Lazaros to Bare Details of Bribes. ' By JIM LONG Piter Lazaros, self-admitted Mafia figure whose allegations about crime and corruption have led to a grand jury investigation in Oakland County, will make further pubUe disclosure Monday about bribes and a murder plot. ' The information will be revealed at a press conference Lazaros will hold at his Troy home. According to Lazaros, it will concern bribes taken by racing officials. lAzaros said he also will shed some E the The Weather • • 11.' S. WwHtMT BUTM* PtTKIlt -I '& VOL. .127 — NO. 152 m light On the planned killing of Oakland County Circuit Judge James S. Thorburn when the jurist was conducting a grand jury inquiry of the Hazel Park Racetrack. Thorburn revealed the plot on his life in Jui^e*',,^ Announcement of the news conference came yesterday while Lazaros was waiting in the hall outside the second floor courtroom of Oakland County Circuit Judge Frederick- C. Ziem, in which hie pregnant wife was testifying lb an extortion case against another reputed Mafia figure, Joseph Barbara Jr. of Frazer. Barbara’s trial began' yesterday morning, just .about the time a new grand jura, headed by Det\rolt Recorder’s Court Judge Robert J.-Colombo, began on thfe same floor of the courthouse. It was the Barbara Incident that reportedly prompted Lazaros to begin te^Uing police of underworld activities. The grand jury was initiated on a petition submitted by Michigan Attorney General Frank J. Kelley and Cel. Frederick Davids, commander of the Michigan State Police. y>. ■ ■ ■#. #■ * * * Their request for the full-scale investigation into the influence of the underworld on public officials and at least 13 other major crimes was based on information provided them by Lazaros. Lazaros has been under constant police protection at his home at 2410 Dalesford since being released from prison last October while he appealed a fraud conviction. Charges leveled tjy Lazaros to date have resulted in. the arrest of several alleged Mafia leaders, though no action has been taken against any of the public officials he has accused of dealing with the underworld. The grand jury Inquiry is expected to , THE PONTIAC PRESS delve more deeply into the allegations than would be possible through normal police channels. Newsmen waited some five hours yesterday to talk with Judge Colombo about the grand jury, only to be told by the judge, “We are underway and other than that, no comment.’’ STATE POLICE The investigation itself is being handled by detectives from the Michigan (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 3) £71 Home Edition ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, AUGUST 2, 1969 —44 PAGES nlWMM I md survey—PAGE j Zeroing In After 12 days, lasers locate reflector Apollo 11 left on the F j moon—PAGE A-l*., ,^4, Vietnam War , BS2s pound enemy bttMa in j vicinity of Saigon—PAGE M. Astrology .. i . A respirator has enabled Tommy to • j breathe since he lapsed into a coma M April 28,' four weeks after being bitten and clawed by a rabid, bobcat at . his ; ] home. Attempts to get Tommy to : breathe on his own have failed.' , He is visited .daily by his father or mother. || The $18,000 donated for hospital ex-; penses by individuals and groups y throughout the cou ntry has beat , used up. Vf Special nurses have been taken off a Tommy’s case, and staff nurses now stay with hfa day afcd night. MOUNTAIN PATROL - Soldiers In the U.S. 25th Division Suspect 'Guy a Girl Could Trust' Link to Other Deaths Sought v • 1; ■ r ■■ WlnptHi WELL-GUARDED SUSPECT -* Police surround handcuffed John Norman ColUna 22, as they ltadhim hmfttoWashtenaw County Jail. Collins was irraigned yesterday in Ypsilanti District Courtpn a charge of murdering Karen Sue Beineman, an Eastern Michigan University framman.„ VRBOR (HPI*—John Norman Col-guy a girl could trust”—was yesterday with the sadistic sex of an Eastern Michigan Uni-Coed. Authorities today were checking his possible link to imilar ipur-j ders. Collins, 22, a rugged 6-foot athlete, was in’ Washtenaw County Jail after arraignment on a charge of murdering Karen Sue Beineman, w h o s A nude, beaten body was found a week ago face down In ai gulley three days after her disappearance. ■ ★ ' ★ ■ i Police said the murder site was the ’ home of Michigan State Police Cpl. David Left, Collins’ -uncle by marriage. They said Collins had access to Left’s home while the family was on vacation. When Left returned and “found things not as they should be,” he called his superiors. Miss Beineman, a freshman from Grand-Rapids, was the seventh victim in a series of bizarre slayings of young women in the past two years in Ann Arbor-Ypsilanti area.1 She was last seen speeding away from a Ypsilanti Wig shop on the back of a big, shiny motorcycle driven by a tall, dark-haired young man. i * Collins’ friends, male and female, were stunned by the arrest and said they doubted his guilt. They described the deeply tanned, strapping Collins, who was , just one Related Stories, Pictures, Page D-11 r away from earning a teaching certificate, as “polite, shy, gentlemanly —a guy a girt could trust,” known by many but noticed by few. •HE’S JUST A GUY’ “He’s just a guy you mdet and pass a thousand times,” said a graduate student who-for six months worked with Collins as an inspector at the Motor Wheel Corp. plant in Ypsilanti until Collins quit last spring. Two students trusted him,, enough to welcome him as a protector for their wives during the fear-laden nights when the sex slayings were occurring at the rate of almost one a month for five months- One said Collins, escorted his wife home from classes at night and checked the back porch and closets for. hidden assailants before leaving her alone, Collins, born hi Windsor, Ont., add a -star athlete at St. Clement High School in Center Line, bears a resemblance —some friends say striking while*others say vague—to sketches police made from witnesses’ descriptions of the cyclist. Both his friends and neighbors, however, said they didn’t think of Collins when the__ sketches appeared in newspapers. The arrest was the first major break tn the long investigation, often marked by quibbling among six different law enforcement agencies before the stats took command. ★ . ★ Police refused to reveal any details about the evidence leading to Collins’ -arrest at the State Police crime lab in Plymouth, where he had been taken for questioning. v * * * However, authorities said he had been under surveillance for some time and released last Sunday. Authorities said i tip supplied by a campus policeman and the discovery made by Leik led them back to Collins. Harambee Reflects Self-Determination jL Firemen Win Reinstatemen Two black firemen, under suspension by Pontiac Fire Chief Charles Marion for wearing moustaches, won reinstatement with full back pay last night in a ruling from the Civil Service Corn- Vindicated by the commission ’ s decision were Frederick A. Milton and Daniel Sowell, both 29. and five-year veterans of the Pontiac Fire Depart- Both had been suspended because their moustaches extended just past the corners of their lips — a violation of Marion’s personal-appearance code. In 9 hearing that lasted 4ft hours in Pontiac’s City Commission chambers, attorneys for both sides argued whether Jim fire chiefs grooming code should be upheld. GIVENOPTION T Milton had been suspended July 1 and given SO days in which to either trim or shave off his moustache or—face dismissal from the force. Sowell, suspended by Chief Marion July 14, was given the same option as Milton. Both claim to have had their moustaches since joining the depart- Milton and Sowell claimed since they are the only blacks dh the 145-man fire department, that Chid' Marion was discriminating against them on the basis of their race. Representing the two suspended officers at the Civil Service Commission hearing, whidh opened Wednesday and had been adjourned after a four-hour session until last night, were attorneys -Fletcher Campbell and Gordon A. Gregory. HIRED BY UNION Gregory was hired by the Pontiac Fire Fighters Union, Local No. 376. Campbell was retained by Sowell. Rabid Boy, Is Still in Coma Alger Strom, attorney for the city, attempted to convince the Civil Service Commission that Chief Marion’s action in suspending the two firemen Was entirely within his .powers, under local statutes. ★ ★' w Gregory and Campbell maintained Chief Marion’s grooming code was “arbitrary* capricious and unreasonable.” The code set down regulations on the length of haircuts, sideburns and moustaches for the firemen. • The commission Ailing last night from chairman.!. Joseph Davis Jr., Charles Spann and Lowell Wilkinson suggested a grooming code be drafted by both the fire fighters and department supervisors in a codperative/ffort. They also asked to be presented with'the results of such an undertaking for future study. (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 0) A wonderful weekend is in store for Pontiac area residents, except for a few sprinkles late this afternoon. Here is the official day by day forecast of the U.S. Weather Bureau: TODAY—Partly cloudy with chance of light showers late this afternoon. High near 80. Tonight fair and cool, low near 60. * * * Northwesterly winds at five to 10 miles per hour, continuing tonight and to- TOMORROW — Sunny and a little warmer, high near OS. MONDAY—Partly cloudy and wanner. Probabilities of precipitation in per cent are 30 today, 20 tonight and 10 tomorrow. w-irr'* * • * : .. • A sunny 62 was the low temperature in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. The thermometer registered 80 at 12:30 p,m. (EDITOR’S ROTE- This is the last of three articles on Harambee Inc., o black nonprofit development corporation m Pontiac.) By DIANNE DUROCHER Black people, who comprise at least one-fourth of Pontiac’s population, have complained for years about housing and other problems to city leaders. Repeated disappointments, false hopes and past disturbances have generated a new philosophy among leaders in the black community. It is called self-determination. ★. ’ ★ ★ . Pontiac’s black development Corporation Harambee Inc., is an example of the black philosophy^at work. The organization was begun because the leaders of several black organizations in Pontiac were willing to channel their separate powers into a common dramatic effort. Harambee served more or less as an umbrella group for young bldck militants, ADC mothers’ groups, black business and professional groups and community groups. v RECALLS EXPERIENCES Some Harambee members have gray hair like -Mrs. Lelia Lindsay, a member of several community organizations who fervently recalls her experiences as a housekeeper Working in the South. Some sprout Afro haircuts and wear African garb like Ahmed Shabazx, who believes that black people have -the" power to promote and protect their own interests and shouldn’t depend on white people to-build their communities. There is much loud discussion during Harambee meetings because the views of its members sometimes conflict. But they are in agreement about achieving their goals to improve housing in the black community. Here is what some of Harambee’s members say about their organization. -‘Black is a condition as well as’a color,” said Linda Lawrence, one of Harambee’^ founders. “We are people with a record of hope. “Harambee has given us pride, and a feeling that can’t be explained,” she said. ★ * * Linda is a member of Harambee’s advisory board and the former chairman, of the Crystal Beach ADC mothers. When Harambee was in its initial stages, she was unemployed and a welfare recipient. Today the- young attractive mother of (Continued on Page A-3, Col. 1) SAN DIEGO , Calif. (AP) - Not yet 3, ™ Tommy Buchmann has spent 100 days ndw in a hospital bed with rabies. Except for the first six days, he has been Jn a deep sleep. Doctors^, at University Hospital list his condition as unchanged -still critical. Hie once bright-eyed youngster has lived longer with rabies than anyone else ' in recorded history, doctors say. A Kansas boy was kept alive for 63 days last year. The coma shows no sign of breaking, although Mrs. Max Buchmann said Friday she has spotted tears in her son’s jgyes- CHIN APPEARS TO QUIVER Once, she said, his eyes opened.- Occasionally, Tommy’s tiny chin appeared to quiver. “We hope and believe he is coining •lowly,” said Mrs. Buchmann, wife of a poultry randier in Lakeside. But the doctors put little stock In fhesd apparent No Break Seen on-food sPriees WASHINGTON (AP) — Government experts have thrown cold water on what ’ American consumers had hoped was a sign of a break in soaring food prices. A new forecast from the Agriculture Department says higher food prices at groceries and in restaurants are likely for the rest of the year. * * * It had been hoped that an earlier midweek government report of a reduction in the upward rate of ’wholesale prices might sipal a slow-down in inflation. " But department forecasters—who had cautioned against too much optimism over the wholesale price news—made it official yesterday; they see little change likely'in over-all food supplies. SOMEWHAT MORE They said retail food prices will rise “somewhat more” than last year’s 3.2 per cent. Grocery prices have been going up at a 7 per cent rate this year and are a major factor in soaring living costs. Prices for meals eaten in restaurants are likely to increase by more than last year’s 5.2 per cent, the forecast said. As has been the case all year, meat is a major factor. “Unless the demand expansion tapers off sharply, prices for livestock products are expected to continue well above last year,” the department said. LARGER QUANTITIES .. Possibly lower prices for other foods may occur because they are being produced in larger quantities^ the report said, but the increase in meat prices will ' " offset this, ll Uv# northwest said, but ti FRANKLIN -*Edfrard J. Connelly of 26825 Scenic hoi been appointed first vice president of the Purchasing Management Association of Detroit for He,is employed by the Edward C. Levy Co. in Detroit. ten following she years as executive vice president and manager of fee firm’s New York office! Experts Remove Fake Bomb A-B THE PONTIAC. PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 2, I960 '• ■ . v , . - ,t, . V ft :~x.' « i ’ X- £1, ' j* $3-Billion Program on Antisub Plane Bbgun WASHINGTON (AP) - The Navy has hashed a 63.2-billion program to build antisubmarine warfare planes, but is docking its U.S.'based forces as much as possible to save operational funds, Lockheed Aircraft Oerp., which has had difficulties with two other major military contracts this year, was selected yesterday by the Navy for a 1461-million contract for research and development of the new S3’a carrier-based antisub plane. ♦ It .r it Officials said the estimated ceiling price for the full eight-year program is |3.2 billion for a fleet of 193 aircraft. Shortly after announcing the contract award, the Navy disclosed its whips and planes will reduce operations off U.S. coasts this year in keeping with President Nixon’s ordered Cut in defense spending. There was no estimate of how much would be saved. MORE TIME IN PORT Only the 1st Fleet off the U.S. West Coast and the 2nd Fleet in the East Coast waters are affected. Although the ships and planes Will be spending more 'time in home ports, the Navy said they would have enough at-sea time to remain in readiness, \ Announcement of the Lockheed contract marked the first new mijor aircraft program pushed toward production during the Nixon administration. Lockheed of Burbank, Calif., has Had-problems this year with contracts for the• Air Force C5A supertransport and the Army’s Cheyenne helicopter gunship. Congress has hit hard at cost overruns on the C5A which is $1.7 billion more . than the original 63.1-biUfam estimate, and the Air . Force is seeking major revisions in the contract CONTRACT CANCELED The Army canceled its contract for the Cheyenne in May because of technical problems. The Navy said it chose Lockheed over Genual Dynamics Corp., which was competing for the contract, because of Lockheed’s performance “with particular emphasis on recent Navy programs.” Lockheed is producing tile P3C Orion, a land-based version of the antisub plane which the Navy fell operate off carriers. The S3A contract includes production Vs of six prototypes, with an option for the navy to buy 193 more planes, The S3A is tb be powered, by two turbofan engines, have a speed of more than 400 miles per hour fed a range of more than 2,000 nautical miles. The all-weather plane is to be designed for homing torpedos, mines, depth charges, rockets or missiles with which to destroy enemy submarines. Birmingham Aitai Georgia Wil School Antibi ; ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) - The largest school desegregation suit ever filed by the federal government faced Georgia today as Gov. Lester Maddox summoned all available state resources to fight it. • The Justice Department filed the suit yesterday in U.S. District Court in Atlanta, asking that every public school in the state be desegregated under court order. . * a * Maddox called upon the state attorney general “to use all the legal and financial resources at the command of this State” to oppose the suit. I “We’ll win the war against these tyrants,” Maddox said. “If we don’t, the Vote of Teachers Set in Waterford Teachers in the Waterford School District will vote Aug. 18 on whether to return to classes in September without a contract with the board of education. The decision to take the vote was made last night after the Waterford Education Association (WEA) heard a report that its, negotiating team has made no progress on its wage and fringe benefit demands. ★ t w About 250 of the 667 members of the WEA attended the meeting. They unanimously approved a resolution expressing “extreme displeasure and dissatisfaction” with the school board’s proposal. Warren Williams, executive director of the WEA said some progress on noneconomic matters had been made since June, but file board has been apathetic in moving forward o n economic issues. ■ ♦ it h The contract between the teachers and the school board expired Thursday. Negotiations between the two parties have been underway since March 3. United States will cease to be a free republic.” DUAL SYSTEM ATTACHED Th» complaint, filed on behalf of U.S. Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell, accused Jack E. Nix, Georgia school superintendent, and the Georgia Board of Education with failing to take adequate steps to disestablish a dual school system based on race It was the first time a state board of education has been the target of a government desegregation suit. The Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) had previously cut off federal aid to 30 Georgia school districts. But the Justice, Department said with the filing of the suit federal aid will be restored to the 90 districts. Funds are not withheld in cases where litigation is in progress, the department said. * The government claimed that Georgia, not only maintains a segregated school system, but that the educational opr portunities provided for Negro youngsters are decidedly inferior to those for whites. ' ★ * *• Unless restrained by the-courts, the suit said, “the defendants will continue to operate the public schools of the state of Georgia in a discriminatory manner denying Negro children equal protection of the laws, in violation of the 14th Amendment of the Constitution." Market Is Appointed at Vickers BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Robert E. Walker of 815 Fox Hall has been named director of market development at Sperry Rand’s Vickers Division in TToy. , , Walker received a B.S. in mechanical engineering from Queen’s University In ' Kingston, Ont. He started his career with Vickers as an application engineer at Toronto in 1956. John L. Kohl of 3910 Orchard Hill was elected to the Georgetown University Board of Governors. The school, in Washington, D.C., is the oldest Catholic1 institution of higher leaTnihg in the Unied Skates. Kohl is a 1943 graduate of Georgetown. This Is 'Model Of Navy Anti sub Plana Under Development From Around Neck of Youth FESTUS, Mo. Wl — Bomb 9,experts disassembled a device clamped around. -4he neck of a 19-year-old youth early to-' day, and found it contained only a few pieces of wood, a battery and string. 'Defector Tells Wh/ NixOfl Turnout Big in Romania LONDON (AP) - The Daily Telegraph reported today that Russian author Anatoly Kuznetsov has written three letters to Soviet authorities explaining why he, defected to Britain this week. The newspaper said Kusnetsov voiced disillusionment in a letter of resignation to Communist party officials. It said another letter to the Soviet Writers’ Union spoke of difficulties being a writer in the Soviet-Union. The Weather BUCHAREST, Romania (AP) -President Nixon was cheered by thousands of Romanians today on his arrival from Pakistan and told them the United States is ready to help establish a Europe “free from the fear of war or threats of war.” President Nicolae Ceausescu, greeting the first American president to visit a Communist capital, stressed peaceful coexistence as “a safe way of building a climate, of confidence.” - A 60-year-old high schoolteacher who said he placed it on Gary L. Miller, told police it1 was a bomb, and said it would explode if anjj attempt was made to remove it. Festus Police Chief Burl Rudisiale said Miller told officers that a similar device he had tested on a dog had “blown the dog!s head off.”' V The teacher, identified as Rupert M. Johnson ,of Festus, - was booked is a felonious assault suspect at the JefferSon County jail. $$ - For Miller, the discovery of the price's contents ended nearly 12 hours of horror.* “He told me It was.a time bomb, and only he himself could disarm it,” Miller told police. The device was made of four pieces of copper wire, about one-half inch in diameter, and was fitted snugly by elbow joints. ROMB EXPERTS CALLED Festus police called in bomb disposal experts from Ft Leonard Wood, Mo., the Grant City, HL, Army Depot, ami the in. Louis Police Department. An attempt to X-ray the device at a hospital in Festus, about 35 miles south of St. Louis, failed. The yoqth then was taken outside to a parking lot, where about 200 persons gathered, and authorities called for a powerful industrial E-ray unit from St. Louis. , ' - . ★ ★ _ it Lead shielding was plated between the piping and the youth’s neck to protect him from radiation. The area was cleared and roped off. Officer Gus Palazzolo of the St. Louis bomb squad said X-raysrwhich were developed at the scene in a mobile unit, indicated that the device contained no mechanical parts. * * * The decision was made to lead Miller off the parking lot to some soft ground, and open the device. 2 Firemen Win Reinstatement (Continued From Page One) Both Milton and Sowell plan to .return to work with the fire department next week, with their motistaches intact. A half-dozen of their fellow fire fighters in attendance at last night’s hearing clearly indicated support of the commission’s ruling, ' e ★ Wj: Gregory and Campbell had indicated following the hearings first session last Wednesday they would carry the suspended firemen’s cases to federal court if reinstatement with full back pay couldn’t be gained by a commission ruling here. Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY-Partly cloudy with chance of sprinkles this afternoon. High near 80. Tonight fair and cool. Low about 60. Sunday sonny and a tittle wanner, high pear $5- Monday outlook: Partly clondy and warmer. Northwesterly winds 5 to 15 miles per hour today, tonight and Sunday. Probabilities of precipitation are 38 per cent today, 28 per cent tonight, 19 per cent Sunday. UowMt temperature preceding I e.m. 43 Sun seti Saturday at 7:51 p.m. Sun rltat Sunday at l:IS ajn. Moon sett Saturday at IKlS p.m. Moon riant Sunday at 11 :ia a.m. ona Year A|t In Hlstwat temperature .... Loweat temperature Loweet temperature . Alpena . 70 SS Cincinnati ini sissr Gd. Rapids 7t S4 Duluth Houghton 7J J7 Fort Wortl. Houghton L. 71 50 Jackaonvllle Jackson if s» —i gb »s Cite i . Tina Dale In .77 Yeere Mt. Clement IS 44 Miami Bet Mutktgon 77 S Milwaukee Oscoda 74 SS New Orient., “—talon 47 § New York Inter SO 57 Omaha Me. Marla tt S3 fttlthurgh ----- M ,|t. Loura 70 i. Lake C 47 L French 54 Seattle SIMM EsL Traveree C. 71 54 Albuquerque “ ■ Atssr Bismarck . If LAKE CONDITIONS: St. Clair-Northwest winds, 19-15 knots today, decreasing to 5-10 knots tonight. Huron—West to northwest winds, 19-15 knots today, decreasing to 5-19 knots tonight. Partly clondy today becoming fair tonight. Erie—Small-craft warnings In effect east of Cleveland today, variable winds 5-19 knots today and tonight. Scattered thundershowers tonight. NATIONAL WEATHER Gwfe Lakes regjou and the upper Midwest. Scattered showers are predtetedin the Midwest, as well as along the East Coast. Thousands of persons waving U.S. flags were at Otcpeni Airport and welcoming signs were out as the President and Mrs. Nixon stepped from their plane, Air Force One, into the hot sunshine, The entire city was in a festive mood, and the turnout along the 12-mile route from the airport to downtown Bucharest was great. STANDING PATIENTLY __ The people had been standing patiently for as much as five hours. Girts and women in bright summer dresses and. men in sports-shfrts and business-suits stood behind lines of soldiers. Workers, who ordinarily quit at 1 p.m. on Saturday, were let off several hours early to be able to join in the welcome. Sr ★ , ★ ..... There was no question that the welcome was organized. The people were brought out in government trucks. Nixon struck a warm note in his first visit as a private citizoi two yeark ago. Now, as President of file United States, ami head of a nation that has conquered the moon, he did it again. - Legislator Seeks Probe of Judge in Conduct of Algiers Motel Trial A state senator had palled for an investigation into the conduct of Oakland County Circuit Judge WUham J.-Beer at file Algiers Motel murder trial ’in June. Sen. Basil Brown, D-Detroit^ accuses Beer of “incompetence,” “misapplying •the few” -and not having “proper judicial temperament” at the trial of Ronald August, white Detroit policeman suspended in the incident. ★ * it August was acquitted of slaying a 19-year-rid Negro youth in Detroit’s 1967 racial riot Brown said he urged the Judicial Tenure Commission to review Beer’s conduct. “Judge Beer should not be permitted, to continue to misapply the law Ip any case in the future, the ^senator said. Brown said Jhe is particularly disturbed with Beer’s rulings on the admission of certahr “evidentiary matters and-Ma* charge to the jury.” ' Beer limited the all-white jury to* just two choices: first-degree murder or not guilty7~1The ludge then gave no W planation of why he ruled out second-degree murder or . manslaughter. ' - > • it ) Brown has introduced a resolution in the Senate calling for the commission to investigate the conduct of Beer. The resolution is still in committee. The senatyft^aid he felt compelled to make the reqhest to the commission on his own, rather than wait for Senate committee action, since the Senate Is now in recess. Lazaros to Bare Crime Details £* Wlreptote Gorier weather is forecast tonight in the eastern (Continued From Pago One) State Police. The intelligence staff is headed by Defective Lt. Eugene Dtokel. Meanwhile, down the hall, Lasaros’ wife, Delores, was testifying against Barbara, who she claims stria $4,009 and a diamond ring from their home while her husband was in prison. She said fee money and ring were taken during one of Barbara’s visits to the house. President and owner of the Tri-Cfty Sanitation Co. in Detroit,* fee 32-year-old Barbara is also accused of raring Mrs. Lazaros on two occasions and sexually molesting her another time during the early pari of 1968. CASE IS PENDING ^ SJSjJ Barbara has been dunged with raping Mrs. Lezaros but that case is still ponding in District Court in Parmington. However, during the extortion trial yesterday before a jury of seven men and seven women, the allegations of rape wore mentioned frequently. Under questioning by Special Prosecutor- Jack I.. Birin,’ Mrs. Lasaros said she never told her husband about; being raped until two days after his release from prison. She said Barbara had threatened to kail her, Lexeme end their tdne-yeaimld son if fee ever told anyone about What had happened. ? < . EXPECTING 2ND CHILD Mm. Lazaros, whof is expecting her second child in October, said she went to the State Police the day after die told .ter husband about Barbara- Trudeau's Tone Tough ST. GEORGES DE BEAUCE, Que. (AP) — Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau rebuked politicians who let “a small'minority of maniacs” push them around and called last night for French-speaking citifens of. Quebec to support their federal government, Trudeau spoke to a cheering crowd of 3,000 at Sb Jean Baptiste Day ceremonies in this community- 55 miles south of Quebec. He was invited to speak when the neighboring city of Sherbrooke withdrew its invitation to the prime minister after a bomb explosion and terrorist threats. St. Jean Baptiste is the patron saint of' French-speaking Canadians. I Algeria Festival Ends ALGIERS (AP) — Tens of thousands of Algerians sang and danced and shouted revolutionary slogans in the streets when the first Pan-African Cultural Festival closed hem yesterday. In an Algiers hospital a son was born to Mrs. EMridge Cleaver, Wife of the Black Panther leader, during t h e festival. Barbara’s attorney, Ivan Barris, kept way. pressing for an answer under cross-examination as to why she had never told anyone—pariioula|ly bar husband. “I didn’t tdi my husband because he Could have been killed in jail,” aha said. “He might haVe escaped if 1ml knew. I didn’t want to tell him while be was in jaiL” ■ ... At this print Mrs. Lazaros began to cry, and Judge Zfem adjourned fee trial until Monday at 9 a.m: ■ , - , INSULTS TRADED' As the parties left fee courtroom, Lazaros and Barbara exchanged insults. Lazaros shouted that Barters was a “pig” fed a woman wittLBafeara called Lazaros a “punk.” • r * A fight was avoided . when police hustled Lazaros off in one’ direction and Barbara’s friends took Rim fife 'other People Clamored Fori Household Goods .., “Plenty of action and wonderful results from our Press Want Ad. Well over 30 calls with everything sold”. Mfs. D. N. t^itfe1 jpsr Mtt 1 Duncan Pltyn dinette MT,. ooflft TPjWifitjw. ‘ i ■ PRESS WANt ADS am^ joufet out every day by thousands of readers. They am fee “marketplace” for whatever you have to aril, want to buy, rent, hire, find or swap. Tell them wife a low cost ad. Dial . 334-4981 or 3324981 THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 2, I960 A-5 Harambee Unites Black Efforts I . (Continued Ftopn Page One) two small boys is employed at Pontiac Motor Division and has moved from the condemned Crystal Beach projects. James Eggleston Sr., another founder of the organization and its first vice president, has lived in toe Crystal Beach projects since I960.' HAD CONFIDENCE He said, “When my neighbors first began hearing about Harambee, they said it was impossible and what We were trying to achieve wouldn’t happen. But I said, it will happen—and it did. “Now people come to me with questions about its progress and an admiration for its achievements.” Eggleston is employed at toe Pontiac Housing Commission. Charles M. Tucker, Haramb,ee’s president, said an essential purpose and continuing function of Harambee is to bring black people together as individuals and interested viable groups. “When Harambee was first bom, I was skeptical, but toe more I got involved, the more -1 realised that its . philosophy of togetherness and understanding is the philosophy that I preach from the pulpit," said Rev. Arlond Reid, pastor of toe Newman A.M.E. Church, 233 Bagley, and a member of Haramhee’s board of directors. ‘FULFILLMENT OF DREAM’ * “It is the fulfillment bf a dream we bl'ack people have had for years in this city,” he added. Dr. Garfield Johnson, also a board member said, “Harambee has come along way and done a lot of good, but we don’t want to promote toe idea that we have arrived. Harambee’s advisory couhcil is always open for few membership and there la muoh yet to accomplish.” f ★ ; ★ .. “This organization has kept all of us pushing for better housing and the respect of our fellowman. It has shown we can work together and we have developed a closeness and respect for each other,” said Mrs. Alberta Herron, a board member and member of the Voice of Oakland County Action League. “When it all boils down,” said Kwame Lateef (formerly Richard Northcross), second vice president of Harambee, “no ■ two black people in, this community have ever really worked toward the same goal. Rarambee has tought us that wo can.*”’' ‘PEOPLE ARE ANXIOUS’ William Elobjr, a member of the board of directors, has operated a barbershop in the city’s black community for six years and he sees and heath a lot about what’s going on. This is what he reported: “In toe beginning people had serious doubts about Harambee in the' barbershop and in toe community. Now -there is hope mixed with anxiety; people are anxious to see Harambee’s drawings turn into buildings. “That’s what I see in^the barbershop and in toe community,” Eloby said. as I PETITION FOR THE CONSTRUCTION OF INTRACOUNTY RELIEF ™E AVON;* OAKLAND COUNTY, MICH-NOTICE IS HEREBY mVEN, th*t our-tuenf 18-MI* provleloniof Chapter » of Act. No. 40 of the, Public Acte OM956. County^Draln* COTmHsToner of Oakland b* located eutatontlalty M fallows: County point balng In SnM "B," “KLEM GARDENS SUB-DlVISION," as recorded In Liber 47, Pad* 54, of the Oakland County Roglt-ter of Deads, said point being Wester y 230 feet, more or less and Northerly ■ 10 feet, more or less, from the Northeast corner of Lot 3, said Subdivision; „ Thence Easterly 220 feet, more .or less to the West right-of-way tine of Wllfet “ Street: Thence Easterly 30 feet, more or less, to the center ot Wlllet Street,- feet, more or less, from the southwest TOrnerof Let 77, "HILLCRESTSUB-DlVISION," as recorded In Liber 37, Page 1» of the Oakland County. Regis-far of Deads: Thanca Easterly as feet, more Or loss, to the Easterly right-of-way line of Wlllet Street, tald line elso being the West lot line of Lot W, said Subdivision: Thence, Eeslerly 250 feet, more or less, along a Une perellel to and 230 feet, more or Ins, North of the south lot lino of Mit Vt, sion, to o point on the. Edst or lasa, and Easterly 30 feet, mors e less, from the Northeast corner of Li 21, "KLEM OARDENS SUroiVISION" Thence Northerly lMsfaet, more a less; Thanca Baetarly flSp fee*, mot or less, to e r •“•» li and '20 feat, i „r lees Bast 91. .11— .owumm of Lot .42, "COOLIDGf HIGHWAY SUBO SION," as recorded In Liber 43, . ... 12, of the Oakland County Register of Deeds: Thence Northerly 710 feet, mom or less, along a line parallel to" feet, more or less. East of th right-of-way line of Bathurst Street to a point 10 feet North and 20 feet East of the Nerthaaet corner of Lot 54 -tubdiviewnr•—*—■- s East of the North-ot 90 of the "COOL-SUBDIVISION." BrBsg"onlnB 'ot a point In fection St, T.3N., R.lfE., Avon Township, Oakland County, Michigan, said point being Northerly 240 foot, more or lets, end Easterly 30 Net, moro or Hi*, from the Northe*et ooriMir of Lot 21: "KLEM GARDENS SUBDIVISION," ai recorded In Liber 47, Page 54 of the Oak-land County Register of Deeds: Thence •Northerly 707 Net, more pr less, to a point, said point Doing Westerly 25 loot, more or lees, end Southerly 33, ' feet, more or lest, from the Northeast corner of Mid Section 317 Thence West- Glenn H. Griffin Sparks-Griffin FUNERAL HOME *•Thoughtful Service** 46 Williams St. Phone FE 8-9288 108 N. Saginaw St., Downtown Pontiac - FE-3-7114 OPEN MONDAY 9t30 a-mi to 9 p.m. another bargain blast from the house of bargains and Monday toitofag Be a Smart SIMMS 'BARGAIN GRABBER' On These Specials SA1URDAY-IM0NDAY SMMSl it being W and Spul rlherly 33 feet, more ‘lorlhaast corner ot Nerthlfly *12 feet, i point, said point 30: Thanca Northwesterly .245 fiat more or less to a .point. Mid -point being Northorly 740 -faat, mort or . late, and westerly 290 Mot, more er less, from sySSna* erly 555 Met, more or. less, from the Southeast corner of Socjlpn Mi told point aleo balng tha Point of Beginning of Branch No. 2 of Coolldge Ex-tenilon Sprague Drain; Thanca North- m&ZSUSl mS ■ IM Ml PMMMHMHVWH feet, more or lees, from the Southeast cornet- of Section 30; Thonco Westerly 240 feet, more or lose, to a point on tha East lint of Lot 42 "AUBURN HIGHLAND SUBDIVISION," cordad In Liber 40. Pago 19, County Register of Diode, .at.- MN being Northerly 45 feat, more or less, from the Southeast corner of Let 42 of •, Beginning at a point In Branch No. 1, MlS prfnl lwInB N^heriy oos tael, more or, Web and Wastarty 555 feet, mgr* or Mas, from the Southeast corner of ' lection 30, TJN., R.11E., TAvon t .--TS5T” i County, Michigan; 230 feet,- more or lees, from the : seat corner of Section 30. NOTICE “is FURTHER GIVEN, ..... the Drainage Board for Mid project hee considered the said petition and hee made a tentative determination that said pat tlon Is sufficient and that tha mM pro act It practical: has given the ram ^'ROBERT SI EVANS rIlIEP DRAINS •t th* mma of Mid rrtlet drain* and th name "ROBERT J. EVANS RE Lj E. DRAINS DRAINAGE DISTRICT" name of 1h* ttrtwnao* diet* ■mi has mid* • lemiHv* should be aeidind ____I .. id—on account of „SS’! th* MWWblnitortaard ragm* ant™ 25th day of August, 1969, 0&H4S tfclock Ajt4., Easlam Standard “ MJrii — —— prolec, t* matter hearing' aw^oSSeotlons to M’w ’prolect, to Uie petition therefar. end to the nmtter ^Thle ratjc* tA Oven by f®rdjrj£L ’h •aid Drdfoaw iMrd for Rwmn J . EVWI. R-elSTDrelra. ^ jflaiMl Relief Drains. OMd-MOunty Aug. t AufTWrt9» ‘Lasko’ ‘Eskimo’ ‘Manning Bowman’ 20-In. Electric Fans 136® ia44 id98 Pkg. 100 Parke Davis iMYADEC Caps Reg. $39.95 Reg. $44.95 2494 20-inch electric fans with 2-speeds. Can- be. used in the window or anywhere. Safe for children., Hardware-?nd Floor Choic* of newborn, medium or toddler size disposable ‘' ns. Ideal tor travel. Drag*—Main Floor Has 2-Spesfe and Light ARDEE Electric Scissors Ardee electric scissors has built - In guide light to eliminate shadows, 2-speed powerful magnetic vibrator, table guard to prevent marring work surfaces, 6-foot cord. • Sundries—Main Floor Permanent Press Men’s Pants For the Mature Man ! M Regular £6.95 Summer slacks of 65% Dacron with the wider legs for the mature man. First quality. Sizes 34-38-40-42 in limited lengths. Choice of black or tan. ’ Lets Air In-Keeps Sun Out Bamboo Shades 3x6-foot.... .1®* 5x6-foet.... ,259 6x6-foot... .32S 8x6-foot.,. .42* Long wearing bamboo shades fn a choice of 4 widths to fit most windows. Lets air in while it keeps the sun out, and they roll up when not needed. Just wipe 'em dean. Housewares—2nd Floor New Formula - Self Polishing Gal. BEACON Floor Wax Reg. $3,98 for only P Contains Crystal Blue Brightener that solves the yellow ing problem; Performs like the brightener in detergents. Gives a long lasting shindfousewares — 2nd Flop*' in DOWHTOWISI PARKtMCr MKU. Shop Simms aid Hava your tictot stampidfar 1 hour fraa parking at time of purchase; (fim> cept on tobaeeo and beverages*) 7-pc. Famous WAHL Papoose Home Electric Barber Set Washable Rayon w Eideden Ladies’ Panties Wahl Papoose barber set includes 000 cut clipper, blade guard, 3' Butch attachments, oil and comb. With easy to follow instructions. Sundries — AAain Floor Protect Floors and Caipets Asst. Carpet Remnants You'll find hundreds of usee for these carpet remnantst to protect floors and carpets in heavy wear areas. In the car to protect shoe% etc. They come in a good variety of colors and sizes. Withknon-Slcid ikicks. —Basement 100%Cotton - Machine Washable Infant’s Sun Suit or Boxer Pants Rayon < ladies' panties with band or elastic leg-Slight irrs. of better quality. Sizes 4 ta 10. —Main Fleer, Electric Heating Pad $5.95 value 3* positive fixed heals on this electric heating pad. Soothes those pches and paint. f CASCO Sinus Mask Heat 5® Moist or Dry Heat $8.95 value Caeco eiriu* JFull Gallon Can - Long Lasting jARGET PAINT Infants' sun suits are solid color with contrasting trim, with gripper front and plastic lining. Boxer pants or solid color with back pocket* Size 18 months. —MainFloor 98 North Saginaw St SIMMS JI Choice of latex, semh gloss, otoside, paint or porch and deck paint in a large selection of popular colors. Haidieoie—BedFlwe mM ■. THE PONTIAC PRESS 18 West Huron Street SATURDAY, AUGUST 2, 196# «5B»" Pontiac, Michigan *18056 Hism HUD Okays ‘Center’ A significant social innovation — a Human Resources Center — with Pontiac in a pioneering role has been given the green light by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) through a Federal grant of $1,110,142. The Pontiac School District will provide an additional $4.3 million to finance construction of the project. The Resources complex will combine elementary (school education for some 1,800 stiments and evening programs for adult education with facilities for t wide range of community and social activities. To be situated on a 16-acre tract adjacent to the City Hall, the Center will, in the words of its designer, “proyide a knitting together of the lifeblood of. the City. It will bring together the black and the white, chil- dren and adults, residential and downtown areas, public facilities and tiie school/’ Racial balance in the school sector is seen as 60 per cent white and 40 per cent black. The Human Resources Center was first envisioned by the Pontiac Board of'Education early in 1966 and the concept went on the drawing boards of Urban Designs Associates a year and a half later. A spokesman for the firm said that 11UD altered its basic policies in order to award Federal funds to the local school district in order to encompass the educational feature of the design. Local residents have cause for gratification over this latest evl-. dence of the City’s p r o g re n s toward social and racial unity. Costs Crimp Homebuilding Millions of would-be homeowners are caught in a vicious three-way squeeze between soaring land prices, skyrocketing construction costs and record-high interest rates. For many, mortgage financing has become difficult, if not impossible. Not much can be done about land prices. There is only so much land available or suitable for homebuild-ing, and no more can be created. Neither, so long as. the public tenable or willing to absorb them, wilHabor and materials and financing costs fall or be stabilized until the entire economy somehow gets off the inflation escalator. But there is one aspect of the situation that contributes to artificially high construction costs aiid which is built into national law. This is a serious loophole which permits building tirades ■ unions to engage in product boycotts and other restrictive work practices. ★ ★ ★ The Taft-Hartley Law. prohibits voluntary secondary boycotts, but a 1959 amendment to the law specifically exempted the construction industry. This loophole enabled the National Labor Relations Board to rule that the Carpenters Union was justified in refusing to handle prefabricated doors on construction sites. The board was upheld by the U S. Supreme Court in 1967. The court’s decision opened a Pandora's box of product boycotts. In a ,variety of cases, the NLRB subsequently ruled that plumbers and pipefitters could boycott prefabricated boilers, asbestos workers could refuse to handle prefabricated insulation material for pipes, carpenters could reject prefabricated laminated beams. Now Rep. . Edwin Eshleman, R-Pa., has introduced legislation in Congress to dose the loophole. His bill (HR 12634) he claims, “puts employers and union officials in the building trades on the same equal footing with others in the world of labor-management relations. There is no reason why certain unions or certain employers should be given privileges others do not have . . . «,.. with men it is impossible, but not with God: for with God all things are possible.” Mark 10:27. Juan Migued “Mike” Apeztequia was a Basque sheepherder. At 17 and with a sixth-. grade 8panlsh education, Mike came to this country on a three-year work permit to herd sheep in Wyoming. The many lonely months in the mountains with bis sheep gave Mike much time to think. He realized how little he knew and what his future would be without an education. He said, “I felt God had made me a person with certain talents and abilities and 1 wasn't using them ..-. I wanted something different in life ...” A couple in Evanston, Wyoming, recognized Mike's exceptional abilities and desire to learn and to become an American citizen. They taught him English and arranged for him to enroll at Weber State College, Ogden, Utah, on a trial basis, jn his second quarter he became an honor student and retained that status throughout his college career. But Mike had other problems. During all the time he was going to school he had trouble Staying in the United States, his work permit having run out. Through influential friends a bill was submitted to Congress for Mike to remain in the country. As long as it is not acted on, Mike can stay. Each year the bill is resubmitted, At present Mike is working on his masters degree at Brigham Young University. Abdut two years ago he joined The Church of the Latter-Day Saints. He says, “It has been a great comfort to me. I have found a new country, a new language, a new education and a new religion, and I am grateful for each one.” Confident Living: You Can Master Art of Living “In this period of extreme building costs, much of which arise from extreme wage demands and union restriction^, the attempt by certain groups within the building industry to maintain higher costs by excluding certain products sand certain subcontractors from the market should' not be permitted.’’ ★ ★ ★ ■ Even building tradesr workers ought to he able to agree with this. For they have to buy, homes, too. DR. PEALE ‘Probe of SpateEnri DIRKSEN By EVERETT McKINLEY DIRKSEN Hie Master Designer, the Creator of all of the mysterious unknown in the vast ieachei of outer space, has led man to set foot on the moon, and Ke.has filled the heart of qisb with the desire and the resolve to go to‘ the outer planets and on to the stars. The effort will be great if we do so. The effort will be terribly expensive. Should we do it? The answer can only be , “y«a/*f V ; ' * * * And' when some of the questioners, those who decry the expenditures in future years of vest sums of money to enable men to follow his destiny, ask “Why?” there is only qne answer to give, an answer that is so simple and so true that it sums up the answer to All of the questions of. man’s, search into the unknown ever Since. Creation. Why should we go : to the planets end to the stars? "Because they are there." The astronauts, in their Columbia .and Eagle, found the moon where they expected, where the scientists said it would be. It had been there tor millions of years. Someday the exploring astronauts will find other planets and some few of the hundreds of millions of stars Will be discovered to be' right where the scientists expected them to be.' And the future astronauts will go there for the greatest reason of all because those celestial bodies are out there. Unknowing voices clamor to us to give up the search into the unknown. They ask us to spend the money on things , here on earth. /V v* * M1 They ask for something that already has been done. Where do you think the money is spent that sent Apolio 11 to the moon? It ' ; wasn’t spent on the moon. There are no creatures there to benefit from the billions spent to finally land Nell Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin In toe Sea of Tranquility. The money was spent here on earth, where it enriched the laborers, the draftsmen, the. technicians', the engineers, the scientists—- and their neighborhoods. “ It enriched toe millions and millions of people who always benefit from the industry In towns like Peoria and Keokuk and Worcester-and Burbank and all of the towns and cities in between where people live, earn and spend because industry in those places helped to send two men to walk on the moon, who were sent therebecause the moon was there. When a dollar is Spent in Houston. or Pasadena o r Atlanta or the launching site in Florida, it enriches the families who live there. * A ' # t How can one reflect upon the moon /adventure and toe ' scientific knowledge that was called into play to make it such an outstanding, American-type success without concluding that this limitless universe with the sun, Mercury, Venus, Earth, the moon, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune and Pluto and, farther oiit, toe myriad stars, are all in a state of adjustment and balance that respond to toe magnificent - design of • Creator Who beckons us on? Our iivds will be enriched, our material comfort will be made more secure — and this means toe lives of the poor and toe hungry and their children and their children’s children — if we go on, if we search out toe master design, if we gb there because it ia thebe. By NORMAN VINCENT PEALE Have you ever thought of living as an art? It is indeed a skill. But many people live it, or exist In ' It, without ever mastering this skill. How many days have you lived fully awake to the zest, the beatify, the opportunity of life? How many days haye you been aware of the excitement of human experience and been' thrilled by toe great movements that are operating in toe affairs of. men? Do you wake up each morningtolnklngof the potentialities and possibilities of the day? A good rule to follow Is to forget yesterday and live today. Every night a curtain of darkness comes down to shut off the day that is past, and to get you ready for tomorrow. Now I’m ho different than anybody else and there are times when we all have problems. There is a cyclic rise Verbal Orchids Robert A. Mason of 532 Orchard Lake Ave.; 93rd birthday. Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Armstrong of 25 Cooley; 58th wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Jerome Sr. of Orchard Lake; 60th wedding anniversary. Mira. Genet Amaa of Bloomfield Hills; 81st birthday. Elmar Frick of Lake Orion; 80th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Osworth of Bradenton, Fla.; formerly of Pontiac; 53rd weddfog Anniversary. Mrs. Floyd (Lula) A. Pratt Of 532 Orchard Lake Ave.; «?to birthday. Gordon Randall of 70 S. Johnson; 80th birthday. and fall with everything in this world: in the tides of the sea, in the seasons pf toe earth, in darkness and light. There is also a cycle in the moods and feelings in human beings: ,We have our,ups and downs, our joys and sorrhws, our victories and defeats. When you are caught in a down period, life may not seem so good. But you can make it good, even then.. I remember my w(fe and I had a few days of anxiety »about a problem. We were on the West Coast at the time where II was making some speeches. We decided to rest for a day or two in the beautiful environment of Palm Springs. Our nvx t engagement was to be in Phoenix, Ariz., and my wife said the night before, “What dr yoiir say; let’s drive to' Phoenix in the morning?” > * * /w "■ 3 “Oh, that’s foolish,” I objected. “You can fly over' there in an hour. Sleep late and fly in an hour/’ “But," she- protested, "I'd really like to drive. I've .always wanted to drive across the desert early in the morning.” ■ “It’a about four or five hundred milea uphill all tha way. And besides it’s hot.’’ “Weil,’’ she said, “then we’U enjoy toe heat: Feebly I reminded her, “To drive we would have to get up very early because between here, and Phoenix the time ' changes and we lose an hour." “But,” she answered, “it’ll do us good to get up eariy.” So we got up early, so early that toe hotel dining room wasn’t open yet. The one employe already at work obligingly sot us some coffee and rolls. ’My wife then said, “We’ve been baring several days of anxiety. Let us decide that this particular day is going to be one of the best days wp ever lived/* That struck a responsive choird In me and 1 agreed, I’m tor that!” So We went outside and toe first thing that happened—it rained! But it was an in-teresting kind of rain. It waa rain totoa midst of sunshine. Hie raindrops glittered like VoricB of the People: ‘Take Objective ; TowardSexEdProgram A sex education program is being developed ; for Waterford Township sciipol children. Such a program is controversial and the feelings and attitudes of all should be respected. . , ★ ★ ★ Misinformed people are attempting to play on the fear of knowledge. They suggest SlECUS, sensitivity training and other valuable groups and programs are part of a vaguely defined “Communist conspiracy/’ By innuendo and false accusation, they are trying td smear professional educators, school boards and others who support positive, meaningful and enlightened educational programs. I support our Board of Education and administration in the development of a sex education program. I plead with parents to objectively discover the merits of SlECUS and other organizations in a free and open manner, not behind closed doors in secret meetings. DAVID L. LAWRENCE 2915 VOORHEIS diamonds on toe palm trees. And I stood entranced for a moment listening to the sweet song of the mockingbirds. We started across the desert, but we hadn’t gotten very far when we ran into an enormous sandstorm. I never Saw anything like it. Dust mounted a hundred feet in the air. B111 o w i n g clouds enveloped the car. It got so dark it was necessary to turn toe car lights on. .And even then the visibility was almost nil. Negatively I said, “This sand will get in the engine and we’ll be stuck in the desert.” My wife reminded me of toe wonderful day we had agreed to have. Soon we were out in toe' clear again and In bright sunshine. , • The road led gradually down until it came to a place marked “Foriy-zevin feefc below sea level." Then we started to climb and within 20 miles were 2,000 feet above sea level on n great mountain-encircled plateau. We stopped the car and sat gazing at toe vastness of rock and-aand and space.'Thera wasn't-another soul in sight. “Thin 1* truly., Western." I exclaimed. “I can jttst see coWboys loping across these sands ^gainst toe backdrop of those mountains.” And so toe hours passed, one glorious hour after another. And as we got ready to turn in for-the night, my wife said, “Hasn't this been f wonderful day?". “Sure has been,” I answered. “This has been one tit the finest and most interesting days of my life.” And it was baenuze we had resolved to make It >o. Any day can be just about what you set out to make it. Living ,1s an art which anyone can practice. Ttytt— ~ ‘Suggest Carving Memorial to Astronauts’ Let's find another Mt. Rushmore and carve the faces of those brave astronauts on it. Let's not forget the three who gave , their lives for toe cause. FANNY FAN Says Court Agency Employes Uncaring Employes in the office of the “Friend of the Court” don’t' seem to care about the people they are supposed to help. My ex-husband took my four children 17 months ago, though the-divorce decree gave me complete custody. I re-> ported this immediately. ' * /*" >ui ' ,t Recently, after 17 months of searching, I was able to obtain my ex-hasband’l social security number. When I took it to toe Friend of too Court’s office, they had no record toot -he had my children. They said they would try to locate them through too number, A. ★ i I checked back in five days and the woman told ma I couldn’t come up there every day to see if they had done anything. And she wasn’t very pleasant about it either. I bothered them twice in 17 months and that’s “every day?" JOYCE E. BRASHEAR 1540 LAPEER RD., LAKE ORION ‘Sorry, Wrong Number,’ Her Refrain In regard to tier letter about telephone service, I say “Bravo, Mrs. Shoots," I stand behind her all the way for I have just gone through two weeks of receiving wrong numbers because of nn improper installation. God is alive, it’s true. But I’m afraid Mother Bell is dead and has become unwritten history. . MRS. J. A. KRAUSE ORCHARD LAKE Says Students Imitate Medical Scientists There is a growing fad among high1 school students to perform heart transplants, brain surgery, and other radical experiments on animals. This desire to imitate spectacular scientific feats by mature professionals is understandable, but youngsters are not skilled enoiigh and frequently end by unintentionally torturing and condemning animals tq painful deaths. ★ ★ '-k They are not advancing the cause'of medical knowledge. High school science teachers and national groups can bring this unhealthy fad under control by refusing encouragement for bizarre and inappropriate biological'projects. BOBDeWOLFE UTICA High Schooler Defends Senator Kennedy A few things that wouldn’f happen to you in Ted Kennedy’s situation are: you wouldn’t find your name in headlines week after week to remind you of this tragedy; you wouldn’t be condemned for an accident in which no one was at fault and wouldn’t have this held against you for years to come. A senator is hurting. Sen. Kenned I. You’re not only implications, but his family too. . I am a sophomore in nigh school and I know many young*, people who feel ns I do and will Back up toe Kennedy family to the end. ' ’ . ' KAREN TER61GNI • CLARKSTON Question and Answer Several reports said astronauts on the moon face tempera-tores of 259 degrees in toe son, negative 250 degrees in toe shade of the lunar module. Isn’t heat absorbed and reflected by toe moon surface, as if is an earth? Shade doesn’t make that much difference here. I. J. I REPLY , Those reports were inaccurate. NASA tells us precise temperature measurements aren't available, but moon temperatures in full sun reach about 250 degrees and lunar nights drop to about negative 250. However, it-was only about 50 degrees when the astronauts took their walk. The higher the sun angle, the hotter it is, and the walk was planned for Tow angle exposure. Also, tern* peratures don’t drop that sharply in the shade. It’s similar to shade on forth, Temperature drop would be somewhat greater pecause there’s no atmosphere on the moon, but it nowhere nearly approximates temperatures pf a lunar night, as sometimes reported. |M« o» Ml M IgggjlTHE NCW. NEW A ^ SUN. ONLY WH SPECIALS DRAYTON PLAINS OPEN SUN. NOON TO 6 P.M. Items on Solo ot Downtown Store Monday Only Some quantities are limited! On sale while they last! Infants’3 for 2.09 undershirts 3* l79 High-quality Bunny WOlt snap side combed cotton. ‘ 6 mot. • lb yr*. . OPEN 10 A.M. TOT 9 P.Mt (Sot. 9:30-9) “ ' opon Sunday Noon to 6 p.m. tlttti Tuts* Wtd. at 6 p.mj ininjifO ' Stretch-to-fit recover sets $1 ea. if pert, kitchen terries Reg. 8.99 30” swivel stools Rfg 6.87 22” Bar-B-0 grill 1.00. 2«*1 7.44 4.99 Foam - backed. Fits \ Danish modern,.. -maplo, rattan furri-1 iture. Assorted., • - Slight misprints on ’ cotton terry. Velour finish is . lintless, absorbent. 18x30 Hardwood slat seat and bock, black wrought iron jogs, chrome footrest. Folding brozior has ' chrome-plated grid, perma-lift grid ad ' juster, 1" stool logs : Reg. 3.49 75” vinjl hoses 2.88 W" diam. 75‘ 1-pc. garden hoi* hoi all bran connection!. 2-ply vinyl plastic. , DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON RUINS A—-6 THfe PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 2, 1969 Fords Maverick Hailed as a Marketing Miracle Sears ‘Dacrotex’ Panels MAKER’S CLOSEOUT OF DISCONTINUED COLORS „ , t . «, . Your Choice Hand wash; just touch-up ironing needed. 28% Dacron polyester,* 19% silk, 53% rayon. 5-inch hem. Luscious colors with rich textures. Dress up your windows* Monday! ' Drapery Dept. Shower Curtain Sets ASSORTED TAFFETA WINDOW AND SHOWER CURTAINS ! Lovely niatched ‘sets in fine taffeta. -i Choose from a wide selection ©f solid W*TO 12.99 to 18.99 • colors, floral prints, paisleys and geometries,’ 54” window cutain, tie pack, ,,*• Plastic magnstio liner........2.49 }|| Set of 12 shower hooks... ....... $1 5" Craftsman 7%” Hand Saw MOTOR DEVELOPS OVER 2-HP .... .Vi .SAVE $11 Reg. 62.99 49" Rugged, heavy-duty construction. Depth of cut: 0 to 2 Vi” at 90*; 0 to 2"rat 45*. No-load speed about 5500 RPM. Chisel-tooth Kramedge blade stays sharp up to 5 times longer than regular blades. Aluminum housing. S«or» Hardware D«pt. Canister Vacuum Cleaner 1 HP VACUUM WITH ATTACHMENTS Completely new! Friction fif K wands. 50” sealed suction. Posh Monday Only tivc seal port. Disposable dust bags. Top mounted attachment storage. 67” vinyl hose. Standard motor filter. Fan. 29“ Charge It on Sears ^Revolving Charge Mattress or Box Spring INNERSPRING - CHOOSE TWIN OR FULL SIZE Resiliency of 312 coils gives you Roe. 49.95 good support for restful nights. Red, green,, and . white-colored rayon sateen cover is quilted to. cotton felt fop plush surface softness*- t _ Oslivsrsd Furniture Department , 39“ Acrylic Bind Colonial Rig # 8Vt X 11 Vi FT. RUQ GIVES WARMTH TO ANY ROOM Triple-strong, 3-ply yarns of 80% ftog. 59,99 acrylic and 20% modacrylic fibers unite in toughly twisted surface. Great resistance to soil. Rich autumn colors/ Reg. 6.99 rug 27”x48”......ill “Ctortntewii" „ . floor CoveringDept. 47«» 9 okn. Sears 9 Ml Staidard-Algle Binoculars FOR GENERAL USE 1 POWER - 15 MM Optically ground achromatic lens Rtf; 19.99 system, hand polished dnd coated. lODD Where The Best Begins Status ' rSwSrr Symbols WaasKbstbsfatiwaJarditistHirs m ...a the wlwri% h% iWt lit #sS5«I!S5SS*2 BLOOMFIELD Re w^mootot I«IW»I ^WIM UII I C «•» Mi*. And M ihM b* t*w III LkW CivE youR yARd style ANd protection: Anchor-Fence. Home Plan Accents Outdoor Seclusion effect of additional size and is a secluded outdoor' Hying sliding glass doors, aa'wejl as character. area at the tide behind the ““ *““* | *u‘ * * * earaee Because the garage ptp»i* *............ trades, the house is set back on ARCHITECT the property, affording privacy Architect Lester Cohen has from the street. divided this bonus spam into a An open court is created porch and a patio, accessible along the enure front of the from the living room, dining house. At the same time, there room and kitchen th roju g b This Is a modest one-etory house, with a total habitable area of 1420 square feet. But the place&ent of the two-car garage gives an over-all With the during room forming an L behind the living room,' there is a spacious feel to both rooms, even though neither is very large. , ! A family room at the rear of the center hall has an interesting corner fireplace. • ONE SIDE One side of the room adjoins the kitchen. The otheir has sliding glass doors leading to a How to Build, Buy or Sell Your Home SLIGHTLY DAMAGED X4”xS4”...... Sl.tl 12”x24" ...... .1) .SI Pull study plan information on this architect-designed House of the Week is included in a 50-cent baby blueprint. With it in hand you can obtain a contractor’s estimate. You can order dab, for $1, a booklet called YOUR HOME-How to Build, Buy or Sell it. Included in it are snuril reproductions of 16 of the mdst popular House of the Week issues. Send orders to House Plans, The Pontiac Press, P. 0. Box 9, Pontiac, Michigan 41066 wing to the right uf the center hall. At the front, the two family bedrooms offer com-I (Continued on Page B-4, Col. S) X FAMILY, TERRACE s. PORCH FLOOR PLANS: Although the basic house porch and side patio behind the garage, and is on the smaller side for economy reasons, by a terrace at the right rear, acessible evtra living space is provided by a side from the family room and master bedroom. enjoy the carefree life Buy a On®| or Two Bedroom Condominium Apartment With All of Thwfff PLUS Featuigi: * YEAR BOUND ENCLOSED SWIMMING POOL WITMMUNAtATM * ACTIVITIES BUILDING WITH BILLIARDS * COMPUTE WESDNGHOUSE KITCHEN aad all paint. (1200 wali and neptio allowance. ON YOUR LOT ONLY *20,981. 75% Financing AvaHaMt BOICE CUSTOM BUILDER, INC. FEU-1191 FE9-M97 OFFICE OPEN DAILY 04 EXCEPT SAT. AND SUN. Quarantaad Gala IMMEDIATE CASH SALE TRADE We Hot yew hoM at the Market, Wa buy yaur hOIIM. All Because ef oar enenaiye ndyiit Mae. Wo onanrit •urttlvM In wrtt* money. lift Using program wa am able 1e Mg to hvy the 'Gaya, stay SS take your pree* preparly eny Awe ounmo THtutT- m • • Gay* aftar sale. eat NOME IN TRADE. Call far details. > V ip I DADS I S toy* toolsl Mtet I fBttO fume - Hp 0 LC :HnNJL_J OR CALL FOR jg PROMPT FREE FE 4-0*3 APPRAISAL " 00 OBLIGATION 8-7176 ,// / THE PONTIAC/PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 2, 1969 LOVELY NEW HOMES in Five Different Areas Model as pictured S35,700 including site (Fox Bay) FOX BAY-“on the Huron River” , ™,CED FROM West on Elizabeth Road, right on-Perry, '' left on Fox Bey BEN SAT. and SJJN. 2-6 P!M. ‘30,500 INCLUDING SITE CLARKSTON MEADOWS ONLY ONE MODEL LEFT Specially Priced at $30,850 M-15 North thru Village of Clarkston to left on Bluegrass to Holcomb right OPEN SAT. and SUN. 2-6 P.M. HURONDALE SUBDIVISION ONLY ONE MODEL LEFT Specially Pricedhat $38,^00 From M-59, left on Williams Lake Road, right on Vanden, right to Rene to left on Rene CL I OPEN SUNDAY 2 to 5 P.M. ' 8 Models Under Construction in WESTRIDGE OF WATERFORD ; ' ! AND % LAKE ANGELUS LAKEVIEW ESTATES . Shown hy Appointment Buying u home is.probably the most import'ant investment in a family’s lifetime. Choose it wisely and with assurance at: O’NEIL REALTY 3520 Pontiac Lake M, OR 4-2222 . : ’ Office Open Sundtiy l -I _____• ▼ . ▼*/ MP W^W IL/fL/T.'*' ", * vLr Vj&F UJate/i^vuL Preview Showing Saturday 9-5 Sunday 12-6 New Two-Story Colonial 4 Bedrooms - 2Vi Baths Thoughtful planning ha* igon* into this four-bedroom luxury homo to assure tho utmost in comfortable family living. Thespacious interior features large' living room, dining room, family room and fireplace. j> Located at 6812 Wellesley Terrace m Waterford Hill* Manor Subdivision off Dixie Hwy. in Waterford. t You must see this homo to approbate this fino value, only on# of Its kind............ .............. $47,500 ' 782-1400 353-0750 BUY! SELL! TRADEI . . . USE PONTIAC! PRESS WANT ADS! Classicists Withstand Time Test Duncan Phyffe Jkff homes Meoi Chippendale and Meorge Hep-plewhite were classicists whose furniture designs have stood the test of time. Tucker Macjawick cannot afford to wait for time to accept his creations, and he currently is working on designs for 1961. Madawick probably is responsible for more functional furniture in U.S. homes th Phyffe, Chippendale and Hep-plewhite put together. He designs cabinets for television sets —• big table models and even min-portables — radios, record players and , other home entertainment products. For 20 years he has been recognized as a master of his craft. IMPRESSION “There is no question that Phyffe, Chippendale and Help-plewhlte made a tremendous 'mpressioD' on early Americans” says Madawick. “Yet, you also must consider that Colonial American and centuries-old Spanish' and French designs also still enjoy popularity.”. Chippendale and Hepplewhitej were Englishmen whose elaborate carved ornamentations were developed about the time of the American revolution. Phyffe, the premier American designer, operated his shop in New York from the 1790’s to 1847. Hd introduced chair* that had curving profiles, influenced by Early Pompeiian frescoes, and had becks patterned in the shape of lyres with curved legs and lion’s paws. "The reason Phyffe and the others made such an impression was that their designs ennobled the art to an extent that, they could not keep up with it,” says Madawick. There were no patent laws, as we know them now, so they capitalized on their creations by publishing them in books which other wood workers could copy. ‘Their production facilities were primitive by today’s standards, and while many of today’s TV consoles and large cabinets still are hand-crafted, our production facilities and techniques are considerable improved.” Madawick, chief designer vice president of RCA electronic division here, cur. rently is creating the designs that will bp marketed two years hence. “We must work far ahead,” he says. MODEL SIZE From the drawing boards of! Madawick aiid his staff the new styles, are made in model sizes -4 fractions of the size of the actual cabinets —• and submitted for executive approval. When they’re okayed at RCA’S .corporate headquarters tfeg.ac-tual production begins. ‘Foiling' Dirt Electric appliances — fans, mixer*, anything with a motor — will benefit by being covered with aluminum foil when not in The foil keeps dust and dirt out, both of which are harmful to motors. GRAND OHENINC 2nd Phase BLOOMFIELD MANOR WEST In A Quiet ' Residential Neighborhood 1 aid 2 Bedroom Apartments Many Quality Features , Found in 950,000Bonust From $155.00 Month IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY YOUR MONTHLY RENTAL INCLUDES THESE FEATURES • Swimming Pool • Carpeting-Drapes • Hotpoint Qven-Rnnge • Hotpoint Refrigerator • Hotpoint Dishwasher • Walk-in Storage Area • Disposal • • Heat ,t Ample Parking, ’ • Full dining room, • Air Conditioning • Formica Cabinets and Vanities , Sat., Sun. 1 to 7 p.m. Daily 8:30 to 8:30 p.m. * , Models Open . 682-3882 2300 Woodrow Wilson. #x! OWN YOUR OWN HOME! , - - • FURNISHED MODELS on Cherrylawn, Pontiac MODEL PHONE . 335-6171 OPEN DAILY & SUN. e NOON TILL 8 P.M. # $AT, NOON TIU 5 P.M. • CLOSED THURSDAY TURN IN OFF I BALDWIN AVE. JR®* INTO HOPKjNS TURN IN OFF KENNETT AVE. INTO CHERRYLAWN This 3-bedroom rancher ha* these quality features: all bedrooms carpeted including master bedroom with its privet* bath, slate foyer entrance, carpeted living room, custom kitchen with built-ins and pantry, laundry room and half bath between kitchen and fa rage, adjoining carpeted and paneled family room with fireplace, full basement, at* tar hed 2-ear garage, lot* of storage area and 8 oversized closets, and home is ready for air conditioning. Situated on a beautiful Wathrford HUI homesite. Your home in trade on this beautiful rancher, no waiting. Still Time to Select Your Carpel Colors Waterford Realty 4540 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains 673-1273 OPEN HOUSE % SUNDAY 2-5 P.M. THE CALIFORNIAN ... 2634 Costa Mesa Court A Distinguished Rancher That Reflects the Ultimate in Contemporary Living Kitchen, family dining and family room complex with handsdhne woodburning fireplace (beamed ceiling included), deluxe built-in stove with self-cleaning oven, dishwasher, custom crafted formica cabinets, Armstrong vinyl floor covering. Thru* generously dimensioned bedrooms, elegant TVs ceramic til* baths with gay accessories, raised panel doors, natural finished Woodwork and, gleaming oak flooring. Plus 235# asphalt shinrglod roof, full thick 6" coiling insulation, Anderson porma-soa)od windows, copper plumbing, TOO amp. circuit breakers, basement with tiled floor, gas heat and hot water heater. For extra measure, full concrete drive, patio end walks. There is a certain type of heme that seems-to hold forth a warm welcome, the promise of a lifetime of impressive and carefree living. This is the residence you'll find at Lake Angelus Lakeview Estates ... It is a rare combination .of flair and function ... there is an abundance ef.niceties that bespeaks excellence and elegance while contributing to a new standard Of convenience and comfort. And the area itself provides a climate for leisurely living as well as the workaday necessities. Excellent shopping, easy and swift transportation and houses of worship are adjacent. You'll love the life you lead in LAKE ANGELUS LAKE-VIEW ESTATES. ' Duplication Price '29,950 on Your Lot Driving Directions: West Walton' Blvd. to CHntonville Rd. to 2834 Costa Mesa Court. Kanspson Realty & Building Company 681-1M0 1071 W. Huron tt. :f> t............................................1...................>... . ' v....................................i . - THE PONTIAC PRESS, ■SATURDAY, AUGUST i 1969 yew Community Patterned After New England1 including the electrical trans-lfoot frontage are built in thejthe association dues which will formers underground. {subdivision than would be with range from $S-$5 per pear. j Douglas Colwell, president of 80-foot lots. > The models include three to Douglas Homes Inc. developers * * * five bedrooms with a choice of! of the community, emphasized Bach new homeowner auto- oak flooring or carpeting and, that this achievement is possi* matlcally becomes a member ^dividual room colors, ceramic ble because of Wixom's "open of the area's homeowners' as-tile baths, garbage disposal space” ordinance which allows sociation, tha primary purpose unit, built-in oven and range,' {the 80-foot front area zoned Ho of which Is to maintain the park resilient floors in kitcbeh and jbe reduced to 85-foot fronts pro- acreage throughout the com- baths ami paved drives in the Ividlng no more homes, with 65-jmunity. Homeowners must pay'base prices. ■, j rsUpiwMi by IMh Century New (dally * set-aside children’s play The prices include the home's HMhad, Highgate-on-the-Green{areas. *lt* *"* c0,?cret®.gntt^*nd ^ ♦ w * cuib, city water and sewers, features homes built around a or w w ■* * «co m m on s” o r ”V 111 a g e In the 8S0.W price range, ttie A FIRST _ „ {three models available, the Another first is the develop-1 ' ' . „ M . Wyeth, The Wallace and The merit’s underground utility ays* \A four-and-one-half-acre pane iWilliamsburg are open for pub- tem which conceals alf utilities Entering the newly developed ifc inspection daily md Sunday —--------- community highlights bicycle from l-te-8 p m., Saturday from trails and a fi.OOO-square-foot l-to-6 p.m. and closed Thurs- . community patio area with ape-ldaya. H01716 PlOtl • ii II iw'imifinr ]> ’T v,; At thf rear, (he master bedroom has a door to the rear terrace. A dual bath serves both the children and parents, providing an excellent way of giving two-bathroom convenience | with minimum construction qx-l pense. | STORAGE 1 There are. two storage alcoves, til and near the garage to take care of bicycles, toys, tools, patio furniture and the like; j The main entrance to the! 'house Is at the right side of the front porch, with a door at die' If you can find room at the left of the porch leading to the top, your home expansion .provide porch and patio, the garage iblems will be solved most easily HIGHGATE-ON-THE-GREEN — Located. 888,450 up, the models may ho seen dally on Loon Lake Road off Bensteln near West and Sunday from 1 to 8 p.m. and Saturdays Maple in Wixom, this new community fea- from 1 to 6 p.m. All models are closed all tures three models for viewing. Priced from day Thursday. mm land the storage alcoves. i * ' i The stairway to the basement ] is .off the center hall and con- ] venlent to all rooms. Design S-4 Is for a family that requires throb bedrooms, wants! all rorfms on one floor and likes ■ its outdoor areas tied to the indoors — yet,must stay within a modest oudget range. I SLAB POSSIBLE 1 Although the plans call for a : Adding a room to an existing i home can be very costly, i especially if it requires ad-- ditional foundaton work. An at-i tic, on the other hand, will only require interior finishing work, land this is relatively inexpensive. 1 If your home is equipped with ! hydronic (modern hot water), heating, it may be easily e*v panded to the attic withnT minimum of fuss and bother, in a hydronic system, water is heated in a boiler and circulated through finger-size tubing to baseboard heating panels mounted at ankle height on "outside” waits. SNAKE TUBING To extend heating to the attic,; the tubing can be snaked! through a closet without! disturbing the existing section of the house. . \ By installing a separata thermostat or zone valve for the new room, it can be kept comfortable without affecting the rest of the house. This will keep fuel consumption down to .ft. minimum. Because the sun’s rays shine directly on the roof, the rooms [at the top tend to overheat in the summertime. To keep out heat during the summer, and to keep it inside during the winter, basement, the house .can be built on a concrete slab. In that event, the part of the aide patio just off the kitchen 3 Bedroom Ranch 20 ROLLING ACRES 15 Min. to 1-75 and Pontiac N S-4 STATISTICS ’ Design S-4 has ■ living room, dining room, kitchen, family raoni, three bedrooms and a dual bathroom, with a total habitable area of 1420 square feet. The two-car garage has two storage alcoves. Included within the over-all dimensions of 70’ by 87’4” are a front court and porch, a side porch and patio and a rear terrace. The plana include a featuring • 3 Bedroom Ranch • Finished Basement • Hot Water Heat • 2 Fireplaces • 6 Box Stall Barn • Huge Welded Pipe Riding .Ring • More Land Available SHOWN ANY TIME by Appointment ROYER REALTY. Inc. Goodrich Phi. 636-2211 Oxford Ph. 628-254$ Holly Ph. 634-8204 We wiU build anyttyle hou$» on your lot with terms! sulated. ! Stock louver folding doors of iponderosa pine are ideal for closets where floor clearance apace is a problem. They are decorative, apd provide air circulation to keep clothing fresh. Featuring: u 36-ft. enclosed swimming pool attached to house, 4 bedrooms, family room, kitchen, dining room, 2Vi baths, 2 fireplaces, 3 heating systems, carpeted, overtime 3-car garag#. Available — immediate occupancy. i McCullough realty DIRECTIONS: 5460 HIGHLAND ROAD Custom Builder NEW GALVANIZED 48” UNIVERSAL’S 11 GA. STEEL PRICE INCLUDES WIRE: GHARGE-IT with NO MONEY DOWN FAST INSTALLATION by PROFESSIONALS CALL NOW 363-6639 WAREHOUSE ON MILFORD RO. - JUST NORTH OF M59 THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 2, 1969 WYMAN LEWIS REAL ESTATE CO. I# AUBURN |VE TELEPHONE ; 338-0325 Versatile Varnishes for Floor Finishing Varnish ia a floor finish with «| Not only will It protect the number of built-in pluses for the|wood and make the floor easier *“ BowMr and do-it-yourselfer. |to dean, hot it will impart a golden glow to the floor ae the WHAT IS KUMELHUT FACE BRICK SIDING? It Is thf Multi-Purpose Brisk Sidingthat dots so many jobs-BETTER • Gives year-round insulation • Reduces fuel easts • Beautifies your home, increases its value • Resists fire • Ends repair and maintenanee bills - no painting • Economical to install COMPLETE 1 HOME Phono 673-7597 MODERNIZATION 2503 DIXIE HWY. PONTIAC Across From Silver Lake Rd. BATEMAN -REALTOR - ; FHA APPRAISED MOST GROWING FAMILIES want and need the features this home offer*. Large 120 x 330 ft. wooded lot. City water and sewers. 3 bedrooms, basement, gas heat, large front screened porch aud 2 ear garage. Price, just $14,300. Now is the time to CALL TODAY! , $■ v- ” *' Long, Low aipd Rambling ' PRICE REDUCED on this aim mtside city limits. 3 bedrooms, lVk baths, family room with fireplace, walk-out basement, and 2-car garage. Aluminum screened-in rear porch and huge nicely landscaped -lot. Private lake privilege park that the children will love. Price $33,950. .“YOU GAN TRADE” The BATEMAN WAY with our Guaranteed Home Trade-In Plan BUY NOW SELL LATER ROCHESTER CLARKSTON 730 6573 S. Rochester Rd. Dixie Hwy. OL1-8518 625-2441 § PONTIAC 377 'elegraph 8-7161 UNION LAKE 8175 __jnmerce — EM 3-4171 Floor varnishes are available in a variety of glosses — high, medium and low. Hie selection depends largely on personal preference. The newer urethane varnishes may cost a little more — but are usually longer-wearing, so consider the kind of wear that the floor receives and choose the varnish accordingly. Obtaining a perfect varnish finish will take time — much of it in preparing the floor. First, thfe floor should. be sanded smooth. SANDER This is usually done with a power sender. The first cut may be made across the grain of the wood at a 45-degree angle. Successive cuts should be made with the grain of the wood. Use the following grades of sandpaper: No, 2 or No. 2V4 on the first cut; No. l or No. 1% or the second; No. V4 on the third; and No. 0 or No. 00 on the fourth and final cut. When the sanding Is done, the dust should be vacuumed up. After sanding, it is important to work quickly and thonxigUy. If the freshly-sanded floor is allowed to stand unfinished for long, moisture vapor may cause the grain of the wood to .lift and dirt or stains may damage the flooring. STOCKING FEET Work in your stocking feet to avoid scuffing the floor. Staining is the first step in the finishing process. Stain ia used to change the color of the wood and to accentuate its grain. ★ * ★ Of course, if the color of the wood is already satisfactory, this step may be omitted. But if you decide to use a stain, follow the manufacturer's directions closely and allow the stained floor 24 hours to dry before finishing. Much of hhe flooring in homes oak. It’s one of t h e hardwoods which has pores. These show as small depressions in the wood. If a very smooth surface is desired, these pores should be filled. Special liquid or paste wood fillers designed for this purpose available in paint and rare stores. Just follow the manufacturer’s directions application. FLOOR SEALER The next step is optional — application of a floor sealer. Sealers are widely used as protective finishes for hardwood floors. They penetrate the fibers of the wood to form a wear-resistant surface which does not extend above the surface of the wood. They also provide a good base for the application varnish. If a varnish is . to be applied, the sealer should be sanded lightly. Now you’re ready to apply the varnish. If you have not used a sealer, you will have to apply two coats of varnish to obtain a smooth surface. A dust-free brush and a dust-free floor are absoiueiy essential at this point in the finishing. Air bubbles sometimes appear in varnish films. They are caused by the bristles of the brush, but you Can easilv minimize the problem: don't brush too much; apply the varnish with smooth, even strokes. If bubbles do appear, just brush 'back into the area with light, feathering strokes. DRY Let the varnished area dry for several hours, varnishes dry faster than others read the manufacturer’s directions carefully. Don’t let dust settle on the wet varnish film since this will cause the finish to have speckled appearance. Sand the first coat of varnish lightly before applying the second. Use Caution With Solvent Floor finishing on your agenda? Many solvent vapors are inflammable and if you are using any products which contain' volatile solvents, use caution. Be sure to turn off pilot lights on stoves and furnaces. Avoid using any electrical equipment — unless it’s been checked for non-sparking operation. And to disperse the sdlve'nt vapors open all doors and windows. This will create a draft and it’s the easiest way of ridding the work area of solvent fumes. Akw* pric. liKlud., oR of Pi MM* » !».«• alumina* -Iriw *&*•* M » * Wewh • »«* raftei, • 1* O.C. rtud. • Milt • «M MS**? I warhead dm • «" bu r.rnit*. • CiM-Hm * Mp3. * W )lr. • Doubt* he.de.. • • Alw*. imdMw • “ 8000 ■* y«i cut Kriebs returned home to bed,thwn* **them ta * buckrttt* but was roused out at 2 a.m. by w*^er- A 10-minute wait' on a MR. AND MRS. LLOYD SMITH Shattering high prices! Buy Sunday "Charge I SHOP WITHOUT CASH - "CHARGE IT" AT KRESGE’S RESGE'S i Pair Wed 50 Years THE KAMI AC HifcSS. S ATU HD AY, AUGUST 2. 1969 B—r Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd B. of Pontiac Lake Road, White Lake' -Township w i 11 be • celebrating their golden wedding anniversary aat a family open house Sunday. The Lloyd ,E. Smites of Franklin Road, Bloomfield Township will open their home in holier of his parents. Daughters and their families assisting with the party are Mrs. Waller Simmer, also of Pontiac Lake Road- and Mrs. Kenneth Allen of Transparent Street, Independence Township. Mr. and Mrs. Smith were mar- Aug. 6, 1019 in the First Presbyterian Church on West Huron. Children Learn | Phone Dialing POUGHKEEPSIE, N.Y. WV-Klndergarten children in Mrs. Beatrice Bender’s room at The Titusville School will know what to do if they are confronted with an emergency. Using real telephones, they are learning how* to dial tee fire and police departments and to ask for-assistance. * WANT TO SELL LAWNMOWERS, POWER MOWERS, ROLLER SKATES, WAGONS, BICYCLES? USE A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 3394181. Call Charles Wood. 338-0587 7 we will Trade ANNETT INC. REALTORS 28 E. HURON PONTIAC 338-0466 yk Supvem /coma/ 4 m By Exploring Their City Club Members Find Fun 7 RQOM RANCH - UNION LAKE AREA . In exultant condition with 3 bedrooms, dining room) family room, enclosed back porch and ample closet space. Aluminum siding, storms and screens, 2 car. garage and many other features. Well landscaped 80xM0 foot lot. Reduced to $23,500, terms. After 5 P.M. Sat- and Sun. 1 -4 NEW YORK (UPI) - Six years ago, Howard Goldberg,, a bespectabled and inquisitive ’ type, asked to tour a newspaper plant. Told he could only do so as a member of a group of at,least 15, Goldberg did tee next most natural thing. He placed an ad in the paper, asking persons interested in such a tour to write to him. Sixty-five persons replied. Thirty-five of them showed up the dayof tee tour._ • * ★ ★ The experience marked the birth of Adventure On a Shoestring, headed by Goldberg, a science writer. Members now number 1,500. His plan is' one subject to coyping in any towft, large or small. Practically every night of tee week, and sometimes at dawn, “Adventurers” meet in small groups to go behind the scenes in the big city.. They know from a newsletter’ what’s, scheduled and just go to the events that ihterest teem. So much is going on that around 20 show up for each evenL.No reservations or appointments is} MR. AND MRS. RALPH OSBORNE Open House Planned “AGILON” Ladies* PANIY HOSE Huge - -selection of fashionable colors to choose, from. Small, medium and tall. Slightly Irregular |SUNDAY ONLY} 78' Ladies CANVAS SNEAKERS SUNDAY ONLY Double canvas sneaker for teens, ladies. TX(hite and black. Sizes 5-10. Shop Today ' arid Save PONTIAC 1 1 DOWNTOWN I TEL-HUR0N 1 I DRAYTON 1 1 ROCHESTER 1 1 BLOOMFIELD MAIL | PONTIAC 1 CENTER 1 | PLAINS | 1 PLAZA MIRACLE MILE i afternoon . open house Sunday in Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Church has been planned to celebrate tee "en wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Osborne of Argyle Avenuq, Daughters, Mrs. John Stinson and her family, of Tan view Drive, Oxford Township and Mrs. J. C. Smith, also of Argyle Avenue, will hostess the party. Pontiac area residents for 43 years, Mr. and Mrs. Osborne were married Aug. 5, 1910 in Decatur, IU. They have two grandchildren. what helps make adventure On a Shoestring run. NO MEETINGS “Most clubs,” Goldberg said, “have meetings to decide what they are going To do. We have no meetings — just events.” Sample: Go to Greenwich Village and shine shoes on a Saturday night! Over the years, Goldberg’s group visited twice at tee home of Fannie Hurst and talked with her; walked across the George (Washington Bridge, got into tee traffic control booth at. the Lincoln Tunnel. A Little Wider While highly traditional slacks for men are a bit wider than they were last season, most continue to feature straight legs. - 1 A NEW CONCEPT IN DOOR WALL CONSTRUCTION REPLA SLIDING DOORS OF REINFORCED FUSTIC • %" INSULATED GLASS • PERMANENT FINISH IN WHITE fir TAN • NO.£fiOST OR CONDENSATION • NEVER WARPS Dorwin Distributors Phone 673-9065 $790 Hatchary Rood Slacks, Trousers, Shorts, Sweaters ft Hale Skirts Coupon Only Good Aug. 4-5-6 \ HAVE YOU ivER WANTED 1 j A PIANO OR ORGAN? | l THEN DON'T MISS THIS 1 S There has never been a better time than now | During Our Summer Clearance Sale 1 1 Savings from $50 to $300 | USED SPINET and * JQQQ ' | GRAND PIANOS f»M 4,00. ’ NEW CONSOLE PIANO now”50 ; *699 I . r-Q NEW PIANOS: I MASON k HAMLIN % CHICKERING I FISCHER $: mm KIMBALL , & * LOWREY f | GALLAGHER GRANDS and CONSOLES | IB® ! vi USED ORGANS LOWREY . -HAMMOND ESTEY • SIOQOO SILVERTON IO® . 1 LOWREY ORGAN - STUDIO SALE SAVE $50 t» $300 Ouk Reg. 11.88 **Mediterranean** TABLE LAMPS SUNDAY ONLY *6.66 Choice of styles and colors — 3-way switch. Shop and Save the Kresge Way. KENNER’S NEW WATER ‘GO-ROUND’ SUNDAY ONLY *8.88 As seen on **TV** THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 3, IMP CROP CALIFORNIA Now you can enjoy the extra good taste of Canadian Bacon at practically the price of sliced bacon FRESH HOME GROWN SWEET £ VARIOUS WIDTHS 43* Schmidts Noodles..'Ku35* NOW STACK RACK • TOWN HOUSI Koehler Crackers MEADOWDALE FROZEN 14mx« •B*I.“ STUFFED OLIVES-MANZ Mario Olivos . STOKELY . /; * y P S9t Cut Graan Beans Flush A Byea Pound SAIGON (AP) - B52 bombers struck with new lay Friday and today at enemy bases rang' be from 17 mflee southeast of Saigon to Chau Doc Province 111 miles west of the capital. The big bombers flew It missions TOdey and followed up Helping Hand for Bright Lad 1 Scholarship Winner Gets Wardrobe Aid NEW YORK (AP) - Gordon Right, a 13-year-old Harlem itu-ent, won n $3,370 scholarship to esdusiva Groton School and his world seemed bright. Then he learned of the extensive wardrobe the prep school , required and (eared hi would have to forfeit his chance. IQs family is on welfare. ' Or * W Now a group of welfare case-workers have pooled their resources and promised that Gordon will have the full wardrobe down to seven dozen name tags. "I never heard of Groton until a few months ago,' then I was spending days preparing for the tests, then I won it, and then comes the clothes list,” Gordon said. "I figured I’d lose It «U." DIDN'T HAYS MONEY “It was alarming,” Mrs. Dora White, Gordon’s cousin and guardian, said Friday. "Hero he had this opportunity and we didn't have the money.” The notice from the school said Gordon would need three ■ports jackets, slacks, luggage, towels and blankets. A caseworker who checked found that Gordon owned a pair o< sneakers, a pair of dungarees, two shirts, two sets of underwear and little else. ★ ★ Sr tinder new welfare rules that went into effect this month, special grants for clothing and other Items have been eliminated. At the St. Nicholas Social Services Center in Harlem, Gordon's problem became a prime topic of conversation. 'A BRIGHT KID* “Everyone at the center was talking about this situation—a bright kid who figures to go far with a chance like this,” said Sandy Lewis, director of the with two more early today, concentrating mainly on targets In provinces around Saigon, the ' U.S. Command said. . ★ W, it In one raid 17 miles from Saigon the stratofortresses shook buildings to the dty itself. It was the closest raid to Saigon since April IS, when the BS3> struck targets only 14 miles ‘way. The thunder of the BSSs also was heard to South Vietnam's second largest city, Da Nang, as 'bU on enemy positions only 10 to‘12 miles to the southwest. NO LETUP IN RAIDS Despite the battlefield lull now to its seventh week, there has been no letup to the average number of B52 raids fl daily, although the number of planes taking part has been cut back to the last week by about ) per cent. U.S. sources said the cutback to sorties—one mission by one plane—was in keeping with a previously announced Defense Department decision aimed at reducing certain coats and had no connection with the'level of battlefield activity. ♦ ♦ ★ Another 950 Americans troops left South Vietnam today for the United States, bringing to 11,100 the number that hive departed thus far under President Nixon’s initial order for the withdrawal of 23,000 by Aug. SI. The troops departing today included a 200-man transportation company of the U.S. Army Reserve and 750 men of an Army hawk missile battalion that had provided air defense for the Chu Lai Air Base on the central coast. IN COASTAL PROVINCE Hie sporadic battlefield activity included a dash between North Vietnamese troops U.S. Army Rangers to the coastal province of Blnh Thuan, 130 miles northeast of Saigon. * Two Americans and 24 North Vietnamese were killed in the 5Mi-hour fight, during which the Rangers were reinforced by American and South Vietnamese troops, U.S. spokesmen sgid. Six otherAmericans wore wounded. South VtotnamesO losses were light, with deaths, the spokesmen said. Clarkston of CAP Will Host Belgians The Clarkston C o m p o a 11 Squadron, Group 12, of the Civil Air Patrol (CAP) will host nine CAP members and two escorts from Belgium, tomorrow and Monday as part of an exchange program with European CAP unite. Last year Michigan units visited CAP personnel i Europe. it ★ *„ Hie Belgian cadets will arrive tomorrow morning and stay ait The hbmeT^ darkst^AP personnel through Mon da evening. LL James Peters of the Clerksfon unit said all persons of Belgian descent living to the Oakland County area are invited to be at the Pontiac-Oakland Airport Sunday morning to visit with the Belgian cadets ★ * Lt. Peters said the purpose of the exchange program is to acquaint American and European Civil Air Patrol personnel with each other as well as to hd them develop familiarity wit the way of life to each nation. YOU? EYES BOTHERING Call Today For An Appointment! THE NUMBER IN PONTIAC IS 333-7811 Wo Providw: EXAMINATIONS • REGULAR GLASSES SAFETY GLASSES • CONTACT LENSES SUNGLASSES • REPAIRS' This is a consumer organization sponsored by your local credit unions. Open Saturday and ovary weekday except Wednesday. Hearing Aids,Tool SIDNEY GILBERT, Optometrist RAY HEFFRON, Certified Hearing Aid Audiologist rgnuc CONSUMERS CO-OP OPTICAL Mote An Appelwtwient At Per Convenient Location; • IffllgMhTi Save up to 80^ a lb. All especially selected for the kind of quality you most prefer and priced for thrift H«ni another terrific ▼slue from Wrigley THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 2, 1W B—9 r-Junior Editor! Quiz on- *1 OYSTERS 2 , QUESTION: How doe* in oyster make a pearl, and -whorb ociestheluster comefrom? ANSWER: Pearls are spoken of as gems, but they are very different from other gems. Most gems are minerals, stones; their surfaces are hard, their colors usually sharp, glittering. I In contrast, the pearl has a unique, soft, irridescent quality. You see partly into it.' You see soft rainbow colors 4 which seem to shimmer and move buttydd can’t tellexactly ■f what they are. It is the elusive, mysterious character of the ■pearl which fascinates you, and it is this quality which gives 4 pearls their great value. «} Pearls begin when some foreign body, such as a grain of , sand, works Its way between the shells of a pearl oyster. It The soft mollusk between the shells can’t stand anything 3 gritty, so it cents die sand particle with a smooth, hard, ^ lustrous substance called nacre. :j In middle left of our picture, we see a pearl forming,' • with layer after layer of nacre coating the inside particle. lEach layer has tiny crystals which break the light into ’colors. It is the many layers of such color-producing crystals •.'Which give the completed pearl Us haunting, Shimmering *1 beauty. It (You can win $10 cash phis AP’s handsome World Year-'i book if your question, mailed on a postcard to Junior Editors j in cafe of this newspaper, is selecteafar a pros.) ; COUP D’ETAT: A PRACTICAL HANDBOOK, by fpward Luttwak, (Knopf, $95) Edward Luttwak’s “Coupe d’Etat: A Practical Handbook” cpuld very well have been titled “How to Take Over a Country Without Spilling Blood.’’ fit is a . coolly dispassionate (and potentially classic) study of the mechanics -of painless subversion. , ★ " ★ Sr The author has examined dozens of recent coups d’etat including the ones that, didn’t work (as In Algeria-France in 1901). . He has extracted “a simple formula:, infiltrate those military forces in a position to Intervene using them against the government; then neutralize or isolate other forces by sabotage subversion or the seizure of communication ..................: * Doug Anderson (DPI) THE TODD DOSSIER, By Collier Young, Delacorte, $4.95. Heart transplants are in the news these days, and they have a dramatic interest. What Young has done is to heighten the dramatic tension with a fictional account of a transplant that was set up in advance, without the surgeons realizing what was happening- [ ■" -* * ★ But one member of the surgical team is disturbed by the unusual coincidence, ’ that is what the narrative is about. The author, experienced in writing for the movies and for television, has used effectively narrative technique that switches — like a recording — from one major or minor character tojnother. This isn’t a literary novel. It’s one of those entertaining yards that, sooner or later wtil turn up cm the screen, but it has to be credited with a cei' polished skill. Two Boys Defect BERLIN (AP) r- TWo East German boys, aged 11 and 12, crossed Communist border barriers into the U.S. sector of West Bertyn, police reported Friday. Usually in such cases, efforts are made to contact the minors’ parents, and have them returned to East Germany/ ‘AutoGFkrty Service