMEN'S mm WINN ELIZABETH LYON Bloomfield Open Hunt. Proceeds mil be used to send the Meadow Brook School of Music youth orchestra to play at Expo ’67 in July. At the left are early arrivals: Mrs. Elmer Boch, Green Lake; Mrs. Ernest Fuller, Orchard Lake; Mrs. Alfred Stanker, Green Lake; and Mary Arm Stanker, Highland Road. Wearing a pink and rose chiffon tent from Lisbeth’s of Birmingham, Mrs. Peter Hoogerhyde of C'hippewa Road]~ assumes an * informal pose for Maurice Barnett of the Bloomfield Fashion Shop. Barnett assisted his wife as chairman of Wednesday evening’s “Salute to Meadow Brook” fashion show and concert at engagement af Winn Elizabeth Lyon to Charles George La Pella is announced by Calendar fbidaV , Detroit Handweavers and Spinners Guild, U a.m., International Institute, Detroit. “Anyohe Can Design” by Don Mettler of' the “Signe of the Wever,” Grosse Potato Woods. Art Program Set i for Friday in a Media Trio A demonstration in three media will be given b$ Maxwell ■ Wright at the Pontiac Society fl of Artists meeting Friday,,8:00 1 p.m. in the Community Serv- 1 ices Building. her parents, Mrs. Robert W. Emerick of Birmingham and George A. Lyon Jr. Guests may attend.1 Pontiac Area Council of Senior Citizens, 2 p.m., Community Services Building.' Earl Einstein, social worker, will speak. Pontiac Osteopathic Hos- ★ k k Wright is a native of Pontiac. 1 Both artist aq^l architect, he 1 taught at Lawrence Institute of 1 Technology for twemv years. He 1 has exhibited in New York, 1 Mexico, California and Wash- 1 ington and has won many. 1 of Coral Gabies, Fla. The bride- pital Guild, annual Florence Nightingale Tea, 2 p. m. in the employe dining room. Mrs. Frahklin groom-to-be is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles - La Pella of PhoenixviUe, Pa. A. Mills is chairman. Frances Willard union, Women’s Christian Temperance Union, 6:30 p. m., First Church of the Brethren. Family dinner with speakers Mr. and Mrs. awards. ★ k k * I Wright is a member of the 1 Michigan Water Color Society, I Scarab Club, Pontiac Society of 1 Artists and the Bloomfield Art 1 1 Axflv»totfcm_—-———- —George- Perkins-of--Royal--j Oak. k k k Prospective members and 1 1 guests are welcome. Post Writer Needs Help on Names By ELIZABETH L. POST Dear Mrs. Post: I would like - to submit the following letter in-competition for your book on etiquette. I am currently a college student and at the a g e . where your book could do the best job of guiding my future -actions. — J. J. Kohler__ Okay, J.J., you win! A copy of EMly Post’s Etiquette has been sent to you. Here’s Mr. holder’s letter and my answer: •k k ★ “I would like to, know the rule oh how to-address people older than myself. I am 21 years old and have always been taught *-to address anyone older than myself as Mr., Mrs. or Miss. Now that I am considered an adult, how am I to conduct myself intelligently in talking to office supervisors, older pro* fessional people and older coworkers? I’m confused as to when a person could, Or should, be addressed on a first name basis and when it is mandatory that a person be addressed, more formally.” ★ * * Dear Mr. Kohler: In a large office where a certain amount of formality is maintained, continue your practice of calling older people “Mr.,’’ “Mrs.,” or “Miss” until they ask you to use their first names. Whether they are your supervisors or your coworkers, courtesy demands that it is up tp them to make the suggestion. In a smaller, less formal of-' .fice, keep your ears open. If you hear everyone calling each other by first names you’d better go along, or you’ll just aid up being thought a terrible staffed shirt: Flower Sole The annual geranium sale of the Women’s Assddation of -the Pontiac Symphony Orchestra takes {dace Friday at the home of Mrs. Maxwell Shad* ley, 94 Ottawa Drive, The public may purchase geraniums from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. QUEEN, FUll Of TWIN SIZES Mattress and Box Spring Sat ^King-size 78"x80" mattress......... 88,88 *2 Box springs for King-sin mattress--- 88,88 (Ktog size eettsseM in sets tely) Horn's the solo you've been waiting for... the Sorta Once-a-Year super - size bedding offer. Choose from a complete ' line of mattresses and box springs in standard length or extra length in King, Queen, Full and Twin widths ... at unusually low sale prices. Firm, smooth-top innerspring construction, tempered steel coils, fresh • air vents and handles for easy turning, sturdy woven stripe cover, this offer is for a limited time only, buy yours today. FIRST TIME IN HISTORY! Imagine! King, Queen, Full or Twin .. Aiuf Mdffiwd-i Unit IN STANDARD OR QUEEN SIZE, ALL BY SERTA QUEEN OR FULL SIZE erf Sjrtrititjttjf 1662 S. TELEGRAPH RtL -4L PONTIAC Morn**Mr NMr Orchard Late M. Haas 994 4891 CLOSED SUNDAY __________________ , . . we supply national chain hotels and .motels such as Holiday Inns. We over ordered... Now you can buy, for the same price as Holiday Inn. 118 units only, now* available for immediate do-livery. *2S8-8 ■ or Twin Situ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THOBSDAY, MAY 11,1967 Sisterhood Has Its Dinner and installation of officers on June 6 were discussed at lte9day% annual paid-up membership dinner for members of ass Sisterhood of Con-negation B’nai Israel. 7* i U:: Mrs. Abraham Tauber was chairman of the event in the Synagogue where members of the Sisterhood played hostess Lingerie Sense Don’t wear Blight prints or colors under pale clothes, especially sheer or white ones. Instead choose skin-colored or white lingerie because it Mends with the skin or fabric and doesn’t show through. ooum£l uummi ii youb guide to good food at reasonable prices TI HELP IIS CELEBRATE AND MTHER’S DAY ennui ngsi witm. Make Mother's Day a pleasant family get-together at Harvey's Colonial House this Sunday, May 14th. She “* at ifs finest... plus 5896 DIXIE HWY. WATERFORD Phone OR 3-0940 Free STRAWBERRY SNORT DANE In H0R0So( HER DAY Md OUR 4th AHHIVERSARY PEGGY’S we’re bubbling over with DUSTERS FOR GIFTS A little GLAMOUR makes MOTHER feel so pampered, GIFT her with a duster in dazzliiig print in wonderful easy care washable fabrics. DRESSES for GIFTS 15..o60, RK ' SEERSUCKER JACKET DRESS the smartest • /" mg f Mm j v§ „ Mf : l.w , wears rm \ seersucker if l -f Available f 1 W In Gold, stripes B 1 m Blue and Coral LINGERIE for GIFTS NYLON TRICOT SLIPS ........5. to 15. NYLON TRICOT HALF SUPS., a. 3. to 8. NYLON TRICOT GOWNS.........6. to 14. BABY DOLL AND PAJAMAS.....5. to 10. SUMMER tdCKER BAGS 6. to 15. white and colors GLOVES 2. up a complete selection of * for MotherV Day gift8 Patients in thiTB ward of the Oakland County Sanitorium are enjoying their favorite programs on a new television set recently presented to them by. the VFW Auxiliary of Post W08. Shown accepting the gift is Mrs. Margaret Evans, supe rv is or of patient service, (right) and Mrs. Ayers Miller of University ^Avenue, representing the donor$. Funds f rotor the auxiliary’s spring card party purchased the gift. Lady Forester DURHAM, N. C.W>-Vicki Delill, a senior from Niagara Falls, N.Y., has the dlstinc-tion of being the first female forestry student at Duke University. After completing a two-year program, she will receive a master of forestry degree, and plans to go into some area of research. GRADUATION or... Flrat Holy Communion PORTRAIT SPECIAL 1- 8 xlOBroRw Portrait 2- 5 x 7 Platinum Tones 24-Wallets *1495 COMPLETE Otdyl Offer per fear KENDALE STUDIOS Full Trade-In Allowance Your full purchase price applied toward < highar pricad diamond WHITCROFT JEWELERS I \7 N. SAQINAW, Downtown Pontiac, BMW/ 1967 She'd adore a new, carefree Arnef costume 2 PC. KNIT JERSEYS IN MISSES’AND HALF-SIZES Tell Mom you love her with delightful Carol Brent® sleep, lounge or lingerie mates from Wards! All in maize or pink Whipped Gream® Dacron® polyester ... the cool, comfortable, ® )VALTZ GOWN with scoop neck ■*.$* .*4 ® DUSTER—Easy, free flowing........If, SLEEP COAT (not shown).button front... .*7 © SHORTY PAJAMA—has bloomer panties S6 CAPRI PAJAMA (not shown)—puff sleeves *7. accent now on straw bags with leather trims /WoNTGOMERY WARD Hatter her good fashion-sense by giving one of these Arne)® triacetates, becomingly styled in dresses of wrinkle-free, colorful jerseys. (a) Suit-dress in doubte-knit "V&-age®" in checks of white with red-blade or blue-black. Misses* 12-20. (D Flattering dress-jacket costume in turquoise (or green) with lemon print on white. Half-sizes T6Vi to 24Vi. Give Mother the t perfect suit for tier busy life! SPECIALLY PRICED AT WARDS NOW FOR A "WILTLESS” SUMMER AHEAD TO99-12" Crisp-as-Iettuce suits in a happy collection of prints and solids, 81o 18. (A) Posy suit, in mini-print or solids, never needs ironing! Dacron® polyester-Orlon®acrylichomespun, Pastel 12.99 (D Continental classic in rayon poplin —the jacket lined for enduring shape In cotton. Lemon, pink or navy. 10.99 MmMMMmmm exciting pppglar bulky-knit shrugs e Chills? Reach for warm knits you can count on e 700% Orion® acrylic bulkios... the rage/ • Wear or give these all-season toppings Here are ypur most flattering colors I Delicious pastels,!, always-right white, fashion black I Wear under coats for warmth, adorn costumes -on chilly days I In our Accessory Dept. Small, medium, large. enchant her ini dreamy soft floral Dacron CAREFREE WHIPPED CREAM* IS FEATHER-LIGHT, YET OPAQUE © PETTICOAT—nylon lace at heft*«\y. .if ; (D SLIP—in harmonizing solid tones. 34-4214 \ Many rattan styles, even double entries (open both sides). Base studs, plastic covered rayon linings, zip pockets. Natural, colors. xQlL (jOcuJU- : w ontiac Mall OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10 A M. TO 9:< SATURDAY' 9:30 V.M, TO 9:00 P.M, SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 5 P.M. • 682-10 i 18 CANNON THERAAAL BLANKET Our Reg. 3.67 2.97 3 Day* Only Belmont Thermal blanket 60% Rayon 34% Cotton, 6% Acrylic. Decorator colon. CANNI Discount Price Charge It Four 12!’ x 18” vinyl place mats and four 11” x 11” matching napkins. A fine variety of lovely patterns and colors. Charge it! PILLOWCASES. Current Books CANNON® 3 pair 1.77' THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MAY II, 1967 CANNON® Cotton Terry DISH TOWELS Compare at 79c ea. 2 88* Charge It Jacquard weave dish towels are 15” x 28”. “Coffee Pot” or “Fresh Fruit" patterns in many attractive colors! Dishcloths..... 2 for 44c AN ODD NOTE — Gaylene Ford, 13, found this battered piece of sheet music in the yard of her Grand Rapids home this week. It came from her church, South Congregational, which is two miles away. The church was hit by a tornado last month. The odd note? The song title is “All in ’the April Evening.” Egyptians Want Venice to Return BodyofSt. Mark ROME (AP) - First the Greeks wanted Venice to give back the marble Lion of St. Mark. Now the Egyptians want the body of the martyred tie himself. Venice would just about as soon give away one of its canals. Patriarch Kyrollos VI, religious leader of Egypt’s Orthodox Copts, was reported iq Cairo to have written Pope Paul VI asking that St. Mark’s body be returned to Alexandria whence Venetian sailors whisked it away in the year 815. The patriarch wrote that it was improper for the body to be kept separated from the apostle’s head. The head is in Alex* andria Cathedral. VATICAN REPORT A spokesman for the Vatican Secretariat for Christian Unity said that if Pope Paul had received such a letter, he had passed on no instruction about it to the secretariat. But when word first circulated some weeks ago that the Egyptian Copts might request the body, Giovanni Cardinal Urbani of Venice said: “The body of^St. Mark is so closely linked to Venice that it can never be taken away from the city permanently.” Venice had already come up with a fast dodge to avoid sending back to Greece a nine-foot marble lion statue that was taken from the port city of Piraeus. When Piraeus asked for it back last month, city officials said: “So sorry. It’s no longer our? to give.” ’STATE PROPERTY’ The statue stands in front of’ the ancient shipyard of the Republic of "Venice. Now that Venice is no longer a republic, ,the shipyard and the statue have become state property, Venetian officials say. “It would require a bilateral accord between Italy and Greece to allow the Lion to be sent back to Piraeus,” the officials said. The Italian government is not considering any such deal. I’LL TRADE YOU AN ELK. By Charles A. Goodrum. Funk & Wagnalls. $4.95. This is the funniest book in years. It begins, back there in the late ’30s, with a nonplussed pelican. Having made several navigational errors, it came down kerplunk on a Kansas highway. « ■', A farmer rescued it and turned it oyer to Bernie Good-rum, who had become recreational director in the parks department of Wichita, where there was a very small zoo. ★ ★ ★ Back in the Depression days there was barely enough money to feed the zoo’s pitifully small collection, but Bernie was determined to create a big zoo. He did it by becoming a scrounger and a swapper.. The story of Bernie Good-rum’s adventures with his mo is a delightfully crazy romp, full of slapstick emergencies and droll situations. The author has a natural gift for humor, and his , chronicle of his father’s exuberant career as a zoo-maker contains chuckle quotient tiiat’s hard match. It is one of those very rare books you wish hadn’t come to an end. MOles A. Smith THE THOUSAND HOUR DAY. By W. S. Kuntczak. Dial. $7.95. The thousand hours are the approximate length of the German blitzkrieg, accompanied by a Russian Invasion from the East, which crashed Poland in September 1939. —This huge (128-page) novel is a searingly vivid account of the chaos, pain, confusion, bitterness, fear, fatigue, agony, hunger, frustration, treachery, desperation and brutality of warfare. As a war novel, this will stand comparison with many of the monumental ones, but it carries theme beyond that of warfare slope. What Kuniczak is chronicling here is the transition from the 19th Century, when principles, honor and chivalry still were to be found, to the 20th Century’s 'bestial disregard for human values. ★. ★ * Here is a book in which death and destruction form the background for a memorable story. Miles A. Smith THE POPE’S BACKYARD. By Curtis G. Pepper. Farrar, Straus & Giroux. $4.50. For those who have visited the Vatican or hope to, Curtis Pepper has written an engaging book, lavishly illustrated with his own photos. The style intentionally is simple and this reviewer found a fascinated audience when he read the book aloud to his children. Odd facts, anecdotes and incident make for an intriguing inside look at the unique Vatican city state. ★ * * Few people know Rome as well as Pepper, a University of Illinois graduate who has lived there for more than 29 years. A plus for travelers is an pendix telling how to arrange a Papal audience and how secure admission to the Vatican gardens. Stan Swinton1 CANNON® SALE!. . CANNON SHEETS and CASES 2.57,, DEEPTONE SOLID COLOR PILLOWCASES..L M* t Jpair DEEPTONE SOLID COLOR... 72"x108" OR TWIN FITTED SHEETS.............. DEEPTONE SOLID COLOR.. 8 V'xl 08" or DOUBLE FITTED SHEETS..........., “Casablanca” self-tone stripe, sheets iir twinor double bed sizes. Many shades. Also, deeptone solid color-sheets in twin, double sizes, lovely colors. Both have matching cases. Casablanca stripe 72"xi 08" or TWIN FITTED SHEETS..... 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Choice of decorator colors! Face Towel.............42c Washcloth................22c LOVELY SPRING APRONS hi Our Reg. 1.77 3 Days Only & "Women’s novelty half aprons of quality fabric blends. Some & 'permanent press. A variety of floral and paisley prints, re-!:•: versibles and solid colors. All with lovely trim; many with one &: or two pockets. SEAMLESS NYLONS OurReg. pair W 3 for $2 for 8*0 M “Flowers of France”, seamless nylons in many 1 lovely shades. Rosebud trim on welt. Women’s sizes. 3 pair in gift box. Just ray “Charge it!” 3-PIECE TOWEL ENSEMBLE 1.88 Discount Price Charge It Matching cotton terry set includes the 11x18?* hath towel, 12”xl2” guest towel and washcloth in handsome floral, scroll or “modernistic” design. Pink, blue, gold, green. Attractively giftboxedv CANTRECE® NYLONS 42Ur OurReg. 68c Seamless, sheer hose . with reinforced heel. AGILON® KNEE HIGH HOSE 76pair Discount Price Wonderfully shear ny-nyions stretch 2-ways! cmrroN terry TABLECLOTHS 2.66 ca. OurReg. 3.33,3 Days Only Colorfast, wrinkle-free. Lovely patterns, many colon. LINEN-PATTERN TABLECLOTHS 1.77m OurReg. 2£3, 3 Days Only Flsnnelback, vinyl tablecloths GLENWOOD PLAZA-NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURS CHOICE BEEF Shortening Biscuits *V Skimmed Milk tt-Oal. LOWFAT Chocolate Milk^x CREAM PIES £ 10 SPARTAN 1 STRAWBERRIES ORE-IDA HASH BROWN ft ft|te POTATOES 2^29e SCOTTIES ucumbers led Radishes ireen Onions laHo'Carrots TISSUE SCOTT JUMBO DECORA TOWELS SALE DATES: Thor*., May 11 Thru. Wwd., May thw Right to Limit sAffeewte tigcm stfeum | nMndhiiii i STARDUST OHLORME BUA6M MiT FURRS' ' CASCADE : OtahwiiMei Fewder Si IVORY MOW ' sli» * 21* Wg9c l-ss* ^35® dlERB V- lb. AUcays -——; Fre»hlr USDA CHOICE BONELESS fUlllf!ir mm mm A Ground Lesser Amounts, 49c Ib. t USDA CHOICE—Ovan Ready TAC V FANCY LEG *0 LAMB 19 1 ROAST ib / Mm H . Jr T USDA CHOICE LAW SH’LD. ROAST .49“ J IffM CHOICE SHORT RIBS OF BEEF Fins far SraWng ■39' USDA CHOICE LAW SH’LD. CROPS ■S’ .69'! HOLLY FARMS Onda'A’ 4QC Double Breasted Chickens sw Rosa Canadian Style BACON Mr l THE PONTIAC P&ESS, THURSDAY, MAY 11,1987 JUMlW' paance > The following are fop prices covering sales o&hxtally grown produce by growers and sold by thun in wholesale package lots Quotat' ns are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Wednesday. Produce FRUITS Apples. Delicious, Golden. bU. ... Apples, Delicious, Row bu......... Apples, pclictous, Red, C.A., bu . Apples, McIntosh, bu.............. '“'% Melofish, C.A., bu. ..... Apples, JonelhM, Apples, Jons then, C.A., Apples, Northern Spy, b Apples, Northern Spy, C.A., A. ■ Apples, Sleele Red, bu. ........ Apples, Cider, 4-oel. .......... Beets, N»pedVto ™LB* ! 2.75 $2.00 Mart Active; Gains Prominent NEW YORK (AP) - Stock market advances outnumbered lowers today in active trading. However, the averages were a little lower, indicating that buy* ing interest wasn’t in the blue chips. Chteee. ■ ■PR Onions, dry, 50-lb. Onions, Grass, dt,, ocn..................»■ Onions, Set, 32-lb. bag SOI Parsnips, ft bu. ................. 100 Parsnips, Cello Pak. ..............100 Potatoes, so lbs. .7................1.00 Potatoes, 20 lbs. ...-. ............. .00 Rhubarb, hothouse, dz. bch............. 1JS , 3-lb. box ....... .05 Brokers said they were encouraged by die market’s behavior in the early stages of its corrective reaction and hoped ttiqt the 875 level on the Dow Jones Industrial Average would hdd. Opening of trading in Montgomery Ward and MSL Industries was delayed following an announcement that Montgomery Ward will acquire MSL. PLANE CONTRACT General Dynamics, which received a 81.82 trillion contract for production of the Fill fighter-bomber, rose nearly 2 points. Opening blocks included Ohio Edison, off W to 28V« on 54,800 shares; Sperry Rand, up % at 33V« on 19,700 shares; Grumman Aircraft, up 2% at 39y4 on 15,000 shares, and Campbell Soup. Up W on 10,500 shares; Wednesday, The Associated Press 60-stock average declined 7 to 327.9. . . Prices were mixed on the American Stock Exchange. Fractional gains were made by LTV Electronics, Microdot, Zapata and Flying Tiger. Small losses were taken by Louisiana Land , Strothers Wells and Aerojet. poultry and Eggs The New York Stock Exchange Stick to Probe Hits 'Efforts to Block' JFK Investigation NEW ORLEANS, La. (AP) -Dist. Atty. Jim Garrison said 'there’s no way in the world” to stop his investigation of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. All they can do is' slow it down,” Garrison said after series, of developments Wednesday: Far the Underachiever Ixecs Gef Retraining _ DtTROIT POULTRY . DETROIT (API—PrlcM paid per pound i and fryers 3-4 lbs. Whites 18ft-20; Barred Rock 23ft-i4ft; duckling 31, DETROIT EGGS DETROIT IaP)—Egg prices paid par dozeftby lirst raceivers ilncludlng U.5.H White Grade A (umbo 33-35; extra large jMM .........................i 21ft- 26-32ft; large 27ft-30ft; medium prices unchanged! 93 „ ,66; 60 B 33%; 89 C SOV 89 Eggs steady; wholesale buying prices unchanged; 75 per cent or better Grade' A White* 27; mixed 25; mediums standards *'• These included: A request for a subpoena directing the Central Intelligence Ageneytoproduce what Garri- By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst NEW YORK -** Obviously he wasn’t doing weU. His attitude and achievement were definitely beneath his capabilities, shown oil tests. He was an underachiever and needed! be placed in a special class. With children?] No, with other executives. In this he would be] taught 'better executive practices. He would be given on-the-job -supervision, He would be forced or induced to achieve, perhaps by being given more responsibility, or maybe less. CUNNIFF ness expanding, spreading abroad, diversifying;: underachievers are looked upon as rough diamonds to be polished-BOSS IS BLAMED Far more .often than in previous years the boss rather than the underachiever is ' blamed. Frequently the underachiever is viewed as capable but misunderstood, a potential producer in an uninspiring environment. In fact, if there is a shortage of abie middle executives-and some claim there always is* such a shortage—top management is more frequently in the mood now to accept blame for having failed to train candidates properly. Naturally-this treatment is uftder as much criticism as ap-proval. It is coddling, certainly, but some companies consider training programs to assist those who fail to pick up the tools' of the trade simply by working and observing. These companies fed today’s business environment, in which electronic computers change century-old management methods within a year, demands formal training. Reflecting this, thousands of businessmen this summer will spend from a few days to more than a manth on college campuses they left 20 years before, attending special courses at company expense. This attitude has other facets also: schools at resorts during which management gables are played before swimming or after golf; a growing tendency toward sabbaticals; and instant success courses-salesmanship, speed reading, dress and behav- fiiis gentle treatment of mid- it not just necessary but also “0Pr^aid {or by corporations. die executives is still rare, but rewarding to both the individual i jsj0 ionger jg y,e r0ute to the more common now than it was a"* **■- mnggg| ' ~r ! ......................... w-msfY*.,I,.;,.______jimum ,And the Company. 1 ton guided bv the homelv old ^ cla^^ajoiy-suiyre^al^gn were few and Candi-| ~As~n- rcsult^.numerous corpo-^^^^ sucj, as )^eep y0ur ears named by the Warren Commission as the assassin of Kennedy. Refusal by the Justice Department to permit an FBI[ agent to testify before tbe Or-lean County grand jury on his role in the investigation or the 1963 assassination. TAPE RECORDING A report of a tape recording which purportedly indicated a bribe had been offered for a statement to help substantiate Garrison’s probe. The application for 4he-sub-poena called on Richard Helms, CIA director, to produce before the grand jury a “Rue photograph” of Oswald and a burly Cuban which Garrison says was taken in front of the Cuban Embassy in Mexico City . Garrison contends the photo was suppressed and a “fake photograph” was submitted in evidence before . the Warren Commission. Garrison wanted FBI agent Regis Kennedy to testify before the grand jury on his role in the assassination investigation, but U.S. Atty. Louis C. LaCourj asked Criminal District Judge Bernard J. Bagert to quash his subpoena. Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark had instructed Kennedy not to testify. Bagert ordered a hearing next Tuesday on the government’s motion. Dismissal Motion Stalls Officer's Trial COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) - The court-martial of Army Capt. Howard B. Levy on charges of refusing to train Vietnam-bound soldiers stalled today as his civilian attorney argued for dismissal of file case. Likening the court-martial to a witch hunt,” Charles Morgan of Atlanta asserted Wednesday that Levy’s political activity before entering the Army motivated his commanding officer to increase the charges against the 30-year-old dermatologist. Col. Earl V. Brown, law officer of the court-martial at nearby Ft. Jackson, took the motion under study and said: “I’m not going to allow this forum to be ' by a person of the far right to vent his vengeance on one of the far left.” WASHINGTON (AP) — House Republicans are picking up support among state and local public school official? for their proposed changes in President Johnson’s school aid program. The board of directors of a ;roup representing state super-ntendents of education voted 7 to 0 to support amendments pro-‘ by Rep. Albert H. Quie, R-Minn., to the elementary and secondary school act. Treasury Position The theft of two cases of beer and four cartons of cigarettes, total value of 820, during a break-in at Ted’s Party Store, 4210 Sashabaw, Waterford Township, was reported to township police yesterday. Deposit* _______ 134,029,8/1,411 Wifhdrawels Fiscal ________ 141,574,782,173.13 122,323,681,339.58 13,1M;147.177.40 13,630,828^533 Ind. Rails UHI. Stacks —.8 +.1 —.8 —.1 <67.9 186.4 154.8 328. <48,7 186.3 155.6 328., <67.7 112.0 155.9 326.7 . <44.1 179.0 156,2 315.7 477.2 180.8 152.3 3214 I 159.1 331. I 151.5 1 537.9 213.0 170.5 360.1 ROND AVERAGES emptied by The Associated Brass 20 10 10 $ 10 10 Change —.1 +.1 - MP Wed 72.4 04.7 83.6 02,0 81 Prav. Day 72.4 04.8 83.6 61.0 81 Ago '■ 72.6 04,7 83.7 02.4 81 ...___) H5p 73V 04.7 84.2 02.2 Bf Year Ago 77.0. 05.7 13.6 02.6 * 1067 High 73.0 05.6 #4.0 62,4 jjfc High 70.5 T ii.s ii.i 60.5 Business Notes Guilford W. Forbes Has been appointed resident comptroller of General Motors engineering staff. Forbes of 1065 Chesterfield, Birmingham, was formerly supervisor of the product program section of the financial staff of General Motors Corp. He joined IGMiirMSI: DISSOLVES CONSTRUCTION FIRM - Financier Louis E. Wolfson, chairman of the board of Merritt-Chapman and Scott, told stockholders in Jacksonville, Fla., yesterday of his recommendation for liquidating the multimillion-dollar construction firm over the next three years. The proposal got overwhelming approval. Sitting beside Wolfson is Marshal G. Staub of New'York City, the firm’s president. and to the grindstone. These in-factory” methods are often considered obsolete now. More often the training is outside the firm. INTERNATIONAL TRAINING In Cahors, France, a medieval castle has been transformed into a schoolhouse to train up-and-coming international executives at a cost of $3,000 for 10 weeks, the wife’s expenses included. Colleges participating with businesses or, business associations in training, courses for middle-aged executives include many of the best known names in the country: Harvard, Northwestern, Stanford. For longer periods of study, the sabbatical seems to be slowly gaining in favor. This is a very expensive activity, for it often means the executive is raway from hi§_ job for nine months to a year.:--- Nevertheless, as Dr. Martin ]Warshaw of the University of | Michigan puts it: Periodic full-I time study may be the best way for certain managers to avoid “executive obsolescence” and to keep from being “dropouts with degreed.” School Aid Changes Backed Toyota Gets 1st California Antismog OK News in Brief And some local school officials, particularly those in Southern and rural areas, are urging their congressmen * to vote for the Quie amendments. The basic change Quie would make in the 2-year-old program is to provide lump sum grants to the states instead of allocating them to Individual school districts for specified uses. STRENGTHENS CONTROL Quie claims his amendments would carry out all the aims of the existing program but greatly reduce the administrative burden on local school authorities and strengthen state control over education. The appeal to states’ rights plus the widespread unpopular!. ty of the U.S. Office of Education in the South because of its | school desegregation efforts has Rummage Sale Sat., May 13, produced strong support for 10 a.m. .First Fed. W. Hbron. Quie in a House where Republi-— Adv. jeans and Southern Democrats comprise a majority. Rummage sale. St. Mary’s Episcopal Church. Josiyn at] Greenshield Rd. Fri., May 12 £& 10 a m. • 7 p.m. Sat., May 13 * 10 a.m.-12 noon. —Adv. FRESNO, Calif. (UPI)- Toyota Motor Co. of Japan yesterday became the first automobile manufacturer in the world to gain California approval of_ its 1968 exhaust emission c o n-trol system. 1 The state motor vehicle pollution control board said Toyota’s factory-installed exhaust system met California’s smog control requirements for 1968 with the following qualifications: p • Toyota must agree to certify 100 per cent inspection of spark timing at the end of the vehicle assembly line. • The firm must offer and promote a free spark timing and idle adjustment through the dealer at 1,000 miles. • Notification of this promotion and offering must be made by the dealer to t h.e~ owner. Toyota was the first auto , manufacturer to submit an application for approval of its 1968 exhaust system to the board. i# % * Rummage sale, Church oi God, 623 E. Walton_Blvd., Fri. May 12.8-5. -Adv. # Successfuhfnvesting te # s* -w '% <1 V # 4 Rummage Sale, main building, employees lounge, State Hospital, May 12,11 a.m.—Adv. Rummage Sale, Saturday 8-12 Don. St. Vincents Hall. Wide Track Dr. —Adv. Rummage Sale. Saturday, May 13, 7 a.m. till 12 noon. American Legion Hall on Auburn—Psi Sigma Beta. —Adv. Rummage sal?, 90 Main St. Clafkston. Sat., May 13, 9-12. —Afiv. Rummage Sale. Clothing for the whole family plus many miscellaneous items. 115 N. Tilden. Corner of Holbrook, Sat, May 13th, 9 to 5. —Adv. Bake -Rummage sale, 9-1 Sat. 13. C.A.I., Waterford. --- ; - —AdV. While they last Extraordinary group of men’s better sport coats.' Values to $45, now only $15.90. Osmuns Downtown store ~ lonly. 51 N. Saginaw St. —Adv. $ i By ROGER E. SPEAR Q)'“In your long experience with stocks, have you seen the average person of average income make more profit by long - term or short - term gains?” H.R. A) After more than 40 years’ experience with ail types of investors, I am convinced that the wisest course for the average is to buy and hold — for a reasonable period — stocks of sound companies working in expanding areas of the economy. Over the long termTlBs pOitcy generally proves more profitable. v Playing short-term cycles of stock prices can be either very profitable or, very costly, pending primarily on the perience and judgment of the individual investor — and the sort of advance he gets. I know many persons who have made sizeable profits by investing for quick turns but they are almost always shrewd and knowledgeable people who have been for years. And they always have access to sources of information not available to the average investor. 4 Q) “I am 74 and retired and need your help badly. I have $2,000 in series E bonds due in 1970. My friends tell me I should redeem these bonds or the government wiR tax me when they become due. I prefer to keep them until maturity.” A -M. A) There is no reason at all why you should not do so. Your friends have in mind deferred federal income taxes on E bond accurals. These levies are payable at maturity, but they are equally payable if you redeem your bonds before they come due. Your holdings have been guaranteed an extension in 1970 and tax liability can again be deferred at that time. If your ijretirement income puts you in a low enough bracket, you might be able to redeem all or part of your bdnds in some future year around the financial community without tax liability at ail. THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY II, 1967 Deaths in Pontiac, Areals seph Bird Chapter 294, Orderifoni. Burial wittbeinRoseland of the Eastern Star, Clarkston. park Cemetery, Berkley. Ah Eastern Star memorial Lawrence died yesterday. He service will be held at 7:30 to- was* pupil at Baker Elemen-night at the funeral home. tary School, Milford, a Cub Surviving are lier- husband, a Scout and a member of the Mil-granddaughter and four great-grandsons. Walter H. McKinny Requiem Mass for Walter H. McKinny, 69, of 1800 Sherwood, Sylvan Lake, will be said at 10 a.m. Saturday at Ogr Lady of Refuge Catholic Church, Orchard Lake. ; Mr. McKinny died yesterday. He was a retired group leader at GMC Truck & Coach Division. He is survived by his wife, Adrienne L. Edward J. Pement Edward J. Dement, 68, of 279 Femberry, Waterford Townshfy, died this morning. His body is at the' Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Surviving are his wife, Hazel; a daughter, Mr. Benny McAlex-ander of Durham, N.C.; two grandchildren; four brothers; and five sisters. ----------$ Lawrence C. Giddlngs Lawrence C. Giddings, 66, of 6180 VanSickle, Waterford Township, died yesterday. His body is^|t the Coats Funeral Home, Waterford Township. The family suggests any memorial tributes be made to Waterford Community Church. Mrs. Thomas Jobe Mrs. Robert Griffith ELBA TOWNSfflPw-Requiem a son,, Donald J. LeBeau of Detroit; a sister; and six grandchildren. A Rosary will be said at 8 p.m. tomorrow at the C. J. God-hardt Funeral Home, K e e g o Harbor. SERVICE CITED — Pontiac General Hospital Administrator Harold B. Euler (center) presents a 10-year service pin to Donald H. Carros, assistant administrator, at last night’s annual employes award dinner at Devon Gables, Bloomfield Township. Looking on is Mrs. B. B. Roush, member of the hospital, who was guest speaker for the dinner. Service for Mrs. Thomas (Hazel I.) Jobe, 70, of 2465 Meyers, Waterford Township.will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at the Coats Funeral Home, with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mrs. Jobe died yesterday. She had been a beauty operator and a member of the Jo- 51 Employes Get Hospital Service Pins More than 200 persons attended Pontiac General Hospital’s annual employes award dinner last night at D e v o n Gables, Bloomfield Township. Guest speaker was Mrs. B. B. Roush, s e c r e t a r y of the 11-member board of trustees. Service award pins were presented $1 employes at the annual dinner by Harold B. Euler, hospital administrator. Four employes were honored for 20-years’s e r v i c e. These were Mrs. George Pa-pazian, housekeeping department; Mrs. Ivan Riggs, dietary; Mrs. Grover Holser, central supply room; and Mrs. Elbert McVay, social service department. Pins for 15 years’ service were awarded 14 employes, while 10-year pins went to .33 employes. Title of Mrs. Roush’s speqch was “Your Hospital--City of Care,” which is also the theme for National Hospital Week which ends Saturday. Area Motorcyclist Injured in Collision •' A 16-year-old Independence Township motorcyclist was in-jured last night when his vehicle and a Car collided on Clinton-« ville at Pine Knob Hoad in the township. Listed , in satisfactory condition in Pontiac General Hospital is Charles R. Johnson of 5231 Westview. Driver of the car was David W. Cohoon, 18, of 6280 Pine Knob, Independence Township, Pontiac State Police said. Burned Woman Is Still 'Critical' —A Pontiac Township woman injured in a fire at her home Tuesday remains in critical condition at St. Joseph Merey Hospital. The victim, Mrs. Wanda Perdue, 34, of 311 Oakmont received burns over 70 per cent of her body in the blaze which originated hr a living room couch. Town-ship firemen found her lying on a floor near the front door. For Pontiac Schools Data Processing Dept. Expansion OK'd Plans for expansion of the Pontiac School District department of data processing, including the addition pf a new manager post, were approved by the board of education last night. Needs of the department totaling at least $26,000 more than currently provided in a prelim-Inary 1967-68 budget were pre-seated by Melvyn Staebler, dl-rector of data processing, and were in effect sanctioned by the board. Staebler estimated that Pontiac would have to spend $109,-738 in the next fiscal year on equipment, supplies and personnel to prepare for a new concept of teleprocessing be- What the board specifically approved waHhe addition of a manager of data processing at a salary of $8,000 to $10,000 and a secretary at $4,500. GOP'sDixie Plans Peril LBJ, Says Ford Staebler said he is now essentially performing the duties of a manager, who would- be con-cerned with operation. As director of information services. Staebler would deal with systems development. MORE EQUIPMENT Staebler’s other proposals were to increase the rental of equipment .at Oakland Schools from three to four hours a day, up-date and add local equipment and supplies. It is anticipated that Pontiac will receive a $12,000 refund from federal’ funds to help pay added costs, according to Staebler. BOWLING GREEN, Ohio (AP) — House Minority Leader Gerald Ford says that Republican “southern strategy” may help drive President Johnson out of the White House in 1908; Speaking before a crowd of 500 attending the opening of ‘Greek Week” ceremonies at Bowling Green State University Wednesday night, the Michigan Republican also said it could help the GOP take over control of tile House of Representatives. “The strategy is to drive southern Democrats, in the House into the arms of the administration on. votes that will hurt them in their home districts,” Ford said. He also charged that “back-pedaling” and contradictory statements have . left many Americans without confidence in the. Johnson Administration. “I firmly believe that the American people are looking for a change of direction,” Ford added.-—- Failure of the administration’ Vietnam policy, a credibility gap and a sag in foe country’s economy are the best reasons the Republican party should make headway m 1968, he concluded. I Police Action I Pontiac police were § called to investigate some 1 40 major incidents, mclud- I* ing both criminal activity and accidents, in the past 24 hours. A breakdown of causes for pollcc action:_______ Arrests—4 Reported Vandalisms—2 Reported Burglaries—5 Reported Larcenies—8 Reported Unarmed Robberies—1 Reported Arsons—2 Reported Obscene Phone Calls—2 Reported Assaults—6 Property Damage Acci--1 dents—7 * Injury Accidents—4 Academies Applications Applications are now being accepted by Congressman Jack H. McDonald, R-19th District, for the competitive Civil Service examination for appointments ||academies for the class beginning in July 1968. 1 The examination is open to all 1 young men, 17 to 21 years of age, who are residents of the 19th Congressional District. One appointment is open at each of the two academies. Applications can be obtained by writing McDonald, House of Representatives, Washington, D. C. 20515. The deadline for applying is May 26. ing d e v e 1 o p e d at Oakland Schools Data Processing Center. neer in use of Oakland Schools data processing services. Some data being stored electronically *by Pontiac’ are students’ scheduling, grades and attendance. “Today very few scjiool districts (including those with over 100,000 student populations) in the United States can equal the services available at ttorOak-land Schools Data Processing Center,” Staebler told the school Pontiac’s two-year-old data processing department is the largest single user and pio- COUNTRY’S BEST BOarcPPresident Monroe Mi Osmun, who is also on the Oakland Schools Board of Education, remarked that Oakland Schools data services will “be the best in the country” with the coming of teleprocessing and new Oakland Schools building. A year ago Pontiac was a charter member of a group of school districts to commit themselves to the development of teleprocessing (data processing by telephone) within Oakland County. 2nd Vandalism MeetingSet Staebler said the federal government recently funded $600,-000 under Title III of -the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 to operate the teleprocessing system with Ma-comb and Wayne counties and Detroit. • McConnell Parents, Police Eye Action Parents and McConnell Elementary School authorities are scheduled to meet tonight with Acting Pontiac Police Chief Harry Nye a second time regarding outbreaks of youthful vandalism on the city’s near east side. An afternoon conference held Tuesday at the request of community school director Fred Carter and attended by some 100 McConnell parents produced two police commitments. Nye told the group that the school would be checked every 30 minutes by patrol units and that the city’s youth curfew ordinance would be strictly enforced. He indicated today, however, that the patrol frequency would probably be cut to every hour, noting that similar tactics had been successful in combating a similar situation at McConnell two years ago. Tuesday’s meeting at the .police department, one day after the school’s basement had been broken into and vandalized, was termed “satisfying” by Carter. ‘NOT HOPELESS’ “I think the conference proved it’s not hopeless to go to ‘city hall’ with legitimate concerns,1 grid fob U.S. Naval aftd Air Force Carter said. “Capt. Nye did not 1 spoke di- duck the rectiy to the parents. In addition, Carter commented parents were interested not only In what police were willing to do, but in what kind Of action parents themselves could take. Caret indicated a representative of Oakland County juvenile court might also attend tonight’; discussion, scheduled as part of the mohthly PTA meeting at the school, 245 S. Paddock. Service for former Pontiac resident Ferdinand Kretz, 47, of Toledo, Ohio, will be 10 a.m. tomorrow from the Clegg Mortuary with burial there in Wood-lawn Cemetery. Mr. jgrctz, an employe of Toledo Van & Storage Of, died Tuesday. Surviving are his wife, Maxine; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Kretz of Toledo; a daughter, Mrs. Kenneth Jackson of Waterford Township; two brothers, including Lawrence P. of Pontiac;'six sisters; and four Service for Bristol Slone, of 114 E. Beverly will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Huntoon Funeral Home with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Slone, an employe of Jamds Wright Realty, died Tuesday. . New Trials Denied Pair in Bribe Case Two men convicted last summer in a bribery case involving an undercover Pontiac police officer were refused new trials yesterday by Circuit Judge Frederick C. Ziem. The Michigan Cour t of Appeals will now be asked to overturn the decision against An-gelo (Barrels) Lombardi, 38, of Detroit, and Odus Tincher, 49, of St. Clair Shores. Lombardi was found guilty by a jury of conspiring to bribe and theaetual bribery, while Tincher was found guilty of conspiracy only. Both received prison sentences but are free on bond pending ther appeals. Lombardi is still awaiting trial on a gambling charge stemming from a raid on the now defunct Seaway Civic and Social Club in Pontiac. Ferdinand Kretz will be 11 a.m. Saturday at the Church of the Immaculate Conception, Lapeer, with burial in Mt. Hope Cemetery, CroswelL Rosary will be 8 p.m. tomorrow at the Muir Brothers Home, Lapeer, Mrs. Griffith died Wednesday. She was a member of this Lapeer church. Surviving besides her husband are a son, Robert A. of Flint; two daughters,'Mrs, Maurine Jaissle of Chicago, 111., and Mrs. Ann Truax of Lapeer; two sisters; 10 grandchildren; and 12 great grandchildren. Bristol Slone AVON TOWNSHIP - Service for William J, Hand, 67, of 3056 Caroline will be held at Old Cathedral Church in Vincennes, Ind., qn Saturday. Burial will be in Mount Calvary Cemetery there. He died Tuesday. - Local arrangements are by Melvin A. Schutt Funeral Home, Pontiac. Surviving are two sisters, including Mrs. Kenneth Meyer of Auburn Heights. Egbert C. Trexler Egbert C. Trexler of 3260 Whitfield, Waterford Township, died today. His body is at the Coats Funeral Home. ROCHESTER — Mr . George (Alexina) Hersey, 66, of 827 N. Main died this morning. Her body is at the William R. Po-tere Funeral Home. Lawrence F. Cohea COMMERCE TOWNSHIP -Service for Lawrence F, Cohea, 9-year-old son of Mr.and Mrs. will be 1p.m. Saturday at Rich-ardson-Bird Funeral Home, Ml- Local Suspect Is Bound Over A youth accused of shooting a 17-year-old Pontiac boy April was bound over to Oakland County Cfrcvdt Ctsfft yesterday on a charge of assault with intent to murder. David M. ‘Leonard, 20, of 470 Fildew is charged with wounding David Bradley, son of Donald Bradley of 4621 Fiddle, while Bradley waited in his car at the GMC Truck and Coach Division p 1 a n t for his father to leave work. Leonard failed to meet the $20,000 bond set by Municipal Judge Cecil B. McCaDum and was refoanded to Oakland CoUn-| ty Jail._ ,___ __________ He faces arraignment May 18. District GOP Meeting Set A 62nd Republican Legislative District organizational meeting will be held at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Supervisors’ Auditorium at tiie Oakland County Courthouse. r MONTHS OF WORK The raid climaxed months of undercover work by Capt. Raymond Meggitt, during which time he accepted bribes on the order of Police Chief William : KHaffgorTJeggiti was paid to inform the operators of the club of any raids. \ The district includes most of the city of Pontiac. All area Republicans are invited, according to Roland W. Folk, district codirector. William J. Hand Mrs. George Hersey David B. Koenig BRUCE TOWNSHIP - Requiem Mass for Lance Cpl. David B. Koenig, 21, of 69100 Powell will be 9:30 a.m. Saturday at St. Mary Mystical Rose Church, Armada. Burial will be Resurrection Cemetery, Fraser. Rosary will be 9:30 tonight at Roth’s Home for Funerals, Romeo. David died May 3 in Vietnam. He was a graduate of, St. Augustine High School, Richmond. Surviving are his parents, Mr. and Mbs. Paul Koenig of Bruce Township; two brothers, Lawrence and Paul Jr., both at home; and his grandmother, Mrs. Ann Roland of Detroit. Joseph Miller LAKE ORION — Prayer service for Joseph Miller, infant of Mr. and Mrs. Gene R. Miller of 198 W. Shadbolt, was to be this afternoon at Allen’s Funeral Home with burial in East Lawn Cemetery. Joseph, was dead shortly after birth Monday in Anchorage, Alaska. His father is serving with the U.S. Army at Fort Richardson near Anchorage. Surviving besides the parents afe grandparents Mr. and Mrs. James Shafor and Mr. and Mrs. Renaldo Broderick, all of Lake Charles Smith HOLLY —• Service for Charles Smith. 69. of 206 E. Maple will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at Voor-hees-Siple Funeral Home, Pontiac. Burial will be in Edwards-burg Cemetery, Edwardsburg. Mr. Smith died Tuesday. Mrs. John Thompson ROMEO — Service for Mrs. John (Stella) Thompson, 63, of 11376 Wealthy Lane will be 10 a.m. Saturday at Roth’s Home for Funerals. Burial will be in Riverside Cemetery, Plymouth. Mrs. Thompson died Tuesday. Surviving are three sisters and a Mother. Lombardi’s gambling trial had been scheduled for May 31 before Circuit Judge Farrell E. Roberts, but has been adjourned without date. His attorney, Carlton Roeser of Pontiac, said the postponement was granted because Lombardi is recuperating from & heart attack he suffered in December. Press Honors Sheriff's Aides LAKE ORION - Judy Kay Weir, 15-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Weir, 1499 S. Lapeer, died yesterday. Her body is at the Muir Brothers Home, Lapeer. Herbert Radunz, who retired as chief of the Oakland County Sheriff’s Department civil division May 1, was honored by The Pontiac Press at the Pontiac lions Club meeting yesterday at the Waldron Hotel. He was presented with a framed portrait bearing plaque which read; “Her b Rar dunz — 32 Years of Community Service — The Pontiac Press.” Judy KayWeir t Monday p to S:W Death Notices loved grandson Of Cecil L. Cohea; dear brother of Julia Cohea. Funeral service will he held Satur-eeyr-Mey- - ,-of-1 pjn. at the Richardson • Bird Funeral Hotne. Milford, with Rev. Archie Donlgan officiating. Interment In Rowland Park Cemetery, Barkley. Lawrence will lie In state at the funeral home. The family suggests memorial contributions may be made to SLONC, BRISTOL; MW » W! 114 Bast Beverly; ago 64; beloved husband of Lucille Slone; beloved son of Mrs. Charles O. Hill; dear brother of Mrs. 6. R. Hagland Smith; Robert E. and Stspha also survived by sight _________ dren. Funeral service will be held Friday, May 12, at 1:30 p.m. at the Voorhees - Slple Funeral Home with Rev. Henry Schmidt officiating. Interment In Edwardsburg Cemetery, Edwardsburg, Michigan. Mr. Smith will lie In dale at the funeral home, (Suggested visiting hours % to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m.) TREXLER, EGBERT; May 11, lt«7; 3260 Whltefleld Drive, Waterford. Funeral arrangements are pending __at the Coats Funeral Home, Dray- ' Dial 334-4981 or 332-8181 Pontiac Pross Want Ads FOR FAST ACTION NOTICi TO AOVtKTISnS AOS RfCIIVID «Y S P.M. WILL BE PUBLISHED THE FOLLOWING DAY. H " I should ho « CtosMg lime f< *;rf2 o’clock i day ptooioos to osMicohoo. CASH WANT AO RATES I when cosh accompanies Order) >s I-Doy 3-Days GOoyo $2.00 $a.46 $3.S« 305 S.4D 3,66 6 41 )0J>8 i 4,St 1.64 13.44. 3 44 9.72 13.12 6.10 10,10. I6J0 fitionol chorgo of SO cents dotarosoof Pontioc* - The Pontiac Press FROM 0 A M. TO 5 P.M. ■no.....i end number of c_„ . „ that realize "YOU CANT BORROW YOURSELF OUT OF DEBT." At Nora______ Hours M Men. thru Frl. Sat. 9-6 (BONDED AND LICENSED) BOX REPLIES At 10 a.m. today there | were replies at Thei Press Office la the fol-j lowing boxes: 3, 11, 15, 17, 29, 23, ] 28, 30, 31, 33, 3«; 49, 41, [ 45, 51, 53, 99, 97,99, 195 j COATS FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON f PLAINS__J Keago Harbor, Ph. 6 DONELSON-JOHNS Funeral Homo "Daelgned for Funerals" SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME tfui Sarvkt" FE miS Huntoon FUNERAL HOME Serving Pontiac tor SO yean - *— frwwr Voorhees-Siple Cemetery Lots ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING a friendly advtoer, Phone PE >4111 | 1 * 5 Conwaanfial ARTEX LIQUID EMBROIDERY Lessons Ldaiie “* CONNIE ASSELIN MAY INKIAl Igs restyled $4.95. Houee of >E. M2I6.------------------ STATE Ll« NSED-60NDED Open Saturday 9-12 am. egfWflijnSt&roinr^ PLANNED BUDGET PROGRAM ' YOU CAN AFFORD ■ TAILORED Tg YOUR INCOME MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS FOUND: DOG WITH SHORT LEGSL fe 4.I7S4 after & LOST:1 LAblES f/krat,'' SILVER , SS ■LOSTtBLACK poodle, vldnlty Auburn Heights. UL 2-1375, aft. 3 p.m. the Pontiac press, thurspay, may n, im —Television Programs— Programs furnished by stations listed In this column are subject to change without notice 2-WJBK-TV, 4—WWJ-TV, 7^WXYZ-TV, 9-CiaW-TV, SO-WKSD-TV, 3S-WTVS TONIGHT 6:M (4) News (C) (7) Movie; “Convicted” (1950) Glenn Ford, Broderick Crawford (R) (50) Superman (R) (5«) Friendly Giant 0:15 (56) Science Is Everywhere 6:30. (2) News—Cronkite (C) (4) News—Huntley, Brink-ley CC) (9) Twilight Zone (R) (50) Flintstones (R) (C) 7:00 (2) Truth or Consequences (C) (4) Michigan Outdoors (C) (9) Movie: “Captain Me-phisto and the Transforming Machine” (1945) Richard Bailey, Linda Stirling (R) t (50) McHale’s Navy (R) (56) Planet Earth 7:10 (2) My Three Sons — The Douglases visit Hawaii (C) (4) Daniel Boone — Israel Kelps to vindicate a woodsman of a murder charge. (R) (C) .(7) Batman — Sandman steals the Batmobile and .Catwoman imprisons ' Robin (R) (C) (50) Honeymooners (R) (56) Managers in Action 6:00 (2) Movie : “LovOJi Many Faces” (1964) The suspicious death of a beach boy endangers the marriage ofawealthy couple in Acapulco. Lana Turner, CUff Robertson, Hugh O’Brien, Stefanie Powers (B) (C) (7) F Troop — Agarn has amnesia and is blamed for thefts at the fort. Milton Berle guests (R) (C) (50) Perry Mason (R) (56) Choiqe: Challenge for Modern Women 8:30 (4) Star Trek-The cap- ,----tain of an alien spacecraft sentences the crew of the enterprise to d e a t h for trespassing in a forbidden galaxy (R) (C) (7) Bewitched — A wood nymph seeks revenge against Darrin the Bold. (R) (C) (56) Creative Person 9:00 (7) That Girl—Ann wants to change her name, and her father is outraged (R) (9) Profiles in Courage— *judge Altgeld felt powerless to intervene in the case of the anarchists convicted for participating in the Haymarket Riot of 1886- Burgess Meredith, Howard St. John (R) (50) Movie: “My Reputation” (1946) A widow meets a handsome Army engineer very soon after her husband’s death. Barbara Stanwyck (R) (56) Conversations With Toynbee 9:30 (4) Dragnet — A lab report forces Friday and Gannon to reinvestigate a suicide case (C) (7) Love on a Rooftop Jodie and Dave meet endless complications when they try to buy and install a big brass bed (R) (C) (56) Sunday Showcase 10:00 (2) Coliseum—Woody Allen is host to Paul Revere and the Raiders, the U. S. Marine Drum and Bugle Corps, Walsh’s Leopards and fire-eater Tagora (R) —m-~ (4) (Special) Colgat Comedy Hour—An hour of comic sketches by Carl Reiner and M$1 Brooks, Phyllis Diller, Shelley Berman, Bob Newhart, Nip-sey Russell, Edie Adams and Nanette Fanray (C) ____(7) ABC Stage ’67—A mu- sical tribute to Rogers and Hart is performed by Petuta Clark, Bobby Darin, Count Basie, Su-premes, and the Mamas and the Papas (R) (C) (9) Telescope (C) 10:30 (9) Canadian Wildlife 11:00 (2) (4) (7) News (C) (9) News (50) David Susskind (C) 11:30 (2) Movies: “The Young PROFILES JN COURAGE, 9 p.m. (9) DRAGNET, 9:30 p. m. (4) COMEDY HOUR, p.m. (4) ABC STAGE ’67,10 p.m. (7) Women Use Language to Keep You Guessing Land” (1959) Pat Wayne, Dan O’Herlihy (C) “Crest of the Wave” (Eng., 1954) Gene Kelly, John Justin. (R) (4) Johnny Carson (C) (7) Joey Bishop (C) (9) Nightcap 12:30 (9) Window on the World 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ 1 (7) Untouchables (R) (50) Las Vegas (C) 1:30 (4) News (C) 2:30 (2) Highway Patrol (R) TOMORROW MORNING 6:15 (2) On the Farm Scene 6:20 (2) News (C) 6:30 (2) Sunrise Semester (4) Classroom (7) Kingdom of the Sea (C) 7:00 (2) Woodrow the Woodsman (C) (4) Today (C) (7) Morning Show 7:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (9) Romper Room 8:39 (7) Theater One: “Every-body Loves Sweeney” .. Mickey Rooney. (R) 9:00 (2) Merv Griffin (4) Living (C) (9) Bonnie Prudden Show - (56) Rhyme Time 9:10 (56) All-Aboard for Reading 9:30 (7) Dateline: Hollywood (9) People in Copflict (56) Numerically So 9:55 (4) News (C) (7) Children’s Doctor (C) (56) Let’s Speak Spanish —a ___________ 10:00 (4) Pat Boone (C) (7) Supermarket Sweep (C) (9) National Schools 10:10 (56) Numbers and Numerals 10:30 (2) Dick Van Dyke (R) (4) Hollywood Squares (C) (7) One in a bullion (9) Hercules (50) Yoga for Health 10:35 (56) Science Is Everywhere 10:50 (56) Let’s Speak Spanish I 11:00 (2) Love of Life (4) Jeopardy (G) (7) Everybody’s Talking (9) Mr. Dressup (50) Dickory Doc (C) 11:05 (56) Art Lesson 11:25 (2) Jackie Crampton (C) (9) Tales of the River "Bank 11:39 (2) Search for Tomorrow \ (4) Eye Guess (C> (7) Donna Reed (R) (9) Friendly Giant 11:45 (2) Guiding Light (C) (9) Chez Helene 11:59 (56) Memo to Teachers 11:55 (4) News (C) AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) News (C) (4) Match Game (C) (7) Fugitive (R) (9) Take 30 (50) Dialing for Dollars 12:25 (41 Doctor’s House Call 12:30 (2) As. the World Turns (C) (4) Let’s Make a Deal (Q (9) Communicate (50) Movie: “The Amazing Dr. Clitterhouse’ (1938) Edward G. Robinson. (R) . 12:35 (66) Let’s Speak Spanish I 12:50 (56) All-Aboard for Read- 12:55 (4) News (C) 1:00 (2) Password (C) (4) Days of Our Lives (C) (7) Newlywed Game (C) (9) Movie: “He Walked by Night” (1948) Richard Basehart. (R) 1:10 (56) Science .Is Everywhere 1:25 (56) Adventures In Science 1:30 (2) House Party (C) (4) Doctors (C) (7) Dream Girl (C) 1:55 (7) News (C) (56) American History 2:00 (2) To Tell the Truth (C) (4) Another World (C) (7) General Hospital 2:20 (56) Numbers and Nu-merals 2:25 (2) News (C)_____I.... 2:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) You Don’t Say! (C) (7) Dark Shadows (50) Love That Bob (R) I 2:45 (56) Let’s Speak Spanish II 2:55 (9) News 3:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) Snap Judgment (C) (7) Dating Game (C) (9) Matches and Mates (C) (50) Temper (R) 3:25 (4) News (G) 3:30 (2) Beverly Hillbillies (R) (4) Concentration (C) (7) Virginia. Graham (9) Swingin’ Time (50) Captain Detroit 4:00 (2) Andy Griffith (4) Bozo the Clown (C) (7) Outer Limits (56) Continental Comment 4:30 (2) Mike Douglas (C) (9) Fun House (C) (56) Spectrum 4:55 (4) Eliot’s Almanac (C) 5:00 (4) George Pierrot (C) ' (7) News (C) , * (50) Alvin (C) * (56) The Standwells 5:30 (7) News — Jennings (C) (9) Cheyenne (R) (50)^LittleRascals (56) What’s New 5:55 (4) Carol Duvall (C) BOYLE By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK (AP) - Science has made considerable progress lately in learning the languages of such birds as the crow and such be as ties as the dolphin. What it should set out to decipher next is the 1 a n g u a g e of women. That would ireally do ivilization a favor. , However, it is unlikety that science will ever accomplish this feat. Women don’t want anyone to solve their language. It is the real secret of die legendary mystery of their sex. There is a fundamental and inescapable difference in employment of language by man and woman. MEANS OF EVASION A man uses language to say what’s on his mihd. To' a woman, this, is incredibly naive. She uses language to say what isn’t on her mind. To a man language is a means of communication. To a woman ianguage is a means of evading communication. If she really has - something on her mind, it is up to you to guess whatiMs^------^ if it ★ Except when die loses her temper and thereby reveals herself.inadvertently,, a woman opens her mouth only to plead tiie Fifth Amendment. Her conversation is a camouflage to protect herself and her motives. This is why two women can talk for an hour on the telephone contentedly-witiiout saying anything. Each of them, after putting down the .phone, has a feeling of total victory. Neither of them gave herself away and neither wanted to. * IT’S MYSTIFYING This mystifies most men. The only men who can talk for an hour without saying anything are politicians.' r Nothing about his wife puzzles a new husband more than her enigmatic use of language. The marriage rea% begins to succeed only when he begins dimly to perceive .that she rarely says what she means and rarely means what she says. Florida to OK Disney World TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) After 19 months of conversation, Building Down DETROIT (AP) - Contracts for construction in Michigan totaled 8145,000 in March, 33 per cent down from the same* month ■ last year. For the year to date, total construction contracts were 18 per cent behind last year’s figures, reports the F. W. Dodge Co., marketing and information ! specialists. 25Approach 27 Smart In sttlre (coll.) 31 Also 33 Table sersp 34 Worm 36 Self-esteem 36 Ransom 39 Spheres 42 Mountain pass 89 Dinner course 10 Small islands 37 Feminine name 11 Kargin for 38 Bovine’s call - action 40 Improved 1 Diamond waight 12 Made a mistake in health 2 Prayer 10 Bright color 41 Placid SRaiaeanap 22 Belonging to a 42 Alabama count) (m.) glvontime .44 Trap 4Young child 26 Flower 48Try flavor of 5 Palm leaf (var.) 28 Sturgeon eggs 48 Italian city 6 Arboreal homes 20 Therefore 49 Honey-making 7 Short, written (Latin) .insects . reminder 30 Atmospheric 52 Equine’s tidbit 8 Mouthward disturbance 54 Masculine 9 French “bay" 32 Monosaccharide nickname (yar.) aeLlst'1 . Once that happens he can usually manage to get along with her very well He knows that when she asks him if he feels chilly she really means, “Go close the window, .Dopey; I’m cold.” ‘PASS THE PLATTER’ He knows that when she asks, “Do you care for any more meat?” what she reaUy means is, “Pass the platter, Buster; !*■» ******** no In 1966, Germany shipped to ! the United States $1.8 billion ? dollars worth of products. become a reality Friday. Gov. Claude R. Kirk Jr.’s office announced today that package of enabling bills for the pro-poposed ’ 3800-million complex near Orlando will be signed into law in a patio ceremony at the governor’s mansion Friday^ matter hour accustomed He gets to a wife’s upside down use of language, can’t quite adjust himself to her use of the words never” and “always.”HM Roy Disney, brother, of the late Walt Disney, will attend the ceremony with state House and Senate leaders, the announcement said. LOS ANGELES (AP) - Mohammed I. Khvan, 35, a visiting history professor here, will return to his native India next month as nephew of the nation’s president. ★ ★ *\ Khan’s uncle, Zalyr Husain, ), has just been elected first Moslem president in the predominantly Hindu country. 'Calories Don't Count' hut Jail Sentence Will Khan, also a Moslem, will leave California State College at Los Angeles at the end of the present semester. He said he hopes to improve the teaching of United State’s history in India. NEW YORK (AP)—A U.S. District Court jury has convicted Dr. Herman Taller, author of the onetime best-seller “Calories Don’t Count,” on 12 counts of mail fraud, conspiracy and violations of the Food and Drug Act____1_..:.. Judge John F. Dooilng Jr. set June 23 for sentencing Taller, 56, a specialist in obesity. The charges on which Taller was 'found guilty carry a total maximum penalty of 50 years in prison and $71,000 in fines. * ★* 4 The jury in Brooklyn brought in its verdict Wednesday after deliberating 14 hours. Taller was acquitted on 37 of the 49 counts against him. The judge allowed him to continue free in his own custody. S4FFLOWEROIL Taller’s book, which sold two million copies in 1961-62, recom-mended the use of safflower oil capsules for weight reduction. The government contended that Taller’s system was a “worthless fraud.” *; ★ i* ■ * The defense argued that Taller was a “fool” but an innocent one. A score of former patients who testified for the defense during the five-week trial praised Taller’s treatment. Radio Programs— WJR(760) WXTZQ 270) CKiWfBOO) WWJ(95Q) WCARfl130) WPON(l 460) WJBK(t 5O0) WHFI-FM(94.7) !Tu„c, (pods I, Jo* Bscarslla k Iparll .... _______Y«w* Sport* wwj, N««n. sport* CKLW. New*, Music WXY& HwwBOP* WJBK, Newi/Muilc, WCAR, News. Jot WPON, New*, Spc WHFI, Uncle Jay isjo-wwj. Today In Ravlaw WJR, Bus. Barometer SMS—WWJ, Emphasis . WJR, Lowell Thomas WCAR, Ron ROSS WJR, News, Sports, Music TitB-WCVZ-Joey Reynolds WHFI. 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NOWS, Music tlsW-WJR, News, Godfrey WXYZ, NUWfc Music Pat Murphy For example, if he hasn’t taken her out for a week, she tells him, “You never take me out anymore.” If he forgets an anniversary once, she tells him forever after, “You never remember our anniversary." _ j -u A situation that befell a friend The project will include built- Q{ ^ serve to illustrate lamap aitiaq In fl cplr.unvpm- , , ,, , the wifely use of the word “al- to-order cities in a self-governing 27,400-acre enclave, ringed by swamps. History Professor in U.S. Is Kin of India's President ways. TROUBLESPOT In 1935, as he was turning at T intersection, another car brushed against his and dented “For 32 years sinceUien,” he told me mournfully, "every time we have approached that intersection my wife has grabbed me by the sleeve and said, ‘Be careful. Remember, you always have an accident here." * it ★, There are some more things I could tell you about how wives _ lage. But why should I? In this field every husband has to learn how to interpret his own babbling brook. Ball Team Ready for Any Emergency MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) The New York Metropolitan Opera’s softball team lost 8-5 to team from the University of •Tennessee medical unit and one team member figured the Mets couldn’t have lost under better circumstances, “I think their lineup is great,’ commented Paul DePaola, chorister-catcher.. “If you lose tooth, there’s a dentist. If you break a bone, thebe’s a doctor. If you get killed, they even have a preacher on the team for the last rites.” The Mets took time out for the game while in Memphis on their spring opera tour. FRIDAY AFTERNOON 12MS-WJR, News, Farm ' WJBK, News, ‘Edar, Musk WWJ, News, Market, Musi WCAR.NSWS. Dave Lock- ■ WHFI, News, Boyle WPON, Nows, Musk CKLW, News, Dave SlwfS 1:00—WJR, NOWS, Music . WPON, News, Musk WJR. Nows, LinkMtwr 1:**—WCAR*, News, BacarCiie WJBK, Nwn, Mustek VBg WJR, News, Musk Hi Son Awaits Murder Trial DETROIT (AP) - An ex-convict, charged with slaying his mother and carrying her Mdy to Tennessee where he allegedly tried to burn it in the trunk of a car, was hound over r trial Wednesday. VviTi. * * William Larry Campbell, 24, of Detroit was ordered held without bond for first degree murder by Detroit Recorder’s (Criminal) Uoirt Judge George W. Crockett Jr. No trial date was set/ s and dente iceTKen,” l Judy Seen Up to Par Again; Stars on Jack Parr Special By EARL WILSON j NEW YORK — Judy Garland staged one more truly brilliant comeback the other night when she taped a Jack Paar special— to be.seen next Sunday. I was privileged to sit in on the taping up at 6B at NBC. Judy wasn’t permitted to sing ... not even to have entrance music—because of gome ip money, owed to a drummer whose union j| cracked down. But she was a tremendous ’ interviewee. j Wearing a brown chiffon very short skirt,, slender little Judy seemed to have forgotten the? tears of last week when she was fired from ‘Valley of the Dolls.” She reminisced about: Hollywood enchantingly, tossing some jabs at Marlene Dietrich and Liz Taylor. When she finished. Paar told her, “Now you go home!’’.Judy flung back, “No, YOU go home!” She made it rather clear that with two escorts—her ex-husband Sid Luft, and young Tom Greene—she intended to go out. “Would you be interested in working at El Morocco?” asked Judy who is known to need employment. “Certainly,’ she said. “Let’s give them a price. What about $10,000 a minute?” . Paar’s special, “A Funny Thing Happened To Me On The Way to Hollywood,” has a quote from the late Fred Allen as the central idea. Fred pnee said: “You can take all of the sincerity in Hollywood, stuff it in a flea’s navel, and have room left over for four caraway seeds and an agent’s PLUMBING DISCOUNTS 3-Piece BATH SET *59»8 White or on Colored “B” TOILETS “i” *1695 FIREPLACE Gas Logs 24” VANITY WITH TRIM 49“ ■LUMBING 841 Baldwin FE 4-1516 or FE 5-2100 Wu4. and Fri. Evss. ’Til 1 P.M. Students Turn Panty Raid Into Campus Protest HATTIESBURG, Miss. (AP) -A springtime panty raid early today at the University of Southern Mississippi turned into a spontaneous demonstration against the school administra- Another antiadministration demonstration was planned for tonight. A crowd estimated by police at between 200 and 300 male students ran up and down for aboqt Vh hours. A student leader said the protest tonight would include complaints about food, overcrowding in dormitories, censorship of the student news-iper. The university has about 7,400 students. WILSON THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . . Joseph R. Levine returned from a 10,000-mile trip stopped at the Plaza at his wife Rosalie’s charity ball for the Lila Motley Cancer Foundation. He drew, the door prize. One prize hp drew went to himself. It was a $750 trip. Bob Hope introduced Chicago agent Charles Hogan at the Catholic Atcors Guild salute to Horace McMahon, saying “He used to book me for $25, now he books me for $25,000. He booked me in some marvelous places in Cicero. They didn’t applaud you—they let you live, they had intermission to let everybody reload.” ★ ★ ★ TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Jackie Vernon recalls he once lived in a town so small that one alarm clock woke everybody up. WISH I’D SAID THAT: A good memory is what keeps a good chaperone awake. REMEMBERED QUOTE: “Nothing holds a modern family together like good behavior on the part of the parents.”—O.A. Battista, Dictionary of Quotoons. EARL’S PEARLS: The hardest job of a girl’s life is to prove to a man that his intentions are honorable. Concert musician Ray Lev explains why some parents want their kids to play the piano instead of tty; violin:’ “It’s harder to lose a piano.” That’s earl, brother. (Th» Hall Syndics! State Collegians Compete at Litter-In TRAVERSE CITY (UPI) Students at Northwestern Michigan College staged a-litter-in yesterday and claimed, or rather picked up, the world’s championship in the field. - * -k it ■ In a two hour and 15-minute session on highways in Grand Traverse County, 150 students picked up 17,798 cans and bottles. They buried last year’s cleanup,' record by more than :6;M0 containers. .Tne winning, sit-member team walked off with the prized trophy—a giant beer can .mounted on a plaque. Do yoif liave debt worries? We can set up ONE PAYMENT ycJcan afford! Call 338-033 Authorized RCA-ZEMTH Sales Sdd Our Selection of New RCA and ZENITH COLOR TVs Color TV RCA COLOR TV QjpKlfy ColOI « low « X Service! $329^0 .. Open Saturday 'til _ Opun Man. and Fit, Evus. 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