Negotiators for Waterford Teachers, Negotiating teams representing the Waterford Education Association (WEA) and the Waterford Township Board of Education last night readied agreement on a 1966-67 master contract for teachers, culminating nearly seven, months of bargaining. - If raped by teachers at a WEA meeting at 7:30 tonight and by the board tomorrow, classes will open on schedule this week. The agreement was announced by Harry N, Cassel-man, an arbitrator for the Michigan Labor Mediation Board (MLMB)' Who supervised intensified bargaining and mediation sessions last- ing 31 hoars between Thursday night and 8:30 last night. The WEA ratification meeting will be at the Community Activities, Inc., building. A it J ★ Teachers had threatened not to return to classes unless & contract was negotiated by the time school opened. Teachers are slated to report back to school tomorrow, while students are scheduled to return Thursday. Terms of the contract are being withheld, pending ratification by the teachers and school board. Negotiations between the two sides first began last Feb.-4I. In June, a mediator from the MLMB was called into the sessions after teachers had voted * to withhold their professional services unless a contract was negotiated before the start of the school year. OtARRKS FIT.Fnr Last Monday, the WEA filed charges of unfair labor practices against foe school board, and Supt. of Schools Dr. Don O. Tatroe appealed to Gov. George Romney to intervene in foe crisis in an effort to find a solution. Thursday, Romney proposed a 60-day moratorium for Waterford Township and. eight other troubled Michigan districts to assure that school Would open on hdfedule. t He was turned down, but received pledges from all nine districts that intensified bargaining would be carried out in an all-out effort to prevent any delay in foe opening of school. Waterford already had planned stepped-up negotiations prior to foe governor’s meeting. The teacher-contract problem (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) The Weather U.S. Wtalfeer Bureau Forecast Cloudy and Cooler (Details Cage j) VOL. 124 r- NO. 180 THE PONTIAC PRESS ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1960 —36 PAGES UNITED$PJreUT?NTERNATIONAL Labor Day Edition 10c Florida Crash Kills 7 as U.S Toll Skyrockets 4 U.S. Planes By The Associated Press Seven lives were snuffed out early today as two cars crashed near Clearwater in western Florida, pushing the 78-hour Labor Day weekend traffic toll toward what the National Safety Council said looked like a “pretty definite” record. Are Downed in N. Viet Raids The death toll reached 450. The crash on U.S. 19 a few miles north of Clearwater __________________ killed three boys and four girls, aU teens, and injured three others. It was otie of four multiple fatalities that marred foe holiday. The grimmest accident came yesterday when three cars collided west of Norwalk on the rain-slippery Ohio Turnpike and nine persons died. “Unless there’s some radical improvement,” said a safety council spokesman, “it will be Morton Assails Senate Dems WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. Thruston B. Morton assailed the Senate Democratic leadership today for “embarrassing” President Johnson by proposing a reduction in the U.S. troop commitment to Europe. Morton, who heads the Republican senatorial campaign ppm-mittee, took foe lead in ah attempt to force hearings on a resolution offered by Democratic leader Mike Mansfield and Democratic Policy Committee members to put the Senate « on record favoring a -cutback in ‘North Atlantic Treaty Organization forces. “The proposal at this time is untimely and embarrassing to foe commander ip chief,” Morton said in an interview. “I am upset and concerned that foe Democratic leadership is so little disciplined that it would come out with a proposal like this. ★ ★ ★ “If we do this — and we won’t — Europe would consider NATO as going down the drain and the I rest of the world would think we were concerned only with Viet 1 Nam,” the Kentucky Republican said. An Associated Press canvass disclosed that of 65 senators willing to taka a public position at this time, 48 favor early withdrawal of some American troops from Europe while 17 oppose the action as likely to have far-reaching adverse consequences. COLDWATER (AP)-Eight persons were killed and two were seriously injured today hi a two-car ceiHsfon on US-13 near this southern Michigan community, sheriff’s officers said. Officials refused to identify foe victims, pending notification of next of kin, but said that six of foe dead were Branch County, Mich., residents, and two were from Mishawaka, Ind. near foe top of our estimate — 630 deaths. This, of course, would far surpass foe record of “At this point, it looks pretty definite,” he added. COMPARISON For comparison, 505 persons died on a recent non holiday weekend. Two multiple fatality accidents Saturday took 11 lives. A collision in Jacksonville, 111., killed four members of one family and two other persosns and injured two others critically. it ★ ★ A head-on crash near Wagner, S. D., resulted in five deaths and four injuries. Government Troops Kill Nearly Half of 600-Man Red Force SAIGON, South Viet Nam W) — North Vietnamese ground fire shot down three U.S. fighter-bombers during raids near Hanoi yesterday and another American plane was knocked down farther south today, the U.S. command announced. Only one of foe five pilots was rescued, a spokesman said. The aircraft losses brought foe number of U.S. planes reported shot down over North Viet Nam to 381. While American jets pounded oil depots, missile sites and other targets in the North Vietnamese heartland, ' government troops in South Viet Nam reported wiping out nearly half of a 600-man elite Communist force in a three-day operation in the sweltering swamplands of the Mekong Delta 120 miles southwest of Saigon. * * ★ The fighting, broke a 10-day lull in ground action in the south. BRACE FOR TERRORISM As the allies braced for increased Communist terrorism in advance of the national election next Sunday, 5,500 South Korean troops arrived aboard three JU.S. transports at the cen-ral coast port of Nha Trang. * fe * , A U.S. twin-engine Army Caribou transport plane crashed into a Vietnamese village yester- ; day shortly after taking off ' . frpm Dong Tra airfield about 250 miles northeast of Saigon. MANY WELCOMES — President Johnson has his right hand and arm gripped by many hands while walking down the main street in Dallastown, Pa., on his arrival to help celebrate the town’s centennial over foe weekend. The President leans over from the enthusiastic grips of the town’s citizens. Record Jobs, Inflation Woes Backdrop for This Labor Day WASHINGTON (AP) — Flags wave, workers parade, bands blare and speakers laud labor’s role in American life as the nation observes Labor Day today. The holiday dates back to 1882, when workers’staged the first. Labor Day parade in New York City. It has been a legal holiday since 1894. This year’s observance comes amid record employment and a growing discontent ever inflationary pressures. The government announced last week that 76.4 million Americans were at work in August, a carryover of July’s Car-Muncher Coming to Pontiac A machine that could spell the end of so-called auto graveyards is scheduled to go into operation in two weeks on Pontiac’s North Side. City officials, including Mayor William H. Taylor Jr., Poiice Chief William K. Hanger and Fire Chief James R. White, were on hand Friday for a look at the pilot model of foe “Rhino-autoripper.” The machine has been installed at foe scrap processing yards of Sam Alien & Sons, Inc., located on Collier near the city’s sanitary land-fill site. The Rhinoautoripper is a ma-a chine that reduces automobiles to a big lump of metal, cutting and ripping with double sets of 12-inch metal teeth. * ★ * The machine, foe first of its type to be installed in the country, will tip at the rate of 300 per day. YEAR TEST Built by foe Richards Shear Go. of Seattle, Wash., the machine has been tested for a year. Before the auto Hi fed to the giant jaws «( the Rhine- |! ' (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) record-breaking figure. A week earlier, it had announced the cost, of living had reached a record high. ★ ★ ★ Labor’s top spokesman, George Meany, president of the 13-million-member AFL-CIO, defended the right to strike as vital to democracy and said in a holiday statement labor is not to blame for rising prices. EQUAL SHARE President Johnson said Labor Day is a time to focus on new ways to assure every citizen an equal share in the greatness of America. “Every segment of American life — labor, government, business, foe public at large —has a special stake in extending our prosperity to those it has eluded for too long,’’ Johnson said in his Labor Day message. Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey and Secretary of Labor W. Willard Wirtz steered clear of controversial economic issues in their Labor Day messages, confining themselves to RIPPING DEMONSTRATION—City officials get installed at Sam Allen & Sons, Inc., on Pontiac’s • sneak preview of a new machine, the Rhino- North Side, transforms junk cars into foundry-autoripper, being fed Its first meal. The machine, usabfe chunks of metal. Mostly Sunny Weather Due in Pontiac Area The weather is going to be sunny and pleasant in the Pontiac area, according to the U.S. Weather Bureau. Tomorrow’s prediction is for mostly sunny with the high ranging from 68 to 76. Today’s partly cloudy skies will dear tonight and It will be cod. Tonight’s low is predicted between 46 and B. West to southwesterly winds at 10 to 18 miles will diminish and become west to northwesterly tonight. * * * Wednesday’s outlook is sunny and a little wanner. The lowest temperature reading in Pontiac before 8 a m. today was 55. It was 60 by 10 praising labor’s role in seeking a better life for all Americans. ★ ★ ★ In the background of the Labor Day celebration hung foe strong possibility of a major strike in the telephone industry, following hard on the heels of the recent crippling airlines walkout that spurred new talk of antistrike legislation. “In recent weeks and months, some of foe basic precepts of free trade unionism have been challenged,” Meany said in an obvious reference to the airlines furor. . Anyone who says he believes in foe right to strike must accept the fact that strikes will sometimes occur,” he said. Congress was considering legislation to end the airlines strike when the AFL-CIO International Association of Machinists settled with five airlines. There are signs that new legislation to deal with strikes may come up in the next session of Congress. * * * Turning to economics, Meany said it was a difficult subject for most Americans to understand except when it comes to “the family budget.” He said labor was unfairly catching the blame for rising prices. Government figures show that unit labor costs have long remained stable while profits have been climbtog at record rates, he sakl. “Prices are not being pushed up by wages,” Meany said. “It is a profit inflation, pure and simple.” Li t ONES “Hey, Mom, is this what you mean when you say Mrs. Slater is a hot head?” to Detroit First of Campaign Vows Continued Fight on Guaranteed Pay, Taft-Hartley Repeal DETROIT (fl)?—President Johnson told organized labor today, on its own holiday and in one of its citadels, that “it can’t make all the gains it wants —all at once!” Johnson, starting his first admittedly political trip of foe campaign season, coupled6 a blunt call for labor union restraint in wage demands with these promises: —He pledged he would not forget foe goal of a guaranteed annual wage. —He promised to fight in 1967 for repeal of section 14B of foe Taft-Hartley Act, which authorizes states to outlaw the union shop contracts that require all eligible emptoyfes to join foe union. , W In a Labor Day address prepared for a union-sponsored memorial service at Coho Hall for Sen. Patrick V. McNamara, D-Mich., Johnson said be did not want to varnish rough facts about inflation—“a pickpocket.” He asserted in a key passage: “Labor wants—and labor deserves—a growth of real wages, not just money wages. It wants wage gains that will offset some of foe recent rise ini the cost of living. But it can’t make all the gains it wants — all at once — (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) News Flash TOKYO W - U. S. Aircraft attacked and sank a small Chinese Communist vessel, damaged another and killed nine Chinese crewmen in foe Gnlf of Tonkin Aug. 29, Peking Radio said today. Hie broadcast, monitored in Tokyo, said the action was a “provocative and grave incident” against Red China. k THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1066 WH I I Deaths b Pontiac,Nearby Areas Frederick R. Pickering Requiem mass for‘ former Pontiac resident Frederick R Pickering, 69, of 408North Park Venice, Fla., will be 10 a.m, tomorrow at Venice Church of the Epiphany, with burial in Gulf Pines Memorial Park, Venice. He died Friday. The Rosary is scheduled for. 7:S0 p.m. today at the Rawles Ftuoeral Home, Venice. Mr. Pickering was a certified public accountant, a member of the Michigan Association of CPA; life member of Pontiac Lodge 810, BPOE; Pontiac Knights of Columbus; Venice Yacht Club, and Venice Catholic Church of the Epiphany. Surviving are his wife, Catherine, a daughter, Mrs. Vincent J. Raymond Jr. of Dayton, Ohio, and four grandchildren. Mrs. Burchell H. Ratdiffe Service for Mrs. Burchell H. (Dorothy J.) Ratcliffe, 48, of 2648 Corey will be 1 p.m. tomorrow -at the Melvin A- Schutt Funeral Home, with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. She died Saturday after a long illness. Surviving beside her husband are sons and daughters Richard Palm of ,Bfy City, William M. Palm, U. S1. Navy, and Mrs, Pearlene Durfey, Mrs. Janice Bastedo, Harold Palm, Delores Palm and Gayle Palm, all of Pontiac. Also surviving are three sisters, Mrs. Irene Hart and Mrs. Gail Corey, both of Pontiac, and Mrs. Jeantta Bennett of Ecker-man, and two brothers, Harold Corey of Lake Orion and Roy Corey of Pontiac. j Conrad £. Berghoefer UTICA — Requiem mass for former Utica resident Conrad E, Berghoefer, 6l, of Detroit, will be 11 a.m. tomorrow at Sacred Heart Catholic Church, Auburn Heights. Burial will follow in Morris and Mrs. Lottie Smith White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy, A Rosary will be said tonjght at 8 p.m. at the Harold R. Davis Funeral Home, Auburn Heights. Mir, Berghoefer died Friday after a long illness. Wesley T. Blakely KEEGO HARBOR -Service for former resident Wesley T. Blakely, 91, will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at the D. E. Pursley Funeral Home, Pontiac. Burial will be bt Perry Mount Park Cemetery, Pontiac. Mr. Blakely died Saturday af- sr a long illness. He was a self-employed carpenter. Mrs. Charles J. Hill ORION TOWNSHIP - Sen ice for Mrs. Charles J. (Minnie C.) Hill, 96, of 712 Beardon, will be 1 p.m. Wednesday at the Lewis E. Wint Funeral Home, 1 'Bric-a-Brac' I J ' ' I j Turns Out to j j Be Live Shell i BALTIMORE, Md. (AP) j The bric-a-brac had been gathering dust in Mamie Wood’s house for 13 years. A former tenant had left it behind. ★ ★ ★ It was on the couch when a telephone repair man arrived because Mrs. Wood was having her home remodeled. He gulped and called city police who gingerly removed the live .75 millimeter shell to an impounding lot. Later two bomb experts from Edgewo^xi Arsenal claimed the one and a half-foot projectile. ★ ★ ★ Sighed Mrs. Wood: “I just assumed it was a souvenir. 'M' Professor Off to Europe By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ANN ARBOR (AP) - Dr. Wallace W. Tourtellotte, professor of neurology at the University of Michigan Medical Center, will serve as visiting pro; fessor this month at Gottingen, Germany; the National Hospital at Queens Square, London, and the University of Newcastle. He will work with , medical staff members to present findings made by U. of M. neurolo-gisst regarding the existence of gamma globulin in the brains of patients with multiple sclerosis. Saline Man Is Killed NORTHFIELD, 111. (AP) -Police in Northfield said Sunday ni#it that Charles Stuart, 43, of Saline, Mich., was struck and killed by an auto in North-field. with burial in Evergreen Cemetery, Grand Blanc. Mrs. Hill died Saturday after a long illness. Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. Clarence Redmond of Lake Orion, Mrs. Lily Taft df Mt. of Ohio, and three sons, Fred R. Janskowske of Lake Orion, Charles of Florida and Louis of California. Also surviving are 19 grandchildren, 41 great-graridchildren and eight great-great-grandchildren. Howell Housewife 'Loudest'at Fair Full of confidence in the power and sweetness of her voice, Mrs. Carol Whalen of 2335 Byron, Howell, drove to Detroit Friday to compete in the annual husband calling contest at the Michigan State Fair — and carried off faq> honors just as she felt riie would. The judges made their decision quickly after Mrs. Whalen shook the rafters in the Coliseum with her loud, high- pitched and long drawn-out bellow of “JIM.” »• ★ ★ ★ Her husband, James, is hairdresser. They have been, married five years. It was her first try at the fair. Man Is Held in Bloomfield Twp. Shooting A Bloomfield -Township man is being held in Oakland County Jail today on charges of asault with attvnpt to murder following a shooting spree near his home early this morning, according to Bloomfield Township police. Police were called to the home of Lee E. Scherer, 27, of 4505 Cherokee at 2:45 a.m. after his wife and neighbors reported that he was firing a pistol aimed at homes in the area. Lt Mark McLaughlin said he and his partner, patrolman Robert Zimmerman, were shot at by Scherer as they approached him in a field in back of his house. He said they were able to talk Scherer into surrendering. Scherer had been drinking, said McLaughlin. Reds Down Two More U.S. Planes Area Mishap Injures Man Edward Sulkowski, 34, of Garden City is in fair condition at Pontiac General Hospital with injuries suffered yesterday when his motorcycle overturned in West Bloomfield Township. it it * Sulkowski told sheriffs deputies that he lost control of the motorcycle while riding through a field off Elder in West Acres subdivision. ★ ★ ★ He said the motorcycle overturned and came down on him when it struck a hump in the trail. Plan Conference to Correct Image CHICAGO (AP) - The American Federation of Teachers says it plans a national conference to “correct America’s im-of the past” in racial questions. ‘Special efforts will be made to expose and correct the distortions of the American experience from slavery through Reconstruction to today’s civil ruggle,” said a spokesman. Date for the conference has not been set. Economists forecast that grocery store sales this year may total $62.9 billion, this would be a 5.2 per cent gain oyer 1965. 3-Day Crime Spree Police Nab Mental Patient FARWELLHAP) W A 27-year-old escaped mental patient faced arraignment today following a three-day crime spree in Central Lower Michigan. Russell Scbeldeabraod w a s held Sunday at the Isabella County jail and police said be would be charged with assault to commit murder and escaping state custody. * ★ Police arrested Scheldenbrand early Sunday after he was found asleep in a car parked on knety wilderness trail near here. His capture came after a three-day manhunt by police Hud included three gun * No one was bint Scheldenbrand escaped from the lamia State Hospital for the Criminally Insane mi Aug. 3S. The police search began one week later after a grocery store at Higgins Lake, north of Far-well was held up. Then followed an attempted iridup of store, four car thefts, an counter it gun point* with frightened cabin occupant, plus three gun battles with police. p-i' a # Scheldenbrand was sent to Ionia July 2, 1985, after he was adjuged a criminal sexual pay* copath as a result of the kidnapping of a 13-year-old baby sitter, with whom he hid taken SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) — U.S. military headquarters said today two more American planes were shot down over North Viet Nam during raids on the main supply and infiltration routes to the south. Rainstorms again curtailed' U.S. air blows against the north and an elusive enemy in the south reduced allied ground action once more to small skirmishes. ★ w a High-altitude B52 bombers, flying above the foul weather, dropped tons of explosives at noon today on a Viet Cong base camp and training area close to the Cambodian border. The bombers hit at much-battered War Zone C 79 miles northwest of Saigon in Tay Ninh Province. The losses of the latest two planes raised to 357 the number of American warplanes to go down in action bver North Viet Nam. SKYRAIDER One plane was a Navy A1 Skyraider from the aircraft carrier Intrepid which was shot down 40 miles northwest of Dong Hoi Friday. The other was an Air Force F105 Thunderchief which went down 40 miles north of the same coastal city. The pilots of both planes were rescued. In aid raids over North Viet Nam Friday, American pilots flew 96 missions, all concentrated in the southern panhandle as thunderstorms prevented strikes in the Hanoi-Haiphong areas and the Red River Valley. Air Force planes attacked main supply Route 101 and the road in 11 places within a 20-mile section. ' HOMEWARD BOUND—Jennifer Council, a pretty and pert 4-year-old from Williamston, N.C., prepares to leave Duke University Hospital after a five-month fight for life. With tile little girl is her mother, Mrs. James Council. Jennifer was burned over nearly 50 per cent of her body. Her recovery was aided by blood donations from 64 home town residents and a new skin-matching technique at Duke. Lake Michigan Un/Jertow Claims 5 JOOie in State Holiday Traffic Most Firemen Out in Atlanta . 104 Remain on Job; Recruiting Is Begun ATLANTA, Gq. (AP) - The task of recruiting firemen confronted city officials today as the aftermath of a strike which has shut down two-thirds of Atlanta’s fire stations. An estimated 104 firemen continued on their jobs Sunday night while 500 members of the independent Atlanta Firefighters Union stayed away. * ★ Hr The striking firemen are demanding a pay increase. The fire fighters now work 60 hours a week and the starting salary $403 a month. A proposal during negotiations for a reduction of four working hours was turned down. The strikers want a 7 per cent increase in pay. INTERNATIONAL The men On the job are mostly members of the International Association of Firefighters, AFL-CIO, from which the striking union broke away earlier this year. The strike, which began Friday night, marked the second time in three months the fire fighters had walked off. it it it City officials met with fire department heads Sunday to begin planning a recruiting program to replace the strikers, who are under court order to return to wM-k. „ * Coast Guard Halts Search for Aircraft DETROIT (AP) - The Coast Guard said Sunday it has given up a search fen* tin wreckage of a small private plane which reportedly crashed into Lake St, ; Clair near suburban Grosse Pointe Saturday. ♦ * * A Coast Guard spokesman said continued search efforts would be placed in the hands local sheriffs officials. A no wheel and landing tight were recovered Saturday, a few hours after the aircraft—reportedly piloted by Ernest T. Smith Of Benton Harbor—entered t h lake. Sr ★ ★ Officials said the single-engine Cessna took off from Detroit City Airport Saturday bound for Buffalo, N.Y. Shortly afterward, occupants of a sailboat on the lake reported the crash. By the Associated Press State police say at least 101 persons have been killed so far over the Labor Day weekend on Michigan roads. Nine others have drowned. The victims: Traffic: Herman Carr, 61, Flint, when his pickup trade struck a parked car in Wier Township on the Oceana-Mason county line Sunday. ■k ★ ★ Reinhart Moschke, 75, rural Shelby, in a two - car crash Sunday five miles west of Shelby. Charles J. Buchhause, 31, rural Fennville, when his car ran off U.S. 31 Sunday and crashed 10 miles north of South Haven. RAN OFF ROAD Louis Kinaitis, 36, Williams-ston, when his car ran off U.S. 23 in Livingston County Sunday and rolled over. Mary Ann Gallagher, 19, Jack-son, when a car in which she was riding ran off 1-75 in Cheboygan County Sunday and rolled over. Carol Ann Pierce, 19, of Detroit, when a car she was riding in struck a utility pole in Detroit Sunday. Richard C. MacGeorge, 6 months, Adrian, Saturday night in a two-car crash on U.S. 223 near Temperance. Ida Stafford, 4, Detroit, when she was struck by a car Saturday night in Detroit. Michael Braswell, 23, Chicago, when his car ran off 1-94 near Jackson Saturday and crashed. ★ it , Mauritio Arvizu, no age, Mount Clemens, when Ms car hit a.utility pole Macomb County. DROWNINGS Douglas Lane, 37, formerly of Wyandotte, no current address, after diving from a Mock in Clark Lake near Jackson Friday. ★ it ' A Robert Addison, 23, Pendleton, Ind., carried into Lake Michigan by undertow Sunday off Covert Township Park, Van .Buren County. Joy Ellen: Jurczyk, 18, Hickory Hills, 111., carried into Lake Michigan Sunday while swimming at a private beach near South Haven. News in Brief Tools of undetermined value were reported stolen Saturday night in a break-in at Washington Junior High School, 710 Menominee. Approximately $156 in cash was reported stolen from a metal box yesterday in a break-in at Want Body Co., 580 E. Walton. Owners of Toko Motorcycle Sales, 872 E. Auburn, Avon U.S. spnkpsman said they cut Township, told sheriff’s deputies yesterday that $100 in cash was stolen in a break-in. Red Offices Target of Blasf NEW YORK (AP) - A crude bomb exploded Sunday at the offices of the Communist newspaper, the Worker, wrecking basement room and shattering windows, including a number of stained-glass ones in a church across the Street. There were no injuries. Police said the pipe bomb, 10 to 12 inches long and probably filled with gunpowder, was detonated in the basement areaway of the three-story brownsone building. The church damaged was the Serbian Orthodox Cathedral of St Sava. A party spokesman blamed the blast on the “fanatical, fascist ultra-right ... now inflamed by the Johnson war policy.” Waterford Crash Hospitalizes Three Three persons were hospitalized from injuries suffered in a two-car collision at 6:40 yesterday mi Cooley Lake Road in Waterford Township. In fair condition at Pontiac General Hospital are Patrick McElroy, 75, of 3880 Faber, Waterford Township, and his wife, Winifred, 70., * * * Reported in satisfactory condition at the hospital is the driver of the other car, James E. Labrie, 26, of 109 Williams. McElroy told sheriff’s deputes that he was driving westj near Hiller.when Labrie’s east-j bound car crossed the center; tine. Waterford Fire Damages Home A fire in the home of Ules Rltch, 4126 Fenmore, Waterford Township, resulted in estimated $4,000 damage yesterday afternoon, according to Waterford firemen. Cause of the fire, which started in the rear bedroom, is still being investigated. No one was injured. David Lei ter, IS, of Battle Creek, carried into Lake Michigan by undertow Sunday while swimming with two brothers near a Benton Harbor park. * ★ * ★ Stanley T. Garb, 22, of Chicago, carried into Lake Michi-w by an undertow Sunday while swimming with a toother at Harbert, east of New Buffalo. * i* , * ; Leroy Donnell, 53, of Cairo, (Mo, carried into Lake Michigan by an undertow while swimming at Weko Beach in Bridgman; BOATING Lyle Marquedant, 68, and his toother, Okey, 78, both of rural Leslie, in Carp Lake, Chippewa County, when their boat upset by waves. ★ ★ ★ William H. Harrison, 29, of Lambertville, when he swam after a boat which had drifted away in a lagoon at Sterling State Park, about five miles north of Monroe. CEMETERY MARKERS Markers from $35 INCH MEMORIALS, INC. 864 N. Perry, 335-6931 Bronze Plates for Memorial Park Cemeteries at Below Cemetery Prices Memorials for over 72 Years “I believe in my home . . . and Heaven can only be a larger home, with a Father who is all . wise and patient and tender.” ~Charles Stelzle Thus the great author of “I Believe; An Every-day Creed” expressed his sincere trust that our Creator has provided for us after this life. (Phone FEDERAL 4-4511 'PanJcinq On Our (Pre*Mi = ^oneLon^ojuL 855 WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC for one-stop family shopping and saving! Killed in Fall CROSWELL (AP) - Twenty-two-year-old Carolyn „ J. Warren of Croswell suffered a fatal skull fracture Sunday after she was thrown from a horse while riding with her husband, David, about a half mile from their home east of this Sanilac County community. PARENTS! 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Ladies' Dacron and I COTTON BLOUSES 1 Reg. 1.99 99: r t Limit Two Coupon Expiros 9448. ---" ] j ^ u—pwn tapiies •—• r — — - - COUPON- - — — —-j j-— — — —COUPON— - V ^ Ladies' Tapestry PRINT SUITS Reg. 11.99 Coupon Expiros 9446. $066 It It 11 n it .it Men's and Boys' RUBBER HEELS $100 Reg. 1,50 Shoo Dept. ... Bat.m.nt Floor Coupon Expires S44L pa«r i "CHARGE IT" AT KRESGE’S THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1966 Most Folks Say Juliette ' HONOLULU (Mild Islanders have chosen Mrs. Juliette Kekaikuihalakui-m a nonokuiohinaowaimea Galuteria as the Queen for Aloha Week festivities which”start Oct. 14. Her name means, “The i hala tree against whifcb I the waves dash and then K slide back to the sea." THE DAVE BRUBECK QUARTET presents A Jazz Concert Sot., Sept. 10, 8 p. m. in Oakland University's Howard C. Baldwin Memorial Pavilion Prices: $3 Pavilion, $2 Orchestra Pit, |1.50 Grounds Tickets at: Festival Ticket Office Oakland University, Rochester, Michigan Ph. 338-7211, ext; 2301 C-s Strangetaste Strikes Paper Caper Could Bag the Chips HURON TODAYI athlS-4;W-fe4D-9:0P I INluvi/ a name... soon a ley»: ul. HIDE AND SEEK - Perry and Gerry Stidham, 9-year^old twins from Kansas City, Mo., find rows erf tobacco a great place to play hide and seek. The twins visited a tobacco sale in Lake City, S.C., while on vacation. Can't Help but Choose Heston By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-TV Writer I George Chandler and Dana Andrews. ! The Screen Actors Guild is a relatively young union. Organiz- HOLLYWOOD - Imagine a union president who is a com- ^g 3^^ jn 1933 when actors bination of Moses, ‘John the Baptist, Michel- THOMAS angelo and Ben-Hur. x I Small wonder 'that the Screen Actors G uild has again dominated as presR dent Charlton I |Heston, who hasi also portrayedj | Andrew Jackson ja n d Thomas IJefefrson on die screen. On! I this Labor Day it might be ap-| propriate to look into the state < of the union that Heston heads. * ★ * H, It’s feeling pretty healthy, WALT DISNEY 1 thank you. Jobs are down in j| feature films, what with all that I’ (runaway production abroad. But | filming of television series and commercials helps take up the slack. Membership remains steady at 1,700, with eager newcomers taking the places of actors who die or drop out to sell real estate or insurance. A thousand members live in Southern California, 500 in New York. The rest are scattered in the Guild’s other branches in Chicago^ Florida, Boston, Detroit and San Francisco. DO COMMERCIALS What do screen actors do in those cities? Commercials, mostly. The Guild has a dues-paying member in the U.S. Senate, George Murphy, who was president from 1944 to 1946. Another onetime president, Ronald Reagan, is aiming for the governor’s mansion in Sacradiento. wearied of - 16-hour work days with, no overtime’. The Guild was incorporated on June 30 of that year, affiliated with the AFL in 1935. FIRST CONTRACT Ned until threat,of a strike in 1937 did the producers agree to negotiate for. a contract. over payment to actors when old movies are shown on television. Neither Heston nor his fellow officers and board members, Ricardo Mpntalban, John Gavin; Agnes Moorehead, Inger Stevens, Keye Luke, Rafer Johnson, etc. are paid for their union duties. They set policy that is carried out by the staff, headed by Executive Secretary John L. Dales. Unlike most of the writer, WEST The Guild has had only one director and producer guilds, strike against the producers, the Screen Actors Guild makesj That was in 1960, when the ac- no awards for annual achieve-| tors walked out for sik weeks I ments of its members. LT. KORIN * CRUSOE,US.N -DICK , VANDYKE NANCY KWAN H TECHNICOLOR’ Last Timas Tonite “A MAN COULD GET KILLED” “WHEN BOY MEETS GIRL” TUESDAY LADIES’ DAY Pontiaa’s P0PUUR THEATER EAGLE j By DICK WEST United Press International WASHINGTON — The Agriculture Department this summer has been running some !e x perimentsj that involve^ putting paperj in pans of hot j grease and fry-i ing it. | I’ll swear I’mi not putting you; on. It’s an ac-j tual fact. And[ what is mpre, t h e scientists doing the research are entirely rational. Their purpose is to discover why potato chips sometimes turn dark and yucky-looking rather than an appetizing golden color when they were browned in hot oil Disks of filter paper are impregnated with various combination of acids found in potatoes. “When heated in deep fat, the paper browns just like potato chips,” the department said. By studying the fried paper, the scientists get a better line on the chemical reactions that take place when potatoes are fried. SCIENCE FICTION? No one can say at this point 'what the results will be, but if nothing else, the experiments could provide the basis for another science fiction movie. The plot goes like this : In the opening scene, we see the tall sinister figure of Dr. Milton Strangetaste, a government chemist, entering the office of Agriculture Secre- | tary Orville .Freeman. He is carrying a-bowl full of golden brown disks. “Here,” he says, depositing! the bowl on Freeman’s desk. “Try some of these.” ★ ★ * Freeman pops a couple into his mouth. “Yummmmmmmmmm," he yummmmmmmmg. “They are delicious. What are they?’ ’PAPER CHIPS’ “Paper chips,” Strangetaste replies. Ft e e m a n turns pale and reels backwards. “Paper chips?" he ga.sps. ‘You mean .?” “Exactly,” says Strangetaste. * * ★ “I have created from paper a product that is tastier than potato chips, has fewer calories, easier and cheaper to make and will support a heavier load df cheese dip without breaking j apart and dribbling goop on the' neckties of cocktail party jests.” “Aw, gosh!” F r e e m a n ex-claims. “This could destroy the potato chip industry.” DISASTROUS “Yes," agrees Strangetaste, 'and then I will have my revenge. Everybody giggled when they heard I was frying pieces of paper. This will show the world it doesn’t pay to laugh at Milton Strangetaste." “Yotit monster,” Freeman rages, “1 won’t let you do it. Hand over that formula.” “I can’t,” Strangetaste chortles with a maniacal laugh. “You just ate it” Tuesday Only Special! All You [0kee*PttM«t)j Eat! \| FOOD Y LIQUOR -T Serving 5 p.m. Ye 10 p.m. 1650 N. PERRY at Pontiac Rd. SPAGHETTI With Meat Sauce e Coleslaw $4 e B utfar ANSWER: When you hear a rapid “tap tap tap” coming Heston who seeks no hieher hi*h from ^ trees outside’ you.can be reasonably sure y°u lOn, O S 1*0 d ar« hoarincr a wnnHnppkpr at work offjee, is the 13th guild president. The otherS: Ralph Morgan, Eddie Cantor, Robert Montgomery, Edward Arnold, What was James Capey, Walter Pidgeon, i r Leon Ames, Howard Keel, SON OF A GIMFIGH1B are hearing a woodpecker at work. These are unusual and interesting birds. Most of them have a special arrangement of the toes, two in front of the foot and two behind. These enable them to cling tightly to the bark of a tree trunk. There are stiff feathers at the end of the tail which give support to the bird in the upright position he A woodpecker's bill is sharp and chisel-like. He uses this to drill holes, searching for. insects and pubs which hide under the bark. His tongue is barbed and has a sticky end, which helps him to pull the insects out. In the picture, Bill and his sister are looking at a downy woodpecker. This small attractive bird is the woodpecker most commonly seen. He has a larger cousin, the hairy, woodpecker, who resembles him closely. In the upper left, we show a large, handsome woodpecker of the Pacific Northwest with its conspicuous scarlet crest. •k ★ ★ FOR YOU TO DO: Put a bit of suet with some wire mesh over it on a tree trunk. Woodpeckers will love it, especially when winter comes. » AAAAMAAAAFREE PLAYGROUNDS • EXCITING CIRCUS TRAIN RIDES AAAAAAAAAA MIRACLE MILE ,—FIRST RUN.'-| IT TEARS YOU APART WITH SUSPENSE! * I ■Wf fSSy 1 bur1 MlflAC 2935 OKIE HIGHWAY