Th« Weather 118th YEAH THE PONTIAC PRESS ------------________ , Home Edition ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 80, 1960—52 PAGES OmrSD PRESS internatiorai. Six Left Dead Yearns Coldest as Storm Fades BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Stormy weather that lashed the Midwest abated W day but the season’s coldest weather gripped wide areas from the Rockies into the Northeast and southward to the central Oulf. The storm center reached Quebec during the night • ^ *but the effects of the severe Winters Chords Begin Waves Punisli Grounded Ship Wind, High Seas Block Rescue of 16 Aboard in Lake Michigan TRAVERSE CITY (iS-Towenna waves, ladled by winds running up to SO miles an hour, battered a grounded and leaking Liberian freighter with l6 persons alxMuri today in Upper Michigan. Ar * It The Francisco Morazan was driven aground in a blinding, gale-driven snowstorm last night off tl]e windward shore of South Manitou Island. Capt. Eduardo Trishas reported water up to tVt feet deep In Waves running up to 23 feet in height lifted the freighter and banged her back relentlessly on the rocks on which she grounded. CONOmON WORSENS Her condition was reported worsening as the day wore on, but she was in no lpneaate daagei of keeling over. Aboard are the raptain's wlf^ and R crew of 14. Winds and seas warn tea high to attempt aa weather still were felt in much of the Northeast quarter of the country. Strong winds and snow flurries were reported from the Great Lakes region eastw^. Snow of one inch or roan fell in some areas of Pennsylvania and New York. A freak bliziard. uith gale winds ihat piled snow up to S', feet, nearly halted traffic In the Buffalo. N. ¥., area. Police In Amherst, north of Buffalo, reported IS inches of snow and said drifts measured S'/j feet. The season’s first snowstorm Tuesday night caused a mammoth traffip jam in Buffalo, with hundreds of stalled 9ars, trucks and busep. The Thruway’s Niagara’s; section, which rims the west side { of Buffalo, was limited to one-«^y | traffic. .MORNING WOES — Oh, for those warm s^mer mornings when one could merely get into his car and drive off to work. For the next four or five months, you can expect to be doing quite often what Lee ’Thompson, 24. of 8524 Cas- i Snow, Ice and a Low of 221 Adams Files j^ was limited to one-«^y | ^ ^ II II Petition for ...-Winters Really Here Winds which force In hccUwm of the Midwest diminhiiied and heavy snow ended. The storm, which dumped up to a (o«t of snow In some places, was blamed for at least six deulhs. It was below zero from northeast Montana southeastward into South Dakota and western Minnesota and the freezing line extended aouthward into Kentucky. Tennessee end parts of Georgia’. One of the coldest spots was Bismarck. N. D., with a -12 reading. 'City Receives il8 Extra Months to Add Facilities Judge Will Sign Writ Forcing the Expansion of Sewage Treatment Circuit Judge Stanton O. Dondero announced today that he would sign a court order forcing Pontiac to expand its sewage treatment facilities to curb pollution of the Clinton River. The announcement came after a brief hearing during which the city admitted the pollution and offered no defense, but gained an 18-month extension to the deadline set down by the State Water Resources Commission 15 months ago. ’The decree to be signed by Judge Dondero will stipulate; I. ’That the city have construe-n contracts let by June I, INI. !. That the expanded facilities operation by June l, IMS. Harold A. Kelley, an engineer jwho helped prepare plans for the ■ Q , m j proposed expansion, testified the ii0COUnt< 1 OO•’y * - y I contract-letting time. rssllae Preii Pk«U cade St., Union Lake, is doing here. Although only three-quarters of an inch of snow fpU yes^ terday in the Pontiac area, it was enough to make streets slick and coat cars and sidewalks. Three Coast Guard cutters which rushed to the M»ne Were standing by, but Capt. 'Trizizas vetoed any attempt to pull his ship free until divers can assess damage to ★ ★ ★ He feared it might sink if pulled from the 14-loot depth where she grounded. All pumps aboard the Francisco Mormtan were attempting to keep up with the Incomiug water, amt Capt. Trisitas asked the eatters to attempt to puss him additional pumps. Two helicopters hovered as best they could in the high winds, prepaid if necessary to' attempt to take off the crew and the cap-tafrTgwile. BOUND FOR ATLANTIC 'The ship is carrying a general cargo and was headed out the St. Lawrence Seaway for the Atlantic Ocean from Lower Lake Michigan when she grounded. ’The scene is SO miles southeast of Gull Islan^, where the big Carl D. Bradley broke apart in a Lake Michigan Storm Nov. 18, 195$, and plunged to the bottom with 33 of her 35-man crew. FLORIDA NEXT* Temperatures in the Northeast, at unseasonable levels for several days, dropped sharply as the cold air swept in from the Midwest. The Icy air was expected to dip into the Southeast and into tral Florida. Gale warnings continued on the Great Lakes and in Lake Michi-Liberian freighter ran aground off the shore of South Manitou Island. Galelike winds and high waves battered the 246-foot, ocean-going Francisco Morazan. A new blanket of snow fell on Pontiac today on the heels of yesterday’s prewinter storm which crippled transportation in parts of Michigan. As snow fell for a second straight day, Pontiac state ^police warned that ail state Dynamite Rocks In an effort to protect his winning margin of 694 votes against a possible reversal in a recount. Probate Judge-Elect Donald E. Adams today filed a counter petition'calling far recounting an additional U voting precincts. Labor Leader's Home in Detroit From Our News Wires DETOOrr — A dynamite bomb ripped a gaping hole in the rear of a labor Itqder's East Side Detroit home ’Tuesday night but his H'ife and two young daughters escaped injury. Marion A. Macioce, business manager of Sheet Metal Workers Local 281 and president of the Detroit Building Trades Council, was at a union meeting when the lx>mb, made of three sticks of dynamite powder, tore a two-by-three-foot hole in the $30,000 home. A ★ ♦ His wife Irene and daughters Kathy, 8, and Cecilia, 10, Avere upstairs when the bomb explod- coating of Ice. Temperatures stayed well below I freezing in all areas. last night the mercury in Pon-: Mac dropped to a cold W. The I I’. S. Weather Barrau forecast ! raider for tonight but said a warmlag trMid would set in bv Friday. Sen. L. Harvey Lodge, who W«-terford Township Justice of Peace Adami^fdged ouTTn the Nov. 8 balloting for the new probate judge post in Oakland County, filed .Monday lor a recount in M of the count’s 3li precincts. The board of canvassers begin the recount of the M pre- Today it’ll stay cold, with oc-l ,‘Tt'Tir casional snow flurries. A low of Oxford. 20 is forecast for tonight. ! ’”rhen after w#rc done with At least two deaths on the high- them we’ll move into those request- All 369 Pupils Escape Gaylord School Fire GAYLORD UB-With wind-fannod flames lickii« about them, pupils were wacuafed Gaylord and State Qmservs-Uoa Departmeat Are fighters were uaable to briag the blase ander eontrol aa hoar after it the two-stofy buUdiag aright be Fire was discovered between the lira floor and basement by an eighth grade teacher, Father Golas, who at first suspected one ol his pupils mig^t be smoking in class. When he discovered the fire, the teacher rushed upstairs inune-diately and mdered pupils there outside into the freezing ^winds. Then the first floor was evacuated, systematically and 'orderly, although flames were through the first floor as the last —third graders—left. Dog Trails Included in U.S. System of Roads DETROIT (UPI) — Among the more than three million miles of federal, state and county roads in the UnitrtI States are miles of dog team trails naarked by the Alaska Division of (Highways. ★ ★ ★ This information was contained in a report presented today by the division’s chief engineer, T. D. Shepard, at the convention of the American Association of State Highway officials (AASHO) meeting here. Macioce has been feuding with a rebel group within his local. Seven persons have charged in federal court that Macioce has kept them out of their duly elected offices. Lying Down on the Job MIAMI BEACni. Fla. (UP!) -The U.S. population numbers 180 million persons. But an official of Alfred Politz Research Co. told the National Association al Bedding Manufacturers here Tuesday that a survey by his firm showed 181 million mattresses in the nation. ways were blamed on the snowfall. William Gentenaar, 14. of Richland in the Kalamazoo area, struck and killed by a car on his way home from school in the snow storm. Mrs. Pearl Darin,, 67, of Sawyer, was fatally Injured in a car-truck ooUlston on Icy MM near NUes. A car driven by her hus-ban Anthony skidded on the Ice. The collision followed. Mrs. Dsrin died later In a Ailes bod-piUl. Her husband and the truck driver escaped injury. Kalamazoo reported a snowfall of five to six inches. Drifts contributed to a traffic tie-up. Conditions were severe _________ and Mason Counties of Western Michigan as snow continued coming down. ★ ♦ * In the Upper Peninsula, Houghton and Marquette had a blowing snow. Houghton’s 17 degrees was the lowest reported in tKfc state. Power was cut off for ^o hours in the city of Marquette today. ’The entire city was reported affected. The storm caught the last ol Michigan’s de«r hunters 'in the (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4» ed by Adams,” said Clerk-Re^ster Daniel T. Murphy Jr., clerk of the canvassing board. Checking the 90 precincts is ex-| pected to take five days. Muiphy said. Faces Death as Spy Ar rhsuiti ARRESTED BY FBI — Dr Robert Soble. 60-year-old psychiatrist arrives at Federal Cdurt in New York Tuesday where he ww arraigned on charges ol spying on the United States for the Soviet government for 20 years. Soble, whose legal nanoe is Soblen, is the brother of convicted Red spy Jack Soble who is now serving a seven-year prison term. Bail was set at $75,000 and a hearing will be held Dec. 'JO. Hearing Set Dec, 20 Charge Espionage to Soble Brother Nation’s Biggest Teeder^ Airline Detroit Welfare Chief Is Sorry Oakland Director Burt Has Evidence Showing One Charge Not True Construction costs have ri.sen, steadily since plans were first read-i^ three yean ago, said Kelley. OMto were estimated at 6S mll-Uon When Pontiac ritlsens first voted down a bond Issue to finance construction. They were set at $3.3 million the last time, one year ago. CITES N'EW OBSTACLE Kelley is an engineer with firm of Jones, Henry and Williaa)s of Toledo, Poiitlart ttltfiWertHY consultants. The only witness called by Clly Attorney William A. Ewart during the straight-forward, half-hour hearing, Kelley sidd the State Highway Department has proposed a new obstacle to plans tor added facilities on the site the city owas at Auburn Avenue and Opdyke Rond. Kelley testified that plans to swing an extension to Auburn (M59» through the city-owned site apparently would eat up land that NEW YORK (;PI — A New York psychiatrist arrested i 20-year Soviet spy never tried to escape his shadowers during a long, “hot surveillance’I by FBI agents, says his attorney. On the contrary, the doctor even stopped his car so that trailing agwits^-------------------------------- Peronista Uprising Stilled in Argentina BUENO.S AIRES, ArgenUna (AP) — Peronists attempted to seize the military barracks In Rosario today and were beaten back by troops. The army said the uprising was quickly crushed. could catch up with him, the lawyer said. psychiatrist. Dr, Robert Soble,.60, WM held in $75,000 bail tar a taderal court heartag Bee. 20. Soble, whose legal name i< Soblen, is a brother of confessed Soviet spy Jack Soble, 57, serving a seven-year prison term for espionage. The government charged that the brothers were Involved In separate espionazr rings that sought national defense secrets tor transmission to the itovlet Union. Both brothers were naturalized In 1847. at present is earmarked for future doctor suffers from a serious ill- After brief gunfire, civilian ad-leients of former dictator Juan Peion overpowered sentries of the r, c ., , . , . hilt Infantry Regiment at Rosacto Dr. Soble, if com icted, c(^d forces with a number receive Uu> death penalty. The New Routes Boost NCA The company that will bring Pon-I Other'citles where North Central,aton, FUnl Sagiaaw Bav Citv Uac iU first regularly scheduled wdU be operating for the firri-tlmeLj ' commercial airline lervice tomor- are Traveroe City. Muskegon. Pell-' row is the nation’s largest ’’feed-' > r” airline. ~ In 12 years time. North Central Airlines (NCA) has mushroomed an operation that embraces 6,900 route miles serving 90 cities In 10 states and one Canadian province. The Minneapolis, Minn., firm got Its biggest booot In the nwve Hwt added Pontlae to Its service. Along with Pontiac came 11 other Michigan cities, plus Cleveland, and Port Arthur, Ontario. The additional service granted by the Civil Aeronautics Board .represented a 30 per cent expansion for North Central, according to Hal N. Carr, president. * * Regular service is also startiiR tomorrow at Port Huron, Alpena. Cadillac and Reed aty. Manistee and Ludington will get service in about two ntonths, when airport develoLpment is oompteted. HAL M. fawa [SERVES OTHER CITIES 'The company already serves Detroit (Willow Run), Jackson, BatUe Creek, Kalamazoo, Lansing, Grand Rapids, Benton Harbor; St. Joseph, Escanaba. Menominee, Iron Mountain. Ironwood, Marquette, Houghton, Hancock and Sault Ste. Marie. Besides Mkshlgan, Nsrth Central operates la Wlsesaski, M|a-Bcsola, North tm4 SsMh Dakota, as wefi as a foar eMso la Nebraska. Iswa. an« Ulnsls plas Soafi. Bead la bdtaaa aad Cleve-land la OMs. The Oevetaad oerv-toe Is hraad new and hasn't been Inaagarntod yet. It took about four years oL^red tape before North Central made its original flight in 1948. operating under its initial name. Wis-corriin Central Airtines. ONCE PRIVATE The company grew out of a private flying service operated dur-(Continued on PSfe 2, CW. 2) After accusing county welfare officials here of illegally inducing clients to move to Detroit, that dty’s welfare director has apologized to Oakland County Director George H. Burt for any inconvenience be may have caused. W A b At the same time, Burt dug up information to show that a case worker in his office had not encouraged the Jack Harris family of eight to move out of Royal Oak Township into Detroit last June. Daniel J. Ryan, general snper-Intendent of the Detroit Writare Department, said Monday be had asked Wayne County Prosecutor 8nmuH H. Olsen to took Into the ponsIbUlty of chnrgtag Oakland County with violation of the law which prohibits one county from Inducing clients to move Into another. This. Ryan said, add to the load of Detroit's already overburdened welfare department. He cited but two cases, stressing the practice he alleged was not "wholesome.” A meeting between the two departments, along with representatives of the prosecutor offices of both counties, has been set for Pontiac Dec. 7. A A * Burt received a letter from Ryan yesterday in which be said "I sorry for any inconvenience which you have been put on I matter.” He said he hul gone to Olaen’s office only to check.the law in the event the practice of shuffling clients contlmied. approving vote of the people. 'The commission will be able to do this, Ewart said, by reason of the court decree which J u d g' Dondero was expected to sign this Afternoon. ’This could hsVe been hai^led Ih a simple phone call instead all this prosecution stuff,’ said. UBPBBiaD At letter John A Macdonald, chairman of iCbntlnued on Page 2. Od. SI expansion of the new plant. AAA "It will take time to negotiate a route with the state that will be satisfactory' to everyone." Kelly told Judge Dondero In the successful bid for a deadline exten- bond tosue floated In three Victor Meier, assistant attorney general, represented the Water Resources Commission. He said the decree would be ready for signature within a few hours after the hearing’s end. ness, hi.s attorney said. Soble was ariTsted al noon Tuesday at Rockland State Hospital. in suburban Orangeburg, where he has served as supervising psychiatrist. The Indlrtnient by a federal grand jury also named 18 co-ranspiralorH, none of whom are defendants. They Include several Soviet offlrials and four Americans. took the government three years to coliect evidence for an indictment against Dr. Soble. arguing for low bail, his attorney, Richard C. Green, told the court that Soble would hot flee, •STOPPED FOR Mil’ He has been under w ide-open hoi surveiilanee by federal agents and never tried to nin away, to a point whei-e he even stopped his car on highways the agents trailing him, so they; Aleier offered no objections to the could catch up to him deadline extensions. him. He asked Judge Wllltani B. Hrriands if he could say goodby to "the FBI gentlemen." First reports said one of the invaders was killed and a lieutenant and an enlisted man wounded. AAA The army command at Rosario, located about 175 miles up the Parana River northwest of Bue^ nos Aires, said moat of the civilians involved in the uprising fled as the garrison regained control of the sentry post. Ewart had been ashed by the CHy Commission to draw Into the hearing the poUntton which the township bat been accused of conlributlng to Crystal Lake, which Is part of the Clinton system. But it was decided during a conference preceding the hearing that only Pontiac pollution could be dis-cuased in court. Judge Dondero explained afterward that the law did not permit him to review the Wa-(Oontinued on Page 2. Col. 6) In Today's Press Comtes .................. 46 Coaaty Newt ..............V EdHortato 8 Markets 48 Obituaries tS Pet Doctor ............... 6 Hporto ............... 41 a TlMiaters ................ M TV * Radio Programs 61 WUno. Earl .............. 61 Women’s Pages ......... 16-n Pros isnisUM M WMb iTtfr Atoai- Herlands smiled and gave his permission. The doctor bowed from the waist and waved to the FBI agents. ’’TTiank you very much, gentlemen," he said. ' The government said the Soblei brothers were born in Lithuania' and during the 1930s roamed Eu-| rope as Communist agents tor the Soriet secret police. The indictment charged that in! 1940 Jack Soble met the late Lavrenti P. Berio, head ci the Soviet secret police under Stalin. In ex-ge for permittihg nearly all the families of both brothers to' go to the United States, the brown agreed to act as spies here. Eventually, said the government, the entire family — about 15 persons — left Lithuania. Most of them settled in the New York area and in Canada. Extend Seaway Season MASSENA. N. Y. (APl-lTie :. Lawrence - Seaway, supposed to dose today for the season, will remain open through midnight Thursday. The Seaway Authority granted the one-day extenston because of mild weather. Sewing Column Introduced Today The Womeu’s Seettoa sf The PmUsc PreM has s aew to-tormsUve feataro to add to your resdtag ptoaaare today. Our new c • I u m a, “8(w Simple.’’ win appear weekly to amwsr your The Indtetmrat said that Dr. SoMe received moathly reports dttriag World War — from loeal headqnarteni la Rarkefelter Plata of the superaecret Uflice a( Sttotegte Servirea. Documents, writings and photographs and notes allegedly were ceflected and sent to the Soviet Union. Written by Enaiee Parmer. teacher of custom tot-lortag, the eotama to In clear language that evea the begta- The little troahtes you ea-oonnter when aewtog ara shared by many women. Mrs. Farmer sharea her helptal ad-vtee aad practical aaggesttaaa Invites yon to submit yoar Iota as hp enjoytag this caF ■B. Whether yan Hke to ntoke sr sew sUpeavers aad draperies lor year heme, yea’ll ' ? ; THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 30. 1960 pesire Fast OK of Sales Tax Hike Ifiliiams Urges l)ay Session ^wainson Backs Call » AgrMs to Bid for Full *!; Cent Increase LANSING liv-Michigan'8 sal«s tax.wijl be Increased to lour per cent in a quk* snap-of-the-fingers spedai session of the State Legis-l^tiue, if Gov. Williams has his . WiUiams and Gov.-EIect John B. Sjv$inson agreed Tuesday to call a special session to consider rais-in^jUie sales tax by one per cent. .Tv •pprowd by the voters Nov. 8. date was specified for the there wss sOfl a good possibiUty that M woaM eome Dec. 8, the day the voter-approved consU-tsthmal ameadmeat goes Into ' efCeet. Williams told a »int news conference that the date depended w'hen an agreement can be worked out with legislative leaders to ap-' prove a fuU one-cent increase, Mflier than a bill calling for some action of that amount. . • d ★ ★ w^e’ve decided that there should to a special session, and I'll call on#.’’ he said. "But I feel strongly t(5it It should not be a debating nWtph. We don't have time for thal." * ♦ ♦ Williams said he and Swainson *would be contacting legislative leaders of both parties as soon possible to work out the agree-lawnt under which the measure ^«m!d pass in a one-day session. New Routes Boost NCA Judge Will Force City Pollution Curb (Continued From Page One) ter Resources Commission’s findings. Any action against Waterford would hhve to be separate from the action the state has taken against Ponttac, he said. Ewa^ blamed the unfovtoaUe Th^ Day in Binningham Dec. 19 Vote on Sewers to Decide Job Financing „ Hills voters are asked Dec. in a special election if they „_nt an internal sewer system _____________________________________they will, in irffect, be deciding votes against coostructioa bond the financing of the Improvement. U the proposal is turned down on the gl.5 million system, the city will eventually be forced into building the sewer by court action, according to Mayor Henry Wool-fenden. , •‘The city h pfaurf and it has a sMe,’' he told the oeart. "Bat we have not BIRMINGHAM - When awn- OONVAIB SM — This is the Oonvair 340 that North Central Airlines will use in lU Detnrft-to-Sault Ste. Marie route which will serve Pontiac starting tomorrov.'. The iargest plane in the Nrnth Central fleet, it seats 44 passengers ahd 1 pressurised cabins. Hie Gonvair cruises at 248 miles an h "There is no defense fo^ the city now, nor is there any question that the stream is being polluted, seriously affecting the people downstream from Pontiac." | Ewart agreed in court that the question of pollution from soorpes outdde of Pontiac "b not pertinent in this case." The suit was filed aftn Pontiac, for want of financing, failed to meet the Water Resources Corn-ion daadUae of July 1 of dik year for the letting of construction The SUte Wafer Resources (Continued From Page One) ing the 1940s by a aintonvUle, Vns.. manufacturing company. Other companies kept badgering the FWD Corp. for so many rides on its planes that FWD officials figured they could start a commercial airlines. The original application was filed 1th the CAB in 1944. Four years later, but only after the CAB had ordered FWD to sell its own interest in the proposed airlines, Wisconsin Central started out. figures to illustrate the growth that I From 112 employes in 1948, ths has made their airlines the biggest company has grown to 2,100 em-of the nation's 12 local airlines, ployes, including 300 pilots and 183 The alrUnes, for Instance, wlH, ^ ^ probahly carry well over a mH- r—. lion-----------thi« «Mr to the future. North Cen- lion pssnengers this year. tral has asked the CAB to let it service cities as far west as Sheridan, Wyo. Other expanskq) is North Central aircraft carried i planned within Nebraska, the Da-4,856,740 pounds of mail last year, kotas, Iowa and Kansas. In June 1959, the confflany l^an North Central has asked ap-carrying air freight and hauled ajproval of nearly 1,100 miles of total 2,112,960 pounds by the end.helicopter routes to 37 points on of the year. iu system. Asked whether no advance agreement would mean no special session. Williams replied: "It comes close to that—I said 'Iflose to that. ” —r,. ♦ * ♦ Swainson opposed the suggested ^b^Ws tax Increase during the cam-•ptlgn. while Republican candidates "t^herally supported the amendment. But Swainson said Tuesday: ♦ ★ * "I believe the results of the Nov. 8 election have demonstrated that a majority of citixens, recognizing the need for additional state revenues, have expressed their desire to meet that need through a (>n(j||^t Increase^ in the tax. ^ accept the majority will and '*lftisrelore agree that the legisla-fur* should to convened In spe-rial session to ronsider carrying *«nt that voter determination as soon ns possible.” Swainson added that increasing .iho sales tax should be viewed as 1m emergency measure. ♦ ★ ★ "We all should still strive for the comprehensive tax reforms which all fi.scal experts agree are needed.” he said. .Swainson estimated that a one-cent boost in the sales tax would bring in between ^115 million and $129 million nually to the stale’s d<-pleted treasury. WWW 'Before the news conference broke up. Republican leader, Hojise Speaker Don R. Pears of Buwanan. had heartily endorsed the special session with a mimeographed statement of his own. Detroit Welfare Chief Apologizes to County (Cbntinued From Page Om) the Oakland Social Welfare Board, said Ryan’s charges were "perfectly ridiculous." ' Both MkodoaaM and Bart were surprised by Ryan’s letter of ex- A feeder service is one which fills in the gaps between the giant hops flown by the trunk airlines. Big problems during the early years of expansion was the lack of improved runways and instrument controls. WWW During the first three years, more than $8 million was spent on airport development and improvement in cities served by Wiscon-In Central. WWW The airli^s itself provided elec-^ tronic equipment at most of the intermediate stops at a cost ofj around $1(W.0(X). Today it operates what it believes is the longest privately owned instrument network n the country, By l»5S, the system was developing westward and the company moved to Minneapolis with the new name, North Central. The company had turned to larger Douglas DC3 aircraft in Students Battling Army in Caracas CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) — Leftist students fought a guntat-tie with troops today in defiance of President Romulo Betancourt. The stubborn challenge to the authority of the moderate Socialist president made the situation Firing from high school buildings on Avenue Roosevelt has continued soradically since Monday night. It is part of ‘ ‘ rioting in the capital that has killed 6 persons and injured at least 105 in an attempt to touch off a revolution and establish a Castro-style government. Tough military crackdowns, sup- In 1959 the switch began to big, 44-passenger (Tonvalr 340s, twin-engine airliners with pressur-l Ized cabins. The radar-equipped Convairs cruise at 248 miles an* hour, compared to 160 for the DC3s. WWW Convairs now service 18 per cent of the North Central system and will to used on the Detroit-.Sault Marie route that has Pontiac as a stopover. North Central officials cite ported by a suspension of chdl guarantees, have snuffed out moat I of the rioting which began last i Friday. However, for a time Tues-|day night it spread from the slum Lawrence ^' I v»'A Bloomfield Township house-1 2le was found dead last night the garage of her home at 69191 ^Jtodbank Drive. '^BJoomfield Township police said thpt Mrs. Robert C. Mack was found in the family automobile ' with the motor running by a neighbor. Polic-e said Mrs. Mack <^took her own life. The Weather in County Jail Murder Charge Hangs Over Berkley Woman Judged Sane Nov. 21 districts of western Caracas the fashionable eastern end. NEAR LWVEBRITY The main battle was centered at Miguel Caro High School in western Caracas. The -school is adjacent to Caracas University, which officials said appeared to be the demonstrators’ chief stronghold. WWW Police have not attempted to enter the university grounds, where Social Christian party students backing Betancourt fought their way into classrooms to break a Communist student strike. One leftist gfoup att^pted to storm the police station nearby but were driven back by tear gas and armored cars of the presidential guard. Another gang of youths tried to burn a bus in the aouthern suburb of Chaguaramos, despite or-to the army to shoot such firebrands on sight. The bus was saved by firemen. ★ W A Troops took up positions Puente Trinidad Street, where several newspapers are published. The papers have advocated a tough line in suppressing Com-minist activities, ^tancourf has charged the (foiilmunists are behind the rioters. Mrs. Sarah Sue Lawrence was' returned to the Oakland CountJ'i Jail yesterday, possibly to stand trial for murder. RICHARD D. KUHN Eyes JP Post in Waterford ^chard Kuhn Reveal. rsU IJ.S. WeetU.------- rONTUC AND VICINITT iII!i»k»"Vr*"Ts«eSi7*yrSIJithe slaying of Mrs. David Cren-..-yfe! j «haw. 33, of 6230 Snow Aople Dr., •to* •^'««|ciarkston. on May 22. 1959. Mrs. Lawrence was judged criminally insane following the slaying. Hhe was released from Ionia State Hospital yesterday and trannferred to the Oakland County Jail. Her attorney. James Renfrew, has filed a motion in Circuit Court here to quash the still outstanding first-degree murder charge. f Tsaar IS rsBiiM L^rtet teapersture precedlof I s.a. At I SB.: Wind Ttlocitr IS a.p.h Dlnetlaa: Northwest. • , ,.aun wis Wsdneadsr ot |:tl pjn. ‘ .a«n rises Thursdsr at 7:41 I i.m. - Tsssf BtahMt ^psi^t Luwst teaperstu UM ttapcrstari WSsUlsS-aaow nnrrtss, wlodr Was Tsar Asa M reallas •igbest aat wsst Trapsratsrss Prosecutor George F. Taylor, who holds the warrant, said he will decide whether to proceed with charges after a Dec. 5 court hearing on Renfrew’s motion. Mrs. Lawrence was ruled now ■ane by loula CtrcuU Jndg^ Morris K. Davis Nov. SI following a habeas corpus hearing. Mrs. Crenshaw was shot during a scuffle at her home. « » sSsw To^ ss isj Mrs. Lawre^ told sheriffs dep- •• 1R a asWtaaa aak.A knot OWMUA AWaOM fhatr >. rraoelses M , a: Marts *7 sess-i s s raw sstssi: ss uties she had gone there to pay blackmail demanded by Mrs. Cren-shaA and her husband under threat of losing custody of her then 9-yearotd son. OeTishaw nras the former boy (riend of the accused, deputies said Candidacy in Primary Race on GOP Ticket Pontiac attorney Richard 1 Kuhn has announced he trill be a candidate for Waterford Township justice of the peace on the Republican ticket in the February primary election. A * A Kuhn, 31, ia a graduate of Michigan State University with a degree in political acience. He was awarded his law degree front the Detroit College of Law. Kuhn is married and has one ion. He Is a member sf the West Poatlac KIwaals Chib, PsaUac Area Chamber ot Omnmerce and He is alao a member of the Oakland County Bar Association. Michigan Bar Aaaociatktn and the Amer-iran Bar Aaaoclation. AAA If contested, Kuhn promises a vigorous campaign. One of the two toTVTiship Justices, Donald E-Adams, wbb elected Oakland County's aeoood probate judge Nov. I. Snow, Ice and Low of 22 in Pontiac Area (Continued From Page One) woods. Today Tvas the fla day of the oeasou. Michigan had two other traffic fatalities during the stormy period but neither Tras attributed to the areather. Donald M. Dury, 23, of Pioneer, Ohio, was killed today when his car hit a tree 10 miles south ot HUladale on Hillsdale Road: State police said Duiy apparently fell asleep at the wheel. Perry E. Williamson, Brethren, lost his life Tuesday in a two-car collision on U.S. 31 three miles north of Manistee. Northwesterly morning winds at 20-30 miles per hour in the Pon-tihe area. Trill become westerly and slowly diminish tonight and Thursday. The thermometer in doTvntown Pontiac registered 26 at 2 p.m. This deadline, idus another of Dec. 31, 1961 for completion of the expansion, aras set in the summer of 1959, after engineers testified that Pontiac pollution was killing plant and fiA life In the The engineers testified thal Pontiac's existing treatment facU- _________ ities were inadequate to hamjle ^Ugafion*~b o n (1 s arrangement, the load. They, said untrmtcti sewage was entering the river. bad given him "a lot of donble talk" when he threatened legal action In an Ang. If letter concerning the Harris case. Burt said he would present affidavits at the Dec. 7 meeting showing case workers did not suggest the clients In question move to Detroit. , A: A A Although he said he had statistics to show that Detroit clients had moved into Oakland, the veteran welfare director said he didn't plan to bring them up. "We’re not going to accuse anybody of anything. We don’t play that sray," Burt said. Burt said Jack and Peart Harris, formerly of tl4M Dowling St., R»^ Oak TomMMp. moved to DetroH Jnne 17 iriUi their six children after the toTvnahip had refased the department’s offers to pay bach Kent. The toTvnship, Burt exidained, had refused because Harris’ lx»ne in a low-rent housing project was rnady for razing as part of s& itnii renewal project there. Harris made the move to Detroit 1 his own and vrithout encouragement from Oakland case workers or officials, Burt said. Over 3S,0(X) franchised new car dealers in the U.S. offer prospective buyers a choice of 18 makes, 96 models, and hundreds of styles produced by U.S. manufacturers. In Oakland Ooanty arcalt Court to stop the Hty from poUnttog the Rouge River. If the plan is approv«id, the city will to In the position general obligation bonds project, a method found to to mort economical to the taypayer, the mayor ex|dained. If the proposal fails and the dfy is forced Into Installing the sewer system, tto city has no alternative but to finance the program through special assessment DeCaulle Will Visit Algeria, Talk Policy PARIS (UPI) — President CJuirles de Gaulle decided today to visit Algeria despite warnings from his generals and ministers that such a trip would be danger- u. The French leader told his weekly cabinet meeting he would leave Paris Dec. 9 tor Algeria to explain hit policy to French officers and the Algerian people. . De Gaulle called a special cabinet meeting tor the eve of his departure to fix the date for the referendum he has called to get France’s approval for his plan to set up a provirional administration in Algeria. ... So How Did His Front Yard Look Afterward? WACO, Tex. (UPI) - Patiwl-men Russell Martin and Ken Berry investigated, and it’s part ot the poUee blotter today. It reads like this: “10:20A ... A man . . . called to report Fidel Casti* has a battleship with Communist troops pniUng up Into his front yard. ‘*11:MA . . . Investigation by Patrolmen Martin and Berry In the Immediate vicinity tailed to locate battleship or Castro,’’ HIGHER PAYMENTS With tto ^ial assessment method the system would have to be paid off in a much shorter period resulting in higher annual payments to the taxpayers thy those proposed'under the general Uam Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak. after a shMl Utoeas. AAA She Vas^ member of the FM Preibyterian Church of Hirmtng-ham, Omiciion Sorority, AAUW ct Blnnlnghain. the Oakland County Chapter ot the Mkh-igaa Society for Mental Health and the Birmingham Musleale. AAA Surviving besides her husband are trro bmjs. Ted of ftu? Francisco, CUif., and Donald of Birmingham; a brother: and two grandchildren. Levies $100 Fine on Clarkston Golf Club Operators Originally charged with the illegal sale of intoxicants, operators of tto aarkatOQ GoU ClQb, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Frechette, yea-today ideaded guilty in Independence Tormship Justice Court to a reduced count ot diaoiderly conduct. Justice of the Peace Helmar G. -Stanaback ordered them tq pay J25 fines and |2S court cosU each. Woolfenden said. He stated reveaue bond flaaBC-lag would mesa a higher charge to residents for use ot the sewer to insure payment of the Isoue by building up a reserve fund. With general obllgaUon bonds. Woolfenden said, the cost to residents would be redu^ annually as the valuation of the dty increases with new construction. Currently the plan for financing the sewer system, if It Is approved, is based on issuit^ the general obligation bonds over a 30-year period. It has been estimated that the coat to residents the first year TTOuld be about $7.31 for each 81,-, W of assessed valuation. AAA Tlie estimate is based on the project being handled all at once. However, city engineers Hubbell, Roth and Clark have suggested the project be undertaken in two Mr. and Mrs. Frechette were charged Sept. 17 follovring a raid of the golf club house at 9241 Kston Road in Independence Township by sheriff’s deputies. AAA Sheriff Frank Irons, who led the raid, said they found Mrs. Frechette serving liquor to two cus-tomers Trithout a license. Mrs. Frechette contended that the liquor belonged to the club members and she was not selling It to them. This plan would see only thej develop^ areas of the city getting! the sewer and only $1.33 miUioa cdl the bonds issued, reducing the first | year's tax to about $6.30 per $1,000. of assessed valuation. The remaining $170,000 in bonds' Tvould be sold at a later date for the improvement in undeveloped] areas. | Mrs. Edurard H., Laird Service for Mrs. Edward H. (Dorothy F.) Laird, 57, of 1220 Redding Road, will be at 2 p m.| Friday at the Manley Bailey Funer-' al Home. Burial will be in Green-j wood Cemetery. Mrs. Laird died today at WU-' NOW 2 STORES to Serve You Better PONTIAC Ample Free Parking DRAYTON Easy Credit Terms ‘ • THOMAS R| ECONOMY /jJJtMSbiJJUl/ «MS MBI aiMnUIT • MUTTM RAUB Headline Erred About Account in Check Story The Pontiac Press vrishes to correct any mistaken interpretation of a story it published concerning a check cashed by Robert D. Roas, 27, formerly of 123 Norton St., that was returned due to fanufflcwit ' nds. Tto headline over the story mistakenly stated that Rom didn’ have an account vrith his bank a the time he cashed his check. The bank says he did have an account but a' the time dkin’t have suffl-ds to cover the check. Wh« the insufficiency wu dls-covrird, the chet^ was made good. AAA The Pndt regrets any emto^ will HE FIND THE O BLACK PEARL?‘^A ...and will he be ii> time to save Christmas for boys and girls? Follow the odventures of Michael, the BOY FISH, in this newspaper starting DECEMBER Sfh Big DmI Difcetits for CHBISTMAS GIFTS Why pay more then Simms Discount Prices on Toys.? Here ere just a few eumples! Flexible Stoeifag on SLEDS 34-Inches 38-Inches 45-Inches SO-JnChes t-li 58-Inches Sliding S^neers 2.88 3.88 4.88 5.88 7.88 36-inch all steel coasters for fun in the snow. With plastic pull rope. Safe to Use—fUCrilfC Wco4 Beriiig Set -|26 TuDor ELECTRJC FOOTBALL orAeama^ BASEBALL llaRICS f7.00 Sellerf ;i5 You're the coech — you call the pieys, meke the touchdowns, hit the homers, etc. — hours of fun for youths and mwr too! •8 H. Saginaw -4nd floor Quitt State GOP » li Studying Work Conditiong UN8ING Ift-Tte State OentraJ Committee hai announced the reaignatioo ol Don Wivner jr^ of Port Huron fran its organization itaff to ento* private builneBs in Port Huron. Wia-mer Joined the GOP staff early this year. ^ su< Robert Raikes of Gloucester, England, founder of the modem Sunday school,^ founded the first such school in 1781. Joint Steel Committee Fails to Meet Dead-line PITTSBURGH (UPI) ~ Th eistrike, has failed to meet its dead-Unitod Steelworkos and the ma- Une. ^ Jor steel companies disclosed Tues- 1®*"' statement, USW - up sss? ss to study local working conditions, | ' key issue of the 116-day steel BIG DEAL DISCOUNTS On All The Famoui GIFTS for PHOTO FANS! Alt special prices in this advertisement good for Thurs., FrI., Sat. Use fre^ layaway — pay only the advertised price. PHOTO DEPT. VALUES 4-Bulb BAR-LITE Sets Aegnlor $13 Valsa -LOWEST PBICE— 77 As pictured — campact bar-lite with A flood bulbs — perfect way to take indoor movies or pictures. #PR300 bar-lite complete with bulbs and fiber storage- carry cask. BOUNCE-LIGHT 4-Bulb BAR-LITE H9.9S Value 10” Bounce bar-light keeps glaring light out of the subiects eyes — just bourvre the tight off the ceiling. With bglbs and metal case. ran looi ho» arriM" Kalart Movie Sjiliears { Smgalai 14.95 >The only way to splice short movie reels into lor>g-show reels. For 8mm movie film. Lowest Discount Prices on RADIANT “Meteof’ Movie & Slide Screens $12.95 Value /P 30 x 40 Inch ^0 S14.95 Vi1m«-40''x40" . .$ 7.99 $20.95 Vdlnt—50 "x50" . $13.99 Ca-Hiine Radiar^t QIass beaded screens on tripod base. $1 ^ >|ls in free layaway. CAMERAS —Main Float prealdent of U.S. Steel Carp., aald the committee, which wu to have reprtled Ita recommendations today under terms of the strike settlement, "has not yet completed its exploration of these matters.’ The sUtemeat said that although under terms at the atrihe settlement the committee’s Hfe expires today. It will eoattoue The Nov. 30 date for the committee's report on local working conditions was one of two important deadlines set for this week. On Dec. 1, the 500,000 basic steel workers will get an yage increase, which the union timates will average 9.4 cents per hour per worker. The Cooper-McDonald statement said that the local working conditions committee "has been meeting in carrying out its functions under the agreements.’’ But the naloB and management representatives admitted that the committee has failed to determine “the area of study ia which a third party might be helpful.” The strike settlement directed that the members of the Joint committee select a neutral chairman by "mutual agreement.” None has b^n named. Tuesday's "Since mutual understanding the aim of the parties, it was felt the efforts of the committee would be directed toward achieving such understanding between the parties rather than involving third party.” Zeppelin Captain Dies in Germany FRANKFURT, Germany (AP) Max Pruss, captain of Germany' famed Graf Zeppelin and Hinden-burg airships, died of pneumonia in a hospital here Monday. He "He had been fighting lor the revival of the seppeltaa his last day,” his widow oald la Pruss captained the Hindenburg when it exploded at Lakehurst, N.J., May 6, 1937, kUling 36 persons. The skipper was injured seriously in the blast. But he never would believe that it ended chapter of history. Just one shave with a NEW Sdrick 3 Speed and you'll never be satisfied with any other razor! ALL-NEW 1066 SCHICK 3 SPEED SigMiest staviag astniMit cwr imietM! Not just 3 speeds... but tne largest head ever put on any razor! Fit the shave to^ face... shave faster, closer, without irritation! Once you try It you’ll never be satisfied with any other razor, blade or electric. Handsomest carrying case of all, too. Ask us for a free demonstration. Here’s your razor! SCHICK 3 SPEED Shift the speed... set the hOad... solve ^ your shaving problems ... no matter how tough your beard or how tender your skin! Come in and see this fa-mous razor for yourself. Only ||| 98 North So^inow St. ELECTRIC RAZORS —Main Floor FOUR THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. NOVE^tBER 30, 1960 Heport Citeg Domestic Goab U,S. Must Grow Economically, i Warns Presidential Commission iwnor** MoUi A Iwftlw itodT br prtildmUal euainlMloo bu Mt up ---* artlcltt b» •Urlint K OrMU, AP wrtur ou teo- ' mic tftalri. Sub««uati>t artlclM II dMi with forptgn atfairt and ; By sterung f. green IWASHINGTON (AP)-Several hundred goals for the 1960s were sej before Americans this week b)i a White House commission. Yet one sim^e, overriding, all-e^ntial word told the story growth. ‘ Growth to provide at least 13.5 I mfllkm new jobs, growth to avoid j higher taxes, growth to support ! new multimillion-doilar outlays for I re^arch and education, growth to* rebuild decayed downtowns, gi^rwth to arm more strongly against “grave danger." Without economic growth, at a raje apparently not less than one-sixth faster than American pio-di^tion has increased over the " years, the tied directly to economic policy— breaking down racial and religious bias, reducing juvenile delinquency, and reorganizing the government, to name a few. But the central theme was the United States must make a greater investment—of both private and public money—in its own future, or it will risk the ioss both of world leadership and its own cherished freedonu. The growth goal was sUted mainly in terms of jobs. The target, said the commission, should be the fastest poasiUe rate which is "consistent with primary dependence upon free enterprise and the avoidance of marked inflation." * * * What will that rate be? The commiaalon waa uncertain, careful study, it said, su__ that the total output of goods and services can be boosted by 3.4 per cent a year—if unemployment is held con^istenfly below 4 per cent and if a climate favorable to investment and research is main- srfvs some of.the nation's vital oti^ctives will be lost, its secu-rify and leadership endangered. * * * in such a case, said the Presl-detit's Commission on National Goals, Americans are going to h^e to sacrifice—perhaps by tax increases, loss of leisure time, p slower rise of living standards, aifd unaccustomed controls. The commission said it this wAy: “If the growth rate is lower, it [will impel consideration of higher taxes, lncrea.sed quantity of la-b((r and the greater Individual effort and sacrifice exemplified by fotced savings and reduced consumption" This was the essence of the re-p(^ filed with President Eisenhower by 11 distinguished Ameri-cfUis after 10 months of study, rje White House rcieased it Sunday. FACE PROBLEMS bn the home front, the commission dealt with many matters not Yet equally careful studies indicate that a 5 per cent growth can achieved "without extraordinary stimulating measures," said the report. The average increase in gross national product recorded since 1939 has been 2.9 per cent. NEED MORE JOBS The first task is to reduce job-issness from the October rate of 6.4 per cent to the commission's goal—below 4 per cent. Then, over the decade, economy must provide about 13.5 million more jobs than now exist to accommodate new entries into the labor force—mostly youngsters born during the postwar boom, now arriving at working tomation and advancing technoi-ocy must be retrained or relocated—partly at public exp«ise, commission presumed. The commission’s proposals for insuring growth included many that will be cited in Congress next session when the hot issues of recent years are rekindled. They include federal aid to education, aid to depressed areas, medical care for the aged, tax revision, and civil rights. SPECIFIC TARGETS Here are some of the specific targets: EDUCA-nON-Yearly U. S. outlays must be doubled by 1970, to $40 billion. "The federal role must 9w be expatxied." The commission hewed to the ne that education b "primarily a responsibility of the itates” and ta3 goals GAL 3 eesa/yy ar30 shied away from an outright doraement of federal aid school construction. But it said that since 1787 the federal government has participated in the support of education “without destroying local initiative and responsibility." TAXES—An “overhaul tax system” is necessary, whether tax rites go op or down, to Pistol-Packing Housewife Sends Salesman Flying ONTARIO. Calif. (AP)-Answer-ing the doorbell, a housewife tripped over her son’s toy gun and picked it up. * The salesman she confronted turned pale and ran, vaulting a 3-foot fence. Mrs. Bernard Pennine _______ . _ Another batch of 1.5 million^lice Tuesday she then discovered Americana — the farmers wholher son, Jimmie, 15, had put won’t be able to make a decent living on the soil—must be absorbed in nonfarm jobs. Aind an unestimated number of factory workers, displaced by au- the front door a sign reading: ★ ★ ★ "We shoot every third sales-an, and the second one just left." improve the climate for new busi-ne« investment. The changes, said the commiask», should include noore liberal depreciation dsductions on business and industrial equipment to encourage modernization and tovestment. AUTOMATIC - Tedmological change should be encouraged with careful advance planning to avoid hardship to those displaced by new machines and processes. Where whole areas are left in distreu, both state and federal govenunents should help provide loans and grants to assist the communities in attracting new industries and in retraining and relocating workers. * ★ * AGRICULTURE - Supply and ’demand must be brought into balance so that the'market—instead, presumably, of federal subsidies—' will provide fanners a fair return. There should be "much increased retirement of farm land, with emphasis on whole farms." But fedml farm programs, including price supports, will be| necessary for some time to come., CITlE^Slum conditions must, be remedied and the process ofj decay in big cities arrested, the; commission said. It called for more urban renewal programs "costing as much as $4 billion a year." ★ ★ .* HEIALTH—Among a dozen recommendations in this field, commission called for further efforts to reduce the burden of the cost of medical care. Extension of medical insurance! is necessary, through both public and private agencies. ” it said. It also called for higher stand-aids of unemployment compensation, without endorsing the effort of many Democrats in Congress to win passage of legislation fixing federal standards. The commission said the government should "encourage the states to meet a minimum standard" and should, in addition, es-i tablish a federal reinsurance pro-i gram for states with temporary acute employment problems. raisi»TH CENTRAL and its network of cities only air-minutes away from PONTIAC From Internatioml Falls on the Canadian border, south to Chicago, east to Cleveland, west to the Dakotas and Nebraska — this is the network of cities soon to be within air-minutes of your community. Our progressive route expansions have extended North Central’s system to more than 6896 route miles — serving 90 cities and their hundreds of adjacent communities in ten states and Canada, with connecting airline service to any destination. North Central’s fast, daily sdieduled flights will be in service December 1st We look forward to bringing you the same service which has made North Central America’s leading local airline, first in its class in passengers, mail and carga NOBTB CESTBML JHBUNE8. lews • Micitisen • Ohio tnd Ontario Csnass av Emm mn lu i! CHRISTMAS TOY SALE " ^ 'a %-Ar r M-Ui. > 13. Submarine with Missilt. Metal, hand cranked friction motor. 14. M.P. Jeep with soldier. Metal, friction motor. 15. Metal Fiat, sun roof opens ond closes. 74< 74r 74r ..a- ^ 16. TR3-Triumph, 17. Ford Hordtop metal, friction, with retroctobls fine reproduc- Friction, tion. 74< 74< IhU «i n*M 0i4*n niM (R 4-SSU) m 4 m Mm. 0i4« ly H*. M«ar Mm ng SkAwsI — WAITE'S TOYLAND . . . FIFTH FLOOR — THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, XOVEMBER 30. 1960 FIVE Q. Will you *lv«« ntp Information on tlio faro of a two and one kalf year old IModler PaHletUarly Ha enra. Mra. M. Toland, N.Y.C. • A. A request for "generar’ li mation ii a large order in allotted apace. Your pet's beautiful hair coat lends Itself to many styles to suit your fancy, but the veterinarian would prefer the hair to be short araund the ears and in the ear canals to prevent infection. * ★ ★ Your dog’s breed is tops in popularity In the U.S. and there i ihany interesting facets to background. The Poodle Gub America, Blair Road, Oyster Bay, Long Island, N.Y. (care Mrs. Kenneth LaWlor) can recommend number of books on this breed. ♦ w ★ After reading them. If you still have any particular question, 1’^ be happy to'advise you. Bees Busy Making More Honey in 1960 WASHINGTON Iff-It’s been a busy year for the beos, reports the Department d Agriculture. The 1960 honey crop is estHnated at 347,523.000 pounds, 2 per cent More than last year’s, and 6 per cent above the average annual production of the last six years. Honey production was up in all sections of the country except the North Central, where th4 yield last year was higk ’The Iff leading honey producing states this year, in order of production, were Minnesota, California. Florida, Wisconsin, New York, Texas, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio and Iowa. They accounted for 59 per cent of the nation's honey. | AAohowk Airlines Sea Merger oi Possible Evil WASHINGTON (AP) - Mohawk Airlines said today that a merger of Capital Airlines into United Air I "could be harmful to Mohawk but does not have to be. ■k It it Mohaaic told the Gvil Aeronautics Board, In a bHef, that the merger is approved. United should be denied the dormant authority of Capital to operate, between Detroit and Buffalo, N. Y. Mohawk said this is a shixt-haul market \^ich Capital hUs not been serving, and it properly belongs t local service airline. About 15 ynillion motot- vehicles se the Holland under water tunnel each year. The tute. first be built, was opfned 33 years ago. Constructs El^tric Tiny Motor PASADENA, Calif. Iff-Last December a California Institute of Technology theoretical physicist, during a talk on the importance of miniaturization of electrixa' gadgets, said; “I want to offer a prise of •1.M to the first guy who makeo In wires.” Monday, a young engineer collected the 31,000 from Dr. Richard Feynman. William McGeRan, who worked for a local electronic firm, had toj display his motor under a 40-power -miscroscope. To the naked eye appears hardly larger than a speck of dust. He said it took him 24 months to build, on his own time, only six one-thousandths of an Inch in diameter—no larger than the period at the end of this sentence. Yrt It roatalna four colls of wire with It luma per coil, a quarts bearing, a Hny rotor—1.1 parts in ail. it has an output of a millionth of a horsepower. McGellan acknowledges that he hds no immediate use for it. But he'n have no trouble finding a use (or Dr. Feynman's 31,000 personal check. "That," says McGellan, "goes toward the education of my daughters.” Bockeieller Tree to Recover OK From Fractures NEW YORK (UPI) - A big spruce from Pennsylvania arrived Tuesday to be the symbol