i } “Harris (D-Ark) said today he in-| I Like, Respect and Need Adams, Ike Tells Press eabuinaven (President Eisenhower said today that Sherman Adams was imprudent in his relations with Bernard Goldfine but “I need him” to continue as - top presidential aide. Eisenhower made it plain at a news conference that , + «tt [he has no intention of fir- Wants Goldfine ss = = Testimony Soon words, In anticipation that the Presi- Rep. Harris Says Week dent would talk about the hottest Washington subject of the moment, newsmen were packed into the conference room. May Be ‘Before Psy ee ee ca er Calling industrialist Adams had been imprudent, as WASHINGTON we i Rep. Oren House investigating in | testimeny yesterday before a committee. TWO SECTIONS FALL Despite that imprudence, Eisen-| tends to call for testimony from jhower said, he has reached these | Bernard Goldfine’ the Boston in-| personal conclusions: “ dustrialist whose gifts put presi-| “1. 1 believe that the presenta- dential aide Sherman Adams in| tion made by Gov. Adams to the hot water. | Congressional committee yester- “It is certainly my intention”) | day truthfully represents the per- to summon Goldfine, Harris said, tment facts. - | but he fixed no date. . “2, 1 personalty like Gov. | He said a week or more may | “42!™- { be led to develop the | oy coe eee ot | = Sees - | his personal and official integ- | Harris heads the House subcom- rity. mittee which yesterday heard “3. 1 need him.” President Eisenhower's top aide) Fisenhower then went on to say: | Two others were missing and! pler-eupparted seations. acknowledge he should have ‘ ‘act-| Related Stories Pages 12, 33 “Admitting the lack of that care-' jful prudence in this incident that) I believe with my whole heart that. ihe is an invaluable public servant, | ‘doing a difficult job efficiently, jn Honestly and tirelessly. “Almost without exception, everybody seeking public office ac- cepts political contributions. These pin -tnggpr) and actions the recipients. In the general ial this whole activity is. understood. NOT CALLED YET accepted and approved. So far the subcommittee has “Anyene whe knows Sherman made no move to sumimon Gold-| Adams has never had ony s = fine himself. It has tussied with) of his personal integrity him over his records, part of which/ esty; Legsapereing ar teddy finally wound up in subcommittee could be beught. But he has hands. been, as he stated yesterday, im- prudent. ‘Ladies and gentlemen, so far as with no intent to win favored treatment for the wealthy Bos- tonian. a Harris said in an interview he | would have preferred to have Adams testify at a later date. |1 am concerned, this is all that 1 That's because the congressmen —can—alt- thet steal, fay. have yet. to complete another , * chapter in the Geldfine inquiry | The news coderente attracted which is said to involve Adams 257 reporters. It dealt, for the again. ‘most .part, with the controversy Adams set a precedent for a, jover Adams. * * presidentia} aide in volunteering | Other highlights were: to testify. Harris did not rule out; juNGARY — Eisenhower de-. the possibility of receiving 4 fur- snced the execution of former ther explanation from Adams 0M bingarian Premiet Imre Nagy|°¢t¥ . questions that may still come up. |and his colleague, Maj. Geni. Pal| ~~ & Maleter. Harris said the House group also} LEBANON — Asked under what| intends to get testimony from John! conditions the United States might, Who voted against the measure,/ Fox, publisher of the now defunct!take military, action_in—the Leb-|Suggested that interested oe - Boston-Post,-whd was quoted in/anon crisis, Eisenhower replied he ‘could petition.to put the question | couver, -B. C., VANCOUVER, B. C. (AP)—Two sections of a‘ nearly finished si lane bridge collapsed mysterious-| witheut warning. ily yesterday in a tangled mass of |steel, plunging at least 16 work- ‘men to their death, 22 injured, : Skin divers today searched at least two other workers still) unaccounted for. Twenty survivors of the tragedy, were hospitalized but none was ‘reported critically injured. pgp st chad pow uh — Twisted steel of two sections of the nearly completed new Second Narrows Bridge near Van- lies in Burrard Inlet after collapsing with a thunderous roar Tuesday and killing at least 16 workmen. Two completed this year. 16 Die as Bridge Collapses: doliar Second Narrows Bridge jbeams. Others were crushed be- over Burrard Inlet gave way |neath tons of steel and concrete ' |after they dropped into the 40-' | Forty construction worke rs|!00t-deep inlet. - were on the steel lacework of the 2 2 “One survivor, Don Mitchell said| |} Suddenly with a muted rumble, |@fter riding the first section down! the temporary front supports of | that “everything happened so the foremost section crumbled|quickly there was little sensation! jGov. Adams yesterday referred to,,among the twisted wreckage for) 4 dropped the jutting end of the|of fear.” | bridge 200 feet into the tide-| frvand North Vanconer” QIN May Precede a Pleasant Thursday * The strain jerked forward the: concrete pier ons the section on Sunday Beer Sales. Measure Killed. _ by City Commissioners in 4 to “8 poee “By | F a to 3 vote, Pontiac City Commissioners last night turned down a proposal! to end Sunday sale = of beer and wine here. Their vote ended a_ two-week! \drive, supperted by the Pontiac |Pastors Assn., for a city ban on; lsale of beer and wine im taverns, ‘package stores and abe er! ween the hours of 2 midnight Sundays. * * Mayor William W. * Donaldson, | testimony as alléging that Goldfine could not answer that precisely.!on the November ballot if they $0) got preferred federal treatment|He also said he did not care to through his friendship with Adams. |make predictions. Kerbawy Forsakes Lions ~ for $1 Million With Pistons _By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Ponti.c Press Nick Kerbawy announced that he had resigned as gen- million dollar, long-term contract with the Fred Zollner | Corporation, owners of the Detroit Pistons. The announcement was made this morning at a press. conference in the Lions’ office. Kerbawy, who joined the Lions in 1948 as pubile re- lations director, notified Ed- win J. Anderson, president of the club, of his. decision ~ Sunday evening. ° - At another press conference at noon, Zoliner officials were pre- sent to confirm Kerbawy’s affilia- tion. with the Pistons. The position as general manager: - “et the Detroit pro basketball team has been vacant since the resigna- tion of Fred DeLano sina weeks the multi-millionaire industri. d alist, in—an- administrative ca, = pacity, a As a result of Kerbawy’s reste — _ (Continued on rh 2, Col. 7) NICK KERBAWY \ , es — , di \ nc 3 : a ‘desired. Commissioners John A, Dugan, Robert A, Landry and Philip E. Rowston also voted against the ban, while Commissioners Floyd P. Miles, who first proposed it, Milton R. Henry and Wesley J. Wood voted for it. | Miles’ proposal came about aft-| er a group of Pontiac tavern own-| ers asked the city to let them open} iat noon on Sundays, two hours! earlier than local ordinance allows. | ~« * * Rowston had originally indicat-; ed he would support the measure. |Last night he explained that he eral manager of the Detroit Lions and was accepting a had changed his mind because the| ‘tavern owners had meantime with ‘drawn their request. “T therefore believe it beet to! maintain the present hours for, controversy there have been no ,complaints to us about their opera- ition on Sunday,” he said. Robbery Not So Bad SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) — A Market Street bank was robbed yesterday for the third time this year — but at jeast. the “with... _drawats”” Keep “getting smaller. The bank was robbed of -$1,500 on Jan. 20, $611 on May 16 while yesterday’s loss was only $80. Bagwell Offers Symbol LANSING, Mich. a@— Paul D. Bagwell, Republican ‘candidate for Michigan governor, plans to make a 236 rin a 1908 Oldsmobile. Bagwell says the car symbolizes the 1908 constitution under which Michi- gan operates and which he thinks should be neve. ward like a sagging W with their! 55 front part submerged and rear still on the supports. — day will be partly cloudy but plea- An eyewitness, Edwin Leitch, sant with the temper: ature rising said the “frightening roar of the to 7478. collapse sounded like a continu. | Friday will be cooler (ollowed | ous peal of thunder lasting about iby a warming trend about Satur- i sent jday or Sunday. Precipitation will huge crane which had been | average around ene-quarter inch} hoisting steel girders -to the top/or less showers again late) jof the bridge toppled and plum-|Thursday or Friday — _ The weatherman predicts Thurs- _inte—the—mass—of Tangled’ The lowest temperature in down. i: | Vareckase in the water below. town Pontiac prec eding 8 a.m. was Some workmen were caught 34 degrees. At 1 p.m. the reading and killed in the tortured, twisted was TZ men are missing and 22 were injured. The $16,000,000 span, re- placing the old Second Narrows Bridge, was to have been Sadly cntihy ct 0° cata e\' Se ee Oe ee ee ae ks So Bridge Co., the their collapse tilted crazily down-| |for tonight with the low around Several Cam group of rebel Democrats today promised Gov. G. Mennen Williams a “stiff” primary battle for the first time in 10 years. — With only three hours left before the deadline for fil- ing’ nominating petitions fell, William L. Johnson, an Upper Peninsula radio sta- tion owner, filed petitions) which, if valid, qualified him as a candidate for the Democratic nomination for governor. Filing along with Johnson were iomee Martin, Plymouth, as al candidate for the Democratic nom.-| ination for U. S. Senator, . and| Michael T. Moherdt, Detroit, as4 ‘a candidate for lieutenant gover- AP Wirephote Johnson filed 17,913 signatures | Bill Hallman, who was al from 28 counties, Martin filed over the eld Second Narrows; 16,913 and Mohardt filed 16,399. \Bridge 200 yards downstream,| T° qualify, a candidate needs |said, “The air was tilled with] ‘30 stenatures. | * * & shouts and cries . . . The Men| th trio is part of a splinter 'didn't have a chance. ‘group known as the ‘“‘Democratic “When they hit the water I [Clubs of Michigan.” They said | could see some grasp for pieces they formed the organization in | of driftwood. It Voecaata about protest to ‘domination of the Dem- Wiliams ye Lists for Aug. 5 Vote Declared Largest in LANSING (UPI) — A’: ‘have filed in the Oakland paigns A total of 66 candidates County clerk’s office for a place on Aug. 5 primary bal- lots. - Mrs. Mabel Child, elec- tions clerk for the county, described the turnout ‘“as one of the largest in several There were 50 candidates on the August 1956 ballot. “I'm wondering if we're going to have room on the machines this year,” a puzzled Mrs. Child said | Candidate Lists ~ on Page 2 yesterday after the avalanche: of fees and petitions hed stopped at the 4 p.m, deadline. The candidates—38 Democrats and 26 Republicans—will be vy- ing for 16 offices, including two non-partisan posts as Circuit Court commissioners, Incum- bents Verne C. Hampton and Maurice F. Cole were the only ones filing for these new four- year terms. At stake in the primary is the nemination of one Democrat and one Republican for: The 18th Congressional District jocratic Party by the organization half of the men were trapped un j | der water by the bridge ho ‘of Gov. G. Mennen Williams and! | Others were swept away by the - Ident Walter Reuther.” Sosa Sas *|growing Democratic geervmsegé f launched an immediate investiga-|