Saturday, June 11, 1960 THE BATTLE CREEK ENQUIRER AND NEWS fK so FORECASTS" Court Orders Halt On Monroe Reactor DETROIT CD Power Reactor Development Co. was considering today whether to ask the U.S. Supreme Court to upset an order for the Atomic Energy Commission to take another look at whether a nuclear power plant being built outside Monroe, would be safe. The U.S. Court of Appeals at Washington decided at issued until after "testing and confirmation of the plant's safety characteristics." Plans called for the plant.
ttoHt SvhSo? Mart Pi jure Omw low Temperertvre t-xp4 Urges Rocky Join Dems SACRAMENTO, Calif. (UPD California Gov. Edmund G. Brown has suggested that New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller join the Democratic Party.
Brown, a Democrat, yesterday praised Rockefeller's attack on administration policies and Rockefeller's accusation that Vice President Richard M. Nixon has failed to spell out his views on major issues. Brown said he did not think that Rockefeller and the Democrats agree on all points of political philosophy. But Brown said Rockefeller's "criticisms are correct and point generally in the direction toward which this country should go. "I think, he will find much more intellectual solace in the Democratic Party than he will ever find in his own," Brown continued.
Button, Button, Who's Got the Radio? which will heat sodium that in turn will generate steam from water, to be tested with non- nuclear materials in the first stages. Safety of the plant was chal lenged in lengthy hearings be fore the AEC by the United Auto Workers, electrical work ers and paperworkers unions The AEC held the challenges without merit." The unions then appealed to the courts. The UAW denied that it was attempting to divert from private to government sources the development of atomic power plants. Morning stars: Venus, Mars. Jupiter and Saturn.
Evening star: Mercury. The sun sets today at 8:17 p.m and rises tomorrow at 4:34 a.m. The moon rises today at 10:20 p.m. sod sets tomorrow at 8:40 a.m. TEMPERATURES ELSEWHERE High Low Baltimore 77 SO Bismarck 71 49 Brownsville 91 73 Buffalo S2 53 Chicago 85 67 Cincinnati 65 Cleveland 78 62 Denver 64 Detroit 77 61 Duluth st 49 Fort Worth 96 73 FCC Post Calls Detroit Lawyer Charles King Tells Of Ike Appointment DETROIT (UPD Charles H.
King, dean of the Detroit College of Law, said last night that President Eisenhower planned to appoint him to fill the Federal Communications Commission vacancy created March 10 vhen FCC Chairman John Doerfer resigned under fire. In Washington, White House officials refused to comment on King's announcement. It is customary for the White House to make the first announcement of all its appointments. Aide Informed Him King, 54, said he was advised by David Kendall, an Eisenhower aide who formerly was Michigan National Republican Committeeman, that the appointment would be made in abou; two weeks. King said he "of course" would accept such an appointment; his announcement, while irregular, was not viewed as sufficient reason for the White House to change its plans.
Doerfer resigned "to avoid embararssment" to President Eisenhower after House payola investigators brought out he had accepted hospitality aboard the yacht of George B. Storer, president of a 12 station broadcasting network. In his letter of resignation, Doerfer denied any impropriety in his actions. King Active in GOP King has long been active in Republican politics. He was defeated in a bid for election to the Michigan Supreme Court in 1952.
That year he had supported the late Sen. Robert A. Taft against Eisenhower in their contest for the GOP presidential nomination. The unexpired term on the five-member FCC runs until July of 1961. cording to the Daily Express.
Tacks holding down the carpet in the British embassy in Moscow, the Express said, were actually dime-sized microphones installed by the Russians and the knobs controlling the radiators were listening devices wired through the plumbing LONDON CPD British security agents searched Prime Minister Harold Mac-Millan's overcoat for button-sized spy radio transmitters after every party he attended in Russia last year. The button-sized transmitters were capable of sending signals close to seven miles, ac- 150,000 Japs 'Looking for Trouble 'Gun Moll 19, Robs Man Of $1, Shoots Him in Back INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (UPD A platinum blonde teen-ager who said she was looking for trouble admitted today she shot a man in the back after robbing him of $1. "I guess I was just scared," Patricia Ann Taylor, 19, Indian- Turkey's Junta Asks Cash Help ANKARA, Turkey (UPD Gen. Cemal Gursel's military junta government, hard-pressed financially after deposing ex-Premier Adnan Menderes's debt-ridden regime, awaited response today to an appeal for public aid.
In a communique issued last night, the Gursel government announced it would "accept donations" of money, gold, silver and platinum to help restore the dwindling treasury. In a second communique, the government gave civilians a "final" warn- ing to return unlicensed firearms before Wednesday. Those caught with firearms after that date will be punished. Maggie's Mirror TROY, N.C. IP) Maggie, a maternal ape with a crush on a nameless white kitten, has a new distraction in her cage.
It's a mirror, a it probably will save kitty from being loved, literally, to death. Carlton Hannah, who owns Maggie, said the kitten became the ape's love captive two weeks ago when she strayed too near the cage. The kitten teemed happy 2-1 yesterday to set aside a construction permit granted Aug. 4, 1956, for the 60 mil lion dollar plant that is scheduled to be completed by next September. Detroit Edison Co.
has all but completed a $15,590,000 generating plant scheduled to use steam manufactured by the proposed fast breeder reactor atomic plant. Ordinarily orders such as issued by the Court of Appeals do not take effect for 15 days, and PRDC indicated it planned to continue construction meanwhile. Robert W. Hartwell, general manager of Power Reactor Development said a final decision has not been reached, but he "anticipates that Supreme Court review will be sought." In issuing a construction permit, the Atomic Energy Commission said that an operating permit would not be Lakeview OK's (Continued, from Page One.) to accommodate up to 1,200 people. IN OTHER ACTION last night, the board considered bids for renovation of the junior high school building, which were opened at 4 p.m.
yesterday. These will be studied by board members over the weekend and action is expected at the regular board meeting Monday night. Bids were received May 19 but rejected as too high, since they exceeded by some the amount of $147,275 in federal funds authorized for the district. The board then scaled down some specifications and again advertised for bids. Those received yesterday included four for the general contract and two each for electrical and heating and plumbing contracts.
Room (Continued from Page One.) accept a draft for the nomination. Morton said he didn't think a reentry by Rockefeller into the race would make much dif ference in the convention outcome. He said national com mittee members "feel very def initely the vice president will be our nominee." No Willkie Parallel While Wendell L. Willkie won the Republican nomination in a seven-week pre-convention blitz in 1940, most Republicans don't think Rockefeller could duplicate this feat in the seven weeks left before the GOP nominating meeting in Chicago. Willkie ran against -several opponents and was able to bowl them over because they did not unite against him.
Rockefeller would face a single rival, who already has more than enough convention votes pledged to him to assure him the nomina tion. Nixon also has the backing of Eisenhower. WhilesRockefeller could carry his message to the country by television, as Willkie could politicians thought it would take a tremendous upheaval to knock Nixon out of the picture Paralyzed 12 Years By Bee Sting; Dies OROVILLE, Calif. Ml Mrs Edna B. Mann died yesterday after almost 12 years of paraly sis caused by a bee sting.
She was 60. Stung in 1948, Mrs. Mann had been in Butte County Hospital ever since except for a few months. Dr. Donald Hewitt, the hospital director, said she was sensitive to the poison in the bee sting and that it re suited in paralysis of her cen tral nervous system.
Calhoun IE Salesmen Meet Resistance RICHMOND, Calif. (UPD John A. Penberthy was awakened at 4:50 a.m. yesterday by a loud knocking on his front door. He descended from his bedroom and found seven vacuum cleaner salesmen simultaneously trying to spell out the glories of their product.
Penberthy thought they were burglars. He scuffled with them and then got a pistol and fired over their heads. They fled. Police finally caught up with three of the salesmen, who said they had decided to test their relative selling mettle after a night of tippling. Their four partners were out somewhere, apparently still trying to sell vacuum cleaners.
Reds Makes Threat About Berlin TEMPERATURES IN BATTLE CREEK Max. Mln. Yesterday (7 p.m. -7 p.m.) 81 49 A week ago today 62 A year ago today 81 67 Low last night 7 a.m. today Noon today 3 8 SO Precipitation (7 p.m.-7 p.m.) None Barometer at noon 29.04, falling Humidity at noon 62 Si THI MOON First Qy.
Ml full Lit Qu. New DJ Imwl lax IS A sea of bobbing candle-lit lanterns stretched half a mile from Japan's Parliament building to the American embassy. Demonstrators lustily sang the "Internationale" anthem of the left-wing labor movement. Sometimes 30 abreast, the marchers passed the embassy chancery. There were no clashes with police guards there.
One brief fight erupted earlier near Parliament. Five hundred students sur rounded a busload ot 20 of Kishi's conservative party mem- ners, poked them with sticks and hauled out at least three. They were rescued after a five-minute mauling, but not seriously hurt. Buddhist priests, hymn singing Christians and hundreds of women were among the demonstrators. They oppose the security treaty on the ground it will expose Japan to war.
Akahata (Red Flag), the Jan- anese Communist party newspaper, stepped up Japan's boiling internal political crisis over Kishi and alliance with Amer ica, with an editorial call for more anti-Amencanism. The streets around Japan's Parliament and the American Embassy were a sea of Red, Communist-style flags. The surging mob sang songs and at times listened to harrangues oy ssocianst members of Parli ament and representatives of Japan's leftist Anti-Nuclear Bomb Council. The situation around Kishi's home looked serious, but police said they had no plans for. reinforcements.
They threw up a barricade behind Kishi's gate. The students cut all roads into the area, claiming they were determined to prevent the premier from keeping an appointment with" Hagerty an appointment Kishi denied having. The mob roared and chanted for Kishi to come out. Like all other leftist elements in Japan and some conservatives they want the premier to resign and dissolve Parliament to void the new U.S.-Japan security alliance before it becomes law June 19. Hagerty was closeted earlier Saturday with Foreign Ministry officials reportedly making drastic revisions in Eisenhower's Japanese schedule June with the emphasis on providing more security for the President.
Changes planned, to insure the President's safety, include cancelling of a golf match with Kishi. A news conference also was reported out and the President's speech at Parliament is expected to be canceled. AUTO-TOURISTS! TAKE LAKE MICHIGAN GUT WllwwikM, Wia. Muskegon, Mich. (doutf to DefcWtf Season open May 25th $ov 240 mil of driving Enjoy Clipper hospitality Spacious decks, beautiful lounges.
Outside bedrooms with toilets, children's play- room, free movies, TV, dancing, fine food and refreshments at reasonable prices. In Battle Creek. Security National Bank Bldg. WO 2-6 2 S6 Muskegon Tlrket Office and Dock, "The Mart" Telephone: FArkway 2-3679 S.3. MILWAUKEE annum LOWER MK'JtltiAV (U.S.
Weather Bureau Sratterrd sbowera or ttiundrrohowers tonight and Sunday afternoon. Little chang In temperature. BATTLE CREEK AREA (Municipal Weather Station) Mostly cloudy with scattered late aiter-n and evening showers and thunder-showers. Low tonight, high Sunday. 15.
Sunday partly cloudy, with chance of lata afternoon or evening showers. Southerly winds 10 to 15 m.p.h.. diminishing somewhat tonight and becoming northerly 8 to IS m.p.h. Sunday. Grand Rapids 82 65 Houghton 63 49 Jacksonville SO 67 Kansas City 9.
73 Lansing 62 Los Angeles 74 60 Marquette 69 41 Memphis 90 72 Miami Beach 71 Milwaukee 73 63 Minneapolis 75 56 Omaha 71 62 Pellston 77 Phoenix 98 72 Pittsburgh 7S 60 St. Louis S9 72 San Francisco 69 S3 Sault Ste. Marie 74 Seattle 74 SO Tampa 91 61 Traverse City 81 64 Washington 77 67 four or five shots were fired at the group, Bond said. Police arrested the trio mo ments later. They were charged with robbery, inflicting injury while committing a crime, and auto banditry.
Patricia told police they committed the robberies for "kicks." "I wanted to get into trouble," Patricia said. "I'm a typical juvenile delinquent from a broken home." How Smart Are You? (let each member of your family write down his or her own anawera or it at achool iet each pupil write down the answers to each question. Of the 10 questions four correct answers Is a fair average for adults, three for children under 12. The correct answer! will be found on News Notes page.) 1. How many watts to a kilowatt? 2.
What is the longest tributary of the Mississippi River? 3. Are kittens blind when born? 4. Was Noah Webster the brother of Daniel Webster? 5. Is the plural of spoonful 6. Ethan Allen was leader of "the Mountain Boys" in the Revolutionary War? 7.
On what street in Washington, D.C. is the official residence of the President? 8. What is the Navy's nickname for an aircraft carrier? 9. Which is lowest in intelligence; a moron, idiot, or an imbecile? 10, Where does a child go when sent to the Land of Nod? PER ANNUM EFFECTIVE JULY Isr, 1960 AND LOAN ASSOCIATION 15 CAPITAL N.E. PHONE W0 8-6191 V5 uV TO BERLIN (UPD Paul Ver-ner, Communist boss of East Berlin, said the Reds will "solve the Berlin problem" next spring, or sooner, if they get extra angry at the West.
In Communist parlance, "solving the Berlin problem" means eliminating (Continued from Page One.) past columns of demonstrators carrying Japanese lanterns. The demonstration outside Kishi's residence was staged by Zengakuren, the radical leftist student group that helped be-seige Hagerty yesterday4 Only 300 police were present to deal with the ugly crowd at Kishi's house. Yesterday the police admitted they had been caught by surprise without enough men at the airport, prompting fears about the ability of Japanese security forces to control leftist crowds when Eisenhower arrives. Convicted (Continued from Page One.) "A formal study of the possibility of setting up a board for the sole purpose of handling cases of this kind is war ranted." Pecho, 41, a former Lansing factory worker, had been imprisoned since he was convicted in 1954 in the death of his wife. A shotgun blast killed her.
Pecho said she slew herself. The state claimed" she couldn't have. Gov. Williams pardoned Pecho yesterday. The gQvernor quoted the parole board as saying it was "of the opinion that Mr.
Pecho would not likely have been found guilty if the jury had heard all the evidence presented to us." Williams added: "The parole board, in its report to me, stated that a majority of the board recommended a commutation rather than a pardon. If Mr. Pecho is innocent, as. I believe him to be, then commutation is not a sufficient remedy and a full pardon is the only, adequate answer." Pecho used to work at' an auto plant in Lansing and Edward Delt, president of Lodge 60 of the International Die Sinkers Conference, said $392 had been collected and de posited for Pecho. He said Pecho was a good worker and that the union would ask the company to give him his job back.
Pecho was met by his daughters, Judith, 17, and Janet, 16, and some other relatives. Pecho said he would live with a broth er-in-law in Lansing until he gets established. A son, Law rence, 19, is a soldier at Fort Belvoir, Va. Pecho received a 15 to 20 year prison sentence upon conviction in the death of his wife, Eleanor. Jack W.
Warren, Ingham County prosecutor who repre sented the state in a parole board hearing for Peeho in April, said "It is difficult to un derstand how such a decision could be reached as to free Pecho. Sate Sen. Paul Younger (R Lansing) county prosecutor at the time of the trial, called the governor's action "immature and irresponsible. County SOCIETY KNOW? Judge Meats Out Justice ATLANTA UP) A restaurant customer's appetite proved his undoing in Municipal Court. The customer was charged with ordering a steak in a restaurant and refusing to pay for it.
He told Judge James Webb yesterday the management said customers did not have to pay unless they liked the food. "Did youMike the steak?" Webb asked. "No." the customer said. "Did you eat it all?" the judge persisted. The customer admitted he did.
The judge assessed a 30-day sentence and suspended it provided the customer paid the $4.50 for the steak. The customer paid. Saves Kitten with all the petting and attention, but when curious people crowded about the cage, Maggie gripped the little creature as tight as she could. "Something had to be done to make Maggie loosen her grasp," said Hannah. "So I put a mirror in her cage.
That did it. When Maggie saw her reflection she let the kitten go and began to primp, as all females will." West Berlin. Verner told a Communist convention yesterday that Nikita Khrushchev's statement that no action would be taken against West Berlin until after a new summit meeting didn't mean the West could postpone action indefinitely. Fredericksbun Va. Eighteen days later the bodies of the mother and Susan were found in a shallow grave near Annapolis, Md.
"The father had been shot and bludgeoned, the others apparently struck over the head. Several days ago Peter Her kos, a Dutch telepathist, was brought into the mystery murder case by Dr. F. Regis Ries-man, psychiatrist at St. Elizabeth Hospital in Washington, D.C.
Herkos led police to the trash collector, who last May had been questioned about the Jackson case. The trash collector whose name is withheld by law agreed to enter a state mental hospital at Marion The trash collector's wife took part in the commitment proceedings. Herkos, who lives in Miami, claims he has "vibrations" which can pick up brain waves permeating the scene of a crime. SORRY, WRONG NUMBER BEIRUT, (UPD Residents here will have to stop calling Beirut's emergency police force by the name of Squad Sixteen. Sixteen was the squad's tele phone number.
It has been changed to 18. Bulletins NEW YORK UPl The New York Post said today that Adlai E. Stevenson is ready to announce that he is available for a draft as the Democratic presidential candidate. In a dispatch from Washington, Post correspond-end Robert G. Spivack said the twice-defeated presidential candidate is "preparing a letter to Airs.
Eleanor Roosevelt making it completely clear that he is available for a presidential draft GREELEY, Colo. (EPI) Four persons were found dead their light plane near this northern Colorado town. The state patrol said the single-engine Piper Tri-Pacer apparently crashed sometime during the night, when severe thunderstorms swept the area. Weld County Coroner Ross Adamson withheld identification of the four pending notification of next of kin. LONDON ftlPB The Soviet Tass news agency said today that two Soviet ships had been "buzzed" by an American airplane and dc stroyer recently.
Tass said one incident took place last Wednesday in the Mediterranean. Casfro Charges (Continued from Page One.) "act of treachery" oriented by the U.S. State Department. Part of 'Plot' The refusal was part of a plot to destroy his revolution by leaving Cuba without oil, he said, and warned that the companies should "rectify their decision or accept the consequences." "Let them' not say later that the government attacked, expropriated or confiscated them," he added. The revolutionary prime minister protested that the American Esso and Texaco and the British shell companies were retiring their personnel, technicians and funds "in total disrespect for the laws of the nation." Might Not Seize He indicated his government might not resort at once to seizure.
The foreign oil companies, he said, acted after consultations in Washington with the idea that the Cuban government would instantly move against them. Ecco, Texaco and Shell recently informed the Havana government they could not accept an offer to refine 900,000 tons of Russian crude oil being received by Cuba under a trade pact with Moscow. The National Wildlife Feder-1 ation offers scholarships up to' $1,000 in conservation educa-j tion. i Mind-Reader Leads Police To Murder Case Suspect apolis, said. "I don't know how this all started," she said.
"It just happened and I feel miser able now." Police said Patricia admitted five robberies, three of -them early yesterday. Officers said she was accompanied on the holdup spree yesterday which netted only $30 by Helen Sarkine, 22, and Charles Allison, 19. One of the victims, John R. Norris, 21, Indianapolis, was shot in the back. He was reported in serious condition with a bullet wound in his right shoulder and lung.
'She's Nervous "This girl came up behind me and stuck a gun in my back," Norris said. She said, 'Give me xour When I did, a man said, 'You better start running, she's awfully "When I did, she shol me," Norris said. Shortly before the Norris robbery, paratrooper Jerry Bar ber, 18, was. held up by the trio, police said. Barber, home on leave from Fort Campbell, identified the suspects and said they took $29 from him.
Hold Up Students Polica said the gang, in their final robbery, stopped a group of high school students and demanded their money. The students were walking home from a party when a car drove up and a blonde woman ordered them to hand over their Wallets. But One Of the Stu dents, John E. Bond, 17, struck the girl with a pop bottle. The car then sped away and Where to Go, When BIJOU "The Fugitive Kind" 1:00, 3:00.
5:03. 7:18. 9:30. MICHIGAN "Leech Woman" 1:00. 3:50.
6:45, 9:40 and "Bridea of Dracula" 2:25. 5:20. 8:15. B. C.
AUTO THEATRE "Aladdin and Hia Lamp," "Man with the Gun. 9:35: "The Devil's Hairpin," "Cop Hater." 12:45. WEST POINT AUTO THEATRE "Gun Fight at Dodpe City," "Hell and High Water." 10:45: "Flame of the Islanda," 11:30, and "Joy Ride." 1:00. OPEN DAILY FROM 9:00 A.M. UNTIL DARK WABER NURSERY INC.
871 Capital, S.W. WO 4-4651 For information, contact Wisconsin Michigan Steamship Company, Muskegon, Michigan ar rw AwWis DON ROYAL JR. ill A 1 Um7 Jf a- I is holding their annual, meeting HART HOTEL TUESDAY, JUNE 14th, 12:45 P.M. Members and Friends of the Society are Cordially, Invited to Attend FAIRFAX, Vi-enna, trash collector has agreed to submit to a series of mental tests after police were led to him by a mind reader investigating the unsolved murder of a family of four. On Jan.
11, 1959, Carroll V. Jackson, 29-year-old truck driver, his wife, Mildred, 27, and their two daughters, Susan Ann, 4, and Janet Carroll, 17 months, disappeared while on an auto trip. Their car was found abandoned on a country road. The family had been heading home to Apple Grove, Va. Bodies Found On March 4, 1959.
the bodies of Jackson and Janet were found in a brush pile near IQUIRER NEWS 60ta Year or PuDllcatlon Published week day evening! and Sunday mornings by Federated Publications, Battle Creek. Mich. Telephone. WO 4-7161 Full report of the Associated Press. United Press International.
JP News Fhoto Service, JV Newsfeatures. JP Wlrephoto, JP Pnotofax and the Newspaper Enterprise Assn. (The Associated Press la exclusively entitled to tne use for republication of 11 news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein.) SUBSCRIPTION RATES By earner delivery: 45 cents per week. J2.00 per month. $5.85 for three months.
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ri 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ii 1 1 il PRINTING! AS YOU PREFER IT OFFSET AND LETTER PRESS PHONE WO 5-0525 LAWSON PRINTERS 685 W. COLUMBIA DID YOU To be have an alert awareness of the wishes of others and to see that those wishes WORGESS SAYS: Jim Jones would not be passed; He bragged his car's endurance; He passed six cars, with backward glance His wife has his insurance. are this is a part of our creed. Roval Fi oyai runerai HAS BEEN TRUSTED WITH 3 MILLION PRESCRIPTIONS SINCE 1926 1A good reason to have Speaker's compound your next prescription. 2 parking or walking necessary, you don't even need a ear! 3 Simply ask your doctor to phono Speaker's to have your prescription delivered.
AJt you have a Security Charge please mention this; we can arrange this on delivery, at tho door, or at our store, it you wish to stop in. THE SPEAKER LABEL ON YOUR PRESCRIPTION IS LIKE THE WORD STERLING ON SILVER! SPEAKERS ARE OPEN EVERY DAY OF THE YEAR SICKNESS KNOWS NO HOLIDAY SPEAKER'S: Battle Creek's Professional Prescription Store! ITT I I-JA6BU nomeinc. 1 281 UPTON AVENUE PHONE WO 4-7315 BATTLE CREEK WORGESS INSURANCE AGENCY 508 Post Bldg. WO 2-5468 IlillllllilliUllillllillillllllllllilllllll.