The Weather . WMthtr luriM PoTMut Warmer (DM»i|i on Pogo _YDL. 125 — _NO*-142- THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. FRIDA'Y, Ju£y 21, 1967 —44 pages vAssociated PRess X united press international LBJ Tax Bill Gets WASHINGTON (fl — Indications grew today that the administration is putting finishing touches on it? plans for a tax increase. Government economists, armed with a late string of statistics, contended the economy is strong, bouyant and available this weekend for any possible high-level conference on taxes. One source said a, formal tax bill could be sent to Congress within 10 days. He said the, 6 per cent rate he jMt>-posed in Janua^ could b^adjusted — presumably upward — but ho decision moving toward the boom they predicted last January. ' Secretary of the Treasury Henry H. Fowler and Undersecretary Joseph M. Barr huddled late yesterday with Chairman Wilbur D. Mills, D-Ark., of the tax- President Johnson proposed a 6 per cent surtax on income taxes last January to help pay for the Vietnam war,''' bold down interest rates and stem inflationary pressure from the boom economists said was coming. has been made. It’s knowp, however, that alternatives ranging from 6 to 10 per cent have been submitted to the White House. But one source says he still expects the rate to be 6 per cent, at least for individuals. Government ’ officials are convinced the economy eventually will b^r out writing House Ways and Meaiw Committee in Mills’ office. * And Fowler is expected to remain Johnson has not sent a formal tax message or tax legislation to Congress_ but at a news conference this week he ' reaffirmed his intention to do so. their request for the tax hike. They said the June figuresTrCompleted yesterday by the Commerce Department And,showing personal income took its hjiggest jinl§ sincfe lasr^Janoary—offer.. some proof of this. ' Kuhn Files Suit MUDDV SITUATION — Vietnamese Marines in full battle gear help each other through a muddy quagmire as they wait for a helicopter lift in Phuoc Tuy Province 30 miles southeast of Saigon at the edge of the Mekong Delta. They were faking On I I n V ........... with U.S. and Australian ' N IV.WIIIC I UA part in Operation Paddington, along with U.S. and Australian troops. Heavy rains turned the soggy ground into a mire. Waterfbrd Schools Pontiac attorney Richard D. Kuhn today filed a suit in Detroit Federal Dis- Pilots trict Court challeiiging the constitutionality of the new Michigan state income tax. Face Money Woes Down 3 MIGs in AeriatBaffle Kuhn charges that the income tax violates provisions of both the 1963 Michigan Constitution and the U. S. Consti^ion. The suit requests a three-judge^f^earing By HUDSON WILLSE JR. Supt. of Schools Dr. Don 0. Tatroe last night alerted the Waterford Township Board of Education of a grave financial condition facing the school district next school year and told members they should start preparing for a fall millage election. “We have a ver^ serious financial situation facing us for fhe coming year,” said Tatroe, who termed the recent budgetary action of the Michigan Legis-ture as ' too little and too late.” Tatroe pointed out that the district next year will, in reality, rec|^ive almost ^ less per pupil in state aid than during 1966JI7. A 5 per cent state aid Increase was approvi^,. but the district must pay more b.e c a u s e of a hike in state equaiized valuation. Tatroe suggested three possible alternatives for raising funds — a further increase in State Legislature appropriations, to incur a cash deficit by borrowing on anticipated income and a tax increase which he sqid could not be levied in time to remtedy the predicament. ■ , He and Treasurer Donald W. Porter favored approaching state leaders in an Related Stories, Pages A-2, B-6 ABOARD CARRIER BON HOMME RICHARD — Ip a raging dogfight against Communist MIGs “that were everywhere,’’ U.S. Navy fliers said they knocked down three North Vietnamese planes today and probably got a fourth. Two U.S. planes from the carrier Bon Holnme Richard were shot up badly but both pilots ta-ought them back safely. No planes from the carrier were lost in the strike against an oil depot about 2(h miles north of the port of Haiphong. on the act which was signed ^ law by lay- / , . Kuhn was a Republican delegate to the Gov. Romney yesterday. 1 96 2 Constitutional ^vention which drafted the new State institution. He is the brother /f State Sen. George Kuhn, R i Birmii^ham, who recently asked Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley whether the tax law violated previsions of the constitution insuring the right to a referendum. effort to obtain additional monies. Porter suggested a coalition of needy "^districts would have a greater impact on the Legislature. Tatroe also recommended that ail non- mistakes.’ “Their pilots were pretty good and they were aggressive,’’-, said Cmdr. M. H. “Red’’' Isaacks, 37, of San Diego,' Calif., the leader of the first flight of fighter escorts over the target. “But they were not good enough. They made IN OWN BEHALF In an informal letter, Kelley told-Sdm Kuhn he thought ithe law was constitutional and would stand up in court. essential operatioi^Th the district be "minmed unless funds be- Little-Known Pro Off Fast in PGA reduced or elimii come available and that the number of personnel be reduced by leaving some positiods vacant. Isaacks shot down one MIG and then brought his damaged plane back. Richard Kuhn filed the suit in his own behalf as .a citizen and taxpayer. * * * HIGH BOY — Terry Hart of 1064 Berwick fashioned this eye-catching rig out of an inverted junk bicycle frame and a couple of lengths of scrap gas pipe. It sdrves as an exerciser for Hart and his wife, Darleen, and a conversation piece for anyone who sees it. . The financial woes faced by the district .compound the problem of meeting 1967-68 teacher salary demands. The F8 Crusader pilots ran into the MIGs as they approached the oil dump after encountering little groundfire on the way in. He said the tax, if collected, would cause himself and other citiaem ‘‘immediate and irreparable damage.’’ ^ DENVER, Colo. (AP)-Dpna|tf:Bies, a little-known assistant teaching pro from < I Seattle, Wash., got off the mark fast with an outgoing two-under-par 34 today ^ and moved into the thick of contention in the second round of the PGA championship. . ■ gp. Getting birdies on the two par 5 holes— the 592-yard second and 580-yard eight— and parring the rest, the 29-year-old.Far, Westerner moved fivfeundOr-par though. _ 27 holes with a s^re of 103. . At this stage in relation to par, he was even with U.S. Open champion Jack Nicklaus and one behind the first round leader, Dave Hill of nearby Evergreen, Colo., who were among the late starters. Young Hill scalded the 7,436-yard, par 72 Columbia golf course 'ITiursday with a recotd sbc-under-par 66. - POPPED OUT OF CLOUDS’ Lake Orion Wife Charges Husband With Rifle Threat “Th^ just/ popped up out of the clouds,’’ sW Lt. Cmdr. Robert L. Kirk- wood, 36, of Fall River, Mass., and San . Diego, who was credited with a kill. Saturday to Be Sunny and Ford Calls UAW's Goafs 'Unrealistic, Complicated' The other kill was made by Lt. Cmdr, Ray G. Hubbard Jr., 32, of Poway, Calif, and the probable was credited to 25-year-old Lt. j.g. PhiHp William Dem-pewolf of Bellevue, Iowa. or Sol is expected to tqin up the heat Over the weekend. By The Associated Press DE'TROIT — Ford Motor Co. received yesterday the last of the United Auto Workers’ demands for new contracts and the company’s chief negotiator tertiied, them “complicated and unrealistic.’’ at Ford, 400,000 at General Motors Corp. and 95,000 at Chrysfgr Corp. Next Tuesday, Ford will present to the union its proposals for contract changes. A. sleeping Lake Orion waterfront was roused this morning as .an alleged family fight threatened to erupt-into a shooting. Held.by'OSkland County sheriff’s officers- is John Czarnowski, age unknown, of 602 Longpoint,. Lake Orion, who had barricaded himself .in his boathouse-* living, quarters following a reported squabble with his wife. In Toda/s Press He is charged by her with threatening to shoot her with a 35-caliber Marlin rifle. The rifle was confiseati^ by Lake Orion police after Czarnowski was persuaded to surrender. It was believed thSHater siffifig Of information would convert his probable to a confitmedK^l. It was the first MIG for each of the Navy fliers, although Hubbard had been credited with damaging one of the North, Vietnamese jets on May 1. The fliers knocked the MIGs out of the sky with rockets and gunfire, and one of the Red jets “exploded like a fireball,’’ they said. Three “good” chutes were seen from all three planes, indicating the three^Communist pilots para-chuteid safely. Sunshine, partly cloudy and possible showers with rising temperatures is th6 outlooks——----------/ --------- ___ , _Here. is Iht official day-by-day U.S. Weather Bureau forecast: Sidney F. McKenna of Ford said the UAW demands made up “a longer list and of greater magnitude^ than they haVe conirontedus with in past negotia--^ tions.” The union and the UAW got into a dispute over jrhat they would call a committee being set up to “explore and refine” one of the union’s major propos-»i?lKuacflfiteed annual4ne©n»^ . TODAY — Sunny, a little warmer with a high of 82 to 86. Fair tonight, the low*58 to 62. TOMORROW—Sunny and quite warm. Henry Ford II, board chairman of Ford, previously had said the union goals were “unreasonable and unrealistic’’ and warned that labor strife may lie ahead unless the UAW softens its ambitions. Birmingham Boy Is Killed by Auto SUhTOAY — Partly cloudy, continued wafm. Precptation probability in per cent: today and tonight 5l tomorrow 10. The contract talks, which began Jufy 1ft, are aimed at reaching agreements to supplant year pacts expiring Sept. 6. 'The UAW represents 16ft,ftft0 workers Six county cars responded to an ap-^ . peal for tfelp from the Lake Orion, Almont dejfetrtment after Mrs. ’Czarnowski es-' Trailer park zoning issue stirs ' caped from the boathouse with another up villagfe.rr- PAGE A-4. rifle, a 22rcalibeE> * * ; ' Defiant Quakers neighbors, the Robert Group plans to send more * Chambers, 616 Longpoint. Mrs Chambers medical supplies to North Viet- 4 notified police at 7:15 a.m. nam soon — PAGE A-5, I * BULL HORNS USED Soviet Diplomacy . Bull horns were used by deputies in String of blunders raises eye- | an effort to persuade Czarnowski to brows in West — PAGE A-11. i surrendw. He came out about 8:30 a.m. i after an appeal by a friend, George Area News .... .......A-4 I R- Schindler of Detroit. Astrology ' I Tear gas was not ne^d according C-* I to Detective Charles Whitloek. Crossword Puzzle D^ Neighbhrt said the Czdmowskis, had lived in the boathouse with living quar- r 7_T 0 ^hrce Farm and Garden C-7-rU-9 orfourveal%. Markets .......D-1 J- Mystery Story .............A-8 > Obituaries ,D-f / , . , . Sports c-i-c-5 Nobel Winner Dies Hieaters ...C-10,&U , TV and Radio Programs . . .D-8 DURBAN, South Africa (Fi — Chief Wilson, Earl ...............D*9 1 Albert LuthuU, 68, Nobel Peace Prizq Women’s Pages ........B-L-B4 ij winner seven years ago, died today of j injuries suffered when he was hit by '.'"i a train. Ex'Official/ Builder Indicted By JIM LONG / Oakland County grand juror Jafhes 5. Thorburn late yesterday issued in- dictments against a former Madison Heights councilman and a Detroit build- Other indictments and warrants for the arrests of at least three mote persons rQ)ort^Iy havOeen issued, but grand jury investigators refuse to dis-y close any information until they are taken into custody. Two other former councilmen, Antonios Branoff and Dean Eggart were named as coKwnspiratws in {he warrant, but were not named as.-itefendants. The Detroit -builder was identified as Marvin G. Alexander, 46, of 19426 Warrington. A 3-year-old Birmingham boy was killed at 5 p.m. yesterday in the street near the front of his home. Sean Stebbins, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Stebbins of 530 Merritt, died under the wheels of a car driven by Dora Holden, 56, of 1047 N. Woodward. Police said the woman had been visiting in the neighborhood and when she was driving away, the boy, playing in a toy car, rolled down a jjklveway and intp the path of her car. He and another party are accused of The indictments, t^lq^t handed out E he was ni by Thorburn since h^ was"^named to succeed Circuit Judge Philip Pcatfi. accuses ex-Councilmpa Roman Nowicki with bribery and conspiracy to coihmit bribery. bribery and conspiring to commit bribery in the alleg^ $6,b00 transaction. The identity of the other person cannot, be rcvcired since he has not been ar- . rested. JAMES s. Thorburn He allegedly accepted $l.ftft0 of $6,-ftftO bribe, according to the warrant, in return 'for his favorable vote on a rezoning matter. . . the iwoperty, according to ihvestiga-T tors, is located on the sduth side of 14 Milb Road at BarringtonL near the 1-75 e}q>ressway interchange. It was rezoaed from residential to commercial, they say. 1 ' Nowicki stood mute at his arraign-mentrthis., jnorning before Bloomfield Hills Justice of the Peace Jack Baldwin. A preliminary examination was scheduled for Wednesday at 10 a.m. Another indictment involving the solicitation of a bribe in connection with ■a Hquor license also was issued against 'NowickJ. \ CSontinued on Page A-2, Col. 3) ‘‘SWAP” Want Ads Can jBe Fun... Profitable “We had 30 calls from our Press Want Ad from people who wanted to^'swap. Very successful.” Mrs, E.F. PRESS WANT ADS >c th« kna<:K of htiping to work aW nr r kind of. < dul for proflf. Try « 332-8181 or 334-4981T for action A—2 IHE PONTIAC l^RESS, FRIDAY. JULY 21. 1967 LBJ, Chief of HUD Antirat Defeat Rip , WASHINGTON (AP) - President Johnson and federal housing chifif Robert C. Weaver denounce as crud and unjustified House rejection of a measure aimed at attacking rats in urban slum breeding grounds. Johnson, in a statement short-Jy after Thursday’s 207-176 vote to sidetrack consideration of a two-year, $40-million rat eradication measure, urged House reconsideration of the administration-backed legislation. “We are spending federal meoey to protect our livestock from rodents and predatory animals,” said the President; “the least we,can do is give our chil- Grievance on Pay for Teachers Aired dren the same protection that we do our livestock." Weaver, secretary of Housing and Urban Development, caiied the House vote “thoughlless, heartless action” that “victimized the poor— and this time the helpless.” ATTACKS JWUSE MEMBERS Weaver sharply attacked— without naming names—several House members who bantered about the bill before voting against debating it. Weaver said he* deplored “those who found anything humorous in such a proposal. I cannot understand those who ridiculed a program to protect children against rats. A grievance filed by the Waterford Education Association (WEA), involving the rate of pay for 10 teachers in a study program, was discussed at last night’s board of education meeting. mePiffidy pay rate of $22 a day should prevail, based on provisions of the current contract. Tlje WEA contends the teachers should receive regular wages during the six-week prcK gram which began Monday. The The project is a federally funded exemplary program to be incorporated at the new Crescent Lake . Elementary School. It is aimed at developing. greater individualized instruction. The board will decide the issue in executive session. ^JAinneapolis RaceViolence Flares Again By the Associated Press Rock throwing, at least two shootings and a dozen small fires were reported as» violence flared up in Minneapolis, Minn. Thursday night and eply today A police''in^)ector said the second outbreak in two nights Occurred on the Negro North Side oHhe city. There were no fatalities from the shootings but two injuries. Earlier, Mayor Arthur Naft-alin blamed the Wednesday ■> night outbreak of street fights and fire-bombing on a few “lawless” individuals and said the Npgro community was not at fault. “We’re dealing' with a few ‘ Individuals who want to inflame the community,’' he said. “For many days rumors of impending trouble have been circulating. In certain measure it was organized around the rumors themselves.” administration daimsAbe-^ Teachers contend the project is unlike summer-study programs in the district and that the regular contfactural 'pay rate should prevail. SIMILARITY CITED The administration feels the project is similar to summer-study programs in that teachers are preparing for the regular school year. Accdrding to teachers, the government has laid aside about $17,500 for wages during the six-week period which they claim is sufficent to meet regular salary requirements. In other business, the board was presented a plan for split grade sections at' Lotus Lake Elementary School next school year after which a few parents lodged complaints. The ^chool is slated tentatively to have three split grade classrooms -in September, volVing first and second graders, thll-d and fourth grader's and fifth and sixth graders. ’^Pburham, N.C., some 300 Negroes staged a relatively underline their demands for better hous^g apd other social reforms. Split grade classrooms become necessary when the number of pupils on a g^rade level is too many for one room or too few for two rooms. Next school year, 35 split grade sections in 20 schools arej earmarked for the district. laughter when Rep. James A. Haley, D- Fla., called the measure “a monstrosity of a bill,” and suggested: “Why not just buy some cats and turn them loose oh the street.” But Rep. Martha W. Griffiths, D-Mich., squelched the laughter by saying rats “have killed more human beings than all the generals in the world.” DEFENDS MEAStJRE Noting earlier House approval of the $79-billion defense appropriations bill, Mrs. Griffiths said: “If you’re going to spend $79 billion to kill off a few Viet-cohg. I’d spend $40 million to kill off. the most devastating enemy man has ever had.” But 148 Republicans and 59 Democrats, most of them Southerners, combined to overcome the 154 Democrats and 22 Republicans who backed the meas-"Ure. Opponents of the bill said action should be l^t to state and local authorities. , After the vote. Rep. Theo dore Kupferman,' R-N.Y'. told the House he wa ashamed of the vote here today.” He called the House inconsistent in passing antiriot legislation earlier this week, then rejecting the antirat measure. Criticism of the House action Iso came from Pittsburgh Mayor Joseph M, Barr,, president of the U.S. Conference of Mayors,, who called it deplorable and urged reconsideration. Grand Juror Indicts 2 in Bribery Probe BLOOMFIELD HILLS - A ’dial-a-class” concept in educa-tjdn is being studied by the school district's bofrd of trustees. ’ . THEN AND NOW - Shirley Temple Black (pictured at left during her childhood acting career as Shirley Temple . and at right in a recent photo) is reportedly considering running for the congressional seat vacated by- the death of ^^^^~A r!F—" * ............ - • The idea is called “an exciting possibility” by David Cook, principal of the new Lahser High School. He explained that with it, individual students or classes as a whole could phone or tune on taped lectures or educa-ional presentations. ‘The idea is in conunon use in colleges and universities, and more and more high Schools are installing them,” Cook said. unning ______ "Republican Rep.T. ArthiTrAFoiinger of California. _Mrs. Black said she Would make her final decision in a week dr "two. The program, labeled “Dial Access Retrieval System,” will pot be instituted this fall, and board members are expected to Former Child 3tar*Eyes Vacant Seat in Congress WOODSIDE, Cdlif. (WP! Shirley Temple Black is thinking seriously of running for Congress. The former child movie star expects to announce her decision within two weeks. Mrs. Biack, 39, a Republican, said Thursday she was considering entering a Nov. 14 special election race because state Sen. Richard J. Dolwig, Atherton attorney, had decided against running. “He was my candidate,” Mrs. B i a c k said. “Now' that Sen. Doljyig has made His announcement that he will not run, I am going to give the matter serious consideration.” Gov. Ronald Reagan "Thursday set for Nov. 14 the special election -to fill the flth district seat vacated by the ■ death of Rep. J. Arthur Younger. He died June 20 in Washington of leukemia. If no candidate, wins a majority in the Nov. 14 voting, a runoff SectionjjWill be held Dec. 12. Three Republicans already have announced for the seat representing San Mateo County, immediately south of San Francisco on the San Francisco Peninsula. They are Paul N. McCloskey, Palo Alto attorney; Robert R. Barry, former New York congressman now living in Wood-side, and Sheriff Erl Whitmore. William Draper III, membpr of a wealthy investment banking family, has said he expects to decide shortly on thaking the race. MSU Student Fee Hike Seen By The Associated Press Michigan State’s University’s Board of Governors was to meet today and was expected toToT was undetermined today. low three other state universities in announcing a hike in student fees. Death Cause Unknown on Man in Pool The cau$e of death of an year-old man whose body was found in a swimming pool in Bloomfield Township yesterday Henry J. Fericks, gardener at the home of C. W. Smith of 3060 Birmingham Area News JPial-a-Closs' Concept Eyed study it at least a year, Cook CENTRAL OFnCE The program would call for a central office containing tapes. to the ppssibility of. reducing the amount of teachers and space needed. djaP for the desired material. Cook sees an ever-increasing application of the basic principal. “This; would greatly expand possibilities in language teaching, where this process is familiarly used, as well as all other disciplines. “Even the football coach could use it for skull sessions,” Cook said. No Success in Manhunt for 4 Killers The manhunt for the killers of Edward Emmett DeConick, West Bloomfield Township trustee, continues unabated today, 18 -days after the brutal slaying. A combined effort by township, CQpnty and State Police, aided by FBI agents, has thus far failed to bring about an arrest. DeConick was killed at his liome at 5847 W. Maple the night of July 3 by a gang of four intruders — three Negro males and a light-skinned woman. His..sister,' Kathleen DeConick, 73, was beaten and shot in the head, losing her left eye, but is recovering in a Pontiac Hospital. The student .would not neces- sarily have td be in school to dial a class, he pointed out. MINIMAL COST Cook called the idea the best use of updated, electronic de- f '* Looking farther into the future he sees the system as easily incorporated as h community service. “It could someday be available for home use and taxpayers would get a direct benefit for their dSllars spent,” he said. Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. Hava You Shopped SIMMS Tobacco Dopt? You’ll Find All Your Smoking Hdhds at SIMMS Lower Discount Prices These prices good Fri. and Sot. Rights reserved limit quantities. Ul I ■ to ■ Tobacco & Candy Dept. Police are checking criminals with violent backgrounds and various gangs and keeping a lookoflt tar the pieces of jewelry taken in the $25,000 robbery. X $6,000 /eward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of members of the gang has been offered, $5,000 by the Detroit News and $1,000 by The Pontiac Press. A The ready-mix concrete busi-Wayne State University ‘"e pool at no^^ I enterprise of small Eastern Michigan University] Township police said he "^d . . decade aeo has announced boosts in student ^PParently accidentally fallenijj^^ involves more than 3,000 ! tuition. into the pool, perhaps while peaceful march to City Hall to S eh oo I officials said more (Continued From Page One) study and discussion with Lotus Lake parents will be undertaken before the start of school. The Weather The alleged bribe and rezoning, according to the warrant, took place between March 1964 and February 1965. » Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report JPONTIAC AND VICINITY Sunny, a tittle warmei- MayV high 82 to 86. Fair, tonight, low i8JQ_62. Sunny and quite warm Saturday. Outlook for Sunday, partly cloudy, continued warm. Variable winds 5 to 12 miles. Precipjtation probabilities in per cent: Today and tonight 5, tomorrow 10. LAKE CONDITIONS LAKE ST. CLAIIW— Sunny southerly winds 10 to 16 knots. LAKE ERIE — VaViable winds 10 to 15 knots; partly cloudy. LAKE HURON — Southeast to south winds IS to 20 knots. LAKE MICHIGAN — Southeast to southwest winds 15 to 20 knots. LAKE SUPERIOR — South to southwest winds 20 to 25 knots. Thuridiy in Pontitc The University of Michigan A second party, not yet ar- jannounced it would up student rested, is also accused in the indictment. stricken with a heart attack Oakland County sheriff’s deputies said today the body bore no marks and it was not known if drbwning or iiiness was the fatalxause. NtPautopsy was performed. > • The second indictm&t lainsL-iNowiekf says Ahaf he and other parties ’>did accept ’gifts and gratuiiresArom cer-tain individuals” applying for .plate and local approval as package liquor dealers between January 1962 and June 1964. ALREADY IN JAIL • Nowicki already was in jail when taken to his arraignment He was sentenced to a one-year term on Monday after, being found in contempt of court for failing ,to< answer a grand juy subpoena« ‘ dormitory charges. Higher cost of higher education for thousands of Mlchigah’s college and university students were forecast after budget cutting by the last session of the state Legislature. , All 21 state-support^ colleges and universities may fall in line and.:hflest; tuititm ;fe«. The Legislature cut Gov. Jj^ney^’a higher -oduc Tam^D’Shanter Country Chib budget and also rejected most of the individual schools’ pro- He was defeated for reelec^ iron in~Ap1119B5.‘ “ ' Branoff lost their bid on. reelection ... II primary two months earlier. Highest temperature Lowest temperature ...... Mean temperature Weather; Sunity, perfect iladelphla » 69 61 Phoenix I" --'6S Pittsburgh 84 59 Salt Lahe C. 87 59 S. Francisco 62 54 81 58 S. S. Marie " 87 66 Washington ,1 65 NATIONAL WEATHER — Scattered showers and thOn-. dershowers are expected tpnight from the sodthern through the western Gu|f Coast and in parts of Montana, the lower Great l^kes and southern Florida. Clear to partly cloudy skies'll^ forecast for the rest of the country, with no great teraperatuiia changes. . ' T Wayne State of t>etroit Thi day announced an increase of $99 to $300 yearly for resident and nonresident students, acting, a day after Eastern Mioliigan’s increase of $60 to $150. , The iarger of the tWo sums will be charged against nonresident students in each instance. Both EMU, an Ypsilanti institution with an anticipated 2,000 enrollment increase this fall, and Wayne State said that legislative appropriations beneath requested amounts were the cause. companies and annual sales of, Cigarettes By The Carton Regulars-Kings and Filters Only — Your Choice 2 Ctns ajl4 For O Choose (rotn our tresli sleeks ol fcivoril* bronds, in regulars. Kings cmd fiileri. ' Pay this low price plus sales tax. Limil ? New EXtRA LENGTH Cigarettes-Carton You will find the new longer length cigarettes, your choice of Super King Winston, Winston Men-r lOOMM Marlboro at Simms low discount ;s. Plus soles to 2« America's Largest Seller - Box of 50 King Edward Cigars Regulor $3.00 value, box- of 50 popubr Kiiig Edward Im* periol cigars. America's largest seller. Limit 2 boxes. 2*» RONSON BUTANE FLUID 69« :-0z. Ronson Fluid 29 Box of 50 Book Matches '.'5c 50 books ol motylies ^ {more than $2.4i)illion. Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. Tam Seekirig 1970 Tourney on Orchard Blo« I Township yesterday posed appropria_tiQ0.ir greAses,.^adri bid in Denver to host ...............................luiirthe the 1970 PGA championship. At first the club considered a bid for the 1969 tournament. However, pro Warren 0 i* 1 i c k said the chib wanted more time to 'get its course into top condition. Tam O’Shanter recently completed a half-million dollar remodeling program to. the clubhouse and adjacent buildings. The current PGA championship is being played in Denver where the PGA executive committee is also holding its annual meeting. All Whites Are Excluded Btack Power Confab/Opens NEWARK, N.J, (AP) - From black nationalists to the NAACP, about ^00 delegates to the first national conference on black power are gathered here today intent on making the once divisive slogan a working sym- what they considered absurdi- what sort of action and organ-bol of Negro unity, 1 ties in the v^y the United ization Negroes should unite All , whites, including news-States expects its noawhite men, were formally excluded citizens to behave. comedian Dick Gregory and Los Angeles black nationalist Ron Karenga, was not so much antiwhite as pro^black and antiwhite exploitation. Some speakers pointed out- plan, he’s got be sick,” .Gregory said to a storm of ap* plause. The main question, to be debated over three days in a series of 14 concuiirent workshop^. behind. from all working and delegates, induding the Student /Coordinating Com- Nonviolent mittee’s 0iaifmah H. Rapp Brown, were asked not , to give individual news conferences. But the tone of the orientation session Hmrsday set by Negro ‘GOT TO BE SICK’ “If whitey thinks he’s going to send me to Vietnam to risk my life for instant freedom for a man who looks more like me than he (whitey) does while my wife and -kids back home, get freedol^’ 'An the , ^installment “Everybody knows whitey’s a devil. The question is what are you doing to xlo about it?’ asked Karenga. Predictions are made risky by the fact that delegates come from almost all pditical factions of the Negro commilipty. 4hE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. JULY 21, PbfirriAC CARS in derailment — About 175 new Pontiacs, including several experimental models, were stacked up in piles yesterday after 13 cars of a Monon Rail-. road freight train derailed in Wannatah, Ind. Damage to the cars was placed at $300,000. One trpin crewman suffered ''A^ifllLnor laiury. The causg^of the derailmenLls being sought. Washington Actiofis Aim at Marketplace Simms Bros.--98 N. Saginaw St.-Oowntown ?onti SATURDAY STORE HOURS: 9 a.m. to 9 WASHINGTON (AP) - A series of federal and congressional actions improve the outlook for U.S. consumers. If all bear fruit, buyers may not necessarily save money but they’ll be assured a fairer shake in the marketplace., While federal agencies mioved Thursday to implement or impose rules governing sale of food and transistor radios, congressional subcommittees worked toward improving the auto insurance shopper’s lot, letting credit buyers know what credit costs and looking out for air travelers. * ■ * . ★ These were the developments: — The Federal Trade Commission proposed a rule that would force sellers of transistor radios to list in their advertising and labeling a true count of the number of transistors. The FTC said the practice of listing transistors that don’j really add to a radio’s effectiveness misleads purchasers into believing certain radios are better than they actually are. INSURANCE PROBE — It was learned that Chairman Emanuel Celler, D-N.Y., has ordered the staff of his House Antitrust subcommittee Ito probe the auto insurance in- dustry. Aim of. "the investigation: To see whether the industry should retain ite 1945 congressional exemption from antitrust laws. The probe apparently resulted ' from a request by subcommittee members Reps. Peter J. Rodino, E>-N.J., and William T. Cahill, R-N.J., .who told Ceyer letter of wideSpreE^d complaints that auto insurance firms discriminate among purchasers on racial, occupational and economic grounds, w . . ★ ★, Chairman Leonor K. |Sulli-van' D-Mo., of the House Consumer Affairs subcommittee urged the. panel to make tougher a so-called “truth-in-lending” measure that recently cleared the Senate. The Senate-passed bill would require mo^ lenders to list the true annual interest the^ i! chprge. Mrs. j^llivan is pushing for a federal ceiling of 18 per cent on financing charges far below the maximum often charged — plus a ban on garnishment of wages to satisfy quantity in each package. The rules J^pome effective Dec. 31. ^ .Starting thqn, each food con- ' tainer must sprofy in boldface ( type the net quantity in total ounces for all containers less ( than four pounds or oqp gallon. — Chairman Harley 0. Stag- I gers, D-W. Va., ahhounced the . House Commerce Committee ( would start public hearings j Monday on aviation safety. t He said the committee may j try' to determine the cause of f Wednesday’s collision of a small j private plane and a conunercial I transport which killed 82 pdr- i sons in North Carolina. - To Air Milk Order I FOOD PACKAGING The Food and Drug Administration announced its new rides requiring food packagers state clearly on labels the. Jse Any Major Credit Card You Rave And -Get ‘INSTANT CREDIT' Here At SIMMS . If you have d credit card from a ma jor oil company, Sears, Hudsons, Wards, k Penneys, Waites, Kmart, Osmuits, etc., you may yet instant credit on p— phases of $30 to $1S0 here at Simms. Ask us'about this plan when y ^_________________shop these week-end specials. CAMERA DEPARTMENT DtSGOUNTS Henuine $164.60 value - the only 36mm SLR camera with cross coupled Cds and full . lent Interchongeabllity — preset the shutter speed and automatically gel the F stop or set it slop and gulamatically get the correct shutter speed. Standard 60»m 12 lens, telephoto'alts wide-angle lent are opiionol. " RADIANT Glass Beaded SCREENS For MOVIE an^LIDE Projections 40 X AO Inch 50x50 Inch • Simple, automatic operation. Model AS-8ML • Adjustable 4-woy oir flow. I BTU Air-Conditioner WAS *129,. Bm Air-Gonditinier WAS *149,. BTU Air-Conditioner WAS *229,. A\ « 98 13 98 Glass beoded screens to show your movies or slides itr their trug ^ color'brillibrice. Vplues to $21,50. Only $1 holds in loyoway. No Money Down-2 YEARS TO PAY-Open Friday 9:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M^ I\/I4ignav< STEREO OFFER! Electronics- TRANSISTOR Dept. Fully PORTABLE 2-TRACK Cartridge Tape Playef It plays music simply by' inserting a cartridge tape into the side of the machine. As shown — hi-jjppor;t case operates anywhere — at the beach, df home, in tjje car or boat, too. Uses low cost batteries. $1 holds. *40 Remote Speaker at No Extra Charge! Now you can own a fine Magnavox stereo console with an extra speaker to use on your porch, patio, wherever you choose! These radio phonpgraphs are housed in fine furniture, cabinets, have Microngatic Record Changers with dia.- ■ rhohd stylus.. Solid-state stereo FM-AM radio has drift-free AFC to “lock in" FM stations. Four superb speakers provide 'exciting stereo sound! Stereo and Remote Speaker 298=^ RECORDED Choosa from over 100 different title* — mode for the above tape *i,- .• ________________. . » of the residents[.^The operaUng wells Orchard Lake Council Retains New Firm as City's Legal Adviser ORCHARD LAKE - The firm of Hartman, Beier, Howlett and McConnell of Pontiac will replace William W. Slocum Jr. of Birmingham as the city’s legal coitncil. The City Council has retained the new firm for $2,500, said Mayor Sylvester Leahy. “The council felt it was desirable to retain a new law firm,” explained Leahy. He declined to explain further on the change. Slocum had been the city’s attorney for the past 10 yeai^. Slocum, however, will continue to represent the city in its financial dispute witl^ West Bloomfield Township. Die dispute originated three years ago when Orchard Lake became a city, w * * And should the city cut overgrown weeds on vacant lots? WEED CUTTING EYED Mayor Ceahy is investigating this problem. If the city cuts the weeds, costs will be added to the property owner’s tax bill. / ing the money was not robbery because he had not induced fear in the waitress. ‘FRIGHTENING aRCUMSTANCES’ The State Court of Appeals disagreed with Laker Thursday. “The circumstances here of a waitress alone in the early morning hours, and a man ordering her to hand over money and lie on the floor, were enough to induce fear,” the court said, adding: “The only indication that the waitress was not put in fear was her initial remark, ‘You’re kidding.’ We are not inclined to place great importance on the initial reaction of the waitress. What is important is the entire factual situation presented in the record.” ' The robbery occured March 29, 1965, in Royal Oak. are in the Tri^f^and Carole Acres subdivisions. The city’s remaining residents have their own wells, Downey said. The, contract will be for construction of water mains and two other pumping stations: The stations will be on Pontiac Trail near Ann Jo and at the intersection of Ladd and Maple. The council also accepted the appointment of James Gilmore as the new fire chief. Gilmore previously was the fire d^ai^ent’s dispatcher. Flooded Suburbs Cleaning Up Mess -L Residents of W^tRT- wac fliA nmcrsA/tle fr\t> DETROIT (AP) -C Residents of'watei:^ logged Detroit suburbs today worked to' clean up the mess and to repair the estimated $1 million Worth of damage from the flooding caused by a torrential downpour. The mayor of Warren, the city hardest hit, called for state and federal aid, but Club to Fete Official Auburn Heights Rotary Oub will entertain its district governor, Eric Bent-lage of Fernrfaie, at a meeting Aug. 7. oral urool, c* jj j u'Y’i!’- confer with Lester W* Wheaton eral weeks ago Stoddard had been chirf and John E. McClure, Resident and ------------------——---------------^--------------— Gilmore Is replacing Bazil Stoddard Jr. of Walled Lake, who resigned sev- Board Refuses Buffer Rezoning WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -Residents of Woodcrest North subdivision have assurance for the present that there will be a lOO-fobt buffer between their homes and a proposed shopping center at^^Maplfe and Orchard Lake roads. ★ ★ ★ Borman Food Co., developer of the shopping center, has been refused rezoning of the buffer from single family residential to commercial by the Town-.shjp Board. Borman had several plans for the 1'/2-acre buffer area. They included first a group of specialty shops, supermarket, bank and iwtourant; then a department store; and lastly a garden center, service drive and parking lot. The board’s reason for refusal of rezoning was that the commercial area would be almost in the back‘yards of the subdivision i^esidents. The board also refused rezoning from residential to office a ^/i-acre parcel on Maple, adjoining; the shopping center area."The Borman company intended to build a professional office building on. that site. » REQUESTED HEARING The rezoning refusq} came at. a hearing before the townsldp board, requested by the firm. It was not a public hearing, ^because the planning commission and the Oakland County Coordinating, Planning and Zoning Committee had recommended denial of the zoning change. The board also set a hearing date of Aug. 2. for proposed rezoning to office of Lot 40 Automobile Country Club Subdivision. The lot is on Orchard Lake Road near the Grand Trunk Western Railroad tracks. The board scheduled a public hearing on the budget for Aug. 2 at,7:30 p.m. at the township hall. Qtizens can examine the budget in the township clerk’s office after July 26. No Vacation for Avondale High School Youth in Firm Program INbEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP - Dan Craven of 6666 Wealthy, a senior at Michigan State, is taking part in a special program .ihis summer provide^ by the Goodyear Rubber Co. At the firm's school in Akron, Ohio, Craven is both .working and studying the industry. Avondale High School, normally a dust collector during the summer months, is being put to good use this year by 62 college and elementary school students participating in an unusual remedial reading program. Thirty-one youngsters, aged 8 to 13, are being tutored on an individual basis by 31 experienced teachers who, in turn, are being s u p e r v i s e d. by Dr. Hal Caphone, a professor of education at Oakland University. “It’s both a training situation for the teachers as well as a program for the students,” noted Caphone. “fiveryone btfiefito—the youngsters, their parents, the teachers and the school district.” The teajjhers are taking part in the prografh as part of a course they are takidg for master’s de^ee predits. in education at OU. All of them have had at least one regular course in the teaching of reading and are regular teachers in numerous area school districts. lecture class on techniques of reading problem diagnosis and remediation, taught by Dr. Caphone and can meet with him privately for conferences after the lecture. was told the prospects for it were dim becau^ most of the da1|age was to per-^ sonal property. At least two deaths resulted from the flooding. More than five inches of rain fell on the area in less than two hours Wednesday afternoon, according to an unofficial measurement. The downpour and flooding were restricted to Macomb, Oakland and parts of Wayne Counties. The stricken communities include northwest Detroit, Royal Oak Township, Royal ’Oak, Hazel i Dark, Madison Heights, Sterling Township and Warren. City cre\re worked Wednesday night and yesterday to pump water from ■ streets and residential areas. But there were still scattered lakes of ralnwaler yesterday evening. UTIUTIES REPAIRED Michigan Bell repairmen spent Thur.s-day catching up with 4,800 telephones knocked out by the storm. Detroit Edi-Isem crews completed repairs on downed wires, blown tfansformers and other power failures that caused 1,157 trouble calls. the water out of flooded cellars, cleaning Area residents spent the day pumping up what they could of the mess and wondering what to do about soaked and debris-covered fumitnre, clotiies, furnaces and cars. ” Warren Mayor Ted Bates asked Gov. George Romney to declare the city part of a disaster area. Romney sent State police to survey the city with Bates yesterday, -a - “If we’re eligible, we’ll ask for aid,” Romney said. But yesterday afternoon T. A. Vangen of the feder^ office of emergency planing in Batfle Creek told him Warren’s flood damage didn’t qualify for help. . In Washington, Rep. James O’Hara^ D-Mich., and Sen. Philip A. Hart, D* Mich., asked yesterday that the Corps of Engineers/check the drainage in the entire stricken" ".:— Drive for Tro^ School Election Near Success ,TROY — A petition drive to call for a new school millage vote is expected to go “over the top” this weekend. At least 700 signatures are sought to request the school board to set a new miUage proposal before the voters. The millage is needed to cut a $465,000 deficit the district is facing which has called for numerous cuts in school programs. The drive got under way after an emotion-packed board meeting last week. At the meeting it was decided to keep the “modular” .scheduling at iHe high school and retain Principal 'Joseph hard — under attack for alleged lishandlihg of the program. It was also announced that the aus-Jerity program would be put into effect in the fall, with sports, music and art being dropped, along with at least 22 teachers. lEDUUNG a group of coaches and ntizens have taken over the sports ^.scheduling to insure Troy being represented in league play. At the close of the meeting, a petition drive got under way in the hope of salvaging some of the programs. One of the petition-takers, John R. Baker of 192 Kirk, said today petitions are still being circulated by 25 volun-teer.s. v Tabulation is to take place Monday in time for Tuesday presentation to the board, he said. The teachers are now in their fourth of five weeks to be spent with the youngsters. ‘RISE TO OCCASION’ “Die teachers have risen to the occasion,” said Caphone. “The long hours and heavy loads they are carrying are Jar in excess of what would be demanded of them iti a regular lecture class situation. J’m delighted‘with the group.” I teacher meet each weekday npiniiaf for Oile and one-half hours •aw which the teachers gather for abqut " groups to discuss what IhpyVekttdahig nity tbeo atteod a regular 90-minute “Nonp of ns are paychologlsts. We Each teacher keeps daily records of his youngster’s progress and makes out a final report which will be given to the child’s regular teacher this fall. The report will indicate what has been done with the studem over the summer, what his difficulties are and what might be done to correct them. BUILDING SUPPUED FWBE The Avondale School District has supplied free of charge the building which would otherwise stand unused over the summery instructional materials and bu§ to take the group on field trips. “It’s an ideal situatioo for^the youngsters,” said Dr. Caphone. He said that the going rate for this’ •kind of instruction, which the university is providing without charge, would be about $10 an hour. ★ ★ * ^ He explained that there are no simple reasons for reading difficulties but that a number of physical, psychological and educational factors may contribute to a youngster of normal intelligence developing a reading problem. BETTER SELF-IMAGE “When they fall behind, they began to doubt themselves and thereby complicate their own problems. If, emotional difficulties' aren’t part of the cndglnal probleffl, they osnally enter in eventual- just try to teach the student and help him d^lop a better self-image. All , Of theu^ds have responded.” - In woking with the youngsters, the teacher uses the student’s own interests as a basis' for instruction. If, for example, he has an inter^t in' fishing, the teacher will find reading material on that subject that is fitted to the youngster’s reading level'and read it with him: “After a trip to Cranbroi*,” Caphone said, “a number of them developed an interest in growing rock crystals. In order to grow them here at the school, they had to fiiid instructions and read them.” Avondale High School now is equipped With a flourishing collection of rock crystals. - ---fitaRAS PROVIDED Six cameras have been provided for the program. On field trips, student and teacher take snapshots and later the student writes a report on the frip.. Dr. Caphone said this commas program should be a meaningful step toward establishment of a closer bond between the university and the area’s public schools. “Too often toe- university is an “ivo^ tower’/in the community. The university iiM to step out toward the schools. W^«Mve ideas and information that can help the school get th» job done. We want them to feel free to come to us when they need assistanep.” He said the program has demanded much time and effort from everyone concerned but that the benefits more than make it all worthwhile. “It’s been a lot of work. 1 don’t tbinif I’ll do this again — until next summer.” $170,000 to 4 Children Orphaned by Collision mount' CLEMENS (AP) - The grandparents of four Southfield children orphaned in a 1965 traffic collision have been awarded a damag»:«tftleineht' 6T^ $170,000. The settlement was approved in Macomb County Circuit Court in behalf of the children of Peter A. Grapp, 32, and his wife, Jean, 29, killed when their car and j'Mumber company station wagon collidro. 'The youngest child is 4. - The award was against Itebert H. Roose, 31, ofJShelby Township,^river of the station wagon, and Ulrich Lumber & .guilder Supply, Inc., of Warren, owner of the station wagon. Roose is on probation for negligent homicide in the crash. The children’s grandfather, Peter H. Grapp oT Southfteldr brought the suit. PROJECT PROGRESS —’Bruce Alluvbt and teacher nwtiae eiew nieie mve Son^CTS rwiew a report prepared following their recent re«. Each has been read and written about hv th.^ etuHanf apd buUetin board represent visual evulence of Bruce’s prog* and will move Avdndale High SchoolSs faU. THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, JULY 21, 1967 A—5 Quakers Plan to Ship Medical Supplies to N. Viet Again Soon SOMERSET, Pa. (UPI)—Mrs, Rose Habel of Lincoln Park, Mich., was killed yesterday in dn accident on the Pennsylvania Turnpike, two miles west of the Somerset interchange. .PHILADELPHIA (AP)--An American Quaker organization which recently transported a cargo of medical supplies to North Vietnam in defiance of the U. S. government today made known it will try to make another shipment soon. “It’s a matter of conscience,” said Lawrence Scott, 58, the white-haired leader of the project. “When people are being bombed and are bleeding, it’s a religious right and duty to help them, whoever they are.” viction would carry a maximum penalty of 10 years in jail and a |10,000 fine. We don’t flel that what we’re doing is unpatriotic, pven though it may be illegal,” said Sam Legg of Baltitpore, an .adviser on the project. Despite a tightening web of federal pressures and road- blocks, the undeterred task grdhp is going ahead with its planning, gathering funds, screening volunteers, awaiting a go-ahead from the North Vietnam Red Cross. “We’re lining up a new boat crew,” Scott said. The sponsoring unit, of which he is executive secretary, is called simply, “A Quaker Action Qroup,” to indicate it is only one of various Quaker approaches to the situa-J tion,. “Essentially, patriotism is doing what’s good for the country and the world, and I don’t see how this humanitarian effort to relieve suffering cap be anything else but that. T consider myself a loyal American as I break some American laws.” MEETING HOUSE -ilt operates from a- scuffed three-room office on the second floor of the old, r^-brick 12th Street Quaker Meeting House in midtown Philadelphia, in an atmosphere of informal improvisation—ol cluttered mall, peace posters, ringing tele^ones and anticipation. “I’m excited,” said a towheaded college boy when asked k how he felt as a potential recruit for the intended new voyage into Haiphong. He’s among about 40 who have offered their services for the outlawed mission, aitped at helping civilian war casualties. A turnpike spokesman said Mrs. Habel was riding in a camper-truck that was slowing for an accident ahead when it was hit in the rear by a tracftiri trailer- challenging laws considered opposed to higher ethical obligations is an pld Quaker tradition, forged in early persecutions, in their 19th century underground railroad for fugitive slaves, in their widespread disavowal of modern .war. It still is contingent on ap-; proval from North Vietnam, Sc-^said, adding that arrange-! Trims are being made through! , correspondence handled from ^ ^abroad to avoid government; "interception. However, the sail-' ing date is expected to be in late August. Scott said the qeganization has chartered for 'a year’s use the 50-foot U. S. ketch, Phoenix, * which carried an initial $10,000 * medical shipment to Haiphong Iasi Mareh. The crewmen on that voyage were ordered deprived of their passports. PROSECUTION URGED . In Washington Thursday, officials of the U. S. Treasury Department said it had recommended to the Justidl Department prosecution of those crew members under the assets con-. trol provisions of the Trading with the Enemy , Act. The Justice Department said the case is under review. Con- Thursday’s ^ents at the Slate Capitol ■y Tilt Autsltitd PrtH THE 60VERN0R Sipned teverti bills Includinp '■ urt revamplnp AAjchlptn's la* sir ApproVtd • SI3a,IM lederal «con«mlc. opportunity prant to the Chlppewa-Luce-Maclflnpb community* action apency THE LEGISLATURE Wt> adlourned until Aup. 1. Fine Quality Nationally Known FURNITURE, APPLIANCES, 0IBSPN AIR ^ CONDITIONERS Grash Is Fatal to State Woman Some 1,400,000. Germans will visit Spain this year. State Police to Seek Nonwhites LANSING (AP) - Michigans’ state civiF service director said Thursday an increased empha sis will be placed on recruiting nonwhites as candidates for State Police trooper positions. Franklin Dewald reported that a recent study of trooper appli-catipns showed only 31 of 1,364 were nonwhite. enough effort to recruit Ne- The study was conducted at the -retjuest of Sen. Coleman Young, D-Detroit. Young had complained that State Police, without a single Negro trooper, hnd';not made screening PROCESS Dewald said the study showed seven of the 31 nonwhites passed the written examination. All but one were eliminated by a subsequent screening process. Jack Hall, a former Behtop Harbor policeman, currently is in his eighth week of the police training school. State Police Director Fredrick Davids reported Hall is in the top half of his recruit cl Davids also noted that policd enough candidates who can currently have nine nonwhite employes in jobs other than trooper-assignments. ATTRITION HIGH Dewald reported that the attrition in the screening process is exceedingly high among both whites and nonwhites. meet the standards. Ernest Wallick, director of special employment programs for civil service, has been assigned to coordinate civil service recruiting efforts with State Police. “The basic problem here is to convince the nonwhites that they should apply,” De^yald said “although" the screening precis rigid, we know if we get enough applicants we wilt get “Our study shows that the nonwhite community is suspicious 'of our examination and recruiting procedure and that /many nonwhites feel it discriminates against them,” Dewald added. “We found no valid evidence to support this claim.” If an Seeking Peace of Mind in This Restless Age DIAL 335-0700 ALCOHOLISM H»lp for tho alcoholic at Ol for fomiliot and friondt affoctod by thit illnott. A.A. MEETING II l.M. Monday thru Saturda B P.M. Sunday thru Saturdai Sptcial AA moolinat 7:30 P.M. Solurday, I. ALANON: S P.M. 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Cool, 100% combed cotton with underarm gusset and extra long tail. 3 button placket model. Sizes S-M-L-XL. Charge It. Men's Wear. .. Street Floor Fpmous Brand Boys' or Gifts' PLAY SHORTS Reg. 1.25 QQc Save up to $1.26 I Stat. Onlyl | to 2.25 • Choose from boys' or girls\summer ploy shorts in assorted styles. Mgny are permanent/ press. Styled by very famous maker, Sizes 3 to 6x. Chargfe Yours at Waite's. Children's Weak. . . Second Floor_____________ a "Ideal Wedding Gift" 50-Pc. Stainless Flatware Reg. 20.00 *13 88. -SAVE $6.12 SAT. ONLY! '/"■ Our finest import, 50-pc. set includes 2 serving pieces. Choose from "Suzanne" ^modern on the left or "Midnite Stor with melamine handles on the right. ’ .Lower Level Housewores . THE PONTIAC PRESS FRIDAY, JULY 21, 1 RICHADD M. FiTSOtllAtt Treasurer and finance,, Officer . ■mSt'-liwnrtiw G. Majishail JOaDAN Local ■ Advertlalng Manager Troy Coaches ^te - A’ for Athletics The teams will do their part by making do with available equipment and unifohns while transportation The proven axiom "Where there’s a will there’s a way’’ was never more truly exemplified than Iw the action of five athletics coaches of the Troy High School. With the school district facing an operating deficit of $375,000 for the 1967 fiscal year, aggra^^atett by voter rejection in June of a millage tax increase, an austerity program became imperative. Part of it was the elimination of high school athletics. ‘ But the athletic director and four coaches blew the whistle on the cut by agreeing to Serve without siipplemental pay amounting to $11,500 to enable'the scKool to field teams ia eight branches of athletics, f has been u n d e r w r i 11 e n by local citizens. ► We warmly commend the fine Spirit shown by the group of Troy High School coaches and their personal interest in the student body. It comes at a time when there is a growing disregard-Of it by teaching staffs as they pUsh salary and procedural demands in contradiction to the idealism that o n c e^istinguished their calling. ^ Let us hope that the example of'selfless service set in 'Troy may find emulation throughout the scholastic community. , C.A.B. May Cut Off Airlines’ Tree’ Drinks The Civil Aeironautics Board has given the airline industry until Monday to comment on a proposed regulation that would end the practice of serving ‘‘free’’ drinks on airlines. On most trunk airlines, first-class passengeijfs receive free drinks and coach passengers pay $1 a drink. (Either way, there is a limit-of :two per person). ^ It could be argued that gratis liquor and all the other perquisites of first-class air travel are not free at all; that the cost is more than met by the considerable difference between first-class and coach fares. Still, the C.A.B. proposes “to require that each passenger who receives such in-flight service shall be assessed a charge there- Industry the Lifeblood of Community Prosperity Inducing a payroll-producing, tax-paying industry to locate in a town is the objective of most communities. Therefore, the remarks of an executive of a company ^at located in Albany, Georgia, to miild business airplanes are of more than passing Interest to many localities. They give a measure of what a prosperous, progressive industry means to any area. No city, or indeed state, can better attest the truth of this than Pontiac or Michigan, favored as they are as the seat of the gigantic automotive industry. ★ ★ ★ A spokesman for the Georgia company cited Monomists’ conclu-»-sions that 100 new factory jobs mean that 296 people,, make the conii^nunity their home; 4 more retail businesses openj; 1.07 more _ passenger cars are registered; 74 jobs are created in addition to the 100 factory jobs; thfre is $590,-000 more in personal income per year; $270,000 in bank deposits and $360,000 in retail trade. But, beyond that, new 'industry means more young people will find empioyment amd advancement in their home towW\___ . The spokesman concluded his observations with this truism: “We have to run a successful, competitive enterprise or both we and the community are in trouble. If the community is hurt in some way, our plant is hurt. If the plant is hurt, the community suffers. That’s why we must cooperate with each other.’’ This is a relationship that holds true ahd mhkes good sense In every' community large or small all across Voice of tHe People: for which shall be reasonably related to the cost and value of the service, in all classes of service!’’ The proposed rule may be a long time in coming into force. Just one year ago, the C.A.B. asked nine piajor carriers to show why they should not run their air terminal clubs in a non-discriminatory manner. Members of such clubs are selected on the basis of how many fares or how much goodwill they can generate. Since there are no rhember-ship charges, it was obvious that the fares of non-members as well as of members help to meet operating expenses. The C.A.B. still has not handed down a decision. "It Could Be The First Plank In Your New Platform!" David Lawrence Says: Rail Formula Is a Step Forward deal with nationwide disputes before they become full-fledged strikes. ^ More attention* undoubtedly will have to be given to measures that will forestall work stoppages which damage the public interest. Except in wartime. Congress has rarely interfered with strikes, no matter hpw far-reaching their effects happened to be. ' The legislation just enacted applies only to the railroads and for a specified period of time. Will Congress eventually give the president authority to intervene in the same way before any serious strike is called and to proclaim that the terms set by an independent board must be accepted and that no strike will be pfermitted? Union labor will, of course, oppose any measures that could vveaken its right to strike. The argument is that employers will refuse to make concessions'when thay know the government will intervene. (Copyright, 1H7, Publl Hall Synillcalt) Bob Considine Says: Nearly Half-Century Late Critical Trouble With China Ahead By JAMES MARLOW AP News Analyst WASHINGTON - Secretary Of State Dean Rusk raised ' the lid just enough for a brief look Inside ab infrequent news conferences he warned Red China ^nd Asian Communists generally against “taking any comfort’’ frOm Britain’s decision to withdraw militarily from the Far East by the mid-1970s. TTiat there is critical trouble ahead with Red China seems certain. At, the moment It has stayed out of the Vietnam, war perhaps for one of sev- . democraUc: government, eral reasons, some of them YiME TO MOVE IN cynical. years on developing hydrogen bombs and missiles. BIG SUCCESS They have had phenomenal success so far with the bomb development. A war might wreck the whole project. But the last thing the Red Chinese have to worry about is being in a fiurry to com-munize or dominate their neighbors. Those neighbors will be there a long time. When China has the bomb fully developed, and the niis-siles to carry it, the balance of power in Asia wiH change, and perhaps • change in the world. Therefore, it can afford cynically to &it idly by while the Vietnamese war goes on. * *. Suppose the North Vietnamese are forceej, to withdraw by the American forces. And, su^se further, with American help South Vietnam then creates a non - Communist, WASHINGTON - It may be confidently , predicted that there will not be a nationwide railroad strike again. The formula wmch has just been put i n t o effect by an a c t of C 0 n-gress has been , called “com-] pulsory a r b i-’tration.” But' it does not LAWRENCE really become so unless col-1 e c t i V e-bargaining proces-sis have been fully utilized and until a board of experienced labor and business mediator s—appointed by the Presicient — has endeavored --------------------------------- to bring both sides together. i rMi w ^ mi Old Teacher Gets Thanks themselves that the terms of settlement propiid by the in-.dependent commission become final and binding. This week’s action by Congress, therefore, is a definitive step forward. Just three years ago, Mr. Johnson tried a different tack. As one veteran negotiator at that time put it, the President “took personal charge of the actual negotiations, and kept them rffeht in the WTi I t e" House.” But the same negotiator added: “Now, this means that when the next big dispute develops, the industry and union will expect Mr. Johnson to take' over the job of medlatTng it. —TTiey will be - afraid To work out their own agreement if they think he may call peacemaking.” This is precisely what has developed d u r i n g the current dispute. President Johnson this week, on signing the new law, said: "We had hoped that the .parties woul3 reach their own agreement, without the CONSIDINE then be willing to risK an atomic war with China for South Vietnam. Or by then through fear and fatigue would South Vietnam be far more ready to accept Communist domination. „^ed for legislaUon. But for 1/ this happens, then all oL..more than a year, corapanito this country’s sacrifices for and unions alike were unable Vietnam in these days will have been for nothing. ★ ★ ★ Or suppose a nuclear China began pressuring the other neighbors around its vaj^ perimeter. Would their present resistance to communism, stfdng today, when tha» United States and not Red China is the nuclear power, then melt? SEEMS OBVIOUS It seems obyious that as China' grows in nuclear strength tHe ^?arious local Communist parties within China’s neighbors will feel strengthened and become more active. It has been having enough «4nternal trouble to keep it busy for a while without getting fpto a war writh the United States. ★ ★ ★ Further, the Red Chinese have been concentrating for This could last for some years — but only so long as the missile-lopded Chinese found it convenient — until China decided it was time to move in, either directly or indirectly with local Conununist^ forces. , . ' \ Would the United Statef The best hope for this cojiitry is that a n^ore rea-^nable group will take over Red China’s'' leadership when the fanatics of Mao’s generation die off. At best this is only a hope, and maybe not ji sound one. ★....'t.„, *■ * What lies ahead looks Uke a nightmare.' to find a solution—despite the* help of three special boards, members of Congress, and the Secretary of LaborT:..” The big question now is what steps will be taken to Verbal Orchids Mr. and Mrs. Joseph C. Drader of Birmingham; 52nd wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Schwartz Si;, of 26 Edna; golden wedding anniversary. Albert A. Smith of Ortonville; 80th birthday. FVed Prentice - of Birmingham:-81st birthday. Mrs. Alma Code ■ of Pittsford, formerly of Southfield; ’ 85th birthday. Mrs. Anna Wisniewski of 50 Waldo; 88nd birthday. Mrs. Minnie GreenWald of Owosso; 95th birthday. EN ROUTE IRELAND — I'm off on a trip to the Quid Sod with an ould friend. Sister B e r -nard of the Sisters of Notre Dame da Namur. It’s a little gesture o f -gratitudp, slightly oveN^-due. Sister Bernard was my teacher in t h e x t h grade of. St. Aloysius .Grammar School in Washington, D. C. nearly half a century ago. Sister Bernard and I drifted far apart in the years that followed her patient and inspiring efforts to beat a little sense into my skull. For some years, in later life, I thought frequently about her and assumed she had long since, gone to her reward. Then one day came an astonishing report that she was stilpalive. T flew to Washing-tovi to St. Aloysius., „ /1 walked down the haUway of the old school, past class-' room after classroom that I' had sat (and sometimes studied) in. REMEMBERS STUDENT And there at the end of the hall, in the eighth grade — advancement is rapid jn the order of Notre Dame da Namur — sat Sister Bernard. Sister Bernard looked up at the intruder. She looked exactly as she had looked when the intruder had sat at her feet. She ioidced 80, a fine and fit 80. “Hello, Robert,” she said in her fine voice. She had not seen me for'40 years. . ★ . ★ ★ I told, her t couldn’t believe it was possible that she would remember. MAKES MISTAKE “I remember all of you,” she said of her generations of students, “And 1 have a bone to pick with you,” she added with mock severity. “I redd a-pjece about you recently which quoted you as stating writing at George Washington University. “You know very well that that’s not true. You learned to write right here,” and she pointed to the second desk in the first row. “You learned to write thorough compositions, such as the ones I have here oi^^ ihy desk. “So did two other boys in that class, George Garner (now NY Daily News) and Felix Belair (NY Times). George sat opposite you in the second aisle and Felix, let me see, of course. Felix sat here in front.” I wrote a book about Ireland once upon a time, but I feel that only now will ! be able to understand the cbiih-try. My tlacher will tell me what it’s all about. Reader Questions Need. ^ for AddedMmnc Taxes Why are tlte State income tax and the newly proposed city income tax necessary? Some coi%. mentators say it is because sp many persons afe^ making a careeT of living on the dole and welfare. Is this tfue? Certainly it is not a case of the Jtax-' payer getting, any more for his tax money than he did 20 or 30 years ago; We enjoyed the same govec,noiental services even in the days before the Michigan State Sales Tax was levied as a !‘tem-porary’"'measure. It has been said that higher taxes are the result of growth. This is not logical. If there are more people needing the services provide^ by government, it follows that there should be more people also paying taxes to provide these services. The ratio of income required for taxes paid by each individual shoujd remain about the same. ★ ★ ★ Surely these matters require a referendum, but the highhanded politicians and sociologists refuse thl^democratic process. So those who have to work for a living continue to pay and pay and pay. . , R. F. DOHNER. 725 GERTRUDE Letter Gives ‘Officiar Prediction for Tigers The Tigers will finish fifth and this 4s official as It's straight from me. BEUTRINGER^ ‘Service of Ambulances May Save Lives’ “Silence Ambulances” is all you read. Have these people or their loved ones ever been in an ambulance trying to get to the hospital in an emergency? Have they ever lain beside thb rbad wondering when the ambulance would come? Do these complainers move off the road to let an ambulance go by? I thank God that we are able to have the service ambulances give and pray they make it in time to save anoth* life. B. M. For seven years f have shuddered every time an ambulance with sirens wailing travels on Huron, but npt because of the wailing sirens. It may be going to pick up someone I know or trying to get a relative to the hospital in time to save a life or a limb. I shudder at the utter disregard of motorists on Huron. Most try to see if they can beat the ambulance, seldom do they even slow down, and never do they pull over and stop. ★ ★ ★ In place of criticism, everyone who hears a siren screech, wail or whoopee should say a prayer that it makes it safely and in time to save a life. LUCINDA H. WYCKOFF 7M WEST HURON ‘Business District Not a Shopping Center’ A central business district is more than a shopping center! MARIE H. GOODSPEED 75 WEST HURON Question and Answer j . I have nothing against motorcycles, but we have a couple in onr neighborhood that make so much noise they Just . about take the roof off «s they go by. Isn’t there something to put .on the^q that wilLquiet them down a little? a. INDIAN VILLAGE RESIDENT REPLY Dealers tell us motorcycles c^re relatively quiet when they come from the factsj^ and when they are sold — only slightly noisier than a car. The noise comes when alterations are made on the machine, and if the motorcycles in your neighborhood are deafening, it’s because the owners like them that way. There are laws against excessive noise, and ^^dUce wUl umte-a 4ie}Mt^^-4t^ if-^fou— call them when the motorcycle is cruising your area. Dealers also hope citizens will make com-pktinie ^mnst^=affemiersy^>^beeeatmthey^don^d^^^ noisy motorcycles any more than you — it’s bad for their business. Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Is That So? The Swift County (MiAn.) News ,It’s hard to believe that a man is telling the truth when you know you w6uld lie if \you were in his place. Rule of Low Chicago Tribune In the Voice of the People today appears a letter from Chhrles . Cogert, president of the American Federation of Teachers (AFIrClO), in which be criticizes a recent Tribune editorial on teachers’ strikes. The editorial noted that two teachers unions had been punish^ for defying court injunctions {tgainat strikes. His main point is that teachers’ union s have learned that strikes have benefited the union mem-bers-and therefore they will be continued regardless of laws dr. court orders. The letter'Closes with a sl^ on school B^rd members, who Work coirnttess hoi^ for no pay and are pepbsUy the the United States. Mt%Cogen calls them “carefree, arrogant, and dictatorial.” ★ , ★ * ■ The most disturbing feature of this letter is Mr. Cogen’s frank defend of anarchy. Every property owner knows that if he fails to pay his taxes, most of which goes to schools, the local governments will invoke laws against him and his property may be sold to satisfy the unpaid taxes. that all property owners should pay taxes, especially school taxes. He does not urge disobedience of all laws. He favors disobedience of only laws and cojirt orders that inconvenience his union. But if Mr. Co gen can disobey laws he opposes, why can’t the taxpayers do the same? To Mr. Cogen, the rule of law is too slow. His letter ★ ★ ★ ssys his organization has mi . . “arsenai of weapons,” includ- This IS one form of the rule ing mass reslgnStidl^ if a 6f law. Everybody must pay Hoard of education refuses to taxes, or government would arrive at a “satisfactory”" collapse. Property owners may complain about taxes, but they must pay them. Cogen no doubt agrees that you got your training iq most public-spirited citizens in The Pontiac Press is delivered by carrier for SO cents a weOk; tnalM In Oakland. Geneseav ingston, A*——- WasM*»aw ’ JIS acTiptionSi payable in advance. Postage, has been paid af the 2nd «^po«,ao ilAWtlgen. agreement. And who is to judge what "is satisfactory? Not’lhe taxpayers or their elected representatives. Not the courts. •The only fountain of goodness, wisdom, and justice, in Mr. Co-gep’s view, Js his union — or, perhaps, himself. ( \High Living - The GranUe Qty (III.) ■ Press Record The cost of living continues to no up amf up, and so does the cost of living it up. THE PONTIAfc PRESS, FRIDAY, JUEY 21,^ I96f AA ONTGOMERY WARD .A—7 ^UNBELIEVABLE SAVINGS . . . JlikjL, \ C TliE POXTIAC; PHKSS, FlUDAV. JULY 21, 1967 Infrigud-suspense of its best HOUSE OF CARDS by STANLEY ELLIN j ... ^,1, *. Marine Returns From His ThircLWar Stanley Ellin. Diitributed by £ CHAPTER 35 "CIGNORA?” It sounded as.il . »Jshe had let the'p^one fall. ^Signora f’ There was a faraway conftT-sion of voices at the other end of the wire. “Monsieur Davis, Charles Leschenhaut, “where are you?” “l«t’s hot waste time, Les-ehenhaut. TTie question is hot where I am, but what I want.” “I sfee. You feel you’re in a position to make demands on me.” “To make a deal with you. You get fifty million francs, and 1 get a half million of them and my passage put of the country. Does that sound reasonable?” He imderstood at once what I was getting at. *-^*qf,^yeu-eaBHpEo\ T*V __a a^_i:aai- T>_1___ to any little old Russian woman —in Gorky Park was not alone.' MOSCOW (AP) — It’s the,Russians ogle the most scantily, greafesf East-West confronta-jmost gaudily clad girls ever tion since Glasgboro: miniskirtslseen-off the stage of the Bolsoi vs. Muscovites. ‘ Ballet. And the Russians are taking! They’re foreigners, mainly the hard line. One old woman in I British, American, Scandinavi-Gorkj' Park took a switch to anian and German tourists. Amwican girl and lashed the:^ SCANDALOUS INCH backs of her bare legs. ^ ^ . Around the Intourist hotels.; All winter Moscow heard ru-the foreign currency shops and;™.''® the International Film Festival. If«*>led. . ---------. , distant West. A few brave Rus- secWe Jlussians,- ,s.ans raised hems a scandalous ^ho rejected Western “op^ linch above the knee. | skies” and disarmament inspec- ! ^i>iby -spring the average jtion plans, yield to inspection of '-^fr6ss still amply covered the the upper legs" usually ample Russian kneecap,'' * Some of the younger tourists An Australian girl and another babushka were seen in a tug-of-war all the way across a broad, busy street. Jhe old woman was trying to girl’s hem down to her knees and the girl was frantically trying to escape. Levels on Rise^ in Great Lakes DETROIT (UPP -- The Great Lakes are continuing to rise and are well above their all-time-lows, the U.S; Lake Survey reported today. All the lakes surrounding . Michigan are one inch above ago while Lake St. Clair remained at the same level. Lake Superior is expected to rise ariother inch in the next month, while Lake Michigan-Huron is expected to remain at its present level and Lakes St. Clair, Erie and Ontario Will drop from one to three inches, Now they’re seeing the real thing 6 to 10 Inches above the knee. And the psjh;b«delic colors seem as surprisingds""^ brevity in the drab Moscow setting. One girl at a film festival par-ty wore aero c h e t e d, see-W“ha!fini^suif from such Communist countries Poland and Czechoslovakia wearing jninis. Russian are envious—and experimenting. Trout Fete Starts BALDWIN m - The 11th annual three-day Troutarama celebration operted Thursday in this Lake County community and concludes Saturday with canoe races ort the Pere Marquette River and*a parade in Baldwin fflfoifglf proportions over a body-stocking. jpvemthe movie stars, not to mention people ^rom -the comparatively 'sophisticated Soviet cultural scene, shocked. LESS WORLDLY Less sophisticated, less world-"4y Muscovites are not taking this invasion calmly. The babushka—the word(^ Some redwood trees are more Officers Chosen BOYNE FALLS Thomas Rau, O^maw County clerk, has been elected president of the ^ Michigan Association of County ^ er^ Clerks at the group’s 59th an-^ nual convention. William E. Butler of Delta County was named first vice president and Jack Bronkenia, KenY County clerk, second vice pTesidenf DREXEL HILL, Pa. (AP) -Marine Staff Sgt. Edward F. Crawford,. 39, came home Wednesday from his third war. Crawford fbught in the Pacific during World War II and latef" in Korea. He was a Marine Reservist and a police officer ip nearby Upper Darby when the Marine Corps asked for Mun^, teets to fight in Vietnam. ★ ^ ‘i:'..★ The corps wanted combat-hardened/ veterans as leaders in the Vietnamese jungles. Crawford, three times wounded during the Korean fighting, answered the call. He received a two-year leave from the police force, bade his wife and three children goodby,: and went back to war. LAST FEBRUARY Last Feb. 21 he joined M Company in Vietnam. On April 30 a rifle bullet hit Win in the right thigh during fighting on Hill 811, near the ■ Cambodian border. He was taken out by helicop: ter, recovered on the aircraft carrier JPrinceton, and returned tlnWty. ^ ★ ★ ★ . On May 20 he Was fighting in the demilitarized zones near the ^orth Vietnam border when he was wounded in the left thigh. ★ ★ He came home to a motorcycle escort and squad car sirens' screaming. Flags lined the walk to the house. A red, white and blue sign on the- porch said, “Welcome Home, Eddie.” i ★ “I cried when I left for Vietnam,” said Crawford, “and I cried when I stepped off the plane here,” ★ Crawford said hjs ^latest war experience had taught him one thing; “The kids who annoyed me as a cop are wonderful boys when they have to fight. 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UHF/VHF tuning, | automatic degausser, 1 year warranty on tube. *379 I FRETTER APPLIANCE COMPANY ! lUCelliedBaHeeCikR'edaa’akaav THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, JULY^l. 1967 Family Films, Animal Projects -Producer f^ows Disney Path Nr A—^9 By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-Television Writer HOLLYWOOD ^P) -- He scarcely fits the Walt Disney image, being stocky, goateed , and Hungarian accent^. To the views, he replies; ineyjjtable question ■Tn inter- “No, I. don't want to be the second Walt Disney. I want to be the first Ivan Tors.” ★ ★ * Yet the comparison remains, and almost every week brings an announcement of a. new project that makes it appear that Ivan Tors is destined to 1^) ^attract the same f kind of family : audience that flocked to "The late, great Dis-;; ney; Tors’ Ipteat {venture puts Ihim into the ■ a m u s e m ent-THOMAS park business, pioneered by Disneyland. The film producer has announced he will build two large attractions, called Ahirpal Kingdom, in California and Florida. His entrance into this field is somewhat reluctant, he admitted. FORCED BY DEMAND “There is , such a demand for leisure-time attractions that I have been forced to get into the business, whether I wanted to or not,” he sighed. “Also, the cost of keeping animals has become so great that I have to find ways of offsetting it. When you have 600 to 700 animals, as we do, it means employing 40 trainers and a full-time veterinarian just to give the aninjals shots. “Originally, I didn’t want to open the compounds, to the public because I was afraid the exposure to people might harm them. But now I find it is necessary.” ★ * * The Florida Animal Kingdom will be situated on 4,000 acres Tors owns at Palm Beach Gardens; the California location Is yet to be selected. His present Africa, U.S.A, 50 miles north of Hollywood, is not big enough for a public operation. The plan is to allow the animals to roam as freely as possible—the more obstreperous beasts would be isolated on islands—and humans would be permitted to drive among them in their own cars pr safari trucks. PREFERS ANIMALS You get the faint impression from talking with Tors that while he is not entirely a misanthrope, he somehow prefers the character of animals to that of his own species. Indeed, he is a persistent preacher of the lack of hostility on the part of animals toward humans. “I first discovered this*when I was producing ‘Sea Hunt.’” he cxpiains. “During all the years we made, the series, no shark ever attacked us, nor were we nipped by a barracuda. After that I decided not to believe in the zoology I had learned in school. can corral the family trade and has ordered 10 pictures in 14 months; In _^releas6: “Africa— Texas Style.’’ Coming up: “Gentle Giant,” “The Daring Game,”. “Island of the Lost.” • Television series. Tors has cannily used his features as pilots lor new series; thus “Afri-ca-Te^ Style,” with Hugh O’Brian emerges as “Cowboy in lAfrica,” with Chuck CohnorglJ “Gentle Ben,” cbstarring Den^ [nis Weaver and a 7-foot bear. “Daktari” will be back, and “Flipper” returns in reruns next winter while the show gears fOr a new family. “Our kids outgrew the series,” Tors explains. He also shares production of “Off To See the Wizard’’ with MGM. “I am convinced that rib animal will attack a human being unless it is provoked. Once in Africa a lioness came up to my car, rubbed against it and walked on. It crbviousty had no Interest in me. We look like apes to lions, and they don’t eat ,apes; both apes and humans smell bad and taste bad to them. “Even a killer whale won’t eat ybii beCaii§(S you aren’t on its diet The only time it would attack a human would be if it were stalling. But that' rarely happens.” <: DISNEY-UKE EMPIRE , Tors, 51, has managed to translate his compassion for animals into film entertainment that has found a warm response from theater and television au; diences. In fact, his operation has taken on all the aspects of a Disney-like empire. It includes: • Feature movies. The-new management of Paramount has announced it hopes that Tors Automatic TRANSMISSION • SERVICE • * ffuanin teed” RELIABLE TRANSMISSION 92il Oakland - FE 4-0701 ENTIRE STOCK— GIRL^' Swimwear f* And Sportswear Vz to Yl OFF ENTIRE STOCK Ladies’ « Summer Dresses Regular to 36.00 099 to IVAN AND STAR TIGER - Film producer Ivan Tors kneels with his star Bengal tiger, Sanang, during a break on the set of the Daktari series. Tors says he doe-sn’t want to become a second Walt Disney. Instead, he wants to become “the first Ivan Tors.’.’ The film producer’s latest venture is i pair of attractions to be called Animal Kingdom. jOne will be in Florida, the other in Xlalifornia. YOUR SOLUTION TO AIR POLLUTION... Protect your and home from the mounting problems of dust, dirt and pollen. Install an ELECTRO-AIR electronic air cleaner )-2f Kast Heating & Cooling Co. 580 TelegrapK.at Orchard Lake Rd. FE 8-9255 Men’s and Students’ Suits - Regular to 75.00 *391. *64 The Greatest Piand Value - of the Year - Now at . . . GALLAGHER’S BIG 40 COKSOLE PIANO A FULL GLORIOUS TONE FOR THE PRICE OF A SPINET • Matching Bench • Comparable Value $795 • Beautiful Walnut • Buy Now and. Save Hundreds ONLY $16.00. USED SMALL BABY GRAND PIANO ^395 You Will Enjoy Shopping at Mon. i Frt., 0:30 *til 0; Tu«t., Wed., Thurs. I Sat. B P.M. 17t0 $. TELEGRAPH! Va Milo South of Orchard Lake Rd. Lots of Froo Parking FE 4-0566 Men's Sport and Dress Shirts Regular to 4.50 2 for 6 50 ENTIRE STOCK T LADIESV SUMMER Swimwear And Sportswear Vs to Yl OFF Girls' \v Dresses ) Regular to 15.00 ^9 to 7** Men's Slacks Regular to 18.00 599 „ ^99 Boys' Knit and Sport Shirts Regular to 4.00 159 t. 2*® J\AEN'S PORTO PEDS Discontinued Styles 1599 Regular to 24.00 NATURALIZER-LIFE STRIDE Discontinued Styles Dress Regular to 18.00 990 _ NATURALIZER-tIFE STRIDE Dist^ritinued Styles Casuals - Kegubr 10 16.0u 790 ^590 Miss America Discontinued Styles Dress — Casuals 490 390 ^ REGULAR TO $12.00 AMERICAN GIRL Discontinued Styles. V DRESS CASUALS ^490 396 REGULAR TO $12.00 ITALIAN SANDALS Entire Summer Styles 290 ^ 590 REGULAR TO $10.00 Men's and Boys' CANVAS SHOES ^ 3 99 Men's—Children's Hush 1 Ladies' HUSH PUPPIES \ BREATHIN’ BRUSHED / V y Discontinued Styles Colors 090 W to 6” 1 PORTAGE-PEDWIN - Discontinued Styles Oxfords and Slip-Ons 390 Reg. to 14.00 CANVAS OXFORDS SLIP-ONS By Ball Band (Disc. Style) ^288 REGULAR to $6 !>■ A—10 THE PPyriAC PRESS, ;FRIDAY, JULY 21, 1967 Police Youth Corps Program Hailed By MEL NEWMAN I •nje first half of the Pontiac | Police^ ,y 0 u t h Service Corps program is nearly over, and ad-| ministrators and field workers; alike kre already voicirig^'hopes: - for ^n expanded program ini the summer of 1968. j The projest, initiated June 19, i has, in the words of Director George P. Caronfs, had a “veiy positive and constructive effect. “It’s good,” he said, ‘*td* have youths working with, rather than against, the police.” ^ ■ Sgt. Carl Colando, head of the Police Department Crime Pre- vention Bureau, and group leaders Richard Hayes and Thom-Gracey, both officers, all cite a change in the-attitudes of the Boys involved as the program’s most encouraging development. * ‘They’ve changed in speech and dress habits for the better,” actual beats \s a>igl>art of the program for therhoys and is supplemented by sessions with Ro^ Gi;ay, senicir staff counselor. Gracey said riding in patrol cars with officers helps the youths understand a policeman’s job and also gives them a feeling o^ belonging to the department, one of the projects stated objectives. How well the boys have accepted the idea is demonstrated by their desire to tell of the program to others, according to Colando. “Some of the boys really talk It up around the playgrounds,-’‘ he said. - Dolux* ^ Black k Decker LAWN EDQER and TRIMMER Beautify your garage and get more organized storage space with PEG-BOARP by MASONITE CORwon Durabt* fini(h«d turfdc* n*«di np painting, itayi good-looking. Easy to install, odty ta clean, easy to uso. Hove a moro *attractivo, organized garage, with Peg-Board and genuine Masonite Peg-Board hooks and hanging fixtures for Vs" and Vi" Board. $3.84 VB”Temp. $5.76 PEG-BOARD 1/4” Presto $6.95 SHEETS 1/4” Temp. $8.96 Convenient Side Door Parking LUMBER&HAPDWAPei tS1 OAHLANP AVt.,POMTtAC • FE4»t59^ said Hayes. “And with the interest they’ve shown thi§ all seem? to mean a change in their self-conception.” WORK WITH PA' Worlang i^ith fal^olmen on “I want to be a policeman, he said. SOJMEMIEBS^. Two of the program s members, Walter Poss,. 14, of 37 Stowell and Keith Spann, 15, of 232 S. Marshall, showed bo hesitation-in “talking it up./’, ‘We have real, beats, said Farm Workers Theater Slated LANSING lAP) - The State Highway Commission says it is accepting sealed bids for removal or demolition of houses on 40 parcels of land in Flint. The buildings are located on property purchased by the department' for construction of the 1-475 -freeway. The Michigan G. I. Forum and the Political Association of Spanish Speaking Organiza-'tiQns of Michigan (PASSOM) are among 19 organizations sponsoring a twe-performance showing in Michigan of the Farm Workers Theater (El Teatro Campesino), The theater group was formed by talented grape workers in California shortly aft®*" organization ^ere of a migrant farm workers union. The players will present pantomime, singing and dramatic sketches based on experiences of farm workers on July 29 in Dearborn and on July 31 id Lansing. Both performances begin at 8:30 p.m. 'The showing in Dearborn will be at the UAW Local 600 union hall, 10550 Dix, and in Lansing at the UAW Local 652 union hall, 426 Clare. Admission is $1.50. Tom Chavez, chairman of PASSOM, said Pontiac area residents needing free transportation to th^ Dearborn performance can ride on a chartered bus which will leave St. Vin-cenf’s Catholic Church at 6:30 p.m., July 29. V WKC EUREKAmi^ 1^ 108 N. SAGINAW - FE 3-1114 EUREKA Floor Polisher FRIDAY, SATURDAY, MONDAY Lets you do floors as often as you should, os easily os you hoped someday you could. EUREKA Deluxe Automatic Upright Vacuum Cleaner Big oversize brushes cleon wider path. ' • Special rug dolly lets you shampoo rugs, too, without harsh scrubbing or rnotting. • Disturbulator deaning action • Special Soniirzed treated dust bag • Vinyl dust bag cover • Step-on toe switch • Adiustatjle.S-pOsition hondle • Soft vinyl bumper • Rolls— -on 4 wheels. 3>Day Special Aufornofic Toe Handle release -malic switch. Touch: ogto-' 3-Day Special SAVE! Ob This EUREKA ROLLABOUT VACUUM CLEANER With 5-Piece Attachment Set Included Feature-pocked bargain has full-powered motor, flip-top lid for eosy removol of disposable dust bogs, vinyl furniture guard, eosy-roll wheels and much morel , ' 3-Day Special OPEN MONDAY and FRIIMY HGHIS’til 9 PEBSPN-TO-PERSON CREDIT ^e Genvenient Budget Terms I • 90 Days Same as Cosh • • Up-to 36 Months to Fay PARK FREE in WKC’s Lot Rear of Store Walter, “and we watch out for accidents and for vandalism.” Keith recalled seeing a boy hit by a^^r during his first weefc^ a Vouth Corps member. “It made a real impact,” he said, “and ^owed the ip»r-tance of a policeman’s job!” BOYS’ PLANS Perhaps the best measure of the project’s success is revealed in the boys’ future plans. “If I’m not going to be an entertainer,” said Walter, “I want to be a policeman.”. rKeitb was more definite. Accepting Bids THE FAMILY WAY-When the member* of the McLellan' family of Atlanta, Ga., • decide to go on vacation,' they do It in' a big way. So big, in fact, that it takes an airliner to transport them' to their destination' in Florida. Here Robert McLellan, his wife and seven children, along with his brothc^r Jyhn,, his wife and three*children, plus two nieces wave goodby as they leave the Atlanta air-porb R'obert’s wife, in the wheelchair, broke herin an auto accident. ^ t II Spend^lOO a month lorl&^earr and wind up with $20,061:52 cash!' r Community. National has come up. with a fabulous new 15-year savings plan that works like this: Save $100 a month for 15 years-(you can save $50:or $25j^onth if you wish), Then spend $jj|p, month for the next 15 years. T?r'compound interest you earn (at current rates) will leave you with exactly $20,061.52 iu yaur account. Don’t believe it? Get a folder explaining how to get started at your nearest Community National office. NATIONAL I BANK Offices In Oakland and Macomb CounHes M«mb#r PDIC V r-' THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, JULY 2l, 1967 A—11 Soviet's Midfeast Blunders Raise Eyebrov/s in West By MAX HARRELSON I Israel was about to attack Syr- UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. ia. This is said to have led to (AP) — Western diplomats are not as surprised by^ the Soviet Union’s failure to win the diplomatic battl?' at the United Nations over the Middle East as by the string of blunders that caused the Russians to lose the skirmishes as well as the War itself. . No one can recall a time when 4he I^’emlin got into so many untenable positions and suffered so many rebuffs in any similar two-month period. This raises some questions whether Soviet diplomats sud- Egyptian President Gamal Ab-’del Nasser’s sending massfee forces to Israel’s southern borders. This in turn resulted in the Israeli mobilization and the war. Israeli Ambassador Gideon Rafad told the Security Council, “The Arab people have paid a heavy price for having been misl^.’’ In May, when the Security Council was called at the request of Canada and Denmark to deal with the mounting crisis, Fedorenko accused the two countries of trying to* dramatize the situation. He said there was no urgency in sending out an ewwi'bmtfflhif Thant had suggee^ted. When the war broke out June 5, most council members were ready Jo vote an immediate ste^ cease-fire appeal. Fedorenko ^insisted that the appeal be linked With a demand W Israeli ,^troops to pull back to their June dorenko was the central figure 4 positions. The Soviet position and that he may be replaced, apparently was based on intelli-but it would be an oversimplification to pin the whole thing on Moscow’s delegate to the U.N. , denly lost their touch, and if so who was to blame for the s by-step lapses. There has been widespread speculation that Nikolai T, Fe- gence reports which failed to show the extent of Egyptian military losses. , Eventually the Russians and the Arabs accep^ the ceasefire resolutions wUhOdt any call for troop withdrawals — but by that time Israeli troops had made further gains against Egypt and had inflicted heavy losses on Jordan and Syria as well. The biggest single mistake made’by the Russians, diplomats suggest, was to call the assembly into emergency session. They apparently believed they would win support for Soviet demands already rejected by the Security. Council. These T&luded condemnation of Israel and the immediate and unconditional withdrawal of Isr§eli forces from Arab territory. They first dropped, their demand for condenuiatioh and then agreed to a watered-down resolution on tro<^ withdrawal, but-they were unable to win the required twp-thirds majority even then. / cials in Moscow. Some of it stemmed from faulty intelligence and some from diplomatic necessity which required the Soviet Union to take losing positions. Most U.N. officials don’t think Fedorenko initiated the idea of the emergency session of the General Assembly, overriding the long-held Soviet doctrine that peace - keeping matters should be handled by the Security Council Since 1950 the loviet^^lNon had insisted that the “uniting for peace’’ procedure for calling emergency assembly sessions was illegal, but that is the way' the current session was convened. This procedure was first proposed by the United States to get around persistent Soviet vetoes in the Security Council. The decision on this seemed to be one for the highest level. Thii? is true also on the personal participation of Premier Alexei N. Kosygin in the assembly session. ONE REASON That is one reason why the failure of the Soviet Union to get a clear-cut' assembly demand for the withdrawal of Israeli troops from Arab territory is a blow to the Russians and helps explain why they have kept Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromy- ___kiUn-liew-york-4orHTWe4han- four weeks tryifig to find a face-saving formula. ^ As the permanent representative of the Soviet Union at U.N. headquarters, Fedorenko was the man in the middle during most of the debate, and he was responsible for carrying out the Kremlin’s decisions. It iS generally agreed that his bitter attacks on Israel and his sniping at various individuals, including Secretary General U ’Thant and three Security Council presidents, contributed to -an unfavorable image presented by the Russians. * ★ ★ As recently as July 9. for example, Fedorenko delayed for at least six hours Security Cijiuhcil'llneement bn assigning U.N. observers to the Suez cease-fire, before finally accepting a formula already agreed to by Israel and Egypt as well as ; the other council membere. He failed to mdke out a convincing case for the delay and finally agreed. Part of the Soviet trouble stemmed from the Kremlin’s inability to takd a position with-' out coordinating it with that of the Arabs. There was, in effect, an Arab veto since the Russians did not want-t®.. risk a public * break. The Russians were being : accused of letting the Arabs * down militarily, and they want-' ed to prove they wolud not de- ert them in diplomacy as well. The Soviet Union appeared I to get off on the wrong foot in ! April. Authoritative sources I said some Soviet leaders at that time told a visiting Egyptian j parliamerttaryir^ delegation that IWeJl House HA^SCOTCH mn iiiuii sciici HisiT iKiii riiu iwiiiiii niM iisnuiK, HI. na 2548 Elizabeth Lake R * origea RCA Vretoraeailer WOWf Cr*«la,i t Iranchti FtXwilt liw. t IranltiM Fratlar * Simmani « Clark t ■ranchai EAST SIDE Aulamalic Apallanat IIIOOGrtliOl 721S Harper BtHtr Hama SI 14189 Craliat 11151 Harper CaPlllaa Muilc thap \f414 f.Warran Dam^ia, Talaalilan WEST SIDE Ambar Talavlilan ?59J2 7305 Granp River farrli Iralheri , 4303 fourleenit, rai rurnllure < Hp»e. 14831 Grand Rrait Carneil Sittlttare 17391 Uvarnteis Oanaral TV LPh. 14110 Fankall —IlOOLWluUiai..... MariaMt FirnHura I 9130 losepri Campiu FtnkfM MtNttk Brothfr 70)2 W. Warrtn Twj*l Furntlur^ ’ TinNryki,HBin« AR#.ABr 5630 MrcTiigin VMtBadlttTV ' 16930 Plymouth WoBnor ElMtrif 14236 W. McNichblt Walktr Buianbaro FurnHl 20924 W. 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Jatlirton UNION LAKE 23601 Van Dyk RCF AppHanai 32766 Van Dyl RlnllTV 26820 PAduind VetANOOTTC Wailaelo Radia 2441 tort-Glraat tFSILANTI /rtLE \‘iS ROA VICTOR DIST.CORF., OCTWOIT A—12 ONE COLOR THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, JULY 21, 1967 Patrol Trainees Put to the Tes FAIRFIELD, Calif. (AP) -The men are hollow-ey^, jumpy. and mean. Vietcopg trickg that took a bloody toll earlier in the week no Ibnger worked. nie Vietcong and the blood are fakes here. But irj^ a week and a half they will be real for these U.S. Navy men training in a 15-square-mile patch of California’s Suisun Slough to police the waterways of the guerrilla-infested Mekong River delta. shores spit machine gun, sniper and mortar fire. The shells are blanks. The fledgling Mekong River police go without sleep from Monday to Friday, working out 80 or more exercises around the clock for 104 hours. man onto the jgBR bOw. Suddenly the peasant at the tiller heaves a grenade into the Navy boat,' and the bandaged man leaps 4o a maqh|ne gun to fire at' the second PBR. The slough rocks with gunfire. ‘‘We’re trying to make sure they get a round-trip ticket,” says Lt. Roy Boehm, head of the River Patrol Craft Division of the Naval Inshore Operat-sions Trainlhg Center at Mare Island, 30 miles southwest. Day and night, Boehm and other IflMlietdrS, all Vietnam veterans, harass their student crewmen who live for a week in a muddy base camp among the reeds, muskrats and mosquitoes of the delta formed by the Sacramento and San Joaquin riv-. ers at the upper end of San Francisco Bay. 30 MILES AN HOUR Floating mines—small charges of TNT—explode geysers of brackish water as trainees gun their little jet-driven river patrol boats at speeds up to 30 miles an hour through tor--tuous shallows in simulated rescue" of a downed U.S. pilot. Ambushes albng the reed-screened ‘Tf they can react when they’re dead tired,” says • Boehm, ‘‘they can react anytime.” After graduation, the river police fly to the Philippines and two days pf jungle training, then head for Vietnam. EXPERT ON VIETS Boehm, whose 25-year career with Navy' special commando forces extends from two-man submarine operation to parachuting and skin diving, haa. become an expert on the Vietnamese, their religion, language and customs. In one of Boehm’s exercises, two patror boats encounter a Vietnamese sampan, a mock-up complete with square crinfson sail and coolie-hatted peasants. One PBR—Patrol Boat, Rivra-—draws alongside while the other circles, guns trained on the two craft. A peasant at the tiller of the sampan asks for aid for his wounded companion who slumps on the deck with a bandaged head. Two sailors lift the injured Boehm, observing from a motor launch 100 yards away, moves in for a debriefing. He pulls no punches as he points out mistakes. - “You’ve got to learn to react within two seconds,” he insists. They do, Boehm says. “By Thursday they don’t trust anybody.” y Th^ training is modified jw “Charley” — the Vietcong — changes tactics, according to observations from newly returned instructors and “after' action” reports aired to the training center. The Suisun area facilities are also "used for researching an-swers to Vietnam problems, Boehm says. “The function of the PBR is to police the river, not fight it out with shore parties,” stresses Capt. C. R. Johnson, the center’s commanding officer. “The men learn to"calculate the risk and take it only when they have' the odds. If ambushed, they fire back immediately, then get the hell out of the kill zone.” Jolhison’s training command includes a second phase of river warfare, assault forces, the first the United States has had’since the Mississippi Flotilla was djs-banded after the Civil War. River Assault Flotilla 1, River Support Squadron 7 Was commissioned last September to support U.S. combat troops in the Mekong. Working with the 2nd Brigade of the 9th Infantry Division in Vietnam, the joint Army-Navy force is known as the Mobile River Force—MRF. The MRF won a major victory over a 409-raan Vietcong battalion June 19-20, killing 169, with 28 Americans killed, according to a U.S. Command spokesman. The river battle took place in the delta 17 miles south of Saigon. A naval river, assault squadron can lift an entire infantry battalion and elements of an artillery battery into combat, and then provide blocking and fire support for the GIs after they debark. River assault and patrol bgat training lasts 11 weeks, the first two to four weeks in classrooms of the Pacific Fleet Amphibious Training Command in Corona-Ro, Calif., before moving to Mare Island. Continuing assault classes have leveled out to about 150 trainees while the patroKboat classes number 70-80, most of them volunteers. Why do SO many people buy used cars from Ford Dealers? A recent used car s^dy tells why. Here’s what you said: You needed'a‘car you could afford. Your previous qar ■■ was worn out. Or a member of your family needed a car. 2, You bought frofn us becausethe price was right and the ‘ deal was good. We had the car you were looking for. You had been thoroughly satisfied in dealing with us in the ■past. ■ • ' "a price I could afford," and "reliable^ dependable transportation." • ^ Did you shop other dealers? Yes, oyer half of you did before coming to us^d buying frofn us. (88% of you shopped other-make^alers!) 3. You bought the make of used car from us that had given you previous satisfaction—and again, the price of it was right for you. 4. in look)rig for your used car, you came to us seeking "good mechanical condition," "good overall condition," What was the greatest help to you in buying your used car? The biggest percentage of you said, "the'^Ford Dealer.’'!'XDther aids: "past experience," and "newspapers." For Used Car you can afford... for the used car you can trust, s^ee The LAiely Ones...your Ford Dealers f-. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD, (NC.—630 Oakland Avenue, Pontiac, Mich. Save Now on World’s Most Glamorous Awnings! GIANT SIZE - lO'xir'^tA N PATIO AWNING y White awning with Styleline Color Panel. 13 P panel colors to choose from. Three supporting p columns. Guaranteed to hold any snow li « Wood-grain aluminum rafters. ■ BUY Nomme Y«|^«f r • Now tviryoni ran own a Iwollfal—‘ ^ Potiollliiri'soniforivirybudgotl ...the MggnifktRt, totally NEW oufitum m ROOM Let us convert your open porch into a useful, much needed extra room. Call for ALUMINUM SIDINS andTRlM is by fa/your Best Buy! There is ^difference! Come in, let us shar you why custom-fitted Sun control Siding and Trim is bv far vour BEST BUY I COME IN . . . OR CAU US OPEN SUNDAY 10-6 P.M. DAILY 8 8 P.M. Side I Detroit | Downriver |Birmingham-Southfield| Toledo |P., PRaL; n ie.rnoa i a convenient time Jar ousinessrnen and area residents to show associates and guests around Meadow Brook. Dr. A. R. Young (left) of East Hammond Lake Drive has with him, a houseguest, Oran Vaughn of Searcy, Ark. Mrs. Grover J. paylor (left) and Mrs. H. B. Littell, both of Rochester, look with mild curiosity upon an iron and brass tree in the Scholar SUop window. The unusual metal sculptures are a feature of the shop. Margo Weiberg, Scholar Shop worker, that are just fun to hav^The shop is open prior helped a cgworker untangle a new stock of capez to performances at the^^vilion, during intermis-shell wind chimes. A wide variety of article^ is on sions and one hour following performances as well sale, ranging from ^oom accent pieces to things as Wednesday. ’ . . This' is .a teverse of the view,^ that .accompanies ouidoor.du’nch- tOns on the terrace.'Often bridge . ..-^ games qr« starts.Mre"dhd on a Valter Poole, associate conductor of the Detroit Symphony While rel^arsals are closed to the public, i^time fir laughter nowAind then, it is still hard wihdless day the orchestra can Orchestra, follows the score as the orchestra does its weekly Wednes- this candid photpgrc^h gives an idea of what takes work. Conduct^^itten Fihrling leads the musicians be heard at practice. day morning rehearsing.im$he Howard C. Baldwin Memorial PaOilion. place when the audience is missing.- While there through their scores. vT .. >'■■■' ■■ ■ t ' .. , • ....... '■ ; ■ - '' - .\ B—2 THE rOXTIAC PRESS, I RIDAV, 31LY 21, 1967 Hairpin Buttons Keep a package of hairpins In the sewing basket; When you remove buttons,; from worn garments, thread them on a hairpin, twi.sting the ends of the pin to hold them there and drop them into the button box. This keeps all buttons of one kind together and makes if i possible to see at a glance if you have enough of a certain | kind of button for a new garment. ________■ Closet Organizer^ I More'than five-million older] |U.S. citizens live ]n poverty andi more than two million must be-| I pend on welfare, government 1 statistics, show. I WheneMroning a little girl’s school dresses, use a snap clothespin-and snap onto the hanger matching hafr fiblidns and socks. When ironing a boy’s shirt, snap his socks on the same hanger. DEAR ABBY: I am 14 years] point about Southern hospitality, old and have always lived in a]but don’t repeat a mistake some She Appreciates 'Old Southern Hospitality' small town in South Carolina. Last summer my family and I spent our summer vacation, in New York and Philadelphia. • Down here in South Carolina everyone is friendly to everyone else and when you pass a person on the street you say, “Hi.” This isn’t just in our little town, but all over the South. If you do that up North, the looks and stares you get Sack show that northerners aren’t used to it. northerners make by judging a whole region by the actions and reactions of a few. DEAR ABBY: When a man is being introduced to another man how can he keep from haying his hand crushed by the handshake? Some men are so intent on impressing you with their power and friendliness they practically break yditr. fingers. It’s,tough on a surgeon whose fingers must DEAR ABBY: I Sm 13 years old. My brother is married" and has three children. Before they were born, liiy parents used to love me. Now I could drop dead, and they wouldn’t even notice I was gone. My mother is always telling peoplp all about her DARLING grandchildren and what they do, but she never says a word about Maybe I’m prejudiced, but l r^l^in their sensitivity. Thank never reaUy appreciated South-1 ern hospitality until I went| * S. R-, M. D. North. I think the North is a nice] DEAR S. S. R., M. D.: A doc-place to. visit, but I wouldn’t’for should know that an ounce want to live there. Anyone care of'prevention is worth a pound to comment? | of cure. When extending your SOUTHERN GIRL I hand, warn, good humoredly, DEAR GIRL: You have al”Easy, friend — I need that to operate with.” He’ll get the me. My parents just don’t care a bit about me, Abby. Please print this and tell me what to do. NOT LOVED DEAR NOT; Your parents love you just as much as they ever did, but ■ now that their grandchildren have come along they have others to Ibve as well. But,that doesn’t mean they love you less. DEAR ABBY: A rather^np-barrassing thing happened to me and T need h(hne advice. The other day I received a very appreciative note from a friend of mine, thanking me for a baby gift I did not send. The worst part of it is, I never got around to sending her baby anything, although I had been meaning to. Should I let this person know of her mistake? Or should I ignore the whole thing ^o she’ll never know I-didn’t send anything? B\ DEAR B: Let your friend know at once that a mistake has been made. Then she can try to find out who sent the gift and thank her for.it. DEAR ABBY: For thh^bther who wanted to give her new-] born child the same name she] given to a previous child ‘ who had died in infancy: I am sure it has been done by many who were eager to pass their name on to a member of the younger generation. One famous case comes to mind: The late Franklip Delano Roosevelt named a xon “Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr.” but that child did not survive. Later another son was born, and he was given that name. MISS A.M.F. Worn With Pride by Generations of Brides The Store Where Quality Countt hi!pau£l CO. COIFFURE PAR ANNE BE At TV .SALON W. Walluii Dravion Plains 67.’t-07l2 >4)RAYTON WIG DlSTRlhUTORS S5AME LOCATION 67;i-:ho8 JULY & ALL HAND TIED WIGS GET FREE STA LING AND LUGGAGE. ALSO FREE LUGGAGE WITH MACHINE WEI TED, iliilnl, iiiid tliv Miii'iiiiir Vi i-fl. Vi ill a (if Drayton Vfi)’ Dislribiil IM'inilcly liot! Drayton Sk'ifs iirnnit the hair ami HCulp tohrrathe aalurally liecaUhe their flhe hettinx in c.ons wear’ healthier after repeated wrariii|{s, clemeiiU that dry (lut the hair. The fineat hand tied ventilated wixa range in price around one hundred dellani more thah the machine weft wiga. This ia due to labor coata. The hand tied wig ia constructed of 100% human hair, completely hand tied by crochet ingnmall groupHiifhalromo each coHier of the wig haae. Elaine Ruth Keeley has become the fiancee df Luther Schultz Jf. Their parents are Mr. -and Mrs. Arthur Keeley of Waldon Road, Independence Township and Mr. and Mrs. Lut her Schul tz of Fow I e f Street. She is a student at Pontiac Business Institute and he a student at Oakland Community College. Terry Good for Outdoors Floral - splashed terrycloth remains the favorite pillow and pad. covering for outdoor furniture. Its out-doors-y look, its Inviting softness, and its repeated launderability keep it In the Number One spot for popularity. An attractive current trend is to buy extra yardage to run up into sheaths for fetftinine members of the family-. Terry has another popular advantage — no ironing needed. After being machine-washed in soap or detergent suds and fluffed in a dryer,Vit is immediately ready to add colorful brilliance to porch or pool-side. A new portable data i)roce«%, , ing unit small endbgh tb; be installed in police squad cars has been developed. --'f :■ I (jJjbuiJbJku (UaMb- tlMot ouvsl, umami cl (md/L ojj lyaut^ tIL IVOU ^ A4 IfLuAj OK/ OxeL mJo 4(AJUjUm dAtMii- ootLd. jdLcJut. dLMMfA mA tuAXLmtJk. (JUmam30tc> f (XlL to Oar Pontiac Mall Store Open. Every Evening to 9 P,^M< 309 N, Telegraph Rd., Pontiac Oar Birmingham Store Open Thars, end Erf. to 9; Set. to 5:30 300 Pierce St., Birmingham . o S' V/i- *7k/.Vs.s... THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. JULY 21. 1967 B—3 ilmgsilepSHn Serving^ An EngHsli Type BUFFET BRUNCH Every Sunday Between 10 A.M. A 2 P.M You will find a variety at this fabulous buffet that will deliahl the most faatidioui ap-petita. Sunday Dinners Served From 12 Noon to II P.M. ala carte 'til 1 a.m. Midwest 4-1400 JOrdan 4-5144 Appointments now being taken for our lovely new”" HUDSON’S PONmc'^ ^ COIFFURES AMERICANA^ BEAUTY SALON Call Direct C82-7400 /Customer SmiceArea, Lower LeveU ^Htidson’s Pomiac in the Pontiac Mallf Med^ow Brook Festival I Opening Night PulIs FullCrowd By BERNICE ROSENTHAL The magic name of “Van Cliburri” drew a capacity audience to Meadow Brook last night. In a season which seems to be devoted to extremely gifted young artists, Clibum did hot measure up tehis predecessors. His Brahms Second Piano Concerto :^as letter-perfett technically, his tempi precise, his pedalling sparse and clear. But beyond the notes he did not go. The emotional impact, the poetic introspec-tipn, the soulful qualities of this great concerto were lost in a sea of pounding harsh notes, which were loud without depth ahd jirilliant without inner support. WITHDRAVi^ He seemed withdrawn, and without communication either with the orchestra or with the audience in the first and second movements. In the, third, there was some attempt at sensitivity and feeling, and the fourth movement,, although a trifle too rapid for comfort; unfolded with greater understanding and delicacy than any of the others. It was a performance which left much to^be desired inter-pretatively. The orchestral accompaniment, under Sixten Ehrling’s direction, was full, sensitive,- Cradle-Carrier A new cradlette is just what mother orders. It’s a cradle-carrier that makes a mother’s daily ritual of holding, transporting, feeding and rocking the baby easier. It is made of heavy-duty polyethylene and lined with a thicky, vinyl-covered foam pad-. VAN eUBURN ' and ias emmitmally siiisfylhf as it could be, under the circumstances. 1^ The plaudits tor the evening, go to Ehrling and the orchestra. Never have they played with such unity, such intensity of feeling and such excellent taste. Contemporary William Kraft’s “Concerto Grosso” featured the quartet playing of Mischa Mischakoff, violin, Albert Tipton, flute. Halo Bab-ino, cello and Charles Sirard, bassoon. While the music itself was not particularly inspiring, the quartet of orchestra members played the solo parts with depth, fluency and interpretative meaning way beyond the confines of the .music. The interplay between orchestra and solo quarte was ^ E^u^inj the orchestra. Allan Chase, trombone principal, was soloist in the World Premiere of Eugene Zador's Concerto for Trombone and Orchestra While Zador was aware of the limitations of the instrument, and refrained from composing anything that it could not handle, he did not make use of the great possibilities of the instrument either; Chase, a master of the trombone, did a remarkably fine job with the music at hand. His exquisite tone and beautiful sense of interpretation more than made up for the inadequacy of the music. Berwald’s nlneteentTh century Tragic Overture to “Estrella de Soria” opened the concert with verve and animation. This rarely heard composttlrtHTakih in nmny respects to Weber & Berlioz, is an overture in the grand, early .ramantic manner and is delightful to play and to hear. Saturday’s concert will feature Cliburn in-the popular Third Concerto By Rachmaninoff. Gordon Staples will be soloist in Berg’s Vioiln Concerto, and the orchestra will be Symphony.” Towei Serves as Crib Pad Here’s an idea worth trying for baby’s summertime comfort: ' Spread a large turkish towel between a' plpstiq f rib mattress and sheet. The absorbent towel soaks up perspiration and other wetness to keep baby more comfortable. The towels cost nothing extra in money, and add virtually no extra laundry time or .trouble as they can be thrown in with any normal washing machine load. BARGAINS GALORE Now is the time to Save during ELLIOTT'S WAREHOUSE SALE! V CARPETING GALORE Prices To Fit Eysfyone’s^; Budget Along with th« Bargains listed here, vail colors, oil Styles. SEE THEM ALL TODAY! 5390 DIXIE HWY. -WATERFORD OPEN MONDAY and FRIDAY TILL 9.P.M. FE 4-D98r 623-0025 Mr. and Mrs. Albert Cox of Jdmm Road, Orion Township, an-.nounce the engagement of their daughter, Linda Bermdette ,io *^^6kard h. Martin. He is the son of Harlan H. Martin of LaFollette,, Tenn.^ and ■Mrs. Mary G. Martin of Rockwood, Term. Oct. 28 vows are planned by the pair. The bride-elect is a former 0 ak I and Community College student. C00L« Beaujty Care Designed ■ to Fit Your Needs RANDALL’S SHOPPE 88 Wayne Street FE 2-1424 M- PON T I A C llie* number of men employed; n seafaring jobs by* the U.S. | merchant marine reached 57,367 i on the first day of 1967, an in-1 crease of about 48,000 over the I beginning. oF 4966. I JulSMt Training for Business Careers Since 1896 - NEW TERM BEGINS JULY 24_ Day School — Evening Division 18 W, Lawrence FEderal 3-7028 Summer ClearClice • Swimwear • Sportswear • Handbags • Dresses Suits uressf VRuU \. July -Sole. Andrew (feller,. . . . DeLisor \Caressa-Mr. Easton . Town & Country Dress . . reg.to$i6 California Cobblers Stack Cdpezio ............ reg. to $18 Penobscot-Cover Girl California Cobblers reg. to $30 18’° reg. to $22 1390 reg. to $17^ 1190 reg. to $16 8’° reg. to $14 890 reg. to $18 890 6’° "ENTIRE STOCK Of JTALIAN SANDALS HURON at TELEGRAPH THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. JULY 21. 1967 This makeshift- clinic in Vietnam' ojfefs the most modern drugs and vaccines needed to combat disease. The help needed to administer them IS in short supply. The U. S. Department of State has put out a call for the urgently ^needed civilian help. Single women who can quali-■ fy as secretaries or registered nurses may contact the Public Af-.fairs Office, Room 709, Veterans Meniorial Ruilding through Saturday, for information. ROMAIfCB bf BLCE . . Thl» lovely creation comblnei the elegance of Cavalier with a amart.^new motif ol white leavei on a beautiful turquoise rim. Accents of-light pink, and silver lines further enhance' this, one of the most desired dinnenvare patterns on the market today. The discrinUnating hostess Will approve its modest price. ' 16-Piece Set........* . . »8« DIXIE POTTERY S281DKieHw7. 623.0911 The lowest number of measles cases'in the past 21 years was reported in the* United States in 1966 — 202,886 cases or 25 per cent fewer than the 1965 total. WANT TO SELL LAWN MOWERS, POWER MOWERS, BOATS, ROLLER SKATES? ... USE A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 332.8181. LAST 5 WS OF OUR FLOOR SAMPLE CLEARANCE! jEbstern's Bell Ringers Back From BritishJTou r LAST CHANCE TO Save 20% to 50% o ON sofas’ chairs, tables, lamps, ■ DINING RO(5m and BEDROOM FURNITURE % Your la^t chance to save so much on selected floor samples of our quality linesj^f furniljire. All the items that have been advertised in the last 4 w/eeks are sale tagged for qoidrclearance during the last 5 days. Parking ________Decorotor ServiCf Completing a three-week tour of Enfj^nd and Scotland, the 18 Bell RiBgers^from Eastern Junior High ScVol, with their director, WiluL^ Coff-ing, and eight chaperones, ve-turned early this week, tired but very appreciative of the opportunity afforded them by the citizens ■^f the Pontiac area to participate in the American Festival in Britain, sponsored by the Restoration Arts Theatre of Detroit. * ★ ★ The Festival had as its center, the Lake District of northern England, one of the lavliest scenic areas in the British Isles. Mountains, lakes, stone fences, and small villages were common sights throughout the area, along with 'many historic buildings, some dating back to the 12th century. The Bell I|ingers gave 14 concerts (Wring the ten days of the festival. Pmgrams were given in ■ schools, .churches, a YWCA, a town hall, on lawns, in the courtyard of a hotel, and even in the market place of one town. In alt cases, they were enthusiastically and graciously received, as their style of bell-ringing is not used in England. REVIEW Quoting from one of the area newspapers, the Lancashire Evening*Post; “The principal concert in this year’s American Festival in Britain, staged in the Kendal Town Hall, must have been the best free concert ever held ih Kendal. An enthusiastic audience of over 200 were treated to a three-hour exposition of the marvellously high standards of music, song, and dance of the American visitors from Michigan. A team of 18 handbell ringers from Eastern Junior High School, Pantiac, with a range of Junes from “Parade of the Wociden Soldiers’’ to a Rachmaninoff p i-anfl 6 classic, delighted the audience with their teamwork, easy precision, and enchanting tone-like the bells of a fairy cathedral. It was a memorable evening which should go a long way to forging Anglo-American links to which this festival is dedicated.” RECEPTIONS - GROUP GATHERINGS, ETC. Special Sunday Rates CHAMPION BUILDING 101 Walnut, RochMtar iSl-1 HOBART ASHBY Visiting Evangelist HEAR Hobart Asbby Garden City, Michigan CHURCH OF CHRIST Waferford, Township DAN WOODROOF Local Evangelist “LEARNING TO LIVE” CONGREGATIONAL SINGING Led by Dan Woodropf JULY 16-23 SUNDAYS 11 A.M.-6 P.M. WEEK NIGHTS 8 P.M. -SEE- HERALD OF TRUTH In Color 8:30 A.M; SUHDAYS Channel 50 A FEW OF THE SERMOH TOPICS "God Will If We Will" 'Toking A Stand For Right" "What The Blind Man,Saw" « THE PURPOSE IN THIS SERIES OF MEETINGS To share with you the joy of discovering the truth as revealed in the Bible, God's word ... To invite you to study the Bible vrith the view of finding what New Testament Christianity really is . . . To bring to you a plea for restoring the religion as revealed in The New Testament ... To invite others to join us in trying to be just plain Christians. Ifs Sad . . . But True! Budget lerrti', ^ I^tJFUMITU FT E Adjust Insurance to Meet Change • NEW YORK (liPIi - Read any good insurance policies latelyX^ not like curling up with a ^od book. But keeping your life insurance and youp health insurance up to date is one way of avoiding financial difficulty later on, family advisors say. According to the Institute of Life Insurance, a family’s life insurance program should be reviewed periodically, especially when there is a major change in family circumstances — say, birth of a ehHtU-eeqtJtsrtion-of a home, approach of retirement, or a new job. . ^ _ KINNEY'S SHOES ^ For the Whole Family PONTIAC MALL MIRACLE MILE ’^Lou/m PIANO LESSONS V>f>pH KvenihfSB 'Til 9 P.M. I Pontiac Mall Optical & Hearjnrfiid OZITE Kitchen Carpet $d95 *T SR-yd* Resists spotting and stains. Cleans easily, quickly. Adds_ the look of elegance to ony kitchen or both. NOW ROLL BALANCE CLEARANCE SALE! DuPont "501" NYLON Beautiful, heavy famous 501 carpeting in luxurious gold or avocado. NOW ONLY "T sq- Vd- NYLON - special^ Heavy, long wearing nylon , carpeting in youf choice of Blue, Green orfAvocaido. CARPETING LINOLEUM TILE-FORMICA Reg. $6.95 WALTON BLVD., DRAYTON PLAINS ........“......... ■' ■■ $495 T sq.yd. 674^0421 Our Services “ Include • Hearing instrument! custom fitted from $75 • All mokes of hearing instruments serviced and repaired < • Ear melds custom fitted Nathan Lipscn Ctrtifiid Hearine Aid Audieloeisi t>it t.M. tS SiN P.M. DAILY 682-1113 ^ome People Neglect Quality For Price ... At YouTl Get Both Commercial NYLON TWEED Os, vd Hpavy Embossed NYLON* IVlany (Colors Sq. Yd. .J'P Sheared ACRILAN* New Fail Colors . *..Acrilan Fibre by CheinsIrAnd • RUG SAMPLES 3f«r*l S)ee One of the Largest Selections of DRAPERlEjS in This Area! ' * Open Mon. and Fri. Nights ’Til 9-Sat. ’Til 2 I I.OOR COl EIUMi; 3511 Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE 4-7775 -1- THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, JULY 21, 1967 -Junior Editors Quiz on CAMIRI, Bolivia UPl — TWO y (? u n g strangers dressed as farmers showed pp mountainous comer of southeast Bolivia 14 months ago and let it be known they were interested in buying land for a pig farm. The men were brothers; Guide id Roberto Peredo, who described themselves to the local arm population as men of wealth. QUESTION: Why do lightning bugs light up? ★ ★ ★ * ANSWER: Lightning bugs, often called fireflies, are neither true bugs nor flies, but a special kind of beetle. Little heat is given off by the light they produce, which, because of this is called cold light and is of great interest to 'scientists. » The light is formed by a group of five chemicals in the firefly’s body held together by a chemical bontj. ^ But another diemical may be released, which. wiltl>r6ak the bond, allowing the chemicals to react togetherto^oduce light. The flashing lights enable fireflies to fimleach other during the mating season. As the picture shows, these havi: wings, but there are wingiess insects in Europe coiled glowworms, which also give off similar tight. Most dramatic of the fireflies is the large railway beetle of Paraguay in South America. It gives out a red light from one part of the body and green lights from other pafts, suggesting railway signals. It’s fun to chase fireflies and watch them flash inside a jar, but you’re likely to mhke a grab at one and find him winking from some distance away. Latin Reds Now Focusing on Bolivia and the government poses danger._____, TIED TO NEIGHRORS An indication of. long and studied preparation has convinced officials the guerrilla idea and its organizational nucleus came from Cuba and that it is linked to Marxist movements in neighboring Brazil, Argentina, Chile and Peru. After inspecting various sites they purchased a seemingly useless tract of brush land 50 miles north of this oil town. It is deep in a thickly forested mountain district known as the Nancahuazu -pronounced Yahn - kah - wab-zoo-after a small stream that winds through it. This wis to become the cradle of the Bolivian guerrilla movement, the latest flare-up of Cuban-directed, rebel uprisings in Latin America. ists felt compelled to seek dramatic effort i!>and hit upon Bolivia. This causes skeptics to ask: “Why Bolivia, a relatively poor prize?” Prominent Bolivians cite the nation’s position in the heart of South America and “historic antecedents” demonstrating that ideas born in this country have spread. The continent’s fight for liberation from Spain began in 1809 in virtually the samejijoun-tains. The recpgfilzable leaders of the mps^ent are the two stran-who came on the scene ^ore than a year ago. VISITED CUBA The sons of a farmer in northeast Bolivia, the pair joined the! Bolivian Communist party and visited Cuba in 1965-66, probably on training missions. They are in their 20s. Many Bolivians believe the real boss is Ernesto Guevara, the ArgentineKluban revolutionary who disappeared from Cuba in March 1965. Another theory is that in the absence of significant guerrilla gains in Guatemala, Venezuela and Colombia, Marxist strateg- mechanics can be applied to Latin American countries. Gen. Alfredo Ovando, armed forces commander in chief, says plotting fOT the operation may have started in-1964, the year the military overthrew the left-wing Nationalist Revolutionary Movement (NRM) government. Hiis was also .thp year a young French writer and philosophy professor, Regis Debray, visited Bolivia as a lecturer. He made several mwe trips to Bolivia’s interior as an anthropologist in 1965. He came early this year as a newspaperman, he says, to write about the guerrillas. He has denied the charges. The Peredo brothers went on shopping trips to villages, made friends with farmers and peasants. The men wjth them, some say, stayed in the background. of advance agent for the guerrillas. CITES BOOK He cites Debray’s book “Revolution Within the Revolution?” It shows the Cuban revolution’s strange activities, the aripy sent out three patrols in February and March without uncovering anything unusual. A fourth patrol, on a different m i s s i 0 n March 23, stumbled onto the guerrillas, and seven troopers Were killed. Nocturnal traffic to and from the Peredo farm aroused suspicion that a larje-scale cocaine operation was under way. Cocaine is derived from the leaf of the coca planf that people around here chew for energy and to eliminate hunger pains. CEMENT BAGS In late February, farmers reported seeing three large truck-loads of cement bags heading into the forest. Cement is rare Gen. Ovando calls him a softiiw^he arear^here almost all DilRINb EXPO '67 HOSTEL DOWNTOWNNRMfilEAl $400 ^ Army officials believe the | bags were filled with weapons and ammunition. Alerted by the reports of WANTED HighestoPrices Paid' “WePif^^Up” F£ 2-(K2dO Used Auto Parts Available Pontiac Scrap 135 Branch L/.S. to Orbit Observatory to Vastly Hike Sun Data The guerrilla outbreak wasn’t taken too seriously at first, but Bolivian authorities and foreign observers now regard it as at least a drain on the thin finances of this landlocked, long-troubled country. j The guerrillas are not yet considered a threat to the govern-^ . :ment itself, but public indiffer- HUNTSVILLE, Ala, (UPli - MatTs first venture into space^°^3rd both the guerrUlas with an array of high-powc/ed telescopes is expected to tell scientists more about the sun than all the past unmanned spaife probes put together. ; Tlirat’s the forecast of Dr. Ernst Stuhlinger, chief scientist for the manned solar^bservatory planned for launch into earth orbit in 1969 aa^an Apollo follow-on mission. Before the advent of unmanned spacecraft, Stuhlinger ■aid man’* view of the heavens was clouded by the “dirty window of the atmosphere” which blocks out most of the X-ray, gamma ray and ultraviolet and infrared light that tell astronomers most of what they need to know about tbe fun and stars. The orbiting observatory, called the Apollo Telescope Mount (ATM), will for-the first time give scientist-astronauts a stable platform about earth’s atmospheric veil to examine the sun with telescopes designed to photograph and monitor its X-ray and ultraviolet radiation. JUST ONE CALL The five ATM experiments will show how the great disturbances on the sun called solar flares build up and die down and how they affect the layer of gas molecules called the corona around the sun. The experiments will also photograph specific areas of the sun to show the processes going on there and will take unique X-ray pictures of the sun. BEST ’TOOL Man’s best tool to date to examine the sun has been the un- manned Orbiting Solar Observatory (OSO). Tliree of the little satellites have been launched sqccessfully and have provided scientists with valuable new insights on the sun. But the ATM will carry larger and more sophisticated telescopes, will be more accurate and, most important of ail, will have men along to do what the unmanned satellites can- Stuhlinger, who is also director of the research projects laboratory at the Marshall Space Flight Center here, said on’e of the major advantages of having trained observers along is to recognize areas of interest and then train the telescopes at them. He said the astronauts will be equipped with television monitors to actually see what the telescopes are looking at. “We want the astronaut to helm us find the early development of flare areas," Stuhlinger sffi in an interview. He noted that the most interesting areas probably cannot be seen from the ground. Have your own ' supermarket '... holds^ up to 406 lbs. frozen foods! Economy Food Freezer $10 Per Month Big convenieiioe, low costj Uprigh|; design! Fast freezing HAMPYON 825 W. Huron FE 4-2525 BROYHiLL COLONIAL Special Clearance of JFIoor Samples 84” Sofa, Swivel Rocker____ *89“ U0inilLL-6 Wap letlar je Every Piece Scotchguarded • Fitted Arm Covers • New 5 L Cushions • Rugged Spring Base • Sofa-Decked is Self-Decked O Triple Doweled Hardwood Kiln-Dried Frames These Prices Available ( Only at ORCHARD FURNITURE WATERFORD FUEL & SUPPLY 3943 AIRPORT RD. At Waterford Depot 623^2 ORCHARD Phone FE S8114-5 FURNITURE COMPANY 1M OMNARD LAKI AVEHUE • PONTIAC 2 BLOCKS WEST OF SOUTH WIDE TRACK DRIVE OPEN MON. and FR1. FROM 9 to 9 TUFSr, WED., THURS. and SAT. 9 to 5:30 • No Money DowiT • Free Delivery 40 24 Months to Pay • Free Parking • 90 Days jPash • Good Services SHOP IN AIR-CONDITIONED COMFORT DEAL DIRECT ^ PAY AT THE STORE NO FINANCE CO. INVOLVED - B~~6 THE PONTIAC PRESS, JULY 21, 1967 Principal, 4 Indicom Posts Filled Board Makes Appointmenfs Appointments proved to be one of the highlights of last night’s Waterford Township Board of Education meeting. A principal was named for the pr-q30sed Waterford * Mott High School, four key posts ,were filled in the district’s Indicom (individual communications system) "project and board members wpre appointed to various? groups. Daniel J. Hogan, 39, of Sagr Inaw TownsWpjgained the top spot at Waterford-Mott High School for the 1967-68 school year. ' Principal of a high ^hool under development in Saginaw Township and a curriculum consultant, he holds a bache- lor’s and a master’s degree from the University of Detroit and is close to receiving a doctorate at Michigan State University. Hogan also has served with Chippewa Valley Schools and at Servite High School in Detroit. “ SPECIALISTS HIRED * Indicom specialist^ hired last night were Joseph B. Mullen, information services; Robert y. Scrivens, research; Ronald Arnold, curriculum and me- dia'; and Nicholas A. Menghini,| The prpgram Is to be financed technology. • exclusively by the federal gov- ernment through Title HI of the Elementary and Secondary Ed- Scrivens, Arnold and Men-ghini have bech employed with the Waterford Township School District, although Arnold left last school year for another position. Mullen pres-, ently is a reporter at The Pontiac Press. Indicom is a three-year trial program in which the district will experiment in individual instruction with a computer. Architect Drawings Unveiled Architectural-drawings for the Waterford Township School District’s proposed new $222,000 administration building were unveiled at last night’s board of education meeting. ^ The a^inistration will be housed at 1021 Airpor^f^current site of Waterford Center School where classes will be discontinued. The existing three-story and one-floor sections of the school will h^ altered to accommodate administrative offices. A new addition, featuring a two-level board of education meeting room, also will be constructed. The meeting room will provide seating for 148, according to tlfe plans designed by Wakely-Kushner Associates, Inc..,of St. Clair Shores. Capacity iiould be increased to 200. Parking facilities at the structure will accommodate 180 cars, architects libted. The new building will centralize virtually all of the administrative offices which now are scattered in five different locations. The project was approved by school district voters in June 1966 as part of a In other business last night, the board voted to rebid the mechanical trades of the Crescent Lake Elementary School project after it wa§ revealed that the low bidding firm had erred in its proposal submitted July 6. The mistake increased the low bid from $120,100 to $142,430, still about $13,000 less than the next lowest bm. The |)oard, however, awarded architectural and electrical contracts with a few revisions. V The architectural contract for $371,400 went to the Waterford Construction Co. Electrical Maintenance Co. was awarded the electrical contract for $63,109. Also last night, the board authorized the administration to apply for 1967 National Defense Education Act Title III aid for equipment ^nd supplies costing $491,741. Part of the funds is earmarked for built-in equipment for the proposed new Waterford-Mott High School and Crescenr Lake Elementary School. . In other, business, 1967-68 contracts were approved*^for 21 teachers and three resignations were accepted. ucation Act. The project has been given verbal approval by the U.S. Office of Education. School officials are awaiting a final contract. Among those still to be hired for Indicom is a director. Prospects currently are being interviewed. Also hired last night as assistant principal of Pierce Junior High School was David L. Lindsay, director of the Waterford Township IJigh School band and convener of secondary'in-[strumental and vocal music teachers. In other appointments last night,' Board Secretary Mrs. Virginia Ross gained a three-year term with the Community Schoods and Recreation Advis-ij^ ory Board „and Treasurer Don-^ aid W. Porter was named designate to the ‘Oakland Schools Board of Elduc||ion with Lewis S.'Long the'alternate. Michael G. Patterson w^p s named delegate to the Michigan Association of School Boards (MASB). Long was selected as the alternate, John Boardman was named as MASB legislative contact. 'Fair Trip I' Proposals Eased, Still Severe By WILUAM B. MEAD ANN ARBOR (UPI) - A State Bar of Michigan committee today slightly softened its “fair trial” proposals wlHch would curtail public release of information about criminal cases. But it still called for a severe clamp-down. The committee, whose original proposals ^were sharply criticized by newsmen, a federal judge and Michigan’s attorney general, presented its revised recommendations to a meeting of lawyers and Michigan news officials. There was little difference between the new and old proposals. The committee suggested that instead of a court order strictly limiting what policemen could tell reporters about criminal cases, that “law en-; forcement agencies adopt their own regulations governing this matter.” ^ But if -they don’t, the committee said, the courts or Legislature should do it for them. ★ * * The committee,, also elimiriat-. ed its original proposal that' prosecutors, defense attorneys or policemen who break ^e ’ rules be subject to jail on con-—temptuf court citations. COULD BE DISBARRED Lawyers still could be jdis-. barred ,for violatiohs,’ howler. Left Intact were proposals that would prohibit release of information about a defendant’s confession or criminal record and the name or comments of witnesses to a crime; permit secret pretrial hearings; and, under threat of jail, stop court employes from telling newsmen what was -said in a secret court hearing. llie proposals, still to be considered % the State Bar mem-berrfiip,f vare intehded to keep newspapers and broadcast stations from getting information about a criminal ease: wttch, the committee believes, might influehci^jurors and make it' impossible for the defendant to get a fair trial. Newsmen have opposed the' recommendations ’ 6n ' grounds they would interfere with the public’s rifdit to know, promote general policies of offipial se-crecy^ ^ stop the press: from Infomiing'the public about cor- ruption or other flaws in the administration of justice. The proposed rules also would encourage judges to postpone trials; or move them to another Quebec Is Next for De Gaulle ST. PIERRE (AP) - French President Charles de Gaulle cruised through the Gulf of St. Lawrence toward Quebec today, leaving behind the .tiny, eight-island remnant of France’ State Trooper at Pontiac to Be Elevated, Moved A State Police trooper, who has been" stationed at the Pontiac post for five years, will be promoted to the rank of corporal and transferred to Marquette, effective Sunday. He is Duane G. Gerstenber-ger, 32, a 10-year yeteran of the State Police. Prior to his assignment to the Pontiac Post in 1962, Ger-stenberger was stationed at Jonesville. He is the recipient of a meritorious service citation. A native of Brown City, Ger-stenberger graduated from high school at Marietta and attended the university of Michigan for two years, ije is married and has two children. SHOP IN UNION LAKE FDR THESE GREAT VALUES MEWRVA’S Annual Siimmer CLEARME SALE f tor ToU to Teen* Sc In-Between* Cooley Lake Rd. .CHILDREN’S SHOP 363-2333 Daily 10-6, Fri. t PhgHiA Lw Shop 8178 COOLEY LAKE RD. Open Daily 10-9 EM 3-3254 A (Different ^ulUOn. Slim and Trim as a pair of pants can be. Just step in, and pull ^em on. No zippers or fasteners of any kind to bulge, gap, slip or break the lovely lean lines. 100% double knit stretc nylon, snug elos-ticized, waist. Sizes 6 to 20. $10.00. And able. SWIMSUIT SALE! STARTS TODAY EVERY SUIT IN THE STORE • JANTZEN • BOBBIE BROOKS ’• ROSE MARIE REID • COLE 1-PIECE AND 2-PIECE REGULAR $12 to $:iO NOW MANY OTHERS la MB” 1550 Union Lk.Rd. Call 363-7174 Open Daily 9:30 to 9 DEPlt - Sunday 10:10to2:10 STORE It a M CHARGE Michigan oankard SECURITY CHARGE City,’if it appeared likely t|jat|North American empire whose news accounts might influence "'^r II loyalty to him jurors; to be more careful in''"^V be beginning to pay off. I selecting jurors; and to make During his enthusiastically j isure jurors don’t read newspa- 10-hour visit Thursday, per accounts or listen to radio Gaulle acknowledged that there are economic problems on St. Pierre, Miquelon and the six! other drab chunks of..^ench territorial rock off the Newfoundland coast and said France would help. * ★ ★ He made no specific prpmises to the 5,500 islanders, whose chief activity ig cbd fishing, but said France has a duty to them and “will do what she must. He said he was willing to discuss economic development cases m the last month” in [ with their representatives, which jurors were influenced by One economic step the is-news about the case. HeTWused landers are eager to take is to; to disclose them. become a port of call for foreign i I The original proposals were fleets fishing on the nearby i copied from a list being consid- Grand Banks', ff the islands jered by the American Bar As-[were fully outfitted with freez-sociation, and Ellmann satd the ling and storing facilities, the 'changes disclosed today merely I trawlers coilld deposit their followed recent changes in the catch and leave the long^is-ABA’s proposed rules. Itance hauling to other vessels. news during the trial. Atty. Gen. Frank J'.~Kelley has said Michigan needs no bans on release of information. Kelley said there is not a single case in Michigan history in which a defendant was cPnvict-ed because of news accounts. But William M. Ellmann of Detrbit^ president of the State Bar, said he could cite “15 KITCHEN CARPET You probably hove seen this new revolutionary carpet advertised os high at $12.95 sq. yd. Karen's, following their price-slashing tradition, have reduced the price of this kitchen carpet to: IMPORTANT SPECIFICATIONS: T—Exceeds FRA Miiiimum Standards 2- Extreme Hi-ODnsity, Microtuft construction 3- A non-wovon Polypropylene hree morning trains to down- ^ Three morning trains to downtown Detroit, three back at night. Guaranteed work and homo time arrivals. Longest time: 1 hour from Pontiac, less from intermediate points. (Beat that by car!) Commuting Grand Trunk costs less than driving, is quicker, no strain! Why drive? Call Grand Trunk Western’s Passenger Sales Oftico, 962-2260. GRAND TRUNK WESTERN THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, JULY 21, 1967 "" *** " ^ h i ^ I 1 In his headlong, rush to alter the natural world, man has wiped out many wild species. Passenger pigeons once formed such huge flocks as to darken the sky—50 years ago,, the last one died in an Ohio zoo. The Labrador duck, giant aea mipk, great auk and m^ny other life forms have passed from existence since Europeans landed on America's shores., Many other creatures are on the thin edge _ of oblivion; some can be saved, others perhaps not, but all of them deserve a chance if only because man cannot be the only living animal on earth. The bald eagle, this country’s national bird, is in jeopardy. In a recent year, there were only 230 active eagle nests in the prime nesting areas of the sopth; only*96 nests were successful in hatching young. The reason is being sought. Alligators, once found throughout our Southeast and west to the Rio Grande, wear , skins that are valuable for leather items. Now, they exist only in Southeast coastal waters, in small numbers. Hawaii has suffered greater losses to et-tinction than any other State. Sixteen species of native birds have gone, about 20 others are in danger, including the nene or Hawaiian goose. The nene lives on lava slopes of Mauna Loa and Mauna Kea volcanoes, 5,000 to 8,000 _ ^feet above aea lev^, an area so arid the webs of their feet have almost disappeared. The timber wolf, once ranged across much of North America. In the “lower 48” states, they are now found only in isolated sections along Lake Superior and on Isle Royale in the Lake, although still relatively plentiful in Canada and Alaska. ^ The best known endangered creature in the United States is t|ie whooping crane. There w'ere only 14 whoopers left when the Bureau of Sport Fisheries and Wildlife began keeping records in 1938. Their numbers painfully increased to 43 in 1966. Because of their 2*600-mile migration between nesting grounds in Canada and their wintering area on the Texas Gulf, whoopers are difficult to protect. The Department of the Interior hopes to save endangered species of wildlife through ^ research, development of sanctuaries, and other measures provided‘T)y the Endangered Species Preservation Act of 1966. 78 m^am-, mals, birds, ;repti'les, and fishes have been selected by Interior for special attention under this new law. Endangered Wildlife Species An albino bison, now dead, roams the National Buffalo Range with another of normal color. Mammals (14) Indiana Bat' Delmarva Peninsula Fox Squirrel Timber Wolf Red Wolf San Joaquin Kit Fox Grizzly Bear Black-Footed Ferret Florida Panther Caribbean Monk Seal Guadalupe Fur Seal Florida Manatee or Florida Sea Cow Key Deer Columbian White-Tailed Deer Sonoran Pronghorn Birds (36) Hawaiian Dark-Rumped Petrel Hawaiian Goose (Nene)^ Aleutian Canada Goose \ Tule White-FrontcB Goose \ Laysan Duck Hawaiian Duck (or Koloa) Mexican Duck California Condor Florida Everglade Kite ; (Florida Snail Kite) •-Hawaiian Hawk (or li) Southern Bald Eagle Attwater’s Greater Prairie Chicken Masked Bobwhite Whooping Crane Yuma Clapper Rail Hawaiian Common Gallinule Eskimo Curlew Puerto Rican Parrot American Ivory-Billed Woodpecker Hawaiian Crow (or Alala) Small Kauai Thrush (Puaiohi) Nihoa Millerbird Kauai Oo (or OoAa) ............... Crested Honeycreeper (or Akohekohe) Akiapolaau Kauai Akialoa Kauai Nukupuu Laysan Finchbil! (Laysan Finch) Nichoa Rnchbill (Nihoa Finch) Ou . Palila . - Maui ParrotbHI ■ Bachman's Warbler ■ Kirtland’s Warbler Dusky Seaside Sparrow ■ Cape Sable Sparrow Reptiles and Amphibians (6) American Alligator Blunt-Nosed Leopard Lizard San Francisco Garter Snake Santa Cruz Long-Toed Salamander Texas Blind Salamander Texas Blind Salamander Black Toad, Inyo County Toad Fishes (22) Shortnose Sturgeon Longjaw Cisco Piute Cutthroat Trout Greenback Cutthroat Trout Montana Westslope Cutthroat Trout Gila Trout Arizona (Apache) Trout Desert Dace Humpback Chub Little Colorado Spinedace MoapaDace Colorado River Squawfish /Cui-ui Devils Hole Pupfish Comanche Springs Pupfish Owens River Pupfish Pahrump Killifish , Big Behd Gambusia Clear Creek Gambusla Gila Topminnow Maryland Darter Blue Pike k. ■ The Attwater Prairie Chicken, Texas.^ * Tbe grey wolf-still fairly common In Alaska. .. .r B—8 THE POXTIAC PRKSS. FRIDAY. JULY 21, 1967 'Someone Fooling on Arms Sales Abroad' .. ROCKET LAUNCHER - U. S. Marine* | gipve out toward the demilitarized zone be’t-! hind an ONTOS, a heavy tank mounted with six 105mm rocket launchers. The area, some Ha, has been the Scene of heavy fight-|n recent yeeks between the Leather-and North Vietnamese -regulars. This 20 miles northwest of the Marine outpost of unit |vas taking part jn Operation Hickory II. ■ ^ V' :.....-- BUY, SEIL, TRADE . . . USE PClNTIAC PRtes WANT ADS! WAS^IINGTON (AP)Rep.'the Export-Import _______________________ Henry Reuss says what the gov-J charter and hike its operating Ijernment tells the public about; authorization 1^ $4.5 billion. Harms sales to foreign naftonsl • * * * I differs from the secret testimo-1 Reuss , said the committee I ny given Congress. j should reconsider the Export- \ “Someone is trying to fool I both the public and the United [States ■ Congress,” Reuss, D-Wis., said Thursday, shortly , after the State Department j made public portions of secret testimony before a congressional committee. Reuss accused the Defense Department of trying to hide the federal Export-Import Bank’s role in providing credit'for massive foreign purchases of U.S.-produced arms. .* * ★ He said when Pentagon offi-1 cials testified before a ciosedj of the House BanSkingj Committee Monday, they insist-j ed figures they gave on armsi loans be kept setret. ‘DON’T JIBE’ Some of the figures madei ' public by the State Department! don’t jibe with statistics the| congressmen were supposed to' keep secret, said Reuss, a member of the committee. j jAfter hiring the Pentagon; testimony, the, committee ap-iproved legislation to continue Bank’slImport Bank legislation to re- Export-Import Bank” he said. oroffnrt -cnU/a ^ ... solve the discrepancies. “Only a complete and open revelation of these figures can restore- the confidence of the public and the Congress in the The Export-Import Bank is tpo valuable to this nation to allow it to be ruined by shabby deception about its involvement in arms sales around the world.” MoreCom^ort Wearing FALSE TEETH To TjverCiiBiB. dlBcomfort when dentures slip, slide or loosen, Just sprlnXle s little PASTBaiTH on your plates. PASTEETH holds dentures firmer. You eat better, feel more comforUble. PASTEETH Is alkaline —won’t sour.Helps check plate odor. Dentures that fit are essential to health. See your-dentist regularly. Qet PASTEETH at all drug counters. tosKBur ■l^^FAMiyrDEPARTM^TSTO^ JUST A ftW You’ll HHO! CVTEQTT* ivMtejsaie! nmtETOir lqng-life ISTARTSlggAi^ HnUN SHEETS 63"x99*' installaoon (Our newLSurprise pacKage.) If you're in the market for a new.,dryer, range or water heater, you're in for a pleasant surprise. Edison has just announced free installation On newly-purchased electric dryers, ranges and* water ^heaters... The installation, of course, has toTie on Edison lines. And it takes in homes up to and'including four-family residences. The only thing not included is dryer venting. Otherwise, installation is free of charge. :v lT“may also juiT^rise yoirto'^tearn tha^^ repair service. No ^ charge for electricai operating parts, no charge for labor if your electric range, ^yetor water heater needs service. ____' Free installation, no-»charge repair servicf. Makes quite a package. Call Edison or your dealer. Edison lowere the cost Of an eie^^c Mg. \ THE PONTIAQ PRESS, FRIDAY, JULY 21, 1967 B~9 'Angry Congress Mood Felf By CARL P CamMng facilities are available. Last year’s championsMpa produced titles- for four Cass Lake 1^ Club members: Harry and Kathy Messier (rtten’s and girls’ jumpir^), Shirley Gilnert (women’s slalom, jumping and over-^ .Jitle)'", and Doug Wren (boys jttinpihg), - HAGGERTY REDWOOD FENCE HEMCUABTERS HAS IT! RAFT $3350 Completely built-up 5/4"x6" W. Pine decking-Zincol Treotedjfor longer life— This Raft Floats Like Foam on STYROFOAM* • Permanently Buoyant • Will Not Rust GET MORE DIVING FUN With (^OTw^t.BOARD roquiret no installation, non-corroti .anomulud matol or i)on-tkid Scotch Trad' EPOXY ENAMELED ONLY 59” NEW IMPROVED DIVIHQ RAFT UDDERS Sturdy, Welded Tubular Steel WITH THREE 5/4 X 4” REDWOOD STEPS Only »16« Don’t Fence with poor quality.. Use Redwood. 6'x4'vBatket Weave ... ST.95 and up 8‘x4' Bosket Weave ... $9.95 and up 6‘xS‘ Boskot Weave ... $9.95 and up S'x5' Boskot Weave $11.95 add up GENUINE HAND-SPLIT WESTERN RED CEDAR RAIL 2 Rail sections—10 ft.. .$1.30 ea. 3 Rail sections—10 ft.. .$9.95 ea. ALL ABOVE SiCTIONS INCLUDE I HEAVY MORTISED POST„ Screen Doors Combination door with uniquo panel design. .Gloss, screen inserts. 0nly^29^> ONLY $-|ja5 CLOSEOUT SPECIAL California RANCH TYPE RAIL REG. 7.25 NOW $6.35 3 Rail 8 Ft. 4x4 poita hove reUndod topt and ore mortited to accept 5/4" rails..’Treated with redwood' ftoin ready to'hike. 1 pottjncluded with sectiona. FOR LANDSCAPING AND EMBANKMENTS SOLID ROUGH^AWN REDWOOD . 4"x6"x6' . . $2.17 ea. 3"x8"x6' . . $2.39 4"x6"x8' . . $2.89 3"x8"x8' . . $3.19 ea. CASH AND CARRY GARDEN REDWOOD 1”S«-4s.........8‘/4c lln.ft. 4’'x6”> Rough.... 38V^c lin. ft. 3"xr’-Rough ..... 42c lin. ft. 2»x4"-S4S .......110 lin. ft. 2”x6»-Rough ... .ISVze lin. ft. 2»x8">Rough.... .24V^e Hn. ft. CLEARANCE SALE Redwood Picnic Tables 6-FOOTTABLE With 2 Side Benches REG. $24.75 NOW K.D. Only $17.95 Buy Now ttid Save WMIe SIsok Letts! ROUND UMBRELU TABLE SET roble l> d?"” In diameter TABLE vlth 3 banchei. Curved te TOPS BUILT-UP RED. $29.15 Now K.D. Only *24.95 Perguet Top Table and Chairs 34" Square Tap Tabt* TABLE with Attractive Chairs. Built up and finished > Certan Packaged $1.86 CHAIRS $4.85 Y Lumber & Supply Co. "MICHIGAN'S MOST MODERN LUMBER MART" Rot. W.MopIt and Pontiao Trail MA 4-^1. 2055 HAGGERTY RD. ^ WALLED UKE Open 7:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. — Fri. Alite to 9 p.m. — • .Sat, 7:30,a.m. to 5 p.m. ^ THE PONTlXc PRESS, FRIDAY; ^ULY 21, 1967, Depth Concern Continue Daily at Wisner Field There’s a ne<^'pleader in the city’s tight JJJational League After ime week of training, head coach Tom Tracy of the Pontiac Firebirds is p 1,6 a s e d with sotae of the candidates vying for positions with the MFL team, but has expressed concern over the shwtage in numbers. softball rac# and the battle for the No. 2 spot in the American loop continues. The Firebirds have been working out at the Wisner Stadium practice fi^ld all this week at 7:00 p.m. [After tonight they will resume drills next Tuesday at the same time. Freehan .....\ 282 35 77 We’ll get a good starting unit together but we’ve got to jfind some depth,” said Tracy. Tracy welcomed several Veterans of MFL play to camp including one of the top pass receivers in the league, Jim Stewart, who formwly played with Lansing. Ed McQueen, kicking specialist and end, who suffered a leg injury with Pontiac last year, reported in good condition Tuesday. The Firebirds meet Ypsilanti, August 12th at Rochester in a benefit game sponsored by the Rochester Rotary club. New Division Leader in City Softball Ploy J. A. Fredman^lLS) ^oved into the top spot, in the National loop with'a 17-4 decision oyer Timberlanes - 1 (6-8), while Timberlanes-2 (10-3) dropped into the second slot after a 9-7 setback’ at the hands of Huron Bowl (^7).’ ■ ^ " Tiger Averages By Tht AitocitM P BATTIN& AB R Tl HI ...... 235 5) 77 ■\^4I ‘ ft} 7t 33 73 37 85 . 10 12 Stanley ....... m 16 3» 16 346 .242 IP ERA (cLain . . 10 >Qdres .. Marshall . Aguirre .. Fight Cast Completed LOS ANGELES (AP) - Jefry Quarry completed the cast for the ^avyweight boxing title eliminations when he agreed to meet Floyd Patterson again Oct, 28. In AL action. Town & Country (12-6) gained a little ground in the battle for second by stopping Locpl No. 594 (11-8), 3-1, behind the five-hit pitching of Roger Reynolds. In an exhibition outing, Ron’s Roost scored three times in the top of the seventh to down Bob’s Bar, 6-5. In Waterford Men’s softball acii«^ last ni^t Clarkston Appliance (9-11) rolled past Me-Annally’s Auto Sales (6-14) by score of 6-1. Rev. Harold Hughes hurled a two-hitter and struck out 13 for Clarkstdn. Fredman, holding a 7-1 lead going into the sixth, scored 10 times and turned the game into a rout. Ken Carpwiter led the 16-hit Fredman assault with two doubles and two singles. Huron Bowl broke away to an 8-4 lead and held on to post the upset win over T^mberlanes-2. Paul Hoehn, Rill Davis and Ron Hetherington picked up three hits apiece to spark the winners. Rich Ewer checked »in with two hits for the losers. Reynolds fanned 11 and gaw up the lone run in a troub» some third as .Town & Cotnfl| gained a firmer hold on second. Don Greenlee led the winners with three IntS'. Dave iSimmons had a pair of^ts for the losers. 2-1 inWaterford Clarkston, Buckner Record Victories Brad Kurlick had two hits including a three run triple in the 3rd inning for the winners. In‘the second game Ruckner Finance (8-12) nipped the Waterford Merchants 3-1. The Mer-ch.ants are now 2-18. iFhe Merchants took a one rihi lead in the first when Ed Comey doubled in their solo run. Buckner tied it up and then went ahead in the fourth inning on two unearned runs. Gary Achenbach scattered four hits for the winners while teammate Jerry Dennis knock out two safeties. , Day’s Sanitary and Spencer Floor Covering both with identical records of 18-2 will meet Monday ,night at Drayton Ball Park at 8:30.. Although both teams have a make-up game Sunday this game will probably decide the 1967 champion as this is the last game of the season. Bengals Gain on Idle ChisoK DETROIT (AP) - Dick Mc-Auliffe wasn’t rated much of a slugger when he joined Detroit six years ago. But his current distance hitting is keeping the Tigers within striking distance of the lead in the tight American League pennant Tape. ' Hie "^28-year-old'second base-ihan rapped out his 17th homer and a triple Thursday night in leading Detroit to an 84 victory over Washington. The triumph left the Tigers in fifth place,'but only three ganjes behind the first-place Chicago White Sox. Sam McDowell reached a milestone in pitehing Cleveland to a 4-() victory over the New York Yankees. He struck'out eight batters, lifting his career total to 1,007. The iireballing southpaw reached the 1,000 mark in the second inning.. Tvhen he fanned Steve Whitaker. )\ . The only 'other scheduled gam e , Boston-Baltimore, was postponed because of rain with the Red Sox leading 2-0 in the bottom of the third. McAuliffe, a 5-foot-ll, 175 pounds left-handed batter, had oply 24 homers in 497 minor WASHINGTON Stroud cf 4 0 Saverine' 0 0 0 AAAulina 2b --------- .... .0 0 0 Wert 3b McMulln 3b 5 0 7 0 WHorton If FHoward If 3 14 0 Green If ,, Valentine rt 3 1 0 0 Freehan c Epstein 1b 3’0 0 0 Cash 1b Casanova c 4 1 1 0 Stanley cf naii.n ih . . 1 o .> .. ilV: Cullen ss# : 3 Oyler 2 0 2 1 I 0 2 0 X Oyler, Wert. 'OP-' LOB—Washington i A^arshall HBP-Cox ________ Prlddy. PB-Casanov*. 2-3 6 4 2 1-3 0 0 0 - . Special Now. Get a deal on PURE Pride-our best tire. You can’t buy more miies per dollar. PURE PridBB. Widor. dBoper tread In a balanced, uniform design for longer tread wear. Four-ply nylon cord for proved Impecf-realttance. We Could go on end on. And eo will PtJRE f^rldea. (Many of our cua-tomera report getting 40.000 milea end more.) Stop at any PURE dealer's where you sea signs announc- ing this event. Every participating dealer guarantdee you special savings on PURE Pride tlres.-lt'e our best price on our best tires. Special tale prices in effect at all Pure Oil Company operdTed stations. PURE Pride Tires also competitively priced at independent Pure Oil dealere>. Uo down payment, six-month terms, no carrying charges— on your PURE Credit Card. the placftto buy tires. Davis Zone Win Near DURBAN, South Africa (AP) ■South Africa was-within one victory of clinching its Group final of the European Zone Davis Cup tennis competition against Brazil today. Bob Hew-Cliff Drysdale sWept South Africa . into a 2-0 lEad Thursday, Hewitt defeating Tomas Koch' 6^, 9-11, 1F9, 6-2 and Drysdale subduing Edison Sf Mandarino 6-2, 8-6, 6-2. league games covering five seasons before moving up to Detroit as a regular in 1961. FOUND RANGE^ Dick, found the home run range in 1964, slamming 24, added 15 the following year-and hit 23 in 1966. He appears , well on his way toward his big league h^h this season and is tied for fifth place in the'> homer derby with the Yanks’ Mickey Mantle. The Tigers jumped on Barry Moore, the Senators’ starter, for two ruhs in the first inning on McAuliffe’s homer, a triple by Don Wert and Willie Horton’s sacrifice fly. three runs, including two with a double in the eighth. Joe Sparma; with relief help from Mike Marshall, gained credit for his 10th victory against three losses. Cleveland scored in the first ining when Joe Azeue’s single drove In Chuck Hinton, who had reAched second on an error. The second run came in the third on singles by Leon Wa^er, Azeue and Rocky Colaviito. Hinton drive in the third run with a double in the fourth. McDowell yielded only six hits recording his seventh triumph against eight setbacks. Fritz Peterson, 2-9, was the los- * Moore was knocked out in the third when Detroit added two more runs on McAuliffe’s RBI triple, a hit hitman and a double play. Ray Oyler singled home a run in the fourth, and Norm Cash drove in another in the fifth. Berhie Allen was the Washington star, driving in Women's Title Decided IRON MOUNTAIN" (AP) -Mrs. Linda™lteea.».-«^ fourth straight Upper Peninsula Women’s Golf title lliursday with a 7 and 6 victory over 59-year;-old Mrs. Kay Robfrls in an all-iron Mountain filtale! Hopes to Stay in Game McCord in 13th Year With Lions (Continued From Page C-1) consistent as he must have something going for him. “I guess one reason why Darris hasn’t received the great publicity is that our tackles have been {vimarily the pass rushers, and oinr'defensive ends get to the quarterback mostly if he moves out of the pocket,”' noted Sqhmidt. Schmidt agreed that when tackles like Alex Karras and Roger Brown get All-Pro attention, it’s very unlikely and unfortunate that a defensive end is forced into the background with publicity. “I think our defense is going to look like ‘ its old self this year,” added Schmidt, ‘‘and Darris could have ope of his best years.” ‘‘There’s a good attitude In camp,” says McCord, ‘‘and I’m really looking forward to, the reason." The owner of two successful soft-drink franchises in Knoxville, McCord, who" once attended CasS Tech in Detroit be-fpre moving with his family to Tennessee, is planning on* moving back to Michigan to spend his football preretire-'menCyears. ‘T’ll play as long as there’s room for me, naturally, I hope it’s here,” he said. One reason for wanting to remain here is that at least people know McCord’s number is 78 and he’s a defensive end, even though he has been overlooked by fans in other NFL cities for 13 years. GRAND OPENING^ Best Mobile Home Sales AT Cranberry Lake Mobile Heme Village “Country Club lAvinfi' nt it's Best" 9620 Highland Rd. (M-S9) SATURDAY and SUNDAY July 22 and July 23, 1967 9:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. FREE REFRESHMENTS EVERYONE INVITED Visit and inspect the newest Mobile Homes designed and built by America's Foremost Custom Quality Mobile Home Builders. Factory Representotives^o assist and advise you. Special Ibw, low prices lor this occdsion. WHY PAY HIGH RENT? When You Can Get a CompleteiyYurnished Home With • Fomihire o QoUe of Dtcor • Brand Nqmt AppOdnets • Many Othtr Ftoturts • Curtains and Drapts ' 0 In n Widt Rang* el Sls*s and Flaor Plans BUY TODAY . . . MOVE IN TOMORROW QUALITY AND CRAFTSMANSHIP i iY Available on terms BEST MbBILE HOME SALES 9620 Highland Rd. (M-59) in Cranberry Lake Mobile Village Telaphone: 363^5600 Wa Provide Service To Our Customerol THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, JULY 21, 1967 C—S EEING By FLETCHER SPEARS * The\JaworS aren’t a& familiar as the Sneads, but they’re well known in local golfing, circles and the family has enoiigh golf talent to stage its own private little tournament; “I’m the defending champion,” says Chet, 40, on^ of five Jawor brothers who work as professional golfers. “Cass is the best but I won the last time we played,” CheUwas saying while talking about the influence of golf among the 11 children in the Jawor family. Chet is employed by the City of Detroit and is head pro at Rackham Municipal. Cass, 32, is assistant fo Ms brother, Stan, 42, at Glen Oaks. Frank Jr., ^6, is a school teacher and pro at Warren Valley, while John, the youngest at 30, is head man at San Marino near Farmington. Trophy Races at Waterford The midsummer trophy ra^c( at Waterford Hills Saturday ar Sunday is expected to attract 130 Sport cars. ' The cars wilLmove onto the, road course at 2 p. m. Saturday ^"he other boys, Ted, 48, and and at noon Sunday. Seven 10-lap races are scheduled Saturday, including five class events for full-licensed drivers. There will be two novice races. All classes will be mixed Sunday with races being setup according to racing tinaes. Each driver can enter two events, giving a full complement of 30 '^ cars possible perjrace. The road course is located on the grounds of the Oakland! Rive'r Rouge golf course" County Sportsmen’s Club, a mile; * *■ east of Dixie on Waterford “Frank started caddying a (that, time,” Chet was saying, ; “and prett^ soon all of us were Large Fleet Joseph, 34, play the game but they turned to careers in other fields. The father, Frank Sr,, and mother, Victoria, came to the United States from Poland in 1913. Political and economic instability in Europe brought on the move. • In Detroit, the elder JaworT**a tree surgfeon, followed that line. During the depression of t h e early 193(i’s, he worked at the Ready to Sail PORT HURON (UPl) - The largest sail fleet in Great Lake’s history assembled today for the 235-mile Port Huron-Mackinac Island race to be held this weekend. A record 214 boats were expected to set sail Saturday on the 43rd annual running of the Lake Huron event. Race Chairman Ivan Fiscus said a mile-wide starting line will give all boats ample room when the classes get under way CADDIES TO PROS From caddying, they turned to playing and then to making a livinp at thp onlf a^mp Clips NY AAets in Class A By The Associated Press . Wilson, 22, now 7-5, allowed Jackie Brandt already knbws only singles by iEtf Charles in it is easier to hit for teammate the first inning and Larry Stahl Don Wilson than against him, in thp ninth -He struck out nine,. Pass Excavating pushed across three runs in the fourth inniiig to break a 3-3 deadlock and rolled to a 6-3 decision over Talbott Lumber last night in city Class A baseball action. The triumph raised the ners’ record to 8-7-1. Tali slipped to 4-12, ■ Art Greene pitched flve-hil ball through the final five innings to pick up the decision and he rapped out two hits match teammate ^at Dailey in that department. \ Talbott pushed across in the first on a double by Paul Roberts and a single by. Dan Irwin, and after Pass Went ahead 3-1 in the top of the second, the lumbermen came back with two to square it at 3-alI after two frames. A * * Ron Megregian, Paul Roberts and Dick Dooley picked up two hits apiece and Megregian knocked in a pair of runs Jor and the rest of thp' National League hitters are' quickly learning it, too. WUson, a rookie right-hander who pitched a bo-hitter a month ago and a three-hitter 11 days ago,:CUt down New York on two hits Thursday night as the Houston Astros belted the Mets 7-4). in- on \ ■^ to W ey opi the losers. P. EXCAVAT. U) TALBOTT (3). •b,r Aegreglan, ss 4 0 312 G.RoberU, 1b 4 0 2 11 Brown, 2b >31 3 0 2 Richardson., p .1 0 1 0 0 MeShirey, p 0 0 Past Excavating . ------- ------- Deaton, Dailey, Gonzales, Renshaw; Megregian 2, Irwin. PITCHING -» Renshaw 2 IP, 5 H, 2 SO, in Women Golfers Battle for lead walked two and Mt one and extended.his shutout string to 25 innings, breaking the club record of 24 set by Robin Roberts. V Oliver’s first hit helped the Phillies to a four-run second It was his third straight victo-and while he has discouraged-tposing hitters, his pitching brought out'ifce best in Brandt. The veteran reserve [elder, hitting only .237, had six'hits in 11 at bats with his only triple and homer and eight of his ,10 runs batted in during those gahies. ★ ★ ★ I don’t know what it is, but I sure do well when he’s pitching,” Brandt said. Brandt drove in four runs Thursday night with a sacrifice fly and the homer and added a double. * ★ ★ Another part-time performer, Gene Oliver, also had a good night, stroking three singles and a two-run' homer as he led Philadelphia over Los Angeles 10-4. aVIC BOMBED League-leading St. Louis unleashed Julian Javier, Orlando Cepeda and Bob Tolan, who each homered, and whipped Cincinnati 7-3. ★ ★ * Pat Jarvis snapped the Chicago 'Cubs’ five-game winning streak with a four-hitter that lifted Atlanta to a &1 victory, and Gaylord Perry broke his own six-game losing string by pitching San Francisco to a 6-1 triumph over Pittsburgh. living at the golf game. * ★ ★ _,Stan turned pro 20 years back and Chet decided to go it as a pro six years later. Chet insists that Cass is the best golfer, but John, the diplomat of the family, says firmly, “They’re all good.” Charles Waggoner of Lake Orion, just back from a tour in Vietnam, found his golf game hasn’t rusted from lack of attention. Playing at Bald Mountain last LONDON. Ont. (AP)-Ten American girls weie locked within one stroke/qf each other at the top of the standings today going into the second round of $18,000 Canadian Women’s I Auto Mechonic LLOYD BRIDGES DODGE Open Golf CHampionship. At 70, two strokes under par for the 6,456-yard Sunningdale layout, were Mickey Wright, Caroll Mann, Susie Maxwell, Sandra Haynie and Murle Lind-strom. ★ * ★ Tied at 71 were defending champion Kathy Whitworth, veteran Patty Berg, Gloria Ehret, Sandra Spuzich and Shirley Englehorn. at 15-minute intervals starting ] week. Chuck rapped a four-wood at 12:30 p m. j shot into the cup on the 198-yard iSEA RAY B0ATS| m f'aclory-to-You m H " Prices J m UKE ORION ^ ■ MARINE t SKI CLUB m 10 M-24, Lake Orion m 693-1148 U.S. Gyntnast Sidelined WINNIPEG, Canada (AP) -The United States will be without the services of one of its finest gymnastics competitors when the Pan-American Games open Sunday. Carojyn Hacker of N^ Haven, Conn., 18-year-old all-around champion, fell during practice Thursday and suffered a dislocated left elbow. inning against Claude Osteen, and his homer made it 6-0 in thd ; third. Bobby Wine beltqd his first hoineto£4he,season;.in4' fifth with two on as Larrji Jack-son, 7-9, 1 For" ADDITIONS - REMIIDELIN6 HOME IMPROVEMENTS - GARAGES RESIDENTIAL DUILDING CALL Javier slammed a three-run shot, Cepedh a two-run blow and Tolan a solo homer as the Cardinals hammered Mel^ Queen. D^ys 673-8573 Nights 693-6909 THE DRUMMOND CORD. DUILOER’S SUPPLIES Need a a complete package of qujgLlity material ^ We specialize in Garage materials — our large quantity buying makes these values . possible. AU KILN DRIED LUMDER INCLUDES: • Plates e Rafters • All Ext. 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DOIT Home kun Nets District Win A three^run homer by J i m Evans in a five-run fifth inning carried Walled Lake’s Little League team to a 5-4 victory over North Farmington yesterday at Wixom in District 4 state tournament acUon, Southfielcl 'tn^'Birmingham tonight at F^j^ngton with the winner slatedno take on Walled Lake tonloiTow in the semifinals Midas Shock Absorbers: AW aw SUndard Guaranteed for Replaced, ,f necessary, for K||||| ir S a service charee only A.wR ■ wr wAR^ He.ivy Duty Guaranteed for 30.000 miles or two year', Midasguarai tees transmls- I sions, too' ■ I'RdiliSiUliiSIONS MUFFLER INSTALLATION IS FREE! Inspection is freei , SERVICE IS FAST and COU^EOUSI You'll LIKE Midas we're squere! ;:Over 475 Shops Cocftt-To-Coasfl 435 South Saginaw 3 Blocks South of Wide Track Drive Ffidoyi S:)0 A.M. to 7 . 1. thru Thurt. 4:30 A.M. !• 5:3Q"P.iU.. Sotwrdoy 8 A.M. to 4 P.M. 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FE 5-2525 Defending Champ Falls in Tennis Tournamenf MILWAUKEE, Wis. tUPl) -Aggressive Mik6 Belkin, wHb upset defending champion Cliff Richey for the second consecutive time Thursday, has madft the race for the men’s singles title of the National Clay Courts tennis meet a four-nation affair. Belkin, a 22-year-old Canadian who was the seventh-ranked U.S. plaver two years ago While UiBlteJ time only-biggest nation-wide sale on The Rain Tire Ever! The Country’s Most Famous Tire Name! WHITEWALL OTHER SIZES at COMPARABLE SAVINGS! . • LATEST DESIGN • FACTORY NEW • CREDIT^TERMS CRESCENT U.S. ROYAL 520 S. Saginaw 333-7031 U.S. player performing for the University of Miami, outlasted second-se^ed Richey;. 7-9, 6-2, 6*3, 6-1, to gain the semifinals. Richey of San Angelo, Tex., pulled out of the tournament later, claiming he was mentally exhausted. Tournament officials said they did not plan to protest. Marty Riessen of Evanston, III, the fourth domestic seed, also gainM the semis by defeating top foreign seed Ray Ruffels of Australia, 6-4, 6-4, 3-6,6-0. Two other men’s quarterfinals were scheduled today. Nancy Richey, Cliff’s sister and defending women’s singles queen, also gained the semis with a 6-0 ,6-1 victory over Peaches Bartkowicz of Ham-tramck. Kerry Melville of Australia, the women’s top foreign seed, outlasted Los Angeles’ Tory Fr^tz, 6-4, 4-6, 6-1. SPORTS CAR ROAD RACES WATERFORD HILLS ROAD COURSE •Mt «f U.S.' 10 on Wolorford Rd.,Wotorford,Mich. JULY22-23nSU $1.00 SAT. $2.00 SUN. CMMrvii oMkr 12 Hil HIEEMRKING MAKl BUME YOUR HOME IMPBOUmflT HEmUMTEBS jto^ B444IA BASKiTWEAVE ALL COMPONENTS STAINED RED Each 6x8 soCtion contitts of tho follow!ngt 1 posh 4 x 4 x 9r SV^b9S Knock 3 woovo stripe 1 x 2 x 6; 12 N Down rough codor fonco boards, MxAxS, 1x9,19.10-4x8,4845 FIBERGm PANELS • PATIO ROOFS • AWNINGS^# FENCES • WIND BREAKERS • CARPORTS • POOL ENCLOSURES 26”x8’ WEEKEND SPECIAL $2^9 In colors, yollow, whito,. PLANTER BOXER -TO-BUILD WITH DURABLE EASY-TO-WORK CALIFORNIA ftlBWOOD INSUL4TION THICK 3^ 2" THICK 4' .q.ft. 3" THICK 5'«i. ft. Lumber 44^ Dixiw Hwy. HOURS—OR 3-1 211- open WEEKDAYS MON. Thni PNI. IA.H.IolilOPJIi. UTURDAYSfroa OiLM.104 PJi. the championship flight in the fifth annual Forest Lake CC Invitational tournament. The fir§t found of the tourney went pretty- much to form yesterday as favorites Harry Nederlander and Gene Eyler opened with a 4-2 wint over Don Mead and C. W. Casgrain. Nederlander and Eyler were the first champions the tournament five years ago and playing in the top bracket they defeated what was sup- II was a day for pitchers In yesterday’s city junior baseball action. ~ — The junior hurlers posted a couple of shutouts in Class D and a pair of two-hitters were recorded in Class E contests. I^i»OFF AT TEE-The Forest Lake CC , Invitational got under way yesterday when / assistant pro A1 Usler, fired the midget cannon off the first tee, while foursome (left Pontiac Prow Photo Nederlander-Eyibr Win to right) of Roy Potvin, Wally Hudson, Jim Smith and Rudy Bortolotti await to go out. The Potvin-Smith duo defeated their opponents, 3-2. ' ^ B(-Chanipions Favored at FLCC By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press Hardly seems like anyone but a Jackson or Weyand has a chance in the lower bracket of end up as a Weyand versus Jackson semifinal Saturday morning. Township Holds Cage Sessions The Waterford Township Rec-reatiop Department is sponsoring open baskelball shooting sessions 11 a.m.-l p.m. Monday through Thursday at Mason Junior Ifigh School. All boys in the township arc invited to participate at no charge. Ray Robinson supervises the shooting. posed to be their toughest foes in the bracket yesterday. proceeded^ to win the 16th With Things are red hot in the lower bracket however and it could The Weyand combination, RoL lie and son Paul had the task of ousting Rich Weyand and E. Norme, w-1. The Weyands are from Birmingham Country Club and today they go against Mike Gul-lett and Mike Jackson of Red Run. (iullett and Jackson were 4-2 victors over Jim McCormick and J. Bonahooom, 4-2. The other fther-son combination of the lower bracket has Mike’s brother Pete Jack-son playing with father Paul and they solidly whirled Eric Goulloud and Bob Reynolds, 5-4. The match was never in doubt IS the Jackson won the first five hiples with deadly approach *ots (that brought about the need “gimmee” another Nederlander wedge which stopped a foot away to clinch the match. Other championship bracket matches saw R. Zellner and R. Ramsey wallop Bill Adams and Don Dawson, 6-5; Art Watkins Pat Hucker whipping Gen-na and Bardha, 5-4; Slocum-Clark ousting Petosky-Uzelac, 54 and R. W. Podlesak-Frank Jarrard edging Strait and Weiss. The strong first flight put Roy Potvin and GAM rated player Jim Smith in the favorites’ role. The biggest rout of the'day took place in the second flight where Dr. Ken Vandeberg and Dr. Jim Picard routed the Zim-merman-Soltis duo, 7-6. 4-2; R. Zellner-D(. ________ Diwson. 6-S; Art W»tklns-P«f Hucker Genna-Berdha, V4; Slocum-Clock def. putts. Bob Gulletf-M lack-Bonahoom, . ----- Wayand _de(. Nurma-RIch Weyand, Nederlander’s strong wedge and Eyler’s 20 foot birdie putt on the l^th hole broke the ice in their tough match and they- FIRST FLIGHT -...-Andy McGuire def. Berg- Walsh, 2-1; E. Rlcbard-Hlte def. Ufner- Kargal, 6-5; Dr. J. Gadbaw-Jonn Gad-baw def. Panelll-Hyvonen, S-4; Loigh Tuohy-Harvey Olieen def. B. Eynon- S^'Prie$'korri-D. Pearseft def. Dykstra-3-2; Roy PotvIn-JIm Smith def. tecOND FLIGHT McKenzie-T. Chamber fenbarry-Phillips, 2-1; D. O'Nell-Banich def. Ellis-Babbish. 5-4; B. Eyatr ' def. Rted-Camerson, 2-up; RIed-Dr. Alexander drt. Long-Filleld, Chuck Llvingston-Roy Iceberg ___________ Eddy-King, 4-3; Henry Clink-JIm Clink S. @™. for Your Pontiac r Equipped with Front Bucket Seats, individually cMliuttable; Walnut wood groin dash; Dual exhauets; F70-14 red lina tires. Glove box lamp; Cigar lighter and ash trov lamp; Courtesy lamp; I Padd^ instrument panel; Dual speed -wiypien;. Windshiald^-l^^ Inside day ond night mirror. Outside rear view mfrrbi; Seat belts ond retractors; Podded visors. Also, Hydromatic transmission; Front and rear seat belts; Console; Powpr steering and brakes; Tinted windows; Sofe*T Track; P.Bi radio; Pear speaker. Burgundy with Parchment interior and many other colors an^ equipment to choose from. The Movin* Car With The iHfdidft* iNLY *2962 V RUMJemiMN ^MOTOR RALN*, INie. UM-24, Laka Orion, . . 693-62M Pitte Pule in Junior Ball Shutouts, Two-HItters Hurled in City Games Rod Clancy fanned seven and scattered four hits as Police Officers Association blanked Clawson, 9-0, Cummings fanned seve gave up only one hit-enth-inning single—as brook stopped the Eagles-lfl 5-0. Tom Alsbaugh flipped, a two-hitter as Felice Market ,trimmed Moose, 4-1, in Class E., and Rick Walker teamed with Ralph Medlen for another two-hitter as Auburn Heights downed House of Barbers, 3-2. In another ‘E’ game, Orville Campbell struck out nine and gave up only four hits as Roch-ester dumped the Pontiac Hawks, 14-1. FONTIAC JUNIOR BASEBALL 4, Pontiac Hawkj 1 Hawks 4, Oakland Angels 2 North^lda Huskies 2, Opfimist 1 Auburn HetgKfs Preps 5, ( Auburn Heights Werriors 4, Sam A Giants I, Auburn Heights Patriot, i Pirates 14, Auburn Heights Hawk, 2 Whli KJd, 7, Tigers 4 ^ _______ te Sox 20, Twin, ♦ Braves 13, Tl( IPeVi' Bowling Loop Holds Meeting The Lakeland Ladies Bowling League will have a picnic and business ro^etulR 6:30 p.m. Wednesday at 5570 Orchard Lake in West Bloomfield township. , - Hostess Bonnie Kuzak invites any women interested in bowling with the league at Sylvan Lanes' to attend the meeting. . Ramsey d jThe season will begih-Se|ft. 13. nation is avail- Additional information i I able from Virginia Madiil, 682-10796. Podlesak-F. Jarrard del. Strait-s, l-up; Paul Jackson-r Goulloud-Reynolds, 5-4. yrne-Hamllton d . Sko- Klng, . Jnyder-I .. _ .............. barg-Or. Picard del. ZImmermen-Soltls, 7-4; R. Hoover-H. Gluckstad del. Gllcrest-Flaharty, l-up, !♦. THIRD FLIGHT .... Orr-BItl FIrnIch def. Harland-Krlng, 2-1; Dr. Sagule-W. Wayland def. M«or«-McClellan, 2-up; J. Cohray Jr.-K. Whiting def. Hardy-lmhoff, 4-3; Charles Sblomon-B. Solomon del. Garner-" • % 3-2. Busch-Jtmes Peters daf. Gurry-Kaston, 3-2; W. Henderson-J. Plana daf. Conher-Randa. 1-up; H. MIHer-T. Rags---------------------- - , .— dale def.. CoupiiCoupe, 2-1; FOURTH FLIGHT Flowers-G. Starck def. Burdette--1, 4-3) Dr. R. Schmaldlng-H. — ' ........... ■ --it o. c . -.... —. Plerce-Sehlick, 3-1; Jim Hall-E. Parcells del Rowlattt-Gobel, 5-4. Paarl-Dr. L. Barber def. 2-1; Gene Acey-S. “ Tuohy-Se def. Mtchle-Hatlionnou, l-up; Bo--W. Fortune def. Zanotb-Hershey, . T. Bramson-T. Rastrlck def. Schmltt-Vlrslel, 1-up. FIFTH FLIGHT Douglas-Ostarman def. Balley-Whitney, 2-1; Dr. Jim Glll-A. Lindsay def. Turner- —^ .... ---------J Halbeisen Krall-DeBus- 2-m, 21; Halbelsen-T. Halbelsa larlSn-H^i-garOTl, 5-4; Krall-DeBUI .. def. Barnwell-tJfflfen,~3rt;---- Gditton-Mardlgan def. wahrman-OI- ____d4i M Levall-Tom Estes daf. Cour- rtar-BuchlhAn, M; Carl Knaack Jr.-Dan PLAY BALL! BASEBALL "Iron Mika" MACHINE Bafting Cages Open CARL'S GOLFUND 1976 S. Telegraph Rd. AOTOBUN1 I NOTORS UNITED TIRE SERVICE 1007 Baldwin Ave. * Min. From Downtown “online YAMAHA SPORTS CYCLE . SALE FREE HEUET WITH EACH NEW CYCLE PURCHASED . NEW 350 " m e o r NEW 180 fw'N S75.PO.L NEW 305 SCRAMBLER 710. P.O.E. ^Ifilson YAMAHA 7615 Highland Rd.-194T Telagrapfi fid. BOTH STORES OPEN 9 to 9 DAILY; SATURDAY9 to 6 ThmTeUgru^SUYrm€hayOp0nSmndayat-^ THE PONWrAC PRESS, FRIEVAY, JULY 21, 1967 C—a GARY PLAYER’S GOLF QASS: The importance of course management Fabermite Dally Double; (1-3) Paid S1W.M Recreation Program af Jaycee City Amatelir Day Sunday ^ Rare is the summer day that the Pontiac Parks and Recreation Department’s facilities at Jaycee Park aren’t in use, and Sunday will be the busiest day of the year, Beginning at noon, the recreation phase of the department will/have its annual Amateur Day program fiy the benefit of , its recreation baseball facilities. The department will have; 17 ball games during the day. They will range from the T-Ball com-pkition (where the ball is hit off a batting tde) to the climactic men’s league All-Star tilt. The 8 p.m. arclight affair will pit the Class A All Stars against city title hopeful M.G. Collision in a nine-inning contest. M. G. and now-leagiie-leading Booth Homes were tiw at time the league representative was chosen and the collision nine won the coin toss. STARTERS Opposing the M. G. regulars will be a starting lineup comprised of Jerry Hill, first base, Rick Pankey, third base, and pticher Dan Fife, all of Booth’s; Someftiing 1*few For The “LADIES” Be Sure and Watch For Our Ad Next Week - HURON BOWL 2525 Elizabeth Lake Road Pontiac Ph. FE 5-2525 SEE THE KARIBOU KAMPER AT Lloyds Eldorado Sales 3681 Elizabeth Lake Road FE 3-7376 Two Blocks Wost of AA59 the Clippers’ Harry Bartkowiak, second, base, Santos Sanchez, right field, and Rick Trudeau, shortstop; Pass Elxcavatihg’s Dick Roy^ catcher, and Ken Mazur, left field; and center fielder Chuck Heavenrich, Cran-brook. All must play at least three innings. All-Star’ manager Paul Johnson of Booth has a mound crew composed-of^Arf Greene, Pass; Dick Goldsworthy, C.I.O.-59t; Tom Willworth, Lake Orion Mickey Cummings, U.A.W.-653; and Ed Sparl^an of Booth: Manning the other eight poF sitions as substitutes will be in-fielders Dave Call, Oakland Un-iversity; Ai Levy, and Mike Burklow, Cranbrook; Llncho Chavez, Talbott Lumber; plus Keith Deaton and Tony De-LaRosa, Pass. The extra outfielders are Dave Fagerlie and Buddy .Williams, C.I.O.-594, Gary Fisher, Teamsters-6.14, and Neil Roberts, Booth Homes. Back-up catchers are Paul Roberts, Talbott, and Charley Johnson, Teamsters. Admission for the entire day per family in the advance , or $1 per adult and 50 The schedule: cents for students at he gate. Additional ticket information is availaible from the recreation office at City Hall. * ★ ★ ' The 32 junior league teams that will play again involve predominance of Auburn Heights Boys’ Club and Pontiac Optimist entries. ■ Boys’ Club coaches Sam Sheehy and Tom Hupp h i Qualified eight teams, while Howard Dell and his staff of Optimist coaches will have six teams playing. Chitago Callfprnia .438 Baltimore ... Kansa; City .. - Thurulay's Rasulta Cleveland 4, New York 0 Detroit 8, Washington 4 Boston at Baltimore, raitr Only games scheduled. Today's Gamas Minnesota (Boswell 8-5) at Calitorn Brunet 8-lJ), night Chidago (Wood 1-0) at tCansas Cl I; Widgets: Yellow lighted ■ Optimist NOON-Class Chiefs, No. 1 IM Cab vs. Malkim 1 p.m.—Class . . ..... — — Allen, No. I; Class F: AHBC Ploneei. vs. Talbott CoMtruction, dighted field; T Ball: Optimisf Meta vs. White Sox, No. 1 softball; Widget B: Optimist Wt)lz Kids vs. Giants, No. 2 softball. 2 p.m.—Class F; AHBC Preps vs. Northside Huskies, No. 1 baseball; Class F; F.O.P. Pirates vs. Lakeland, lighted fl*ld; T-Ball: Optimist Braves vs. Tv No. 1 softball; Wldgefs; Opfimisf-ll AHBC Preps, No. 2 sofiball. 3 Prm.—Class E; AHBC Sporfsmer Lake Oakland or Russ. Sundquisf, No. baseball; Class E -------- ----- ■ AHBC f Columbia «venue ka vs. ambl ranxees, No. I softball; Widgets: Optimisf-t vs. AHBC Sportsmen, No. 2 softball. 6 p.m.—Class. D: 4)«chesfer vs. Drugs, No.................. lice Officer. . . 8 pum.—Class A: Collision, lighted li 1 baseball, < Pontiac Po-llghted field. ANOTHER 7.000 WINNER Alfred S. Sisto ATSUNOEi Top Half-Mile Runners in Track A/teef Two of the state’s top prep half-milers will go to the starting line tomorrow in the Junior Champ meet at Waterford Kettering. Class A champion John Mock of Mt. Clemens won his title with a time of 1:53.1, a state record. Setting a Class C standard of 1:56.1 was Wayne Wills of Ortonville Brandoa. As of yesterday morning, 322 athletes from 29 areas in Michigan had filed entries. Sponsored by the Waterford Jaycees, the meet is being held to decide the team that will represent-Michigan in the Na-Junior Champ meet next *' ” ■ — The preliminaries for Saturday’s meet will get under way at 10 a.m. A coaching clinic IS scheduled at 2 p.m. and then the finals wijl start. KermiV Ambrose, Seaholm; Dean Wil^n, Pontiac Central; iAl CuthreU^ Waterfofd Tow n ship; and Jordon Spencer, Flint Southweste^; will conduct the clinic. tional J M York (Barber 5- ) at Baltim ) at Detroit ) at Cleveland 1 and Bertali Saturday'i Games Minnesota at California, night Chicago at Kansas City, twilight New York at Detroit Boston at Cleveland Washington at Baltimore, night National League Won Lest Pci. Behind Bunning 9-8), nlght-Hpustpn (Blasingame 3-1) ai Veale 10-4), night Atlanta (NIekro 5-4) at St. L ils (Briles It Chicago Los Angeles at New York, night Cincinnati at Philadelphia, night San Francisco al 2 Sign With Pi^ns DETROIT (AP)-The Detroit Pistons announced Thursday they had signed forward Bob ■■ gsett, who played for the im six weeks last season, and ^ard Paul Long from ’Wake Forest, the team’^ sixth draft jthoice. CASH AND CARRY PLYWOOD ONLY 4x8-Ve" ’/a" AB 3.30 4.10 4.86 5.66 6.56 AC 2.88 3.78 4.72 5.60 6.72 AD 2.56 3.39 4.32 5.02 5.95 CD 2.40 3.24 3.84 4.48 8' 10' 12' 14' 16' 18' 20' 2x4 .54 .80 .96 1.12 1.28 1.44 ’1.60 2x6 .96 1.20 1.44 1.69 1.92 2.26 2.50 2x8 1.23 1.60 2.00 2.33 2.67 3.12 3.47 2x10 1.67 2.08 2.60 3.03 3.47 3.90 4.33 2x12 1.92 2^ 3.04 3.56 4.06 4.57 5.08 Yard Office Opens at 7:30 Monday through Saturday USED DOORS If^luding All Hardware ho Cash 'n Carry CALCIUM CriLORIDE 100 lb. bag S^TS 1x6 & 1x8 Garden Redwood-1x6 & 1x8 Clear RedWbod-1x6 Rough Sawn Redwood flEATHK and COOLliK DIVISION SUES loddhia SERVICE LICENSED CONTRACTORS. ALL MAKES OF FURNACES, BOILERS AND CONVERSION UNITS INSTALLED AND 24-hour SERVICE 566 North Saginaw FE 3-TlTI BENSON LUMBER CO. B(|ilding and Ramodeiihg Supplies and Materials ^ 546 North Saginaw Street Open Mon.g $at. 7:30-5 FE 4»2521 I 7.20 4 Pick 4 Conditipnad Pace, 1 Mile ;riscp 5.80 3.00 S iace, 1 Mile Libpy's Girl HI to Wayside No Troubles Dntha Go loth—$1,700: ConditlonM Pact^l^lle Malor Knox Livonia Boy Vesta's Boy Lt>n Ahgoo Hazel Park Results 1st—5^400: Mdn. Three Wedges Gallagraph LANSING (AP) - The State Conservation Commission has announced it will hoW a special meeting Monday to hear department plans for cutting back programs and services. Director Ralph ^acMullan has termed the $28.2 million allocated the department for the current year “calamitous” and an austerity budget.” MacMullen said he will give cut-by-cut report on spending plans by the department. The department originally asked for just over $45 million for operating expenses. Light Intentions Dally Doubla: 0 3rd—SSvSOO: Clalml ) Paid $115.20 p 4'/^ Furlongs 9.20 4.20 3 Ex-Oiympic Ace Dies - CHICAGO (API — Richard Howell of suburban Wilmette. 1924 Olympic Games gold medal winner in swimming, died Thursday of a lung ailment at the age of 63. Howell w<»i the gold medal in Paris in 1924 in the 1,500-meter free-style event. 4th—$3,200: 1 Gold Rita ' Jo.uu Forbidden Gold Wild Walter $th-$2.708: Claiming, 6'/i Furlo Little Willie Diamond Glitt Opt. Twin-D Valintine Baby 4.40 Our Little Rd Claiming, 4>/i Furlongs Level Flow 9th—$X900; Claiming, 1 Royal Fowl Consolation Twin Do Ex-Aussie Netter Wins COPENHAGEN, Denmark US) — Ken Fletcher, formerly of Australia and now of Hong Kong, has reached the finals of an International Tennis Tournament here.’ , If you f want to improve yourself, put it in piting. The coupon below may be your entrance info a fop paying new career in thb world of data processing and computer programming at AUT5MATI0N INSIJIUTE. AUTOMATION INSTITUTE can train you to be a programmer, systems qnglyst, keypuncher or one of many other good positions for immediate industry acceptance. Learn your career from expert instructors . . . and on actual equipment just os you v^ill work with on the jobl Free placement service in 50 citiesi Write or coll today ... for' complete improve-yourself information. AUTOMATION INSTITUTE offers these advantages: • Professional inotructort • Wide variety of courses' • Free placement service IBM 360 coume B J ..... . ~ Keypunch training on 029$ • Budget tuitkon terms Systei^s Anolyst • Free IBM aptitude aitajysis Programming Training for impnedtbte Technician industry occeptancB • Use your Gl Benefits MAIL TODAY FOR FREE IBM APTITUDE ANALYSIS m ADTOMATION INSTITVTE A$$Ocintt!i of C-E-J-Ri Inc., lh» vmrltrt largett independent computer tertice and training or-ganiMntian, 40 hranchet. . D.N. C. 7-16-67 .................rmtPHONE.. □ Yss I wsnl to tako your Froo Agtitudo Tost 5424236 22100 WOODWARD AVE. .FERNDALE, MICH. 48220 OWEN TRAVEL TRAILER Use Your Pick-Up Truck, All Week for Business . . . And Hook Up Your OWEN TRAVEL TRAILER TO GO ON A TRIP OVER THE WEEKEND. HOOKS UP IN THREE MlNUTfS ... A HOUSE ON WHEELS. ALSO CARGO AND FLATBED TRAILERS IN THIS.MODEL! SEE THIS FANTASTIC TRAVEL TRAILER AT- M & M Motor Sales ^ 11SO OaklaNid Avoe 338-9261 Pine Knob ‘ GOLF & COUNTRY CLUB Cordially Extends Its UPPER DINING FACILITIES to the Public > * Inviting Everyone to Enjoy the Dining El-gance of One of Oakland County's Newest and Finest Private Clubs 18-HOLE CHAMPIOMSHIP OOLF COURSE ‘ FAtklY MEMBERSHIPS ^30D / NOW FEATURING . . '^toE ZABELSKI ROHS Full Price ‘5,000 DOWN-‘150 MONTHLY DASED ON 72 MONTHS This might be the price of “The Car of The Year” in the year 2067. So Buy Now while the PPIQE IS RIGHT " O uT€44 OAKLAND CHRVSLER-PLYMOUTH 1907 BARRACUDA ‘2093 PiU OuieuA Full Price Pius 4% sales tax OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH T24 OAKLAND AVE. - PONTIAC P.S. Ruinoi: has it the prices are going up for ’68s. c—e TU^ PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, JULY 21, 1967 Jacoby TheaterG^ider I y ROBIN MALONE By Bob Lubbers NORTH 81 ♦ 74 -VQ lOSfS ♦ 52 ♦ K975 S WEST EAST ♦ AJ 1086 AQSSS »7 V532 ♦ QJ 1096 ♦K843 ♦ A4 ♦10 8 SOUTH (D) *K2 V AK J64 . 4A7 ♦ QJ62 East-West vulnerable West North East South it 2 V Pass . ..Pass 5 tf Dble Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—# Q By OSWALD & JAMES JACOBY When you have to lose a trick anyway it is good policy to coit. sider exactly when you want to I lose it. There is I no bonus, paid r winning the I first trick. Most players ■would have ■ doubled four I the South hand. *Then t h e y JACOBY would have complained about bad luck if West had managed to make his contract. WJe aren’t sureNvest would, have, but we are sure that he could have. In fact he might even have made an overtrick if hearts were opened and contin^ •lied. He would have to gamble, that he could get to dummy Witlii a diamond. He would start wijTfcijr Av AO gwu sider exactly whe i by leading a high diamond and putting on dummy’s king. Later on he would overtake his six with East’s eight to finesse the spades. Assuming that he had not already lost a club trick be would wind up discarding dummy's losing club on a long diamond. All this is academic. South’s bid was five hearts. West doubled and led the queen of diamonds. East played the eight and South looked ftlngs over. He saw that he wasn’t going to make five hearts ■ but he wanted to hold his loss to one trick and the way to do it would be to i “BORN LOSERS” IN COLOR ALSO Rock Hudion and Salomo Jons ‘^SECONDS” _____ S POOL _ iBEUHnon 1 JOUE ' R01.1S SCTi^ BBDREII ______________________ mnipen^^T^ IIIIIIIIIIIIIHII GIANT FREE PUYGROUNOS THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. JULY 21, 1967 C—11. ^ " Dentists Suffer From an Image Gap I By DICK WEST WASHINGTON (UPI) ^ If we can believe a survey recently publishied by McCall’s.. Mag give it some credence. Yet it makes no sense. ‘ The average dentist certain- and adorable as the average brain surgeon. And probably makes more money. I am driven, then, to the inescapable conclusion that den-are siiff^g front an impact imago.'^’V^ich means they-should visit a public relations consultant at least twice a year. seen that tended to relegate dentists to the bottom of the romantic ladder, I am oblige^ THE PLAHER BOX Present* ' “B006AL00 SOUL SHOW” at the C.A.I. ’ 6640 Williams Lake Road Waterford, Michigan Sunday, July 23 8:00 P.M. to 11:30 P.M. THE BREED , (SOUL SOUND) SOUL SEARCHERS and Gulsts DENNIS POTULSKY, M.C. ADMISSION: $1.50 A painless PR expert could quickly elevate dentists to their rightful place as ah equal with brain surgeons among the great lovers of the world. THAT OLD FILUNG It’s simply a matter of teaching dentists to brush their image. tw^ee-daHy-to-Tenrover-the dull films and stains that hide their natural vittues and cause girls to think of them as poor husband material. For openers, the American Dental Association could sponsor a television series called “Ben Cades, DDS.” Bra|n surgeons', interns, ear and throat men, country doctors, hangnail specialists and most other medical types have been television heroes. But dentists rarely get a dramatic break. ★ ★ ★ You ever see a show with a dentist driving a buggy through a snowstorm to save a six-year molar with a broken crown? Fat chance! ‘JPen Caries, DDS’ would fill that gap. In weekly episodes, it unfolds the story of a surly but dedicated dental surgeon locked in a bitter struggle with Uie enemies of fluoridation. * He is ruggedly masculine and darkly handsome. Mickey Rooney iBbuld be good in the part. Ben’s beautiful blonde assistant (Doris Day?) has been carrying the torch, as well as the pliers, for years. But although he admires her biscuspids, Ben keeps their relationship on a professional level, being too much of an idealist for intraoffice hankypanky. ★ ★ ★ After one season of “Ben Caries, DDS,’’ McCall’s could take another survey. I’ll warrant it wquld show every spinster in America hankering for a dentist. CLOSED MONDAYS / “Air Coi^flitioned for Your Comfort** Saturday 6 to 10 P.M. *350 Children Under 12 $2.50 < FRIDAY Complete Menu from Seafood to Chops , > Fine/ Footla (ud Lujfim Catering to Banquets, Parties and Private Meetings of All Types CALL FOR RESERVATIONS Parking Attendant on Duly Thurs., Fri. and Sat. L Wide Track at W. Huron FE 2-1170 t iJAKLUglLIom OUf WHTI in AS CtOStAS Yom HBISHBOmOP BOMHZAI Boneless Choice Dinner $|59 STRIP STEAK Inciudes Texas Toast, Salad and Baked Potato OtJmVmm qa Wqa BONANZA aiRi-oiN pit. Kmart Glen wood Plozo North Perry Street, Corner Gtenwood • Carry Out Available 338-9433 Open 1 Days a yeek - II A.M. to 8;P.M. Malta Victim of Conflict in Middle Edst —™™“RING®L-IhL«WS™fiARS"---" Eari"Sonw- ''ifl the eoiiectk>n of‘BB'ancient wwil telephones ville of Richland checks one of the phones he has gathered as a hobby. VALETTA,' Malta The Pee fine Press Wins Aeether FIRST Wltt Jhe Retiens Re.l SireeletiM Sales Preeistiee The Press was awarded First Place Over-All in the annual contest conducted by the Inter-^national Circulation Managers' Association. The prize-winninsreFfort was created for a sales promotion of a six-week sampling campaign which The Press launched in May. J The Pontiac Press Js Also First To Bring You. More and Complete. Local State and World News Coverage When You Want It! m You’ll Always Find A Little More Than You Expect Iri . ■ r;-. THE PONTIAC PRESS T , ’ For Home Delivery Dial 332-8181 ■ ; D—i ■Hie following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce Jjy groweYs and sold by tf im in wholesale package lots Quotat ns are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Mnrlrets as of Monday. Produce FRUITS Apples, Delicious, Red, bu. Apples, Delicious, Red, C.A., b Apples, Northern Spy, bu. Apples, Northern Spy, C.A., I Apples, Steele Red, bu. . Apples, Steele Red, C.A., bu. Strawberries, 16-qt. Cnt. VEGKTABI-RS Beets, topped, bu. ........ Brdccoli, dzi bch. 2.50 ... —---1, HSrly, ■ NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market moved higher early- this afternoon and dallied with a new 1967 high in the Dow Jones industrial average. Trading was active. , The Dow Jones industrial average at noon was up 3.82 at 912.51. Onions, Green, di. bch. Celery, Pascal,' di. bch. Dill, dz. bch. Kohlrabi, dz. bch. Onions, Green, dz. bch. . Parsley, Curly, dz. bch. Parsley, Root, dz. bch. . Peas, Green, bu. Radishes, Red. dz. bch. Radishes, white,, dz, bch. Rhubarb, Outdoor, dz, bch Squash, Italian, ncti^^1.,90M91.ll ■ Bulldozing. FE 5-4926.~____________ SAND, GRAVEL, SEPTIC STONE, 40-40 top stal, 5 yards $15. Reas. prlces.-473 ()049.___________________ Septic Tank Installation Swimming Pools 3l John S. Voprhees, ^ree ^Trl^jn^Service •1 TREE TRIMMING BY BAL £ree estimate. FE 5-4449, 474-35JQ^ L'S f R E E TRIMMING, REMOV, imales. 473-7140 o E SERVICE, INSURED. removal. Free estl-.... r 724.2695. "DALBY & SONS' STUMP, TREE, REMOVAL FE 5-3005 Mosquito Spray FE 5-3025 MAJOR TREE SERVICE. FREE id tree reftio,val.-3 porteSfiIUd tree service Shrub Care—Free Estimates 182-2752. G & 0 Enterprises. MOVING, TRAS' Help Wanted M. or F. 8 iWork Wanted Female uWaiited to Rent NUCLEAR MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIST A approve I Send resume to ' lerata most office . ...Pontiac. Phone 4 SHORT ORDER COOK, DELISA' SHOULD YOU Ike an employmenf change? NOW IS THE TIME I Michigan Bell 1365 Cass Ave., Deti quality^ dry^ cleaning shop. CaU tinizing Miracle Mile Shi WANTED TO LIVE I 3-2276, Eves. I 626-40764 I X-RAY TECHNOLOGIST g.4 Immediate opening In m< I expanding hospital. Metrop T area, salary open, commt ate with education, training a terlence. Excellent fringe bei . Send resume Pontiac Prc Sales Help, Male-Female 8-A 2 EXPERIENCED • REAL ESTATE Salesptople to replace 2 who a leaving the State's - take ov current prospect file - hottest .. promo- tApjES DESIRE INTERIOR'PAINT- PAINTING-INTERIQR-EXTERIOR free estimates, 332-98Q7, Mr. Morr QUALITY WORK ASSURED. PAINT-paperlng, wall washing. 473- ATTENTION SALESM4N CAN YOU SELL? It so, we have an opening ... 2 people Interested in making money Real Estate experience helpful but not necessary. We --a good building program am attractive commission sch( For Interview call — Mr. T« OR 4-0304, eves. EM 3-7544. REAL ESTATE SALESMAN, GOOD opportunity for aggressive person, ample floor time. Experienced preferred. but will train. TOM REA-GAN.REALTY. 332-0154. office. ^ CALL JOE KUYKND- REAL ESTATE SALES full time AMBITIOUS SAl PEOPLE NEroED. Will trair call for intervitw — Neg-Strom Realtor, MLS, 4900 W. Huron — OR 4-"7“ - ■ nings OR 314229 a SALES PERSON FOR LIGHTING fixture showroom, some sales ex. perlence necessary, references required, apply In person. Standard Electric Co., 175 S. Saginaw StZeet, Ponllac.________' Work Wanted Male HlT I CARPENTER. WORK OF ALL tinds. 473-8514._____ ' CARPENTER. ROUGH AND EMPLO^’ip~FA/^ILY man NEEDS E 5-0163 or FE 2-79 LOTS AND FIELDS MOWED. RETAINER WALLS, PATIOS ETC. TREtJcHING work DONE REA- sonable. 391-0442. ran^d F IRONING SERVICE. 434 MEL--e. Maxine McCowan, FE 4-3867. ADULT SITTER V SarIeRtMINRED YOUNG WOM'-*"bll*'**'l tl ''***^*1 **P*''^PFe In ^e and promotion, seeks challenc PRACTICAL NURSE AVAILABLE - ’2 hour duty any shift, good references. 338-4758. SECRETARY AWAY? GET OUT OF DEBt Avoid GARNISHMENTS, REPOSSESSIONS, BAD C«EOtH -HAR-RASSM^T, BANKRUPTCY ANC LOSS. ^ JOB. We have helpec thousands of people with cradltoi problems by providing a planned managed, organized-----— ' US CONSOLIDATE _______________ WITH ONE LOW PAYMENT YOU CAN AFFORD. NO limit as to amount owed and number of creditors. For those who realize, "YOU CAN'T BORROW YOURSELF OUT OF DEBT . . LICENSED AND BONDfD, Home Appointment Gladly Arranged No Cost or Obligation Jor Interviews HOURS 9-7 P.M.-SAT. 9-5 p.m. , DEBT AID FE 2-0181 Dressmaking & Tailoring T7 tandscaping SCOUT EXECUTIVE DESIRES bedroom home or equivalent, pr. erably W. Bloomfield or Water-. lord. Ret. 343-3134.________ lady with 3 children n WILW SHARE MY HOME employed mother and 1 i 3, child care. 4= E 5-9445. W^i^d^olJjtOte^ 1 homes, lots, ACREAGE PAR. CELS, FARMS, BUSINESS PROP-ERTIES, AND LAND CONTRACTS WARiaip e Water Softeners ^SPERRV RAND \Ackers 15 Mile and Crooks Troy, Michigan Has immediate openings for quolified Tab Machine Operators ployee benefits Including pension and edu irem. Coll 576-3411 for Appointment 8:15 A.M.-^ P.M. An Equal Opportunity Employer YORK WE TRADE ' OR 4-8363 Drayton Plains CASH 48 HOURS LAND CONTRACTS—HOMES WRIGHT 2 Oakland Ave. FE 2-91 I HAVE A PURCHASER WITH CASH-FOR A STARTER. HOME IN OAKLAND COUNTY, call AGENT ______YORK AT 474-1498 __ • LOis-wANTED IN PONTIAC' Immediate closing. REAL VALUE REALTY, 426-9575. NEED CASH? lOvIng out of state? Need ci settle debts? Need cash ti another hotne? Want cas your home? Cash tor your.equL fy? We will buy your home for cash today - Call Nick F---- lukas at 6'Nall Realty, Im 4-2222 or-FE 5-4484 now I Ray O'Neil Realty, Inc. 3520 Pontiac Lake Road FOR YOUR HOME, SMALL FARM OR WOODS \ FOR YOUR EQUITY, VA, , OR OTHER. FOR QUICK ACTION CALL NOW. HAGSTROM REALTOR, OR 4-0358 OR EVENINGS WANT TO SELL YONR-PROPERTY? For prompt, no obllgotlon app listings call LAWYERS 37 Rent Businesc Property 47-A Sole Housei Apartments, Unturnished 38 room. Adults h "SaleJIwiet — J-BEDROOM HOME V apartments - 3 ROOMS AND bath, carpeted, utilities ' W. Bloomtield Scho?! d •bedroom duplex, $I on lease. For details c 8875 after 4 p.m. 2-BEDROOM RANCH . Possible 3 bedrooms, large lot, f-,c«r garagS, alum, siding, fenced-iiTyard. $12,500. Terms. FLA.TTLEY REALTY 420 COMMERCE RO_______363-4981 _3635 JOSLYN 3-BERROOM WITH LARGE LOT, garage, full price $10,300 — $2500 down. By owner — Whitg ' - - ROOMS, FULL BASEMENT, $90 month, $50 deposit. 298 E. Blvd. S. COLORED NEIGH^ BEikOTIFUL PANORAMIC VIEW, luxurious split-level 2;bed-Hlllview Village. 343-7902. - BEAUTIFUL 1-BEOROOM APART-ment, carpeting, al? conditioning. Garbage disposal, stove. and refrigerator. Adults, no pets. $148. DORRIS. 35 Monroe. 338.2947. BLOOMFIELD ORCHARD APARTMENTS Ideally situated In Bloomfield-B mingham area, luxury 1- and bedroom apartments available f immediate .possession from $1 per month Including carpelin Hptpolnt, air conditioning and a swimming pool and large sun d»‘ - All utilities except electric, detail of luxury has been ove looked in Bloomfield Orchard Apt located on South Blvd. (20 Mi Rd.), between Opdyke end 1-75 c CLEAN PARTLY FURNISHED 3Vi MODERN, 2 BEDROOM, HE ----eting, appliances. $121 mo n year's lease. 678-2595. NEW LUXURIOUS APT. T Bedroom—epk—$l45^-Jbto ^children or pets allowed. Fireplace, carpeting, drapes, stove and refrig, furnished, plus all utijltles except electricity. In Drayton Plains area on West Walton Blvd: Tall OR 4-3403 after 5:00 p.m, weekdays and anytime Sat., Sun. «■ i ROCHESTER LARGE NEW ^ BED-( !d'*'^from *$l45*'’'c8il ”45l'-0432 FOR LEASE.-2400 SQUARE FT. merclal north east area, un-tad outside storage, call 493- ig, stor bullt-.li 94-0152. 3 Bedrooms LOW DOWN PAYMENT NO MORTGAGE, COSTS MODEL OPEN 579 COLORADO 1:30 to 5 p.m. — 4 day week WESTOWN REALTY /E 8-2743 da^s 3 MODELS OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAY d the Dan Mattingly e I BATHS. $10,990. 4-H REAL ESTATE g by°curt full basament, ., siding, 2 car garaga, chlck-ouse. larga orchard of pear 's Church. Full price $22,-can be spilt house and 3 $18,500. Beautiful building Dixie Hyxy. Attar 5 p.m OR 3-0455-^. JR 4-2004. iWh, PAULINE DRIVE 5-ROOM‘RaI—_____________________ Drayton Plains, $12,500. Land ---- ---- out, $85 Call 473-7237 after 4 10% DOWN NEW HOMES BIG-BEAUTIFUL-BARGAIN walled Lake 85 ft,- brick ranch, 9 rooms, 2 beth$ and much more. Exc: assumetlpn. $22,900. 624-2104. Brown R'eeltors 8, Bullder$ Since 1939 complete v----- ------ sawn cedar exterior, wrought Iron covered windows, and fcourtyerd. The Interior Is accented with a winding staircase, state foyer, fireplace, open beam callings. Includes 3 bedrooms, )'/■ baths, family room, 2-car garage. Complete at $23,900. Les Brown, Realtor 509 Elizabeth Lake Rd., < (Across from the Mall) FE 2-4810 or F.E 4-3544 car garage, excellent subdivision, $27,950. Call OR 3-0100. ____ BY OWNER 3-BEDROOM BRICK, Formal dining area, 2 baths, walnut paneled family room with -matching walnut bar — fenced — 2'/z car attached garage. Auto, garage opener. $24,700, $5,000 down. Before 9 a.m. pr alter 9 p.m. _474-15J^C. Akers.______ b\ owner 3 bedroom. Carpeting. Garage. 70 x219' fenced lot. Waterford Schools. Quick occupancy. $13,900. 474-1840 or 343-9952. i furnace, finished partial base-nt, newly painted, redwood Sid-1, single car ffirage. 2115 Okia-'*, Rochester — Shown h Neat 3-bedroom layout, basement, gas heat, completeTy carpeted; 2 car garege, ZERO down, $78 per month, Tmmedleta occupancy. FHA Approved, - -ers agent, 474-1449. Crestbrook MODEL OPEN DAILY 12-8 3 bedroom, family room and 2 car garage priced et only $15,990 plus lot. Located In new sub with paved streets, curb, gutter, sidewalks and city water. Drive out M59 to Crescent Lake Road turn right to Crestbrook street and model. DON GIROUX' real ESTATE BEDROOM RANCH » 3-BED.ROOM BRICK TRILEVEL, WEST SIDE. 4 ROOMS AND BATH. ' Retired couple or refined working ' ' gentleman. 335-9038. WEST SIDE 2 BEDROOM, NEWLY decotated. Carpeting. Drapes. Stove. Retrlgeneitor and garage. $125 mont"'- ----------- -........... Lion. 887-57 ?! Rent Houses, Furnished 39 bedroom, NEWLY DECORAT- Apartments, Fornished 37 Cass-Elizabeth Rd. i 1 BEDROOM APARTMENT ROOMS ^ welcome. $25 i dep., Inquire at________ Pontiac, Call 338-4054. ROOMS AND BATH, I ROOMS AND BAtH, PRIVATE entrance, 98 S. Edith._ AND 3 ROOMS, PRIVATl BAfit and entrance, utilities turn., 300 ROOMS FURNISHED. EX'CEL-lent condition. $20 per wee' — deposit. 474-1581. ___ ROOMS AND BATH, F I ST floor, quiet couple. FE 5-8929. ROOMS BY FISHER BODY $: ROO/W APARTMENT, UTILITIES ROOMS AND BATH. ( BEDROOMS ON LAKE, $35 Wk. plus own utilities, dep. 474-3378. LaSgE CLEAN ROOMS, ADULTs, ilred. 493-4413. LARGE ROOMS AND BATH, child welcome, $35 - ------^ • 332-4138. ROOMS AND bath, PRIVATE, ADULTS Or^LY, I BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS. Walls cleaned. Reas. Satlsfe ■' gupninteed. Insurtd. FE 2-1431. JANJTORIAL SERVICES—windoWI ■•'BShlng—Cornmerclel end tesltf "" ' Satisfaction guaranteed^J-IBi-: J^ll^ Drilling . DRILLING. WELL RE- \/lCKERS 15 Mile and Crooks ^ Troy, Michigan ... Has inrmediote openings for qualified KEY PUNCH OPERATORS REM: RAND EXPERIENCE REQUIRED Second shift. High School graduates with recent Key Punch experience. Liberal employee benefits Including Pensloh-and educitlonar ei-elstence Urogram, Call 576-3411 for Appointment -8:15 A.M.-5 PJW* ^ An Equgl Op^rtunlty Employer baby ------------ ... ....._________... weak, $100 dap. Inquire at 273 Baldwin, Call 338-4054,__________________ bacheliJr ment. Well EI^FICIENCY APART-furnlshed.' $14 weekly. te7-5734. BACHELOR APARTMENT — Prl-vate entrance, bath and kitchan, Vz mile from 1-75, 15 minutes to Pontiac Motor. ' Everything fur- Underwoqd Real btqte 425-2415, Evas. 42|B125 BACHELOR — 3-ROOM PRIVATE, LAKEFRONT EFFICIENCY APART-ment, $30 wk, plus dep. 087-4140, LAKE ORION, MODERN, BACHE- ROOAJS,- $35 WEEK, NEAR WEST BLOOMFIELD HIGH School, 3 rooms — 1-rrten occupancy. Private entrance, bath. 1-car, parking space, Ue*l for quiet living. $4$ per mo. Utilities turn. Ret, req. Reply Press Box 0-37. NICE 3 ROOMS AND BATH, arga 'J■EEDRO(^M'■rc^;oRYXC'?1?''K^^hi; alumaview windows, 2-car brick paneled family room, $27,- , J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor a '3 mile west of Oxbow Lake UU604 10735 HIgtitand Rd. (M59) $100 DOWN CURL UP M SMALL FAMILY COMFORT this 2-bedroom, alum, sided IS YOURS A irfTtt F'AIWTtlVT---- -don't fall to Inspect tl dren, no petsr all utilities supplied, S30 wk., $90 dep. W-3477. ______ BEDROOM HOME, IN GOOD' condlf^bn. N. End. “Responsible ;.YORK 2 BEDROOM CLEAN, 3 ROOMS AND BATH, UTILt SMALL HOUSE 1C couple, single man o children. MA S-S489. WE trade! _ „ OR 4*0363 ^ TERMS, NORTH- xl48' site, IVa car gai lendly neighborhood < ade schools.. 119,250. Nc DRAYTON AREA ' ew 3 bedroom, IVo betas, full isemenl, large lot, cloie to ihop-ng centers end schools. DON E. McDonald Licensed builder 3 7837 DR 3-2810 EXCELLENCE ■r both In this custom brick ranch Dakwood .Manor. Has 1344 sq. Representing B. C BEDRDDM, CASS LAKE CANAL tront, yearly lease, dep. 4820821 BEDRDDM, 2 SCHDDL 7aCE AVON TWP. 3 bedroom ranch with walk4; basement, enclosed breeieway a attached 2 car garage. Sifuat on a large well landscaped lot U 3-BEDRODM, CARPDRT ■■), children welcome. F[ ' 5 p.m. Herrington Hj - __________________________ LAKEFRONT YEAR ffOUND bedroom. Nice beach. Gas he $135 per mo. FE 2-2031. Large 4-bedroom executive type home located West University Rent Lake Cottages 41 Lk. Rd. 9443 -Mandon. J63-8139 427 7577._________________^_____ LAKE - front C 0 T T a G E S. IN Northern Michigan — FE 5-1325 UNION LAKE, MODERN, SLEEPS , JM_3-3^._____ WEEK, FURNISHED ROOMS. _ iHepIng rooms, a52-4959. PonUgg, BASEMENT ROOM FOR 1 OR ----toohlng, reas. FE 3-7306. CLEAN, CLOSE TO. DOWNTOWN. FE 3-7241 Eves. Y. WALK TO TEL-H ____ Cookin.g FE 2-7941. lakefrOiw, home to SAGAMORE MOTEL, SINGLE DC- Rent Office Space attention doctors a. dentist Establish your office In "' medica? boll! ‘ r office It ____ jtiding r ' I Hospital, Lari V available. Caj gomplate details. OR 4 B(inf Butlneii RfpBrty ^-A STORE BUILDING Baldwin, near Columbia and Walton $150 month. Ample . parking, 1500 $q. ft. building, gas heat. M59 HIGHLAND ROAD West pt,>Mlac, newer building 400, sq. tt. pis loading dock, if»nfe4 yard, 314'frontage, 2 acres. Sun. Call 332-3759. I, lamlly wn. MODEL. young-bilt homes I C. SCHUETT """‘R^uLT^o'i^ng^^sVLV'"" i 3-708_8 _MA_3-0288 I" “‘FINE HMES ARE BY7.... ra'rsou^Tbumed^^ ^OR^P. plastering and oalnt, a bargain! 3538 PontlQC Loke Rood Md-this low pjice evallabia oniyj 673-1717 KENNETH G. HE^MPSTTEAD Realtor I-FTksTT(rv4rrii~ - FE 4-8284 - 185 ELIZABETH LK. FIRST IN VALUE A VILLAGE HOME 3 bedroom home with 21x12 llv room, full bath, nice kitchen, ' ished basement plus a speck washer and dryer area Is included. Blacktop road, cic— .. schools • and shopping. Additional acreage aval table. $18,900. C. PANGUS INC., Realtors OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 30 M-15 Orlonvill ____CALL COLLECT jfA 7-2815 OR 4 4900 W '“'“AT-ROCHESTER Sharp quality-built 3-bedroom frl-with den or 4th,'has larga kitchen. Family room combination', 'lYj beta — utilities, fenced yard, 2'/5 car ga-— *- schools, shopping, cent dqyyn. quick ________ SHEPARD REAL ESTATE 439 N, MAIN _____ AT ROCHESTER $14,900 — 3 bedroom on a beautiful wooded lot, gas heat, " rage. Terms -L wItt session. MILTON WEAVER, Inc., Realtors In the Village Of Rochester University 451-8141 AUBURN HEIGHTS. -basemOnt, garage. Ni: — 451-0221, 052-5375. BARGAIN MIXED AREA EXCELLENT EAST SIDE LOCO TION - THREE BEDROOMS -AUTOMATIC HEAT - NICELY ^LANDSCAPED YARD — QUICK Possession on land contract WITH DOWN payment. WRIGHT REALTY 302 Oakland FE 2-9141 "Cash tor ell kinds of property" Beauty Rite -Homes- Trade your "ustd home on a new Beeuty-Rlta Home "Buy Direct from a Builder and Save" 3538 Pontiac Lake Rd. 473-1717 - 473-3741 BRICK 3 BEDROOM RANCH, FULL ■------‘ ■ a half, 2'A-car 493-4093, 334- RENTING ■ $78 Mo. Excluding taxes and Insurance ONLY $10. Deposit Wini APPLICATION LARGE DINING AREA yiLL ACCEPT -ALL APPLICA--TIONS FR^OM ANY WORKERS, ' WIDOWS OR DIVORCEES. OKAY V OPEN DAILY AND SAT. ANB SUN. OR COME TO 290 KENNETT NEAR BALDWIN REAL VALUE REALTY For Immediate ActionXoU— EE S-3676 626-9575 rooms, den or office, country size kitchen, IW baths, attached garege. Extra large tot, beeutdully Lauinger ALTY 674-0319 GAYLC^: MACEOAY LAKE. 205' on the water. Fireplace In living room — Large kllchjta and utility room. Glassed-In front porch. l'/i<4r garage. Cell MY 2-282?. FE 0-9493. LAKE COTTAGE, lor on lake. 3 bed-' ns. Stone fireplace. Good terms good price. Call ,MY 2-2821. HANDYMAN SPECIAL Vacant, 2 bedroom tench, full I ~ent, double im, make an mar's agent, 474-1490. HIITER NEAR THE MALL — Immediate ^^ssion^pn^thls 4-bedroom brlpk tern, family room with dMble fireplace, full basement, attached 2Vj. car garage.' Nice lot. Call today. lEAR WALLED lAKE - Larga lot with this S'Mroom'ranch, 2-car garage. $14,(TO, terms. i 1.750, WE -BUILD - This 3-bedroom rancher with oak floors, vanity In bath, full basentanf, gas heat. On your lot. To Sea the model dell B. C. HIITER, REALTOR, 3792 Elizabeth Lake Rd. FB 2-0179, etter O P.it). 602-4453. Gl OR FHA W»ll ktpt J bedroom bom rf ;‘.T'vS?dT.o Full price $10,500. ; bullt-ln omplele- NORTH ROCHESTER ROAD, NEW 3 bedroom tri-level with attached OW-car oarage, carpeted, with Dan Edponds REALTOR 325 Pontiac Trail, Walled Lake 624-4811 IRWIN HANDYMAN SPECIAL 3-bedroom lake front home with large living room, fireplace anc front porch overlooking Wormei Val-U-Way alum, elding, car garage, fenced lot. Approximately $500 will handle on FHA. Monthly r ments approximately $85, Indue taxes and Insurance. GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICI 298 W. Walton FE J-7883 Immediate possessIon-3 bed-room ranch with beautiful Interior, located oh 5 acres. Extra large atiBChed garage and basemer* Stream through property. Ideal f IRWIN DAVISBURG ROAD: Clarkston school area. Paneled ng room, full dining room, kllch-an(^-balh. Basemenl. New fur-:e. Tear garage. Price; J|13,900, ' EAST .SIDE: JOHN K. IRWIN & SONS Realtors 313 West Huron - Since Buying dr Selling Call FE 5-94S5 AHer 5:00 CaM FE 5-8683 JUDAH LAKE ESTATES Small down payment on this e Floyd Kent, Inc., Realtor 3200 Dixie Hwy. at Telegraph i ^E y 123___ or F E< ‘ 2-2*t42 LAKE FRONT Lovely 3 room home on Van Norman Lake across from Waterford Hill. Paneled walls, new carpeling, pttach ed garage, paved drive, beautiful $1,000 DOWN ON Land CONTRACT Sale Houses 49 WVMAN igEWlS REALTY Lakeville, 628-3135. 1520 Rochester BAt USX NO MORTGAGE COSTS * NO CREDIT REPORTS to pay for when you lust take over the payments on thU. 3,year-old bungalow located near Fisher Body. 3 large bedrooms, convenient kitchen and dining area, gas storms and screens. FE 4-3531 )ROOM, . ______sad “ itract. After 5 MILLER AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR .AKE privileges, $»,950 full price P AND READY. 3 bi with lovely carpeting dining room, glassed a“ porch^/full ba"— ' ttSjytio. E«sy terms. Don't waltl WEST SIDE CLEAN. 3 bee________________ ■■ featuring new carpeting, newly Bted, new kitchen with sun celling, full basmt. plus. Only OPEN SAT. 2-6 SUN. 1-5 3-BEDRM. BRICK TRI-LEVEL New model nearing completion featuring Tva baths, 2 car garage, large family room, loads of closets and storage space, kitchen pan-and glass door wall. From $i7„ 600 plus lot. Directions: , MODEL S.OFF KENWIGK DR. between Williams Lake Rd. and Union Lake VUikg'e J*"c. HAYDEN, Realtor liyi 1??35_H'9^^^ RdM M-59) OPEN SATURDAY 1-5 '2930 W. Hickory Grove Road — lust west of Franklin Road. Beautiful MonterM ColonlS on the Fairway of Forest Lake Country Club. Many extras. Make this a must see. $66,000. BROOCK Val-U-Way 2 FAMILY INCOME Spacious 5-room apt. down and comfortable 3-room apt. up. Separate baths, kitchens and entrances, large enclosed front porch, tiled baths, loads of closets, Com- al rental d let the t. Only $11,950, Gl - ORION TWP. Gated on 80'x200' lot. Lan room, hte^ood .floors, ceiling ttjfoQghoute" tITe I R. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 345 Oakland Ave._Open 9 to GILES COMMERCIAL PROPERTY 160' frontage o Income. Good te rooms, oas haat. aluminum storms and scraans. Prietd to Mil. Im-medlata possession. YORK 4713 Dtxia Hw/„ Drayton Plains- ROCHESTER — 4 ACRES WITH sweeping view, spacious 3-bedroom ranch, dining room, fireplace, garage, $35,900. Nix Realtor, 451-0221, 852-5375. ROSS WE BUY WE TRADE OR 4-0363 OR 4-0363 Buy ot today's prices — save ;KENT- A-BEDROOM COLONIAL First floor laundi^, ceramTc fW bath, roomy kitchtm and nook, like new, — ^ men "'na1L"raMirepl1& family room with 10^ 16 paflo. PONTiaC NORTHERN - 2 bed rooms, all large rooms. $8,400 on iMd contract. $2,01)0 down, $74 per rnonth Includes taxes and Insur- kitchen built-ins, gas incinerator. Total house including lake . privilege lot $29,400. 4-BEDROOM TRI-LEVEL seeded lot. Total _ lake privilege lo as'Idw as"?o"'^* DOWN MOVES LAKELAND ESTATES sROYER fha! Richor TAT 1 T-h T I ' Warden Realty ire^.: 3434 W. Huron, Pontiac -333-7157 " Tear; Richord S. Royer, Realtor HERRINGTON HILLS . answer call 33S1I' if Pontiac. Good l’basemertt, 'ga5*^eat, i larage, McConnell Sc Claude McGruder Realtor ARRO TED McCullough, Realtor OWNER TRANSFERRED. ., M 0 s THE rONTIAC MF;SS, FRIDAY, JULY 21, 1967 4«J'l Houses lOHNSON D—5 UNION LAKE AREA 6-room, 1-story frame with tiful landscaped lots. Ther. _ -----wlth_a walk-out recreation '■-go kitchen and dining l-to-wall cirpeting In llv-and bedaoom, two-car ske privllei S'J s........................... the asking price of $18r750 with cash to mortgage. NOTHING DOWN TO Ql On this cute two-bedroom doll -heusw-w Keego^4iarborv-Closa to school, shopping end bus. New...gas furnace. Full pricb only $8,950. ' Closing costs will move you In. A. Johnson & Son, Realtors After 6, call Jack Joll, 682-0282. 1704 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 4-2533 Sole Houses . 49 MATTINGLY LAKE FRONT Brand new and ready for you, 3-bedroom ranch with recreation full basement, brick and aluminum. .Only ^$27,900, 10 per cent SILVER LAKE ESTATES SCHRAM a shaded $375 DOWN 2- bedroom bungalow, furnace, garage, larj becue. FHA terms. $550 DOWN 3- bedroom, newly dec good location, 30 da) $1,000 boWN OPEN MON.-FRI. 9-9 List With SCHRAM And Coll The Von 1 JOSLYN AVE, FE 5-9371 STRUBLE LAKE FRONT y Have your own private beach with this beautiful 4 - bedroom brli" home on Lake Oakland, firdplac KEEGO HARBOR Close to Commerce Rd., I $^oom 3-bgdroom home. I exterior Is .prefinished clap-t_______ that requires no painting, fenced rear yard. 810,700 full price. Sale Houses ■ 49 KAMPSEN "IT'S TRADING TIME" LAKE FRONT $15,500 six room, two bedroom home. 22' Hying room with natural fireplace, 19x12' dining room with patio door. 24'. living room. 76x> TWIN LAKES FRONT This brand new Bay Capri has most In modern living, ptlced $43,900. Trade In your present home and move right In. $13,950-$2,000 DOWN On land contract buys this ni three bedroom well cared i home. All new kitchen! Fjjll _ sio.ooft basement, gas , heaT Screened tract. TIMES nch with full basement and . . r attached garage. This hogne 5 approximately 2000 square In the basement area which .. almost completely finished. This home Is situated on a corner make your appointment earl/. 63 ACRES. Improved I 1,248 s vvith gas hot water heat and full basement. Property is gently rolling in topography and has 1,000 pine trees carefully planted throughout. Tenant home has 2 bedrooms, outbuildings consist ol 30'x50' barn, 14'x22' chicken Ings. Prope^rty has*3,300*^eef of road frontage and is blacktopped — Owner has surveyed the property into 10-acre parcels I offering. rnished. This Is call early fc WHEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE "JOIN THE MARCH OF TIMES" Times Realty 'BUD" TAYLOR DRAYTON WOODS SPECIAL — Immediate possession, large bedrooms, large ‘= oom with beautiful firepTac rate dining room, both a ■......... WEST SIDE FE 8-4025 3 BEDROOM ^.535-6514 ^ - - Sole Houses 49 RHODEJS' LAKE ORION. Nice 8-rbom home. Dll hc^at, large 60'x240' lot, only . 1(18,000, $5,000 down, balance land SYLVAhf VILLAGE. 5-room home, attached ga- sfrbets. Located on north side of Chy. ■Wlsner and Lincoln Junior High District. Ten days pos- bedroom _______ ________ ...______ tiful corner lot 120'x150'. Two . .. Huge carpeted -------- CIO' kitchen with ------...ve end..refrlgera... ., eluded. Attached garage. Oftere WALTERS LAKE. Beautiful recreation room, gas heat, 2-i garage, lake privileges. Only $: A. J. RHODES, REALTOR FE 8-2306 258 W, Walfon FE 5-6712 It $29,50 QUICK POSSESSION. NEW RANCHER Featuring three bedrooms family, room yylth natural place, ceramic tile bath, ____ kitchen with GE self cleaning oven. Attached garage and ' " basement. Gas heat, large lake privileges. Offered at 950. Terms or trade. THINKING OF SELLING OR TRADING HbMES --OUR ESTIMATE BEFORE ruu DEAL — Call Bob Emiry, Thurman Witt, Elaine Smith, Dave - GET PLEASANT SERVICEI t - FOR FAST CLARK 2 FAMILY INCOME: 5 large rooms on first floor, 25' living room with briek fireplace. S0'x150' I location, nice large 8-room h HALL fireplace, separate _ !-car garage. "Real nice lake privllegecj on Bren- MIDDLE STRAITS -bungalow ,with full basen living room and family, en, also 2-c.ar garage o BUILDING?' If you tions; also acrei NORTHERN HIGH: 3-bedroom bungalow. Aluminum siding, pak floors, plastered walls. G8s heat. Good condition and clean. Full basement, IV2- rv;,lagr;.®rrice:nT5!?T. OWNER ANXIOUS: Zoning CommerciaLT bedrooms, fireplace in living room, oak floors, plastered' walls, basement, lot 82'x534'. Good locatioh. Only $19,500 on contract terms. CLARK REAL ESTATE 1362 W. HURON FE 3-7888 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE ^rob,'’q'urk f-l BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP 12) tip-1 able Col top building sites :olonial Hills S -'-"- i ANNETT West Side - 6 Rooms I condition. First floor i%s car B. HALL REALTY Best B.uys Today OVERLOOKING ELIZABETH LAKE.-- Large bungalow-; Income Property ^ 50 BY OWNER, 9 UNIT APART-ment, Exc. location', lake privileges, approx. I acre, or more if desired. FE 438188. GAYLORD area, nicely WOC — 3abln . s1te on small lake ible Ranch and Ski Club, a plot. OR 34)923. Luke Property Lots—Acreage M Vj acre lot on LEACH rd., ----------------------- 2-2304. 'neat 4 r60M-‘»” ' Cottage, 3 lots, Dollar Bay, wi; access to beautiful Cass Lak full price: $14,300. Cottage and lot, may be purchased separately. JACK LOVELAND 2100 Cass U'ke Rd. ___________ 682-1255 living *M9tn and arpeted. SiMclous I Is of cupboards. G. 50x150' LOT, ON Mt. Clemens, City 682-5070. COOLEY LAKE FRONT DUCK LAKE FRONT WATERFORD I- holly recreation area ' WOLVERINE LAKE AREA LOT'— ‘ 80'xJ65'. $1,500, CLARKSTON AREA LOT - 160'x- 4 ACRES Lake^rjy. west Bioom- llreplace. Beautifu on mo-xiso' lot, your ov front lot on Elizabeth L SCHUETT COMME RCE, WOLVERINE, SfL-ver, Oakland, Huron River front-age. Fowler 363-6613 or 363-6683. DEER LAKE ............ '■ Beautiful large lake lot *’®B^^ld°l!iw^^oNj?ing^lI^i^e7 lust] ”^^^7 “ BuMdef off Joslyn this atlragtiye bungalow j Olid SOVC" Mad!»g j°un!;>rHtgh °Sins''.4r BEAUTY-RITE HOMES rooms and bath with full base-! 3538 Pontiac Lake Rd. ................... Ideal'67^3-1717 _ , 673-3761 ' DUCK LAKE str«t loon LAKE shores XT ' pM- $15,000, $600 down plus closin costs on FHA.' ATTENTION GIs, price feduced o ing in livinq room, separate dining room, tHe bath, large modern kitchen with built-ins, 2 car drive-through garage, beautiful lot 80x270 cyclone fenced. Loon Lake orivileges. JHandy to new Stephen Frushour nicholie-hudson Associates, Inc. ■ re' 5gTo1 after 6 p.m^ FE 2-3370 dishwasher. 2^large^ bedrooms 2 car garage. $l1,950. ANOTHER NEW LISTING Illy home, I, If h«« lefed Williams Lake Front 4 bedrooms with 2 ti full basement, rec. i heat, built for a y< home. Excellent be SWIMMING POOL - , j la^^etSe^^f^o'^^r""/; Included jWilh this 3-bedroom aiu irage. $24,000. No. LH 3743. :'mh"?.1?keTs'i^a4“"Jfia;,f^s'l1? HOWELL ' family room, 20'x20?l'' Lot com- TOWN & COUNTRY INC Phone: 313-685-1585 HAR0LI) R: FRANKS,. R..lty 2 bedroo'ms, dir screened porch, on an 8'x286' lot, very nice frontage. Outdoor grill. Quiet spot. All In good clean condition. Also inefudes aluminum boat and 25 h.p. motor. Complett at $12,000. Everett Cummings, Realtor Clarkston Village I bedroom brick ■- 1961, ir ----- Livln< ranch, Mrtlt lent condition. Living with fireplace, all bullt-. ^ screened street and includes living room,] dining room^, ^lichen down, 3 bed-| Brand new offering on th built ranch that contains ' situated just o N. Opdyke Rd. Pontiac Multiple Listing Service O'NHL LAZENBY i s-v $400 DOWN - - . -............. WILL TRADE $10,950, Let's Trade, REALTORS 28 E. Huron St. Office open Evenings & Sundays 14 338-0466 srdener Is Included, 1 ROYCE LAZENBY, Realtor Open Dally from 9 lo 8:30 p m. i Sundays, 1-5 p.m. | 4626 W. Walton - OR 4-0301 M59 FRONTAGE homcsltes. Prlced^attractlvely. Dor,oThy Snyder Lavender 338-9834 _ *87.5736 ■ ' M-59 AIRPORT RD; AREA Owner must sell this beautiful aluminum sided 3;bedroom ranch. 1' ,-car attached garage, 82' by 140' fenced lot. Newly decorated inside and out. First showing, this YORK 4713 Dixie Hwy., Djayto^lalns ,WE BUY ' Wir TRADE ---- -OR-AjaM. Perkins, lif Ini Clark, FE 3-).... ....... _ Estate._I ___________ SYLVAfrLAKE VILLAGE 3-bedroom brick with . . baths, cus-Insulated Alum'aVUa windows, rYal plaster, all city services, lake privileges. 1908 Stratford. $29,900. Open Sunday, oj;^all amrtime^^-2820.______ TUCKER REALTY CO. >03 PoiTlIac Slate Bank__331-1545 TYRONE HILLS Golf Club adlacent lo 8 wooded, some pines, 3 ranch home t57.sofl CA 29 8415. HOMES. INC., 232 inYaKE AREA _jms ^ajd hath, also I furnace, F°^12l500,'’*p'lus LOVELY 3-BEDROOM RANCH. Paneled family room. Basement. Large fenced lot with patio. 2- I Champion, 12x46' with lOx Itlon, attached IVa car garag ats, lake privileges on Merri ;e. 22 Miles No. of Pontia MODEL $48,500. Location 5 Walton Blvd. east Pomeroy Street. PRESTON. wood floors, excellent condition ^ throughout, pi ' mortgage cost! K. L. TEMPLETON, Realtor 139 Orchard Lake Rd. _ 682^00 UNUSUAL - DIFFERENT ----44AHQ«t--6XC1TING , THE COMPLETE HOME Timberline 5242 and^ 5230 While Lake Road WALNUT LAKE PRIVILEGES, A' tractive 3-bedroom home with all fligham Schools, by owner,' $15,50 2 nice bedrooms, dining room, plaatered walls, gas heat and _ basement. Garage and comfortable backyard. $10,700 full price, I available. Sislock & Kent, Inc. 1309 Pontiac State Bank BIdu 338-9294 , ^_________336-9295 NORTHWEST SUBURBAN 3-bedroonh, large living room tractive kitchen, gas heat, i siding, storms and screens, t street location. FHA or Gl terr TOM REAGAN REAL ESTATE 2251 N. Opdyke > Mall MLS 682-5802 if busy M2^58 Val-IJ-Way 2 ACRES beaufifully landscaped law "Waterford DRAYTON PLAINS Solid older home. With 2 bed rooms, full basemetfl, with show er. Nicely landscaped yard. 2 ca garage. 80' lot. $12,000. SERVICE IS OUR BUSINESS WATERFORD REALTY 4540 Dixie Hwy. 673-127^ Multiple Ll5tlng Service WATERFORD ,AREA: VACANT 3 bedroom, custom brick ranch WATKINS LAKE PRIVILEGES, 3-bedroom ranch, Vh baths, ' basement, 2-car garage, kl Wideman bedroom colonial, room and dining room, IVs baths, kitchen has plenty of cupboards and breakfast nook. Basement, large recreation room. 2 car garage, nke lot. PRICED TO SELL. BY.-APPOINT-h^ENT ONLY, 1,0. Wideman, realtor 412 W. HURON ST. 334-4526 LIKE A NEW HOUSE? ou can have a sparkling new ifnt!'*^lum"^ siding. .. __ .... _s $15,200, t you. Coaventionai. trade-in your present “Take “privileges. Deluded with this new 3-bedroom anch. Offers big bedroom, living 1, step-saver kitchen, dining D, sliding glass door, IV, baths, full 2-car attached garage, on large lot, $19,400, Immediate possession. LAKE FRONT On beautiful Sugden Lake - All brick, 1-story ranch-type. Each unft has big bedrooms, firepla. utility rooms, gas heat, 24'x24' rage. Large lot. Good beach j Plan lo^ see this outstanding op- j CEDAR ISLAND _____ "Buz^" dining area, full Yasement and aj-T^ K nrr~''K A A "NT I'oXii^e?; s To'r' JiHoo-sgl m A i hJVL Ain Ee,JLv“- ~NOW IS THE TIME WHY NOT TRADE? FOR YOU HORSE LOVERS This 10-acra farm with 2-sfory 3-room typical farm home, very EM : IMMEDIATE POSSESSION level ranch In wooded section of Judah Lake Estates, walk Vj block lo lake, this Chesterfield Sf. home ■ oilers 3 bedrooms, large living room, step-saving kitchen with dishwasher, carpeting throughout. PRIME ly, tremendous .water frontage, -chy ufililies , $5,000 -per ocre. 623- , keatington ' Beautiful lake-front and lakH-prlvF lege lots available. .Plan to live on leat beautiful new town in Orion 1^,^. j Township^ Models open 3-4 dally. 3 ACR£$ BLACK Dif 652-4163 . _____ HOME SITE PAR- cels. with small ponds, wooded and hilly, highly secluded, 15 miles NW of Pontiac. Owner, 625-5568. 0-50 ACRES, WOODED ifiVER frontage Mr. Fowier, EM 3-9534, . EAA; ' I ACRES FOR PRIVACY, PLEAS- , Smith „.FB ACRES, LAPEER, $15,006), $5,- , oOO down, balance land contract. 0 ACRES, Ortonville. $8500. Terms. ,3 ACRES, Davisburg, 866,500. 5 ACRES/'Indianwood, $30,000, $10,-000 down, balance land contract. L J. RHODES, REALTOR F STERLING OFP water and sewer. : HWY. IDEAL A BETTER WAY ' IS THE COUNTRY WAY homes. $3^95, S590 down. ACRES, across fr Ing, $4850. Terms. ACRES, nice scenic lar exposed basement home, < mile from new proposed e: hardtop road. $7995, I woods, 300' of ful state land, ,-wooded and with pond possibilities. $8,900. Tifrms. C. PANGUS JNC„ Realtors OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEIt •• 30 M-15 Ortonville CALL COLLECT NA 7-28M Sy~6wner. ( ACRES, 397' ROAD TroRToge. wmppla Lk. Pd 9407 Cornell Av6. Clarkston. Christmas Tree Farm 0 acres, 0 miles north of Stand-th. $40,000 proverbial Scotch pinet —In various stages ol growth. To larvest $4,000 to $5,000 per year. Ill pruned , and sprayed. $12,500, I eso'yaao* square. ) T, KEATING CO lie Rd., Birmini 81 6-1234 JACK FRUSHOUR, Realtor 5730 Williams Lake Rd. / MLS _____67^45 __ FE“5-8l83 BEAUTIFUL ACRE" OF LAND: Landscaped to perfection. Centennial 1-story farm-■■--- modern kitchen, part ildini Airihls.'plus a' sd'xl'io'-^aS* - . lot across the stfeet on iinn»i Straits Lake. Priced at $23,51 Living ri full ball . $12,500, $3,000 MIDDLE STRAITS LAKE FRONT l bedrooms, full basemen Barege, good beach, $13,50C A two and a Ihfee bedroom home both* lust decorated, ,— -0 down payment on e - good _ - - Jollars St move yod ' of them. Good -c ...........fireplace, large 12'» ,o' kitchen with plenty of cup boards, 2 spacious 14' bedrooms and 1 smaller bedroom wi" size closets. Over'1400 s( Hying area. Full basement R. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 45 Oakland ^ve._ _Open 9,to 9 KINZIER 4-flEDROOM COLONIAL Beautiful cusfom-bullt llke-new and all of the .latest Innovations. Rich kitchen caSlnefs with bullt-ln oven, range, paneled family room with fireplace and ,gtSss doors to rear patio. Formal dining area plus breakfast area. Fenced rear yard and dwarf fruit trees, i" > «k» Oakland shor-" - Better sf 'FAMILY ROOM with fireplace In this new large 3-bedroom, I'/i baths ranch home with walk-out " reatlon. EAST I full basement, ... ..... hardwood floor, garage fenced yard. Immediate p< WEST rban with privileges on Ellz. I. A dandy two bedroom bun> ’SEMINOLE HILLS Eight room tram carpeting, a privileges a home to’- TED'S , ALWAYS Ti^ding YOUR HOME WILL SELL FASTER ...... gleaming oak fl Thermopane windows, heat. Well located on high s lot off Clarkston-Orion Rd. 3 LAKE FRONT LOTS On a good take With gentle slope to safe sand JMch. Average i^ze 50'x150', out of town owner. 45 ACRES In Holly TWp. All d borders on ■ . ----- Older 2-^di™... go6d investment or. Ideal for development or organization. Eves., phone Clarkston — 625-3298. JOHN KIN’ZLER, Realtor )I9 Dixie Hwy. 623-0335 Across ftom Packers Store Multljl^ Listing Service 6pen ..........‘ realtoi a GUARANTEED >>^!_AN. You'" i one that suits . We believe this : TOP^IEAVY , ’ WITH VALUE ick ranch with' famfly room, I sement, attached garage, .2 I Ihs. Carpeting ana fireplace II now, let's trade. McCullough realty , 5466 Hljjhlan^ Rd, (M 674-2238 kitchen. Immediate possession with easy financing By Appointment. , Eves. Call Mr. Castell FE 2-7273 Nicholie & Harger Co. Better call Noijf! NO. 55 SUBURBAN TWO-BEDROOM bpngalow with new 'sr heated garage. Nice wooded Fith lake privileges on Williams handy real bargain'. ,000 down on MORTGAGE It dip In the lake. ---- _....../ges go with this home located near Maceday Lake, "veryone wille n|oy the paneled mlly room, fireplace *" —— irpeted living room ar kling system, r- you can get yours< Priced at $9,500 w Land Contract. COSTS. So hurry a i the s • ir\ ranchYhtfTRESCENT LAKE PRIVILEGES; Cute 2-bedroom horn on wooded lot. Large 2-car garag with space heater. Only $2,600 dowi assume present mortgage wit LAKE O B Children, undergi 5-27. LOTS TO OFFER - In this three-bedroom brick. Full basement with tiled floors, paved drive, two-car garage, fenced yard and underground sprinkling system. $16,200 on Gl or FHA terms. Call today. 9-4 CLOSE TO THE BUS LINE and Truck .Coach Neat arge lakes. Open Sun. 523J323^FE 4-4509. _ ; aND PRIVILE"fe'ES, f, 135x265, $3900. 625- LAKEFRONT storms, carMrt, tosemedt. Sale swimming, Exc. fishing and boat Ing. Price $16,000 with $3,000 down. Owner - Detroit 864-9333, Eves. Southfield, 353-2512. Sunday aT Lake Orion 693*6351. _________________ custom built brick n basement and 2 bedrooms, family r Ing air condilionin C. SCHUETT FE 3-7088 ' MA 3-0288 EXCELLENT HOME SITE Near Four-Towns School, Oakland Community College, Highland Laka Campus. 72'x200', $3,000. ELWOOD REALTY .. 663,0835 schools 625-5485 01 2 lots plus It garden large closets. *^li: porch, natural! MOBILE H088ESITE, WELL,. SEP- , VALUET REAL ESTATE ONCE YOU SEE IT YOU CAN'T RESIST ONE OP THESE 5-ACRE ESTATES OF GENTLY ROLLING MEADOWS. LAKE FRONT WILLIAMS LAKE Worth the money lust tc mortga^f n gH%rea'*of purchase m iheX“s ..Ffira l^*and goo' rher. See It Dforlable and I swimming Ir nic* home. Cleon a dltloh and well a Is 3jtedroom children gallop their horses sa In your own~junny fields. An cel lent, Investment in an area growing value, this country I adlojns pDain roadVand Is In Cisrkstort area,. close to sav swimming and fishing lakes. I NO. 39 MUST BE SOLD THIS WEEK: and plus costs will DORRIS condition. Shar - : ly imedlale possessioi approved w plemenis the 3 spacious bedrooms and the 12x24 carpeted living room In this luxurious brick ranch home fronting on Silver Leke Golf Cc------ Making It an exceptional bu $24,500 are the 2 ceramic baths, ...„ mammoth log burning fireploce and the 2>/)i car attached garage. 3' The ideal family handle. 10-yea 1 attache j* garage of to the utmost outdoor fireplace. ENJOY THE S.HAD1 Irees^ provide halt bungalow In Pontiac 'Northerin School district, beautifully izM kitchen v'“- , spreading like setting e slory-and- Igw monthly payments ----- -------.nay oe too late! Pull price only $10,950. MODEL HOMES LAKE OAKLAND-SHORES: olonials,' trilevels and ranchers' aded wIttLextras and custom,'lea-ires. BeaUTilully furnished and de-ixe quality all the way. Duplida-on-prlced on your lot as low as 19,950. Several new homes with Im-ledlate occupancy In thl$ subdlvl-on, most of them you can sNtl loose your own decorating colors. -PEN SAT. 8. SUN., 1-5 p.m. and DAILY 6:30 to 8;J0r p.m. DUle Hwy. to. Sashabaw, right to WaltdA, right to Big Bateman sign, left to Models. NEW MODEL RANCHER; 3 bed-ms, IVT baths, .beautifdl custom-It kitchen, full bnennent wood lied glass windows with screens, ar oarage and grekmlno white, efree aluminum siding. Priced at t $16,950 ptu!................ lust, $100 toward < lualllied Gl^wlth ^$te payments , Include t stainless colored fixtures and glass, tub en' closure, I bedroom • down 8nd 7 large bedrooms up, tiled base-1 men! with gas h*at and IVj-car ga-i rage. $14,500 on land contract. U --------Ihg site. It's rdfcdy lor y< inspection NOW! OPEN DAll,.Y,i6 to 8430. p.m. and SAT. 8. SUN.) p.m. Comer'ol .Scott Lake Rd. i Watkins Lake Rd. ■ YOU CAN TRADE • BATEMAN | REALTOR-MLS I DORRIS 8. SON, REALTORS - ROCHESl-ML512536 Dixie Hw/T , 674-0324 OL l-8tlf -22391 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE -H>30S. I»cl ,377, S. Telegraph/Rd. *1 FE 87151 :s|feR - unk)n lake _ . , BM 3-4171 8*75 commerce , VD __PLj^ANmKE WOOD^ "Buy dHreef^om a Builder and Save" BEAUTY-RITE HOMES 3538 Pontiac Lake Rd. 673-17_l7_ _ 673-3761 squareLakOome +ICKUP 1966 TRAVEL OUEEN TRUCK camper, completely self-contained, like new, $2150. 363-3748. radio, custom cab, with tank. Camper Included................. lO'/s' Karibu camper, sell-contained con be seen at 3681 Elizabeth ' ■■ FE 3-7376. AIRSTREAM LIGHTWEIGHT travel trailers Since 1932. Guaranteed for 11 See them ahd get a demonsU. tion ;at Warnar Trailer Sales, 3098 ‘o lol" on* 0* Wallf Byam's .exciting caravansl. APACHE EAGLE-ADD-A-ROOM-Atib spare tire. $350, OR 3-2391. _ ' ■ APAtHf*tAMf ffRAttERS Save up to $400 on brand Open dally _____ _____________ and Sunday until 5 p.m. Apache Factory Hometown Dealer. BILL COLLER, I mile east of Lapeer on M21. FrADLEY CAMPER, PICKUP sleepers and covers. 3259 Seet — ^ Drayton. OR $9528.______________ 891 Motorcycle 1-A BRAND NEW 57'Xl 1965 BSA SPITFIRE HORNET, OJo %4-5W *“*°'^* * 12-X60' ROYCRAFT WITH ALUM, tool, shed, water softener, auto. -------------------- - large ' ' ' ‘ HONDA 250 SCRAMBLER 5600 '*■ g^^ond. $450, Call attar 1965 HONDA 50, 1150 626-0464. Call after 5. 1965 HONDA 250 SCRAMBLER, EX- cellent cond., $425. 363-0318._ 1965 HONDA 305 DREAM-GOOD condition. OR 3-0398. ' Leonard. 628-2824. ' GEM, SELF CO NT AtNElD,. YAMAHA 250 Located Oak Beach Trailer Par between Casevllle and Port Austin, $700. call Lake Orion 692-3456 after 963 10 > 50” NEW MOON, 2-BED- |T(»m, exc. condition, only lived In 2W yrs., $2,500. 625-4454. 1964 DRIFTWOOD, 1 BEDROOM, FE 5-1793. Call from 3-6. 1964 NEW MOON, 60x10', 3-room, air conditioned, washer 295 or reas. offer, 693-6596. 1964 20TH CENTURY MOB home, 10x55, 2 bedroom, furnl exc. condition. 335-7329. < 55, EXC. 363-6739 after ANDERSON TRAILER, 8'X35', AT- CAMPING BEST MOBILE HOME SALK "c'i'(d‘’s‘h*^lrl‘ Grand flush toUetsT'hot an¥ fishing. Half mils so vUI» McFeely Resort 1140 M15 627-3820 weekends______ Damping trailers to rent. 3491 N. Joslyn. 391-2818._ STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. 1771 Highland (M59) FE 2-49 gOLLY TRAILER, tSW LONi sleeps 6, has elec, brakes ai Reese hitch. Salt-contained exce toilet. FE 5-0776. 2064 Dexter. Opening day, July 22, Sunday July 23, he all-new Marlelte ^nd Cham-____, numerous floor plahs and interiors Including 2- and 3-bedroom expandos. Factory represfjptative and refreshments. 9620 Highland Rd. (M59 - 2 miles west of Williams Lake Rd.) On display at Cranberry Lake Mobile Homes Village. "COUNTRY CLUB LIVING AT ITS BEST" ‘ 363-5296____________ 363-5600 ., DETROITER-KROPF Vacation Homes Ith large expanding bed-d large expanding living — $2995.00. Free de-' higan. Also 8 ft., 10 . wides at bargain and 24 ft. wides. I BOB HUTCHINSON, INC. ,. - 4301 Dixie Hwy. (U.S. 10) iDl'ayton Plains OR 3-1202 I 22350 Telegraph Rd. - Awssoriei 97 CARNIVAL 16' STAR CRAFT 40 H.P., TILT-i^n ***'’**■ ■***'' D—7 ml. $300. FE 5^844.’ '‘FOOT GLASPAR, IS HORSE ^w^cury, trailer, ski access. PE d mint condition, MY 3-1136. 1966 305 HONDA SCRAMBLER, EX- celtent conditlon.nr^"-— 1966 BRIDGES 1966 BSA 650 CC U6HTNING,,EXc‘. condition with very low mileage, $950. First come, first served. 58 Myra St., Pontiac._______ service, $450. 335-2151. 1966 HONDA, 160 SCRAMBLER. Oversized tires, 1700 miles, excel-‘ ‘ - $495, OR '4-2035 alter f 4872 Cidrkston Rd. 966 HONDA 305 HAWK, EXCEL-lent, $525 or trade. 1967 World Champ Husqvarna 250 Scrambler. , SPORTSTER. 1966 HONDA 160 CB, LIKE NEW, 3 mo. used. $475. ,FE 4-2642. I SUZUKI, 150CC, GONE I —y. $275. OR 3-8882. 1966 SUZUKI, X6 HUSTLER, EXC. 1967 BSA, MK3 , T'966* HON^ 'STO . With>Joll scrambling equipment including brand new knobby tires, both priced I extremely lo OR 4-0535. 967 JAWA 250CC 967 TRIUMPH Bonneville . - OAKLAND CAMPER Open for your Inspection KARIBOU KAMPER Tour-A-ilorne — Sleeps 6 Only $895 . » o, r Also Hurninum covers 135-0634 ______Baldwin at Colgate Open di ~ PtCKOP,(OOy£RS, $245 UPr" Sat. end rn-,.. .1 Leaving’ state, must sell at X' olf“ fo^*?S?‘°riuity’‘«';; _332-54U.^_ _ PICK-UP TRUCK CAMPERS | JHIS WEEKE^ND 6NLY New 1967 model close-out sale on| IMIi WttNtNU UNLT DetRey and Waak.n-dfr ^ ^^ddel? ' 967 S90 2-42W I I^ONDA, 1600 MILES, FE I cab-over pick-ut , 1966 LIGHTNING, 650CC, EX- 625-1711 Sat, 8-5 __ _ _ Closed Sun._ _ pToNEER CAMPER SALES BARTH TRAILERS $ CAMPERS TRAVEL QUEEN CAMPERS merit FIBERGLASS COVERS (8" 27"-35" covers) ALSO OVERLAND & COLEMAN —....... FE 2-3989 $$$$$ July Clearance Sale Phoenix convertible campers, Winnebago and Phoenix pick-up campers, l6', 17', ,19' vacation trailers. REESE AND DRAW-TITE HITCHES Sold and Installed HOWLAND SALES AND RENTALS 3255 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-1456 $$$$ Rent Wog-N-Master Tent Camper—8 Sleeper as low as $55 weekly Cliff Dreyer's Holly Travel Coach Inc. 15210 Holly Rd., Holly , ME 46771 __ — Open Dally ^Sundays — “specTal clear/wce WHEEL CAMPER Tent Campers — 6 fc 8 sleepers. The ultra In lent campers, only Capri models, 1 OPEN 'TIL 8, MON. TO FRI SAT. 8 TO 5. CLOSED SUN STACHLER TRAILER SALES, IHt- 3771 Highland (M59) FE 2-4928 SPORTCRAfY PICKUP SLEEPERS. Rigid 1" sq. welded tube frame. 4160 FoMy Waterford 623-0650 673-3600 _ MOBILE HOME, 12'X56', DETROIT-«^20?B.' room, up on lot. SOMETH mG“NEW OLD ENGLISH DECOR A|so see our complete lint of 12' Demos at a giant not^ be knowingly^ set-up with available parking. PARKWOOD HOLLYPARK Open 9-9 7 days a wei' MIDLAND TRAILER SALES 2257 Dixie Hwy. 33$0772 1180 Auburn Rd.__85^33W Town & Country Mobile Homes PROUDLY PRESENTS■ 'The Westchester" a 12' X 60' Mobile Home unique In floor plan, beautiful decor. Ideal for retirement. Moderately priced. See if today. ALSO FEATURING THE 12'x50 HOMECRAFT AT $3,995 DELIVERED AND SET UP TELEGRAPH AT DIXIB HIGHWAY MARLETTES 50'63' long, 12' to 20' -wld American, •-'Ttaditlonal or fENT TRAILER OPENS TO sleaps 6, $250, 682-1465._____ Tent trailer, sleeps 4S, new ■■ -s. $200. MY 2-'"'“ Travel With Quality * Line Trovel Trailers - BOLES-AE RO-TRAVELMASTE R FROLIC-SKAMPER TRAVEL TRAILERS ■ Your dealer for, -LAYTON, CORSAIR ROBINHOOD, TALLY HO WAG N MASTER THE NEW EASY-UP AND EASY-DOWN HARDTOP CAMPER. ATwJOHNSON'S E 4-0410 WOLVERINft TRUCK CAMPERS and sleeoers. New and used, $39' UP. Also rentals. Jacks, intercom; ------b*mr.......... WE carryThe famous Frqnklins-rCrees Fans—Monitor Travel Trailers , ■ wag-mast;r , ‘ , Sleaps 6 or I IV^fS' on hand Holly TraveL Coach 15230 Holly Rd. Holly, ME 46721 — Open Dally and Sundays — HONDA IN LAPEER ^tLh^cii&^r.eL'?m'ltProwl'-e er with friendly personnel. 664-8872. HOtlDA SUPER 90. 1966, R E D, $300. EM 3-0855 after 5^.^._ MINI CYCLE'S; GO-CARTr HODAKA ACE 90 HEtWtETS AND ACCESSORIES. MG SALES & SERVICE M67_Dixle Hwy., Drayton Plains 16' WOLVERINE, WAGE MAKER, 35 H.P. Johnson Javelin, start control, tr*"— “ - FIBERGLASS BOAT, 75 I motor, trailer, hardlv used, n see. U 22' TROJAN OUTBOARD'cruiser with 60 h.p. Elgin motor “ " — dem trailer, $950. Sleaps will trade for car oj __equlvalenf St., Pontiac. ___________ 28' SYLVAN PONTOON BOAT. RED and white. Witt) canopy. Motor, all access. $1,050. Now In water. FE 2-2564. 1960 60 H.P., mercury .. _____ shape; controls and all, $350. 335-9864 after 5 ' CHRIS CRAFT, 16', 283 CHEVY V-8 engine with 4 barrel carburetor, 2 skl-m8tlcs, electric bilge. , fiberglas bottom. irs. on boat, ftihg rlnas, $2300. 673- 1967 DELUXE SLICKCRAFT BOAT, 75 Horsepower ------- , 1466 Malcolm— 1967 MERCURY 39, 3.9 HORSE-power,_^ regular —- — --- s Boats & Motors, I BETTER BOAT BUYS! SkLBbat, Johnson motor, $),095. Fishing boat, Johpson motor, $299. Weeres Pontoons, low as $375. PINTER'S Boats — Accessories 97 Junk Cars-Trucks ’ 101-A BIG SALE of the Summer! Big Deals—On The Big Lot! We carry all Chrysler Lone Star, Glastron, MFG boats, and sail boats. Riviera cruiser pontoons, Jon Boats, Alum. Fishing Boats, 12 to 14' In stock. Complete $er»-Ice ot outboai^ — Mercury outboards 3.9 tdWlO h.p. and Merc-Cruiser authorized dealer. Cypress Gardens skis (all styles) GRUMMAN CANOES DEALER Fiberglass canoes .........$1 . RIVIERA CRUISER Up to $T00 Discount Cliff Dreyer's Gun ond Sports C&rter 15210 Holly Rd. ME 46771 r;-- ri.no Sundays DAWSON'S SPECIALS — NEW 1967 15' Steury fiberglass runabout, 71" beam, 1967 40 h.p. Evinrude elec motor, controls battery and box. Complete at only—$1295. NEW 1967 Glasspar G-3 Ski Boat, 1967 40 h.p, Evinrude elec, motor, control, battery and box—$1425. See the 20' fiberglass Ski Barge - $1295. Qlesspar and Steury fiberglass boats—mirro Craft alum, boats— Ski Barge — Grumman canoes— Kayot alum, and steel pontoons— Evinrude motors—Pemco trailers. Take M-59 to W. Highland. Right on Hickory Ridge Rd. to Demode Rd. Lett end follow signs to DAWSON .«AW6k AT JTIPSICO-LAKB,-Phone 629-2179. 16' Carver t Heavy .......... wheel and tire. Only $1495, CRUISE-OUT, INC. 63 E. Walton Open 9-8^E B-4402 SPICO SIINE LAKE DIVING CENTER 35« Orchard Lake Rd. 662-2180 SEE THE NEW SUZUKI X-5 SCRAMBLER A FULL LINE OF ALL NEW Suzuki Cycles & Accessories MG SALES and SERVICE 4661 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains light weight Winnebago Trailer. OXFORD TRAILER SALES OPEN 9-8, CLOSED SUNDAYS mile south of Lake Orion on m; USED 1966 250 CC SUZUKI X6 „„ USED 1966 t75 CC Bridgestone $425 USED 1966 150 CC Suzuki ... ----- USED 1965 eo CC Yemahe .. INTORDUCINGII The new U Suzuki Sierra, rotary valve high performance cycle, 12 month or 12,-mile werranty. FREE HEL-r WITH THE ____H NEW SUZW CC, 250 GC. Rupp ____________ __ low as $149.95, cycle accessories. Take M-59 to W. Highland. Right on Hickory Ridge Rrl. lo Demode Rd. Lett and follow signs to DAWSON SAbES AT TIPSICO LAKE. Phone 629-2179.________________ McDonald mobilFfIMes See our complete line ot 12' wides, 2 or 3 bedrooms as low as $4495. Featuring Travalo, Schult a n d ___ Cranberry Lake_________ ____ Village. "Country Club living at ... besl.'‘ 9620 Highland Rd. (IM59, twp miles west of Williams Lake Rd.T 363-7511. Hours: Weekdayt " * 8 p.m., Sunday 12 to 5 p.m. Rent Trailer Space LAR^J.OIS«. N GAS Pontiac Mobile H VILLAGE GREEN MOBILE ESTATE — New end different, 2285 Brown Rd. Near 1-75 anrf M -................... f M-24. 335-0155. THIS WEEK SPECI/.L, CUSTOM paint lob, $85. Free pickup delivery service, sallslecllon t— anteed. Excel Painf and Bump, Ortonvllle. 682-0173._______________ Motor Scooters ^ 94 ADULT 0WNED'*'i966 SKATKITTY, Motorcycles _____95 5-SPEED DUCATI ’Scrambler, 30 h.p., 240 lbs. Full price, $795, easy terms. 4NDERS0N SALES 8. SERVICE 1645 S. Telegrapli^ FE 3-7102 305 SCRAMBLER i967 Honda, 1,500 miles. Just had grease |ob and oil changed. Excellent condition. $675 or $700 with Buco Helmet and a leather |ackcl inetoded. Cell OR 3-5183 after 6 1957 ZUNDAP GOOD TRAH. BIKE. $95. 624-1738. i HONDA DREAM, REAL d conditloi lls.^363-47^ OSSA . $595 $425 . $560 $380 $679 $470 Dealer Distributor for LARSON Boats Specializing in Grumman Canoes and Fishing Boots Aluminum and Wood Docks Do it yourself—easy to install. We will show you how. HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS (Your Evinrude Deal 1899 S. Telegraph SAffi -SALE! ^Buy now and s'ave. Easy'lerms*"' ANDERSON SALES & SERVICE 45 S. Telegraph -- HEAVY DUTY BOAT TRAILER', ?l63 BUICK LeSABRE 4-DOOR7aLL electric. $975. 673-9915. I960 GMC SUBURBAN WITH V-o 3-speed trans. Radio, clock, tach., ----- >495. FE 4-3— CHEVY, %-TON. GOOD CON- m unbVT, 'la-MJN. dition. $695. 363-9355. 1962 GMC Va TON PICKUP, short box, 2 extra tires, very $ dond. OR 3-"“ »/^-TON FORD PICK-UP, < $850. 338-1587. FORD Vj TON PICKUP, EXC. dbhd. $775. 682-2470.___________ 965 CHEVY V. TON PICK-UP, repossessed, Buckner Finance, 10 1965 FORD ECONO-VAN DELUXE. 6 cylinder. 32,000 miles. In good condition. New tires. $1450. Call 673-8879 after 5:30. drive, pick-up, like i best offer, 624-2502. GLENN'S 1966 VW pickup truck. 5,000 actual L C. Williams, Salesman, 952 W. Huron St. FE 4-7371 FE 4-1797 ••—more to choose GMC DUMP TRUCK Heavy duty, ideal for off road iwork. - GMC Factory Branch Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 Truck Dealer ton, V4-to'n, pick-up^. --0-N-G Deal. Cell Jim Smith at OL 1-9711, 215 Main St., Rochester. SPECIAL $1875 full PRICE New 1967 Jeep Universal ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP EM 3-4155 or______EM 3-4156 Auto insurance Marine TM Mini-Cost better offer!! Bob Burns. Ask forl"L»£!iJWi!?_ BRUMMETT AGENCY WILSON CRISSMAN Foreigi^Cars^ 1959 MGA. BEST OFFER. ; 1960 AUSTIN HEALEY 3000 MUST ■ ‘ it Offer. FE 5-3282. gle; FE 4-7371________________ FE 4- WE NEED CARS NOW! T ADKINS AUTO, 738 Oakland We would iike to buy late model GjVi Cars or will accept trade-downs. Stop by today. FISCHER BUICK 544 S. WOODWARD 647-560D 1964 KARMXk GHIA CONVERTI-ble, extras, must sell, $1095. OR 3-9653. ________ _________ 1966 VOLKSWAGEN 2-door, radio, heater, whitewalls,Yull price: $1,295, only $49 down an ' weekly peyrqerits of $11.88. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM j ^-' Ml 4-7500 Foreign Cars_ Now and Weak Credit? VW, ;feED'WITH BLACK ... lor, radio, ' stereb-tape player t reverb unit, $1,7KI. Cell Mr. ' iu after 3 p.m., 628-2562. ROADSTER, GOOD CONDI-1. new top, tonneau cover, tires. 16 Sylvan Shores Dr. CHEVY 1954, GOOD TRANSPORTA-tlon. UL 2-5166. ................ ......iELS, heater, excellent condition. miles — 647-7436. DON'S USED CARS Small Ad—3i'i Lot 50 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM ■nents to less expensive car. ^ ' M-34, Lk. Orion_ FOR THOSE WHO HAV€ CREDIT problem^ get re-established agair with our new finance plan, ana lei us sen you a car with no money LUCKY AUTO $199, SPECIAL NOTICE Need A Car? Bankrupt or other problems, w can^ help you, all applicetlons ai Capitol Auto. $599 .'63 Dodge Dart , $499 . .'63 Rambler 2-door $999 . .'65 Valiant Convertible HALF-DOZEN CARS AT $99 EA. OPDYKE MOTORS 2230 Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke FE 8-9237 ___________Ffe 8-921 E R.' GLENN'S 1964 Buick Invicta. 4 door hen top. Power steering, power brakes. Tinted glass, low mileage. L. C. Williams, Salesman 952 We HURON ST. FE 4-7371 FE 4-1797 Many More to Choose Prom 1964 Buick Wildcat Convertible with yellow finish, black top_ tomatic, full power. SPECIAL three days only — $1295 HQMER RIGHT CHevrolet-Pontlac-Buick On M24 In Oxford, Mich. GLENN'S 1964 Buick Riviera. Red with BIk. interior. L. C. Williams, Salesman ____no, t-_............. arpi Only $1695. VANDE-. - . . E BUICK-OPEL, 196-210 Orchard Lake. FE 2-9165. $1795 BILL FOX GLENN'S L. C. Williams, Salesman st.j^ • E 4-7371 ^ 4-175 Many more to choose^ffam 1957 CADILLAC 4 DOOR SEDAN. Runs excellent. $199. MARVEL MOTORS, aSl^Oeklend FE 8-4079. 1963 CADILLAC CONVERTIBLE, with automatic transmission, radio, heater, full power, factory air conditioning, beautiful silver blue with blue nylon topi Electric buckets, oil* In a million — todays ,tE' WOOBl cAOilLACS 0 HAND AT ALL TIMES, lEROME MOTOR SALES On M24 in Lake Orion MY 2-2411 ■ Now Is The Tim'e To Save On A Newer Model MATTHEWS-HARdREAVES 631 Oakland A.ve.. , FE 44547 > ■ \, , ^ F,pr Help - Tfy tli Haw and Usad Cow 1Q6 GRIMALDI IMPORflb CAR CO. 900 Oakland FE 5-9421 sr todeyl CALL BILL FOX CHEVY Rochester, Michigan ____________651-7000____________ I CHEVY V-8 STICK, BODY, 0^- OR 3-9157, 1956 CHEVY, GOOD SECOND C body and eng. good, needs i fler, $125. inms. M) O^VROLET, V^ AUTOMATIC, )ood transportatlori. 334-5627. 1961 1962 1963 C08VAIRS Sticks and automatics, low as $197, $3 down and $3 weekly. Capitol Auto. Sales, corner of Oakland ' AAontcalm, FE 0-4071.____ 1961-1962 CHEWS 2- and 4-door hardtops, extellent running condition, good family cars, low as $397 full price. " down. $4 weekly. Capitol Ai Sales, cormer of Oakland Montcalm, FE 8-4071. TOM RADEMACHER . CHEVY-OLDS 1962 CHEVY Station Wagon, ; V8, automatic radio, whlteWL. .. ready for the road. $795. On US10 at M15, r----- ........ WOULD YOU BELIEVE NO GIMMICKS—NO GIVE-AWAYS' JUST Right cars at right prices ■ NO CASH NEEDED-BANK RATES i399 J62 Chevy^2-door 1599 '62 Pontiac Sta. Wagon 1599 '62 Chevy Sta. Wagon “onnevllle Hardtop . .'63 V TOM RADEMACHER 1962 Chevy 4 door, VO, automatlgi-. radio, whitewalls, one-owner, neV I" car trade. Only $795. On US10 S MI5, Clarkston, MA 5-5071. 962 CHEVROLET CONVERTIBI___ AUTOMATIC, RADIO, HEATER,' WHITEWALLS, FULL PRICE $695. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY 1963 CORVETTE STINGRAY 13 CHEVROLET BEL AIR 4-DOOR WHITE BEAUTY >963 Chevy, convertible, $750. FE ROLET. Birmingham. A 3 CHEVY 2-DOOR. GOOD CON- mlngham. Ml 4-2735. CHEVROLET, 1963 BEL AIR, NEW —tewBlI tires, brakes, muffler, , $650, or best offer. 357-0325. - ---... RWAGON, 8 AUTO- MATIC, POWE RSTEERING, 81,., 295 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVRO-LET, Birmingham. — TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1964 CORVETTE STINGRAY f 1964 IMPALA WAGON 8, AUTOMATIC, power steering, $1595 i' ------- - - O I E CHEVROLET, I IMPALA CONVERTIBLE, 327, ^ ^ ^6M.2OT STAR AUfO . WE FINANCE LOW WEEKLY PAYMENTS '62 Ford Convertibla .f$497 '63 Comet ConvertibW $597 '59T-Bird ....../...$497 '42 Pontiac Hardtop . -14^7 '63 Chevy V-8 Stick . $697 '63 Chevy Convertible $497 '63 Pontiac Wagon ... ^$897 '61 Mercury Sedan ... I$29f '64 Corvair.........$597 EASY CREDIT ARRANGEMENTS 962 OAKLAND AVE. FE 8-9661 1962 FALCON STATION WAGON. Auto, 8897, full price. LUCKY AT7TO GLENN'S- 1962 FORD 4 DOOR OALAXIE 50a Real sharp. 1 owner car. L. C. Williams, Salesman 952 W. Huron St. 'E 4-7371 fe 4-1797 " — Mora to Choose From 1962 2-DOOR FORD GALAXIE, < —automatic, z'*u OR 3-5104. 1963 FORD Galaxie 500 2 door hardtop, with radio, heater whitewalls, automatic, red Inside end outi Only— X ■ $1095 BILL FOX DOWN. Assutry weekly payments ot 88.92. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD iring. $650. 16 between 1963 FORD galaxie 500 2-DOOR hardtop, a automatic, power steering, 8995 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEV-’ ROLET, Birmingham. MI- 4-2735. 1963 FORD- STATION WAGGN, POWER STEERING, AUTOMAT. 1C, RADIO, HEATER, WHITE- HAROLD TURNER I 964 FORD ebUNTRY §QUTr1 wagon, automatic, power steering, brakes, good runner! Sevel Autobahn ----- ... Dealer ..... North ot Miracle Mila :iZ65.A.^TelMraph fe 8-<53t ..^ ______ GALAXIE 500 HARD- top. V-l, automatic, radio, heater, whitewalls; Frost white with Rad vinyl interior. A beautiful 19,000 "It only takes a minute" to Get "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford $1,095. 3 1964 FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE, 352 cu. In., radio and heater, power steering and brakes, crulspo-mat-Jc, Monroe levelers, alr-conditloned, trailer hitch, 6 wheals and tl/et. $045. 334-7824. Evenings and SU»Il 1964 FORD Country Squire 9-passenger wagon, roof rack, power steering and brakes, automatic, radio, healer, whitewalls, lull*prlce: $1,395 — only $49 down and waOklY pdy- HAROLD TURNER BIRMINGHAM FORD, INC.' S. WOODWAPPrAVO. iMAAA'V Ml 4-1 GLENN'S T-BMi Power ttaarlng, pow«l brakes. L. C. Williansiv Solesmon 952 W. Huron St, ;E 4-7371 ^ #1 4-1797 P-8 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, JULY 21, 1967 . , ll BEATTIE FORD , 1964 Buick 2-door with V-6, autOnrit^- re- $1195 1965 Ford Galaxle 500 2-door hardtop with V-8, automiatic, power steering. _ 1966 Mustang 3-door hardtop, 6 cyL, automat- $1995 1 1966 Mustang $1495 1965 Mustang 2-Door Hardtop with 6-cyllnder engine, stick, radio, and heater. Only- $1395 $2095 ! 1965 Ford. ’ $1495 —On Dixie Hwy. in Waterford--Yoi(^r Ford Dealer Since 1930 623-0900 New and Used Cars 1061 ARMADUKE By Anderson and I^eeming 4 FORD convertible, 352 VB, louble power, whitewalls, clean,' ..... “Y 3-H20. New and Used Cars PONIjAC tATALINA 6 MUSTANI D MUSTANGS 1965 & 1966 A SEVERAL USED M__.. CHOOSE FROM CONVERTIBLES HARDTOPS. 2 PLUS 2's FULL EQUIPMENT Priced From $T295^ As Low As $39 Down And $39 Per Month Harold TURNER FORD, INC. .. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-7500 T-BIRD . LANDAU with ' champagne tinisl-Ion top, full pow« 12,588 f montH. 50,000 mile or 5 ye warranty available. "It only takes a minute" to Get "A better DEAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford 30 Oakland Av«. , FE 5-41 Village Rarnhler will allow you up to $500 more than wholesale (Book Price) for your present car when you trade for a 1967 RAMBLER - t PRICES START AT . . . 666 S. WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM 646-3900 condition. $1,600. New and Used Cars 106 New and Used Cars 106 Autobahn V Dealer Fg 8-4531 PLYMOUTH 1961 — $1 1962 PLYMOUTH, GOOD CONDI- .. WE SPECIALIZE IN SATISFIED CUSTOMERS . Want something 1965JUI^K 1965 FORD Mustang ?-door hardtop. Bronze beauty. ' Bteerlng. Nice, than nice... 1965 DODGE Polara 2-door hardh steering, radio and 1965 CHEVROLET $1995 and ^^295 iate. J2095 $1895 ower $1695 $1695 ring, y*"' $2895 LINCOlN-MtRCURV 1250 Oakland 333-7863 5 FORD GALAXIE 500 LTD his Is the finest Ford iyjotor Pildt, with V-8, automatic, ----- Beautiful ^etalUc chf Ish with matching i s lust waiting to go. Only "It only takes a minute" to Get "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford 965 ford GALAXIE 500 COh vertible with V8, automatic, radii heater, power steering, beautifi deep burgundy metallic finish^il white nylon top, $1688 full Prici Set "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland AVe. FE 5-41 MUSTANG KfARDTtJF” 1966 FORD, NEEDS FBONV END, best offer. 623-0717. Waterford Auto Body, 5475 •■■ ■ ' GLENN'S 1966 Country Sedan Wagon. Powi steering, power brakes. Like nei L. C. Williams, Salesman E 4-7371 FE 4-1797 ___Many More to Choose From J966 FAIRLANE 0 convertible; powef iWerlhg, tomatic, radio, heater, -wl HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 464 S. WObDWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4- MERCURY 1959, er. A-1, make c I960 MERCURY AUTOMATIC. PO-^LIKE^NEwT”"(95. ^ARK~9 “PASSEN “He’s just worn out, Mom! He Jet i kitten chase him all day!” offer, 682-2731. . 33,000 ACTUAL 1962 PONTIAC CATALINA, 2-DOOR ight red, good $895 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-PlymoufIT* $1788 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth i. Woodward „ Ml 7 $595 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth J TEMPEST, AUTOMATIC. LUCKY AUTO 1963 PONTIAC BONNEAIlL€ CON* LUCKY AUTO Ye 3-7854 I THE NEW AUDETTE PONTIAC NOW SERVING ' 1963 PONTIAC SALE CARS 106 f Catalina 2-door hardtop, 4-speed with 3 dueces, only BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth 860 S. Woodward_____7-3214 , 4964 PONT4Ae GATAL4NA—4-DG0R , ♦lUC C/^AL brakes,, air cohdltloning new tires. OR 3-2201 T06 -DOOR, New and Used Cars 106 . FE.2 . -.....- - -PtWi-XONVER- tible, 18,400 actual ml., clean, $1895. Can be teen at 22 WIsner anytime.__________________________ l965 PONTIAC CATALINA. HARD-top. 18,000 actual ML Power steering, brakes, windows. 2 tone. I FINANCE REASONABLE! .. Rambler and '63 Flat ... $97 u 3 '58 Cadillacs Full Power . $29 Call attpr 6. FE 8 1965 PONTIAC CATALINA CONVERTIBLE, automatic with power $1695 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEV-ROLET, Birmingham. 1962 RAMBLER AMERICAN 2-DOOR SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICK 855 S. ROCHESTER RD; 651-5500 1963 RAMBLER CLASSIC^^WAGON, 6 Cylinder, Automatic, Radio, Reclining seats, this is a cream putt. Priced to sell. ROSE RAMbCer UNION LAKE, EM 3-4155. GLENN'S 1966^ Tempest LeMans Coupe. L. L Williams, Salesman door hardtop--------------- ------- power steering, brakes, bucket seats, whitewalls' and real sharp $1095. VANDEPUTTE BUICK-OPEL 196-210 Orchard Lake. FE 2-9165. 6 CATALINA STATION WAGON. 1838. $2,300. : 1966 BONNEVILLE BROME 2-P^Rt, llke^ new. F^l“ 8-T22'i. 1967 PONTIAC CAT,ALTNA 2 DOOR, 5,700 2 door, 5,700 miles, many extras, air condition I ng. F E J:8551. 1967 FIREBIRD CONVERTIBLE. BLER In Lapeer, I 2335 Dixie Hwy, mpg, stick 5. MI-1977. ... RAMBLER CLASSIC WAGON. 6 Cylinder, Standard shift. Radio, Heater, White Wall Tires. Metallic Blue. Priced to Sell. ROSE RAMBLER SALE5 Union Lake EM 3-4155.________________ GLENN'S 5 RAMBLER WAGON. POWER . C. Willioms, Salesman 952 W. Huron St. 4-7371 FE 4-lTS 1965 RAMBLER HAROLD TURNER ONE-STOP TRANSPORTATION CENTER _______________VALU-RATED USED CARS__________________ 1964 PONTIAC Catalina 4-Door HT ... ...... $1295 Power Steering ahd Brakes. 1965 BUICK Special-4-Door ,.........$1595 Power Steering and Brakes 1964 OLDS F-85 6-Passenger Wagon ....... $1195 economy. Special. ^ 1966 OLDS 98^Convertible . . ....................$2995 f966 PONTIAC Convertible.^ , amfm pip 1967 OLbS F-85 Convertible ......................$2995 Less than 1500 MliM. , 1965 OLDS Starfire Coupe .......................$2395 Full power. Factory air. 1965 OLDS Dynamic 88 4-door HT ..................,$1795 Power Steering and Brakes 635 S. Woodwarcl Ave. Birminigham 647-5111, I matching be seen at 13^ S. Roslyn. (Off^ ^Ehzabeth Lake RV) anytime. iVi9 RAMBLER S'^TION 'wAGON, ; PONTIAC BONN^VJLLi, 1959, RA-2922 Otsego. 334-8276. I MIKE SAVOfE CHEVRO- LET,. Birmingh^^AAlj4-273^ _ 964 GT0 4-SPEED4 ‘RADIO, HEAT-1 ER, SU95 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham. Ml 4 0 PONTIAC, GOOD CONDifT6N. '^$400 takes It. 36_Florence. i BONNEVILLE, GOOD" RUNr _ BONNEVILLE, 2-DOOR. sfC-auto., double I Down, : Sale PONTIAC BONNEVlCiE,Z.i-floor, A-l.cot'U- 332-1564.__ I "1964 PONTIAC-tempest I' ecowWJ*l*evi.**^glheT*% My car for only $895, $9 weekly. ■r of^ak 1 BONNEVILLE rPOIstlAC TEMPEST W rpady to s TTE, BUI d cSiat: F I960 BUICK, a 1960 MERC, auto 1961 RAMBLER 1960 PONTIAC 2,p 1960 FORP Conv't 1962 FALCON, slit 1962 tempest, ai 1960 CHEVY, auto 1958 CHEVY 348 e Buy Here - WE HANDLE / 2 j 1964 BONN E VI LLE CONVE RTIB ill GLENN'S DIO, . HEATEI Ay W. er $9' Pay Here ND ARRANGE XNCING DAN A L. C. Williams, Salesman $995. ABSOLUTE- LY NO-MONEY DOWN, t weekly payments of $9.23. CREDIT MGR. Mr. Pa, HAROLD TURNER FOR Capitol Auto 1966 MERCURY MONTEREY ttARD-1 Get "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford 6^Oakland Ave._^_____FE 5-4101 i95l OLDS, GOOD f RANSPORTA- OLDS, 1957, 4-DOOR HARDTOP -Power steering and brakes, tinted glass, whitewall tires, radio, 624- immw 2-1966 F>ONTlJLCS DEMOS'*--^ . 1966 BONNEVILLE Hardtop--^ h dower steering,-brakes) autometlc, radta SAVE;. . 1966 GTO Hardtop SAVE 1964 CATALINA 4-door sedan .'. 1963 VOLKSWAGEN Karmdn Ghio . . . Convertible, 4-speed. Radio, heater, whitewall tires 1963 CHEVY II................... A^Rea? Sha"^ bardtijp. 6 cylinder, automatic, radio, heater, 1965 CHEVY 4-door sedan ..................... Automatic; 6-cyl.; whitewalls; radio; heater Clean car ‘1964 CADILLAC Hardtop ........... .................. .... .. $1295 . $995 . $895 $1395 $2695 itenna, whitewalls, 6tydra 1962 BlJfcK. Convertible ..; wring, brakes; automatic; 1963 PONTIAC Star Chief . ....................... A^loor sedan. Hydramatic, Shower steering, brakes; vdiltewalls. Onespwner, extra clean! 0^1395 . $995 $1195 w PONTIAC-RAMBLER Ask for Chuck Moriarty, Joe llucnerfelt, Open Daily 'Til 9 P!M. Cif M24 Jn Orion MY' 3-6?66 HASKINS' QUALITY-USED CARS 312 W. MONTCALM Just East of Oakland ___ FE 8-4071 1961-1962 PoDtiacs -.2.door —and 4-door hardlops, $5 weekly. CATALINA, VERY CLEAN. ■Temans~hardtop7~ V8,'4- i goc». 25 E. I eapito GLENN'S L. C. Williams, Salesman 952 VH,j4uron St. 1962 Pontiac Convertible BONNEVILLE, like new, dpuble —— —-....black Interior needed! Assun 3-SPEED. $1,097 ti Montcalm, FE 8 LUCKY AUTO 1940 W. Wide Track FE or^. FE_3-7854 GLENN'S Cala ----.---- BRAKES, BUCKEtI '965 Pontiac Station' SEATS, RUNS GOOP, NEEPs! Ima. Power Steering .power orax( SOME body WORK $295. : 1. c. Willioms, Salesman LOOrtK > 952 W. Huron St. AUTO SALES 674-2257'FE 4-7371 FE 4-19 '' - • lains Many More to Choose From 4278 Dixi 1965 PONTIAC LeMans. top. with V0, autor steering, brakes, $169; 1966 CHEVY Impala -top. V8 automatic, po brakes, windows, air Vinyl top. tn Warrant' 1965 /AUSTANG 2 . doot HASKINS AUTO SALES D S M 0 B fL e, P 0 w EOUIPPEDj, automatic, DIO, HEATCRi WHITEWALLS, FULL PR«E «95, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume weekly payments of $7.92. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 1963 OLDS DYNAMIC 88 HARDTOP, brakes, whitewalls. 1964 OLDS 98-2-DOOR HARDTOP, full power, $1,495 At MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham. Ml 4-2735. \ 1966 OLDS VlSTA-CRUISER, ALL on, $2,600. EM 3-3768.' »6 4-3589 pr FE 3-7668. ... OLDS CONVERTIBLE, AUTOMATIC with power, $2,095 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Bir-mlngham. Ml 4-2735. TOM RADEMlCHER ' CHEVt-OLDS Factory Official 1967 Torbnado hardtop 2-dopr with See the Good Guys in the White Hats Today, '___________ 1963 OLDS ' mist -blue, power, $897 1962 PONTIAC Hardtop II power. Needs minor body repair. No money down. ASKING i $573 1963 MERCURY'Monterey automatic, V-8, sand itona baigt. No money down • $795 1963 PLYMOUTH Wagon V-B, automatic^ power. Be ready 1 ley down. ASKING- $795 SPARTAN " .•DODGE' 855 Oakland ^ FE 6:1122 >'-4 V,1- $1295 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth EVERYDAY LOW PRICES it^O VOLKSWAGEN -A Nice Car $195 1960 BUICK $195 I960 CHEVROLET 2-Door — Automatic "-3195 1961 FORD e 500 4.Door Aut $195' I960'CHEVRoVfT- $195 ,)961 OLDS sr sfeerfng ^d_ Brakes i $195 WE FINANCE -MM. Elizabeth Lake Roaemd M59 “(§f Oustanding,'67 Trades. * whlteWails. Only- 1^65 bODGrf conditioning. ■ $1295 $1495 $1545 1965 PLYMOUTH Fury 3-Door Hardtop v engine, 4-speed, radio, walls, yellow with blat $1695 1965 VW $1195 1965 FURY 111 Only- ,, JQAKLAND Chrysler - Plymouth 724 OAKUND AVE. BIG SALE af STANDARD AUTO SALES You Can Buy a Car - Our Finance Company had a --Bicg Year - And has Money Money - Man^y No Applications Turned Dawn - Walk) NO PAYMENTS^ DURING CHANGEOVER —Followng Cars Must Be Sold Now— - 1965 GMC Pickup. Radio and heater. Full Priefe cHpne Only $695 Weekly Payments . .$7.31 1963 Pontiac Automatic. Radio and heater. A-1 conditipnJ Full Price (Hcnt' Only t4)OyD Weekly Payments . $7.31 1962 Chevy Automatic, V-8, radio and. heater. Tltil Price (fcnc; - Only -. kbOdO Weekly Payments . $6.58 j 962 Ford j Galaxie. With radio / and heater. W-t $495 Weekly Payments . ;$5.42 1963 OLDS Convertible,, radio and heater. Full Price (fOOt; Only . .' kPOdJ Weekly Payments . $9.51 1961 Falcon 2-door, automatic. Nicfe throughout! Full Price (Mnc: Only fPiyj Weekly Payments . . $2.72 1962 Chevy Wagon. Automotic, V-8 Like new. 1^62 Plymouth Fury hardtop, with rndin. JiAciipp. . a',"""... $495 Weekly Payments . .$S38 Full Price ' (ttoor Only kPoyj Weekly Payments . ,$X.^1 1963 Mercury Hardtop. Like new . throughout! Full Price (HCQC Only kpOgO Weekly Payments . ,$6.58 1962 Cadillac Hardtop. Air conditioning. Real dleoft! a'/'" $869 Weekly Payments .. $10 I963«Corvair Monza. Radio, heater. Real nice! $495 Weekly Payments . $5.58 1961 CHEVY Wagon 1960 FALCON ♦ i960 CHEVY 1961 COMET ^ ' ^79 V 50 More Fine Specials to 6^ose From OUR STANDARD IS QUALITY-WE DON'TYeLL JUNK / YOU COME TO standard AUTO — STANDARD Auto SALES 109 BAST BLVD. S. . t ' ' FE 8-403:r THE PONTIAC PRESS, miDAY, JULY 21, 196T -—Television Programs— D—0 Programs fumishod by stations listed In this c^umn dro subjoict to change without notice Chdnnsli: 2-WJBK-TV, 4-WWJMV, 7-WXYZ-tV, 9-CKLW-TV, 50-WKBDTV, 56>rWTVS TONIGHT •:00 (2) (4) News 12 Type of gott ISVelvetUke fabric 14 Frankfurten (slang) 15 Harangue 16 Friend (Fr.) aon-in-law 84 Moron 85 "Put in another " 88 SpeciafabUity 68 Separata clay eOF^^ed «1 Noted ta‘letaD lOPrepoaition 37 Brother DOWN 11 Not ever (contr J 39 To bold la 1 Mother-in-law 2TT.. xuimxaie wLn ijasculina ’ ShiimSh* per dpy ah.) 25 ExcUmaUoa 4 Exclamation of scorn to startle 27 Lion 8 Hence (Utin) 28 Ocean -------- , 6 Grate rou^Iy - 29 Shade tree 38 Medicinal plant 7 Toward the left 30 Residue from 82 Stunted 40 Belonging to (naut.) fire 56 Malt brew them 8 Place for car 31 Dessert 67 Distilled 42 Before__________9 Anatomy (ab.) 32Go a-stray beverage 85 Title of « 36 Toper 37 Froth 43 Priced 45 Dull finish 46 Lose blood 47Ventilato 48 Opera star 49 German rivet 50Circiter (var.) 51 Equal (comb. form) Oh You Kids 23 Skiddoo:.. Oops! DETROIT (AP)—Bring your/means forget it; freak means fine; jack^ up means ruined; bod over tontijnow and we’ll hop in my pig, catch the rays and have a boss time. If that m^es sense lo you, then you’re hip (which is lin outdated word) to the latest in teen-age talk, which they call slanguage. The bod is the body-Kyourself; the pig is a cari«4hat looks powerful but has ' a small engine; catching the rays is getting a suntan; and boss is the same as great. A Detroit News survey of teen-ge talk in .the Motor City uncovered these gems and ’ more! For example: I’m weak I means I’m shocked; bag it just can’t cut It means just can’t bear it. If you’re in your pig and you hang a Louie, you’ve just turned left, man. If you hang a Ralph, it’s alright turn, hang a Sam is go straight and hang a Ulysses means make a U-turn. Conversely, fake a Louie means turn right, fake a Ralph means turn left, fake a Sam means make a U-turn and fake a Ulysses means go straight. If you understand it all; 1hen you’re groovy—which is what cool and neat used to mean. BUY, SELL, TRADE - - - USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! Stage Star of 'Funny Girl' 'Garlics Up' for Film Debut Sadie dozed In her lap as Barbra sat in a Hollywood canvas chair on Pier 84 talking of her new life as a movie star. “How long have you been one?” I asked Barbra, whp started “Funny Girl” the other day lot even a week.' “Have you got it licked?” I asked, waved a hand airily. * * * WILSON Producer Ray Stark had been telling me ^ John!before that he’s now worked with the two most beautiful girls in the world, Liz Taylor and Barbra. ____ “I mean it — physically beautiful. If Barbra’s nose Is little long, you never notice it, because her eyes are so deep!” Barbra was on the pier for a tugboat scene past the Statue of Liberty. But tugs are controlledJoy railroads and the strike had it messed up. . J “Is doing pictures different*” I asked her. “No — it’s just like TV — only bigger.” ASPHALT PAVING ktiidonlial - Comintrctel - Induftrlil DEEP STRENGTH ASPHALT PAVING o Ptrkint Lot$ •'.Drivoways Rasurfacad a Saaloata Panatralion Workmor»)iip at Compot(li<^ Pricot Michitan Slate Niehway Spaclficationa No Charca lor Movinf Our EquipmanI PONTIAC ASPHALT CO. FE 5-6983 FE 8-6511 502 S. PaiidGiik “Just like TV!” screamed Ray Stark. “This one location right here costs $600,000, more.than a whole TV show. That’s about $100,000 a minute for the film we get.” “I mean, a camera’s a camera,” Barbra said. Suddenly the thought.pf $100,000 a minute staggered her. “Oh, my God, 1 can’t act on anything so expensive. Ray, I got to talk to you!” THE MIDNIGHT EARL •3* LI A T • k. I I I Beaties-mgr., wai No Arm-1 wistinq Needed , singer s [about starring at to Get Connolly on Safari The topless all-girl band at the Crystal Room has collected 24 summonses so far . . . Jane Morgan, opening at the Las Vegas Bonanza, has given up her bare midriff outfit in favor of a bare-back-to-the-waist dress . . . London Buzz . . . Brian Epstein, the Beatles’ mgr., wants to get out of the business. ■’s heading for London-to talk to Tommy Steele starring at the Miami Beach Hilton-Plaza ... A friend, flying to Paris, brought Shirley MacLaine something she wanted — a box of buns from the Automat. . . Mayor Lindsay took the wife and kids to see “South Pacific” (and backstage to meet Florence Henderson). O I A This Week Only We will roof an average size home completely for *168'* Come in and see us today ni:l or Phonk 673-6175 AIIBURir BUILDERS 4494 DIXIE HIGHWAY DRAYTON PLAINS T By JERRY BUCK NEW YORK (AP) - An avid sportsman all his life, Gov. John Connally of Texas said it didn’t require much persuasion when 1 he was asked to go to Africa to hunt leopard for “The American [ Sportsman” on the ABC televi-’Riorr network r I “f grew up in" South Texas 1 and hunted everything (Jown I there from rattlesnakes up and down,” Connally said in an interview before leaving for Africa. “I’ve hunted javelina, white tail deer, prong-horned antelope, plus all the birds.” the junket, Connally said, “I’ve only gotten one letter critical of my going over to kill gajne. This person seemed to be against killing any game. “This brings up a basic question we’re confronted with in in Africa,” be said. “I don’t believe in killing for the .sake of slaughtering animals. I’re confronted with the conservation and control of game and we’ve got to achieve a balance.” He asked, “Which is more “One thing I’d always hoped to do was go on an African safari, So when Tom Moore a|j|^ me it didn’t take much am-twisting,” he said. Moore, president of ABC—TV, plans to go with Connally into the Serengeti Plains of jiotih central Tanzania. The trip is due to begin about July 24 and last until about the first of September. Among others going are Bing Crosby, Phil Harris and David Janssen. “The American Sportsman,” rated by Nielsen as the most CKLW.- Newx, WJBK, News, Music, $pOr)s WCAR, News, Jack Sanders popular sports series on, televi-j, sioh, , features celebdties huntipg and fishing in exotic locales. The one-hour color show is seen Sundays from January to April. Asked If.lie h^d received arjy _____\i m yd__________________ criticism in Texas for going on WISH I’D SAID THAT: A woman’s hair is the perfect length when it’s longer than her daughter’s and shorter than her son’s, REMEMBERED QUOTE: “Success comes easily to those who set mediocrity as their goal.’’ EARL’S PEARLS: Dr. C(iarles Allen of Houston’s Fjr,st Methodist Church tells of a presidential candidate who admits he wasn’t born in a log cabin — but moved into one as soon as tusTamily cdiild afford it. “Overweight,” says Dr. Hans Goldschmidt, author of “It’s Square to Be Round,” “is often the result of living hand to' mouth, hand to mouth, hand to mouth.” . , . That’s earl, brother.' (Publl>htr>-H(ll Syndicatt) humarie, to encourage hunters within the law to take so many deer, or to let the deer die of starvation? The great conserva- tionists that I know of ar&_the day, Aug 7, as Purple j men who go out and hunt and take game. Romney Sets Purple Heart Day Day in Michigatr winners of^ the State’s oldest military decoration. The Purple Heart goes to members of the armed forces who have been wounded In action. — Raidio Programs— eRIOAY EVENING ii0»-WJR, News, Sports ■ ........ »s, Jporn 011*1 WPON. N«ws, Soorti Unci* Jay Show News, Toll *:4S-VyWJ, L.,.,.,._, 7:0*-WCAR, Roct 6 ... WPON, News, Music WWJ, News, Xarlson WJB1C News, Music CKLW, News, Duka Windsor liSfr-wWJ, News, Emphasis yyjR, Tigers/Yankees WXYZ, Dateline, Dave Lockhan i »!«0-WHPI, Jack Fuller WWJ. News. Emphasis Sportslln* 11:(6-MtPOR, Arizona Wetien WJR, News, Sports, Music tl:ig-WCAR, Rx, Health tI:25-WCAR, Rod MlMar SA1URDAY MARNINO WJBK.i News, Music WPON, News, Music WCAR. NdAs. BUI Oelzell 1:J*-WWJ, News. Borders WPON, News, Music Wi|^l, Aknanac liia^'WjR, Wewi Sunr.ysld* WCAR, New WJR, t^ews WHPl, Unci SATURDAY AFTERNOON :»g-WWJ, .... WPON, News, S WCAR, M WHFl, Bll CKLW, N WXYZ, Ni l:«0-WJR, WHF), Ja HOME IMPROVEMENT IS MY BUSINESS DEUDHIECT PERSONAL AND DIRECT SUPERVISION ON YOUR JOB. CALL FE 8-9251 • No Salesman's Commission—No Middleman Profit! FAMILY ROOMS Wo. M,295 • KITCHENS • BATHROOMS a ALUM. SIDINO • FREE PUNNINO By EARL WILSON Barbra Streisand had been out feasting on NEW -YORK T heavily garlicy mshes at the Cafe Brittany and her snow white! poodle Sadie hM got into her eye shadow and now looked as though she’d roiled in coal dust. NO MONEY DOWN-FHA and BANK RATES NO PAYMENTS 'TIL SEPTEMBER 1967 # Membv Pontiac Chambor of Cemmorco SiEig ^^NSIBUCTION Cq.,^ f.Vi// inythne . . . FE 8-9251 (No obiigsttoq) 323 N. Pefift PONTIAC FORRELIABLE TV SERVICE Call,Your TESA of Oakland Countyl Get Prompt, Professional Service DEALER LISTING: L Bilks Radio 1 TV FE 4r51li Obsl TV r Condon Rodio-TV IN W. Huron, Panlia* Dolby Radio t TV I Grofon’t Radio-TV 114-NH Imot Radio D TV FI 4-NTT I I Hod’s Radio-TV FE 1-1112 TroyTV-Rsdte arinj'^ulii CKLW, News, Dave Shafarj ,WJR, Tigers/Seftatpri . i l:t»-WPON, News.VMuili WXyL. Naws, Daya Princa WJR, Tigers/Yankeas liOO-WCAR, News, J- .. see more of th^^icture with Mnerica's first full /S" Screen SCRilBM "■iiiT¥ HANDCRAFTED Greater dependatiilityl ! Tho LAKELAND • V2014 Now. oteisnt two-tono roctangular cablnot; 20.000 volto of picturo powor. •Pormt-Sof VHF fins tuning. Colors: Charcoal Brown With Baigs. or Bolgo Fe^er service problemsl »139” Th§ QutlitY poos In btfort th» npm* poos on* Op*n Friday h|lgy 'HI ^ TV-RADlO IIT^ '' SERVICE 770 Orchord Lake Ave. FE 5-6112 D—10 THE POKTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. JULY' 21, '1967 THOMAS FURNIItJRE BRUI6SY0U TREMENDOUS SAVINGS DURING ITS, S10REWIDE AT BOTH PONTIAC AND DftAYTON STORES > COLOR CORRELATED 3-PC. LIVING ROOMS SPECIALLY PRICED EACH GROUP INCLUDES; LUXURIOUS SOFA PLUS 2 COLOR CORRELATED CHAIRS These lavish living room groups ore a perfect example of the astonishing storewide savings you'll find in Thomas Furniture's exciting Mid-Summer Salel Looting for style? Take your pick of three best-selling designs ready for. immediate delivery. Or,, our decorators will assist you in selecting from an impressive ojmy of custom order fabrics, ^er «ray you get the same .sale pri^el We^even include protective arm cove^et ^no extra costi Hurryl Ypu can shop tor^ght 'til 9 P.M.I AMPLB FREE parking DRAYTON 4S45 Dim HWY • OR 4^032f open MONrtAYi IHURSDAY; fRiOAY TIL 9 \J " ■ I The Weather . U.S. WMtiMr BurMu FerKtsi Warmer TITE PONTIAC PRE^S^** 3MVW VOL. 125 — NO. 142 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. FRIDAY, JULY 21, 1967 Key Officials Huddle WASHINGTON — Indications grew today that the administration is putting finishing touches on its plans for a tax increase. Government economists, armed with a late string of statistics, contended the economy is strong, bouyant and moving toward the boom they predicted last January. man Wilbur D. MUls, D-Ark., of the tax-writing house Ways and Means Committee in Mills’ office. And Fowler is expected to remain available this weekend for any possible high-level conference on taxes. ary to help pay for the Vietnam war, hold down interest rates and stem inflationary pressure from the boom economists said was coming. Secretary of the Treasury Henry H. Fowler and Under-secretary Joseph M. Barr huddled late yesterday with Chair- One source said a formal tax bill could be sent to Congress within 10 Johnson has not sent a formal tax message , or tax legislation to 0>ngress but at a news conference this week he reaffirmed his intention to do so. President Johnson proposed a 6 per cent surtax on income taxes last Janu- He said the 6 per cent rate he proposed in January could be adjusted — presumably upward — but no decision has been made. Navy Pilots Down 3 MIGs in Aerial Battle ABOARD CARRIER BON HOMME RICHAkRD (* — In a raging dogfight against Communist MIGs “that were everywhere,’’ U.S. Navy fliers said they knocked down three North Vietnamese planes today and probably got a fourth. Two U.S. planes from the carrier Bon Homme Richard were shot up badly but both pilots brought them back safely. No planes from the carrier were lost in the strike against an oil depot about 20 miles north of the port of Haiphong. “Their pilots were pretty good and they were aggressive,’’ said Cmdr. M, H. “Red” Isaacks, 37, of San Diego, Caiif., the leader of the first flight of fighter escorts over the target. “But they were not good enough. They made some mistakes.” MUDDY GOING FOR MARINES-Vietnamese Marines, wearing full battle gear, move through deep mud to a giant Chinook helicopter yesterday to be flown to Operation Paddington, an allied operation in Phuoc Tuy province some 30 miles southeast of Saigon on the edge of the Mekong Delta. American, Australian and South Vietnhmese units are taking part in the operation. Heavy monsoon rains in the area turned the fields into quagmires. ‘POPPED OUT OF CLOUDS’ Waterford Schools Face Financial Woes Birmingham Boy Is Killed by Auto By HUDSON WILLSE JR. Supt. of Schools Dr. Don 0. Tatroe alerted the Waterford Township Board of Education of a grave financial condition facing the school district next school year and told members they should start preparing for a fall millage election. “We have a very serious financial situation facing us for the coming year,” said Tatroe who termed the recent budgetary action of the Michigan Legislature as “to little and too late.” Tatroe pointed out that the district next year will, in reality, receive almost $3 less per pupil in state aid than during 1966-67. A 5 per cent state aid increase was approved, but the district must pay Related Stories, Pages A-2, B-6 more because of , equalized valuation. i' Tatroe suggested three possible alternatives for raising funds — a further increase in State Legislature appropriations, to incur a cash deficit by borrowing on anticipated income and a tax increase which he said could not be levied in time to remedy the predicament. A 3-year-old Birmingham boy was killed at 5 p.m. yesterday in the street near the front of his homeT " Sean Steppins, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Steppins, died under the wheels of a car driven by Dora Holden, 56, of 1047 N. Woodward. Police said the woman had been visiting in the neighborhood and when she driving away, the Oakland Highway Toll in ’67 61 Lait Year to Date 79 boy, playing in a toy car, rolled down i driveway and into the path of her . car. In Today's Press He and Treasurer Donald W. Porter favored approaching state leaders in an effort to obtain additional monies. Porter suggested a coalition of needy districts would have a greater impact on the Legislature. Almonf, Trailer park zoning issue stirs up village — PAGE A-4. Defiant Quakers Group plans to send more m^ical supplies to North Vietnam soon — PAGE A-5. Soviet Diplomacy String of blunders raises eyebrows in West — PAGE A-11. Area News J-.............A-4 Astrology ............. C-6 Bridge ..................C-6 Crossword Puzzle ........D-9 Comics ..................C-6 Editorials ............ . A-6 Farm and (garden ....C-7—C-9 Markets ................ D-1 Mystery Story ......... A-8 Obituai^es ....... . . . .D-2 Sports ...............C-1—C-5 Theaters ...........C-10, C-11 TV and Radio Programs .. D-9 Wilson, Earl.............IV9 Women’s Pages .......B-1—B4 .. Tatroe also recommended that all non-essential operations in the district be reduced or eliminated unless funds become available and that the number of personnel be reduced by leaving some positions vacant. The financial woes faced by the district compound the problem of meeting 1967-68 teacher salary demands. —44 PAGK.S .... associated PRESS ** JTAVTjllO UNITED PRESS INTERNATIOMAl, lOe LBJ Readying Tax Bill Ex~Councilman, Builder Indicted It’s known, however, that alternatives ranging from 6 to 10 per cent have been submitted to the* White House. But one source says he still expects the rate to be 6 per cent, at least for individuals. Government officials are convinced,, the economy eventually will bear out. their request for the tax hike. They said the June figures—completed yesterday by the Commerce Department and showing personal income took its biggest jump since last January — offer some proof of this. By JIM LONG Oakland County Grand Juror James S. Thorburn late yesterday issued indictments against a former Madison Heights councilman and a Detroit build- Other indictments and warrants for the arrests of at least three more persons reportedly have been issued, but grand jury investigators refuse to disclose any information until they are taken into custody. The indictments, the first handed out by Thorburn since he was named to succeed Circuit Judge Philip Pratt, accuses ex-Councilman Roman Nowicki with bribery and conspiracy to commit brib- ery. He allegedly accepted $1,000 of a $6,-000 bribr, acceding to the warrant, in return for his favorable vote on a rezoning matter. The property, according to investigators, is located on the south side of 14 Mile Road at Bennington near the 1-75 expressway interchange. It was rezoned from residential to commercial, they JAMES S. THORBURN bribery and conspiring to commit bribery in the alleged $6,000 transaction. The identity of the other person cannot be revealed since he has not been arrested. CO-CONSPIRATORS . Two other former councilmen, Antonios Branoff and Dean Eggart were named as co-conspirators • hi the warrant, but were not named as defendants. The Detroit builder was identified as Marvin Alexander, 46, of 19426 Warring- He and another party are accused of Nowicki stood mute at his arraignment this morning before Bloomfield Hills Justice of the Peace Jack Baldwin. A preliminary examination was scheduled for Wednesday at 10 a.m. Another indictment involving the solicitation of a bribe in connection with a liquor license also was issued against Nowicki. (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 3) 'Comp/icated, Unrealistic' Ford H its UAW Aims Isaacks shot down one MIG and then brought his damaged plane back. The F8 Crusader pilots ran into the MIGs as they approached the oil dump after encountering little groundfire on the way in. “They just popped up out of the clouds,” said Lt. Cmdr. Robert L. Kirkwood, 36, of Fall River, Mass., and San Diego, who was credited with a kill. By The Associated Press DETROIT — Ford Motor Co. received yesterday the last.of the United Auto Workers’ demands for new contracts and the company’s chief negotiator termed them “complicated and unrealistic.” Sidney F. McKenna of Ford said the UAW demands made up “a longer list and of greater magnitude than they have confronted us with in past negotiations.” the union its proposals for contract changes. “We will outline areas of the working agreement that we have found troublesome in the past and feel could stand improvement,” McKenna -said. He declined to elaborate. The other kill was made by Lt. Cmdr. Ray G. Hubbard Jr., 32, of Poway, Calif, and the probable was credited to 25-year-old Lt, j.g. Philip William Dem-pewolf of Bellevue, Iowa. Henry Ford II, board chairman of Ford, previously had said the union goafs were “unreasonable and unrealistic” and warned that labor strife may lie ahead unless the UAW softens its ambitions. The union and the UAW got into a dispute over what they would call a committee being set up to “explore and refine” one of the union’s major proposals, guaranteed annual income. The union calls the group the subcommittee on guaranteed annual income, salary and supplemental unemploymoit benefits. It was believed that later sifting of information would convert his probable to a confirmed kill. • It was the first MIG for each of the Navy fliers, although Hubbard had been credited with damaging one of the North Vietnamese jets on May 1. The contract talks, which began July 19, are aimed at reaching agreements to supplant year pacts expiring Sept. 6. JET EXPLODED The fliers knocked the MIGs out of the sky with rockets and gunfire, and one of the Red jets “exploded like a fireball,” they said. Three “good” chutes were seen from all three planes, indicating the three Communist pilots parachuted safely. The UAW represents 160,000 workers at Ford, 400,000 at General Motors Corp. and 95,000 at Chrysler Corp. Next Tuesday, Ford will present to FORD CALLS IT Ford calls it a supplemental unemployment benefits conunittee. McKenna explained the shortened title by saying, “We did this in order to avoid the inference that the subcommittee has a mission to work put a salary status and gdaranteed annual income arrangement with the union.” Saturday to Be Sunny arid Warm or Sol is. expected to turn up the heat over the weekend. Sunshine, partly cloudy and possil showers with rising temperatures is I outlook. Here is the official day-by-day U.S. Weather Bureau forecast: Lake Orion Wif§ Charges Husband With Rifle Threat Tam Makes Bid for PGA Tourney A sleeping Lake Orion waterfront was roused this morning as an alleged family fight threatened to erupt into a shooting. Held by Oakland County sheriff’s officers is John Czamowskl, age unknown, of 602 Longpoint, Lake Orion, who had barricaded himself in his boathouseliving quarters following a reported squabble with his wife. Tam O’Shanter Country Club on Orchard Lake road iti West Bloomfield Township yesterday made a bid in Denver to host the 1970 PGA championship. At first the club considered a bid for the 1869 tournament. However, pro Warren Orlick said the club wanted more time to get its course into top condition, He is charged by her with threatening to shoot her with a 35-caliber Marlin rifle. The rifle was confiscated by Lake Orion police after Czamowski was persuaded to surrender. Tam O’Shanter recently completed a half-million dollar remodeling program to the clubhouse and adjacent buildings. The current PGA championsh^ Is being played in COTver where the PGA executive committee is also holding its annual ihee^g. Six county cars responded to an appeal for help from the Lake Orion department after Mrs. Czamowski escaped from the boathouse with another rifle, a 22-caliber. She ran to neighbors, the Robert Chanxbers, 616 Longpmnt. Mrs Chambers notifi^ police at 7:15 a.m. BULL HORNS USED TODAY — Sunny, a little wanner with a high of 82 to M. Fair tonight, the low 58 to 62. TOMORROW—Sunny and quite wkrm. HIGH BOY — Terry Hart of 1064 Berwick fashioned this eye-catching rig out of an inverted junk bicycle frame and a couple of lengths of scrap gas pipe. It serves as an exerciser for Hart and his wife, Iterleen, and a conversation piece for anyone who sees it. j - Bull horns were used by deputies in an effort to persuade Czamowski to surrender. He came out about 8:30 a.m. after an appeal by a' friend, George R. Schindler of Detroit. Tear gas was not needed according, to Detective Charles Whitlock. Neighbors said the Czamowskis, had lived in the boathouse with living quarters on the seconid floor for about torde dr four years. i , i “SWAP’Want Ads Can Be Fun... Profitable “We had 30 calls from our Press Want Ad from people who wanted to swap. Very successful.” Mrs. E.F. PRESS WANT ADS 't th« knack ef halping to work out moft ' kind ot a daal for profit. Try OM. ssmsi or 3344>981 for action V A—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, JULY 21, Antirat Defeat Rip WASHINGTON. (AP) - President Johnson and federal o . housing chief Robert C. Weaver dejiounce as cruel and unjustified House rejection of a measure aimed at attacking rats in |—r----urbatr sluffl breedfflg grounds. Johnson, in a statement shortly after Thursday’s 207-176 vote to ^detrack consideration of a two-year, $40-million rat eradication j measure, urged House redbnsideration of the administration-backed legislation. “We are spending federal money to protect oun JivestoclUzed the poor—and4his time the from rodents and predatory ani-.......... mats,” said the President. “Thfe least we can do is give our chil- Grievance on Pay for Teachers Aired A grievance filed by the Waterford Education Association (WEA), involving the rate bf pay for 10 teachers in a study program, was discussed at last night’s board of education meeting. administration claims he summer-study pay rate of ^2 a day should prevail, based oh provisions of. he current contract. The WEA contends the teachers should receive regular wages during the six-week program which began Monday. The ’The project is a federally funded exemplary program to be incorporated at the new Crescent . .Lake . .Elementary School. It is aimed at developing greater individual* ized instruction. Minneapolis Race Violence Flares Again By the Associated Press Rock throwing, at least two shootings and a dozen small fires were reported as violence flared up in Minneapolis, Minn., Thursday night and early today. A police inspector said the secoiri outbreak in two nights occurred on the Negro North Side of the city. There were no fatalities from the shootings but two injuries. ★ ★ * Egrlier, Mayor Arthur Naft-alin ' blamed the Wednesday night outbreak of street fights and fire-bombing on a few “lawless” individuals and said the Negro community was not at fault. i • “Wh’re dealing vnth a few individuals who want to inflame the community,” he said. “For many days rumors of impending trouble have been circulating. In, certain measure it was organized around the rumors themselves.” The board will decide the issue in executive session. Teachers contend the project unlike summer-study pro-_rams in the district and that the regular contractural pay rate should prevail. SIMILARITY aTED The administration feels the project is similar to summer-study programs in that teachers are preparing for the regular school year. According to teachers, the government has laid aside about $17,500 for wages during the six-week period' which meet regular salary requirements. In other business, the board was presented a plan for '^split grade sections at Lotus Lake Elementary School next school year after which a few parents lodged complaints. The school is slated tentatively to have three split grade classrooms in September, involving first and second graders, third and fourth graders and fifth and sixth graders. In Durham, N.C., some 300 Negroes staged a relatively peaceful march to City Hall to underline their demands for better housing and other social reforms. Split grade classrooms become necessary when the number of pupils on a grade level is too many for one room or too few for two rooms, Next school year, .35 split grade sections in 20 schools ' earmarked for the district. School officials said more study and discussion with Lotus Lake parents will be undertaken before the start of school. dren the same protection that We do our livestock. Weaver, secretary of Housing and Urban Development, caiied the House vote “thoughtless, heartless action” that “victim- helpless.” ATTACKS HOUSE MEMBERS Weaver sharply attacked— without naming names—several House members who bantered about the bill before voting against debating it. Weaver said he deplored ‘those who found anything humorous in such a proposal. I cannot understand those who ridiculed a program to protect children against rats.’’ The House rocked with laughter when Rep. James A. Haley, D- Fla., called the meas-a monstrosity of a bill, and suggested; “Why not just buy some cats and turn them loose on the street;” But Rep. Martha W. Griffiths, D-Mich., squelched the laughter by saying rats “have killed more human beings than all the generals in the world.” DEFENDS MEASURE Noting earlier House apprpval of the $79-billion-’ defense appropriations bill, Mrs. Griffiths said: “If you’re going to spend $79 billion to kilt off a few Viet-cong. I’d spend $40 million to kill off the most devastating enemy man has ever had. But 148 Republicans and 59 Democrats, most of them Southerners, combined to overcome the 154 Democrats and 22 Republicans who backed the measure. WOODSIDE, Calif. (AP) -Shirley .Temple Black is thinking seriously of funning for Congress. 'The former child movie star expects to announce her decision within two weeks. Mrs. Black, 39, a Republican, said Thursday she was considering entering a Nov. 14 special election race because state Sen. Richard J. Dolwig, Atherton attorney, had decided against running. Opponents of the bill said action should be left to state and local authorities. After the vote, Rep. Theodore R. Kupferman, R-N.Y told the House he was ashamed of the vote here today.” He called the House consistent in passing antiriot legislation earlier this week, then rejecting the antirat measure. Criticism of the House action also came from Pittsburgh Mayor Joseph M. Barr, president of the U.S. Conference of Mayors, who called it deplorable and urged reconsideration. Grand Juror Indicts 2 in Bribery Probe (Continued From Page One) A second party, not yet arrested, is also accused in the indictment. The Weather THEN AND NOW —Shirley Temple Black (pictured at left during her childhood acting career as Shirley Temple and at right in a recent photo) is reportedly considering running for the congressional seat vacated by the death of Republican Rep. J. Arthur Younger of California. Mrs. Black said she would make her final decision in a week or two. -The idea is call^ “an exciting possibility” by David Cook, principal of the new Lahser High School. t He explained Ihat with it, individual students or classes as a whole could phone or tune in on taped iectures or educational presentations, “The idea is in common use in colleges and universities, and more and more high schools are installing them,” Cook said. The program, labeled “Dial ' Access Retrieval System,” will 1 not be instituted this fall, and I board members are expected to I Former Child Star Eyes Vacant Seat in Congress “He was my candidate,” Mrs. lack said. “Now that Sen. Dolwig has made his announcement that he will not run, I am going to give the matter serious consideration.” MSU Student Fee Hike Seen By The Associated Press Michigan State’s University’; Board of Governors was to meet today and was expected to follow three other state universities in announcing a hike in student fees. Wayne State University and Eastern , Michigan University has announced boosts in student tuition. The University of Michigan announced it would up student dormitory charges. Higher cost of higher education for thousands of Michigan’s college and university students were forecast after budget cut-Th .J u u J last session of the The alleged bribe and rezon- state Legislature. Gov. Ronald Reagan Thursday set for Nov. 14 the special election to fill the 11th district seat vacated by the death of Rep. J. Arthur Younger. He died June 20 in Washington of leukemia. MAJORITY NECESSARY If no candidate wins a majority in the Nov. 14 voting, a nmoff election will be held Dec. 12. Three Republicans already have announced for the seat representing San Mateo County, immediately south of San Francisco on the San Francisco Peninsula. They are Paul N. McCloskey, Palo Alto attorney: Robert R. Barry, former New York congressman now living in Wood-side, and Sheriff Erl Whftmore. William Draper III, member of a wealthy investment banking family, has said he expects to decide shortly on making the raice. DEM CANDIDA’TE Howard M. Keating, Atherton lawyer and founder of Ramparts magazine, is the only announced Democratic candidate. Assemblyman Leo J. Ryan, south San Francisco Democrat and former school teacher, said he would make his decision by next week. He said he expected the Republican National Committee to do something about stopping a big intraparty fight in San Mateo County. • Mrs. Black and her husband, Charles, are active in social and community affairs in the county and Woo(|side, wealthy suburban area. Black is a business executive. His late headed Pacific Gas & Electric Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINI’TY — Sunny, a little warmer today, high 82 to 86. Fair tonight, low 58 to 62. Sunny and quite warm Saturday. Outlook for Sunday, partly cloudy, continued warm. Variable winds 5 to 12 miles. Precipitation probabUities in per cent: Today and tonight 5, tomorrow 10. LAKE CONDmONS . . “■ Sunny southerly winds 10 to 16 knots. LAKE ERIE v- Variable winds 10 to 15 knots; partly cloudy. LAKE HURON — Southeast to south winds 15 to 20 knots. LAKE MICHIGAN — Southeast to southwest winds 15 to 20 knots. LAKE SUPERIOR — South to southwest winds 20 to 25 knots. in rlMf Saturday at t:____ Moon.tats Saturday at <;5S a. Moon rliat Friday at 9:44 p.ir Davmlawn Tamparaturai Oaa Yaar Aga In P HIghait tamparatura Thursday'! Tamparatura . ria 77 53 Fort Worth B7 71 Escanaba 71 64 Kansas City 90 - Gr. Rapids 85 57 Los Angalas 90 _ Houghton 86 65 Miami Beach 85 79 Lansing 83 54 Mllwaukea 81 64 Muskegon 82 58 New Orleans 82 72 Traverse C. 83 55 New York 84 78 Albuquerque 85 66 Omaha 87 71 ....... .. .. jj - - . Phoenix 109 89 Boston 74 65 Pittsburgh 83 59 :ago 71 66 Tampa 93 - ;lnnall 84 59 Salt Lake C. 98 Denver 87 59 S. Francisco 62 81 58 S. S. Marie 79 81 66 Washington 81 65 Detroit ^ WIraphoto NATIONAL WEA’THER — Scattered showers and thun-da^wers are expected tonight frpm the southern Plains ttatwgh the western Gulf Coast and in parts of Montana, the lower Great" Lakes and sottthern Florida. Clear to partly cloudy aUea are forecast tat the rest of the cobntny, with no greet temperature changes. ing, according to the warrant, iw i ivir took place between March 1964]^''^ FALL IN LINE and February 1965. The second indictment against Nowicki says that he and other parties did accept ■gifts and gratuities from certain individuals” applying for state and local approval a$ package liquor dealers between January 1962 and June 1964. ALREADY IN JAIL Nowieki already was in jail when taken to his arraignment He was sentenced to a one-year term on Monday after being found in contempt of court for' failing to answer a grand juy subpoena. He was defeated for reelection in April 1965. Eggart and Branoff their bid on reelection in the primary two months earlier. All 21 state-supported colleges and universities may fall in line and boost tuition fees. The Legislature cut Gov. Romney’s higher education budget and also rejected most of the individual schools’ proposed appropriation increases. Wayne State of Detroit Thursday announced an increase of $99 to $300 yearly for resident and nonresident students, acting a day after Eastern Michigan’s increase of $60 to $150. The manhunt for the killers | of Edwgrd Emmett DeConick, West Bloomfield Townstfip I trustee, continues unabated to- I day, 18 days after the brutal | slaying. Co. Death Cause Unknown on Man in Pool The cause of death of an 80-year-old man whose body was found in a swimming pool in Bloomfield Township yesterday was undetermined today. Henry J. Ferieks, gardener at the home of C. W. Smith of 3060 Chickering, was discovered dead The larger of the two sums!in the pool at noon. Birmingham Area News 'Dial-a-Class' Concept Eyed BLOOMFIELD HILLS - A “dial-a-class” concept in education is being studied by the school district’s board of trustees. study it at Iqast a, year. Cook said. CENTRAL OFFICE The program would call for a central office containing tapes. Teachers or individuals could dial for the desired material. . Cook sees an ever-increasing application of the basic princ^. “This would greatly expand possibilities in language teaching, where this process is famUiarly used, as well as all other disciplines. “Even the football coach could use it for skull sessions,” Cook said. sarily have to be in school to dial a class, he pointed out. MINIMAL COST Cook called the idea the best use of updated, electronic devices and pointed out the cost could very well be minimal diie to the possibility of reducing the amount of teachers and space needed. 7 The student would not neces- Looking farther into the future he sees the system as easily incorporated as a community service. “It could someday be avail- , able for home use and taxpayers would get a direct benefit for their dollars spent,” he said. Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. No Success in Manhunt for 4 Killers Hava You Shopped SIMMS Tobacco Dept? You’ll Find Your Smoking Moods at SIMMS Lower Discount Prices These prices good Fri. and Sat. Rights reserved limit quantities. 1 All I ed to ■ Tobacco & Candy Dept. Cigarettes By The Carton A combined effort by township, county and State Police, aided by FBI agents, has thus far failed to bring about an arrest. DeConick was killed at his home at 5847 W. Maple the night of July 3 by a gang of four intruders — three Negro males and a light-skinned Regulars-Kings and Filters Only —Your Choice 2Ctns For .514 Choose froin our fresh slocks of favorite brands. In regulars. Kings and Fillers. Fay this knv price plus soles kix. Limit 7 cartons. New EXTRA LENGTH Cifaretfes*Carton You Will lind the new longer lengtfi cigaret^, your choice of Super King Winston, W ihol, or lOOMM Marlboro of Simmv low discount prices. Plus sales ta)(. ^ 2« His sister, Kathleen DeConick, 73, was beaten and shot in the head, losing her left eye, but is recovering in a Pontiac Hospital. An^rica’s Largest Seller — Box of 50 King Edward Cigars Police are checking criminals with violent backgrounds and various gangs and keeping lookout for the pieces of jewelry taken in the $25,000 robbery. A $6,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of members of The gang has been offered, $5,000 by the Detroit News and $1,000 by The Pontiac Press. The reay-mix concrete business, an enterprise of small proportions just a decade ago, now involves more than 3, companies and annual sales of more than $2.4 billion. Regular $3.00 value, box-of 50 popular King Edword Imperial cigars. America's largest seller. Limit 2 boxes. RONSIHI BUTANE FLUID oiu», clean burning, odorless butane tluid I 69« !-Uz.Ronson Fluid 'c volu*. 12-oz. siz« Ronson fluid for oil wick (.ghiers. ATP BoxofSU Book Matches 7® . Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. nationally advertised toys always make great birthday gifts - and when you save 50% and more at SIMMS annex, it's even greater! open tonight 'til 9:30 p.m. — sat. 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. ERECjanCQNBTRUCTQR*«M- I will be charged against nonresident students in each instance. Both EMU, an Ypsilanti institution with an anticipated 2,B0B enrollment increase this fall, and Wayne State said that legislative appropriations beneath requested amounts were the cause. Township police said he had apparently accidently fallen into the pool, perhaps while stricken with a heart attack. Oakland (bounty sheriff’s deputies said today the body bore no marks and it was not known if drowning or illness was the fatal cause. No autopsy was performed. All Whites Are Excluded Black Power Confab Opens x\. comedian Dick Gregory and Los Angeles black natifmalist Ron Karenga, was not so much anti-white as proJilack and antiwhite exploitation. NEWARK, N.J. (AP) - From black nationalists to the NAACP, about 600 delegates to the first national conference on black power are gathered here today intent on making the once divisive slogan a working sym- what they considered absurdi-bol of Ne^o unity, Ities in the way the United All whites, including news-States expects its nonwhite men, were formally excluded citizens to behave, from all Working sessioi^s, and plan, he’s got to be sick,” Gregory said to a storm of applause. The main question, to be de-over tlvee days in a ser- Some speakers pointed out of 14 concurrent workshops, . . .. jg gQ,,j q£ action and <»:gan- ization Negroes should unite behind. delegates, including the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee’s Chairman H. Rapp Brown, were asked not to give individual news conferences. But the tone of the orientation Thcpgjjgy Jjy JJggJQ , (k-v l\ , * (\i'ti u’ GOTTX) BE SIC*’ “If whitey thinks he’s going to send me to Vietnam to risk my life for instant freedom for a man who looks more like me than he (whitey) does while my wife and kids back home get “Everybody knows whitey’s a devil.C’The The new building will centralize virtually all of the administrative offices which now are scattered in five different locations. The project was approved by school district voters in June 1966 as part of a bond issue. The mechanical contract for $371,400 went to the Waterford Construction Co. Electrical Maintenance Co. was awarded the electrical contract for $63,109. Also last night, the board authorized the administration to apply for 1967 National Defense Education Act Title HI aid for equipment and supplies costing $491,741. Part of the funds is earmarked for built-in equipment for the proposed new Waterford-Mott High School and Crescent Lake Elementary School. In other business, 1967-68 contracts were approved for 21 teachers and three resignations were accepted. teachers. In other appointments last night. Board Secretary Mrs. Virginia Ross gained a tiiree-year term with the Community Schools and Recreation Advisory Board and Treasurer Donald W. Porter was named designate to the Oakland Schools Board of Education with Lewis S. Long the alternate. Michael G. Patterson was named delegate to the Michigan Associatiem of School Boards (MASB). Long was selected as the alternate. John Boardman was named as MASB legislative contact. State Trooper at Pontiac to Be Elevated, Moved 'Fair Trial' Proposals Eased, Still Severe By WILUAM B. MEAD ANN ARBJpR (UH) - A State Bar of Michigan committee today slightly softened its "fair trial” proposals which would curtail public release of information about criminal cases. But it still called for a severe clamp-dowp. The cQmmittee, whose original proposals were sharply criticized by newsmen, a federal judge a^ Michigan’s attorney general, presented its revised recommendations to a meeting of lawyers and Michigan news officials. There was little difference between the new and old proposals. The committee suggested that instead of a court order strictly limiting what policemen could tell reporters about criminal cases, ^t “law enforcement agencies adopt their own regulations governing this matter.” But if they don’t, the coniunit-tee said, the courts or Legislature should do it for them. The committee also eliminated its original proposal that But William M. Ellmanh of Detroit, president of the State Bar, said he could cite “15 cases in the last month” in which jurors were influenced by news about the case. He refused to disclose them. The original proposals were copied from a list being considered by the American Bar Association, and Ellmann said the changes disclosed today merely followed recent changes in the ABA’S proposed rules. prosecutors, defense attorneys or policemen who break the rules ^e subject to jail on contempt of court citations. COULD BE DISBARRED Lawyers still could be disbarred for violations, however. Left intact were proposals that would prohibit release of information about a defendant’s confession or criminal record and the name or comments of witnesses to a crime; permit secret pretrial hearings; and, under threat of jail, stop court employes from telling newsmen what was said |n a secret court hearing. The proposals, still to be considered by the State Bar membership, are Intended to keep new^apers and broadcast stations from getting information about a criminal case which, the committee believes, might influence jurors and make it impossible for the-defendant to get a fair trial. Ne^vsmen have opposed the recommendations on grounds they would interfere with the public’s right to know, promote general policies of offleial se-crec]{^and stop the press from informing the public about cor- ruption or other flaws in the admlntstf atioff of justice . The proposed rules also would encourage judges to postpone trials, or move them to another city, if it appeared likely that news accounts might influence jurors; to be more careful in selecting jurors; and to make sure jurors don’t read newspaper accounts or listen to radio news during the trial. Atty. Gen. Frank J. Kelley bans on release of information. Kelley said there is not a single case in Michigan history in which a defendant was convicted because of news accounts. Quebec Is Next for De Gaulle ST. PIERRE (AP) - French President Charles de Gaulle cruised througti the Gulf of St. Lawrence toward Quebec today, leaving behind the tiny, eight-island remnant of France’s North American empire whose World War II loyalty to him may be beginning to pay off. During his enthusiastically received 10-hour visit Thursday, de Gaulle acknowledged that there are economic problems on St. Pierre, Miquelon and the six other drab chunks of French territorial rock off the Newfoundland coast and said France would help. A State Police trooper, who as been stationed at the Pontiac post for five years, will be promoted to the rank of corporal and transferred ^o Marquette, effective Sunday. He is Duane G. Gerstenber-er, 32, a lO-year veteran of the State Police. Prior to his assignment to the Pontiac Post in 1962, Ger-stenberger was stationed at Jonesville. He is the recipient of a meritorious service citation. A native of Brown Qty, Ger-stenberger graduated from high school at Marlette and attended the University of Michigan for two years. He is married and has twuohildren. SHOP IN UKi FOR THESE GREAT VALUES miwirvA^s ; .. Annual Summer OLMiUKie SALE f eorT^U,T,enM*i Lako Rd. 363-2333 CHILDREN’S SHOP^^ , Daily 10-«, FH. fo 9 PligHij Lie Simp 8178 COOLEY LAKE RD. Open Daily 10-9 EM 3-^3254 A ^Different ^Breed (PulU Slim and Trim at a pair of pants can be. Just step in, and pull them on. No zippers or fasteners of any kind to bulge, gap, slip or break the lovely lean lines. 100% double knit stretch nylon, snug elos-ticized, waist. Sizes 6 to 20. $10.00. And it's washable. SWIMSUIT SALE! STARTS TODAY EVERY SUIT IN THE STORE • JANTZEN • BOBBIE BROOKS • ROSE MARIE REID • COLE MANY OTHERS 1-PIECE AND 2-PIECE REGULAR $12 to $30 NOW To »16“ SIZES: 8-20 5-15 K"ll 1550 Union Lk.Rd. Ciall363-T1T4 Din: STORE fItMtetiM CHARGE IT 'RAMCHAaOC MCHIOAN aANKARC SKURITYCHAItOi He made no specific promises • the 5,500 islanders, whose chief activity is cod fishing, but said France has a duty to them and “will do what she must.” He said he was willing to disci^ economic development with their representatives. One economic step the landers are eager to take is to become a port of call for foreign fleets fishing on the nearby Grand Banks. If the islands were fully outfitted with freezing and storing facilities, the trawlers could deposit their catch and leave the long-dis-Itance hauling to other vessels. .m GRAND TRUNK WESTERN KITCHEN CARPET > You probably have seen this new revolutionary carpet advertised as high at $12.95 sq. yd. Karen's, following their price-slashing tradition, have reduced the price of this kitchen carpet to: ' IMPORTANT SPECIFICATIONS: T-Exceeds FHA Minimum Standards 2-Extreme Hi-OensHy, Microtuft construction A non-woven Polypropylene Primary Back (water barrier) . . Super Hi-DensHy Rubber Backing TERNS: 90 Daqr* the Same As Cash or up to 3 Yoars to Pay! tAMKI-HOISE TRMLEI SPEtMl HOURS: Mon. and Fri. 10 A.M. - 9 P.M. Karen's have over 100 small pieces of quality carpeting under 9 feet long. Ideal for campers, trailers and home. Tues.| Wed., Thurs. and Sat. 10 A.M.-5:30 P.M. Priced at just ^0 *9- fti Uop 3750 Dixie Highway, Drayton Plains OR 3-2100 THE FOXTIAC TRESS, FRIDAY. JULY 21, 19(57 The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by th'un in wholesale package lots Quotat' ns are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Monday. Stock Market to Stay in NEW YORK (AP) - City officials and representatives of the New York Stock Exchange have reached a tentative, agreement The tentative proposal would require state and city approval of two contemplated fjhanges in the tax and formal agreement Produce jto keep the exchange in the city from the exchange’s board of governors. Apples, Steele Red, I I while reducing the impact of the . ,4.50 stock transfer tax, the New ' York Times said today. | The pact would halve the tax ★ ★ ★ lover a five-year period for per- When the, controversial tax sons living outside the city and Cabbage, Curly, I omens. Green, di Cauliflower, di. b Celery, Pascal, d; Kohlrabi, dz. bch. Onions, Green, dz. bcl Parsley, Curly, dz. b Parsley, Root, dz. bet Peas, Green, bu. .. was increased last year the ex-50 change canceled its option on a M new site in Lower Manhattan and threatened to move to New “ Jersey. place a $550 ceiling on the tax due on single large block transaction by ihdividuals or institutions wherever they are, the Times said. Capital Interns to Protest War Though it is a state tax, the $160 million revenue it took in last year all went to the city. The tax ranges from 1.25 cents a share on stocks priced at less jthan $5 to 5 cents a share on stocks of $20 or more. The Times story said it was estimated the city would not lose revenue because the vol-ne of stock trading continues increase and because the proposed amendments would bring in business now done elsewhere to avoid the tax. 2 LBJ Advisers Off for Selling Job on Allies The New York Stock Exchange WASHINGTON (AP) - While President Johnson sends two top advisers on a tough Vietnam selling mission, a group' of congressional interns is thinking of attempting an even tougher job on Johnson ^ selling him antiwar sentiments. The Jcdinson advisers going to Asia, Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor and Clark Clifford, are trying to get six allies to boost their troop commitments in Vietnam. Muinrd, bu. .................. Spinach, bu................... Turnips, bu................... LETTUCE AND GREENS Endive, 1 bu.............. Lettuce,'Bibb, pk. bskf. Lettuce, Boston, dz. Lettuce, Head, bu........ Lettuce, Leal, bu. Lettuce! Romalne, bu. Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (AP)-(USDA)—Prices paid per pound tor,,N». I live poullry. heavr type hens, 19-jtf roasters heavy type, 27- I broilers and fryers whites. The Capitol Hill young people want the United States to cut or eliminate its own commitments in that wartorn country. Rep. Robert H. Michej, R-Ill., said Thursday some of the 1,300 young interns working in Washington this summer are circulating a petition among the rest and are planning an antiwar protest at the White House later this year. WALKING OUT He said they have discussed seeking, a face-to-face meeting with Johnson — and then perhaps walking out on him in a bid for wider news coverage. Michel protested “that the prestige of our offices is being used to foster a given point of view.” NEW STORE FOR MEN — Tlie Barn, a fashion clothing store for men opened yesterday at 685 S. Adams in the South Adams Shopping Center, Birmingham. Name-brand merchandise is on sale in the unique setting Ponliic Pre»» Phot® of Michigan antiques, according to owners Mr. and Mrs. Philip Pennell. Among the a tiques are a two-seat cutter, an antique store counter, a 1900-vintage washing machine and an old-fashioned cash register. Not Catching On in U.S. Soviet Digest Sputters By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst NEW YORK - Sputnik, not the satellite but the Soviet Snglish-language magazine that s supposed to give Reader’s digest a run around the world, s hardly a ball of fire in the United States after seven The administration point of months. the Digest s foreign circulation of 10.7 million copies in several languages. Sputnik originally was printed in English, Russian and Japanese, but more languages will be added. In the United States, Eastern magazine until you promote it. In the past we did some, but now we want to see how the results hold up.” HOPED FOR MORE The editors reportedly hoped for a circulation of 50,000 in the News Distribution, Inc., which|States, a small goal that supplies newsstands across the seems within sight. Many Its American dislrihulnr save lor and Clifford in a follow-up tck thM ^ distributed some are have seen Sputnik sate - Detose Secre«,7RotertS^Mc-f/^ relumed b, dealm, but ,and that college, towns seem to ..ut h nm. 1” downtown stores rattier It reportedly is beamed at getting Vietnam’s allies to match in part predicted increases in U.S. forces. be receiving it with more than common inter- Survey Showsit CNB Growth ■'We’re not doing much promotion,”' a spokesman said,^han corner newsstands or sub-“and you really chn’t iauncli a Vrban variety stores. —-.........- - ____ As for doing business with the Russians, the distributor says, easy to deal with them.” Parcel Post Service Hiked Community National Bankjat the present time, ‘ we’d like 13 54% 54>/b 54% + .---^ ------- dT« V . . ® ronuHc rosimahicr »nuam, ^ ^^"A«^Y-has4dimhedfrQm^^^^^^ can consolidate our ^ rtonolrison today announcedi nla/TO arrmna Kanlrc hnlHinD ir'ImiiaHnn ” ...... .. ....; The contract is ba.sed < number of magazines distributed and, he says, he isn’t losing money. "Were in business. We fouldn t stay in this and take a loss. We re compensated for our Pontiac Postma.ster William, services.” Ihe publisher Nnvnsti place among 500 banks holding,circulation.'’ j^at parcel post deliveries "in! p—A^erT^"^^ handsome, digest-size,: Pontiac will be expanded from ^vTn the barest United States, according to an American Banker magazine survey, a bank spokesman announced today. The survey reported that the rise in position took place during tl]e first six months of 1967. multicolored, 50-cent, 248-pagejfWe to six days a week as of|, ,,, ^e met on July edition, for example Will Monday. $12,000 or so return from ‘‘‘.^^"hution of lessj -phis resulted from a directive;present circulation. Just a few H'.an 25.000 copies. The Reader s;fr„m U.S. Postmaster (k>n.jyears ago one American maga-Digest sells 17.2 million copies j^awrence F. O’Brien following!zinc, the old Coronet, went domestically. j legislative appropriation of $8.5: broke with a circulation of three , , , LISTS 40 COUNTRIES | million for restoration of the j million and lots more ads. The spokesman attributed the! But Sputnik, launched rise to aggressive management, the opening of three branches in the last year and the new check-free system. The bank has been here for years and we’re sharing in the general prosperity of the area, he added. Ford Unveils Electric Auto dav route had been cut backj in Mav 1964 as an economy! The current issue of Sputnik measure. *ias only eight full-page adver- 1 which it is distrib- Prototype Debuts at Preview for Newsmen January as a condensation of the best m Soviet newspapers and magazines, was never^ tisements, four from Finnish meant to give that kind of com-, The improved service will magazine is petition in the United States., remove an inequity for mbny tprmtgd there-and four from Abroad it might be a differcntl business and residential |soviet industries; lumber, cam-matter, for Sputnik lists 40 routes, Donaldson said. g,.ag coats and textiles Postal cu.stomers served by motorized letter carriers have been receiving six-day deliveries all along, while carriers on foot only delivered small packages. Customers on these routes serviced by foot carriers *have received larger parcels from the five-day-a-week parcel route covered by truck. countries uted. Nevertheless, it will have to travel like the satellite it was named after to -catch up with News in Brief DETROIT (AP) - You wouldn’t call it long and low, but at least it’s not loud. That was the impression given by the T^'ord Motor Co.’s prototype electric car which made its debut Thursday in a preview for newsmen. Michael Brown of 841 S. Winding, Waterford Twonship, reported to township ^lice yesterday the larceny of a television set and a chain and saw —total value of $290—during a break-in of his home. Garage sale, 2855 Silver Hill, off Walton. July 22, 9 to 5. —Adv. ...--------------r- Dividend Slated !The board of directors of Win-kelman Stores, Inc., has declared a cash dividend of 10 cents per share to common stock holders at the close of business Aug. 7, 1967, payable August 21, 1967t— Treasury Position WASHINGTON (AP) - ncling d«tp b '^year July 18, mr July 18z mi 8,171,918,482.41 4,^,807,217.31 7,980.293,433.68 % 7,511,157,837.55 Deposits Fiscal Year 5,270.035,0U.22 Withdrawals Fiscal Yei 8,181 .DM,973.50 Total DeW— 331,034,677,734.92 319,172,692,081 Gold Assets - 13,109,165,685 57 13,434,017,770. .. -Includos $261,908,691.47 debt not su loci to slatutory limit. DOW-JONES AVERAGES STOCKS 30 Industrials .......... 20 Rails 65 Stocks ........... -TNDS Bonds ............* Higher grade rails . Second grade rails Nahied the Comuta, it’s the first to be designed by a major auto maker specifically for elec-trie propulsion. Ford sees it cdh, hence the name. The ([lomuta is powered by four lead-acid batteries, with a fifth to run the cars accessories. It goes 40 miles at (25 miles per hour. BOXY SHAPE Tiny by American standards, the Comuta is designed to carry two adults and two children. The shape Is boxy since there’s no engine. The batteries are located under the seats and the two electric motors are attached to the rear wheels. The control system is simple: a key to turn on the power and a little switch with positions for T forward, reverse and neutral. A gauge resembling a gas CAR DEBUTS—Newsmen and Ford Motor gauge, with a needle that moves Co. employes examine the company’s proto-from “full” to “empty,” shows type electric car. Which was unveiled yester-how much electricity is left in. day at Ford headquarters ii» Dearborn. The the batteries. car is called the Comuta because it is de- signed primarily for city travel. Powered by two electric motors on the rear wheels, the Comuta draws its elefctrifeity from four leai|l-acid batteries. It will go 40 miles at 25 miles per hour.