European Stars And Stripes (Newspaper) - June 20, 1962, Darmstadt, Hesse Page 6 � the stars and stripes wednesday june 20, 1964 of Ai s t = cutting Back work forces Chicago a some rail Road have begun laying off non operating employees in a move that rail management says will compensate for recently increased la Bor costs. Other railroads indicated they who begin cutbacks of no Noper rating employees soon. Still other lines said they will study the possibility of layoffs. Hall management gave As the major reason for the layoffs a 10,2 cent an hour wage increase agreed on june 5 by the railroads and unions representing 450,000 non operating workers. Three Chicago based. Railroads plan to reduce the number of their non operating workers a total of about 1300,Wayne Johnston president of the Illinois Central Railroad said we be already begun a process of reducing no operating employment by ?50 men. Sub million Cost w ,3ve1re going to Lay off enough Lumen to compensate for the wage increase he stated. Another com Pany spokesman said the wage hike will Cost Illinois Central $3,8million Rock Island line reported twas laying off 300 workers to compensate for wage increases i estimated at 52.4 million. A. Ellis Johnson president said began month ago. He said he expected to Tal layoffs to reach 400 or More within a spokesman for the Milwaukee Road said the company has begun laying off employees and is also conducting a study of the problem to determine whether further furloughs Are spokesman said the line expects to drop 300 or More to make up an estimated additional Cost i wages to the company of nearly f2l5 million. Other railroads executives of other railroads reached in Chicago made the Fol lowing reports Northern Pacific officers said 54nonoperatlng employees had been dropped thus far and further cuts were St Louis the Missouri Pacific announced it has started laying off workers to offset the $3.3 million addition to its payroll. The Road declined to name the exact num Ber expected to be Cuttle St Louis san Francisco rail Way announced similar plans. A Santa be official in Chicago said higher labor costs and slump in car loading May cause some Force adjustments there was no estimate of when or How Many adjustments might be made. Would multiply catastrophically dec biologist says Artera War. ,1may takeover new York up a Johns Hopkins University biologist said Here there is a possibility of in sects taking Over the world in the Wake of a nuclear War. In a paper read at a scientists conference on survival a h. Bentley Glass a member ol1 the advisory commission on biology and Medicine of the atomic Energy commission said insects could multiply catastrophically it a. Nuclear holocaust caused the death of said the United states would be reduced to a loth rate Power incapable of Industrial re habilitation in the event of a nuclear could save it even u shelters effective against blast heat and radiation have been provided for the entire human popu lation unless shelters also were lutherans of merger Minneapolis Minn up delegates to the lutheran free Church annual conference vote to merge with the american lutheran Church. Pee Daing at 103lots Carrizales a Cherokee Indian who says he s 103 Yean old shows Tola physical dexterity at the Dea Monea Iowa Myca. Marx Azalea says he walks 25 Miles a Day. And he has these suggestions for staying Young Don t smoke and drink work Bard sit utile drink Biz glasses of milk a Day keep an Active inter est in the opposite sex and deep Only four hours a night a photo Jackie Mamie win meet again plan culture Center Washington a parked car some picnic objects along Shore and an empty inflatable raft led to the discovery thata family of three and a neighbor boy had drowned in a murky Pond Fuller m. Lovett about 56, of Rural Bay county and his wife Lottie. 47, apparently trying to Rescue their son Ronald 9, and Donald Curtis 10, drowned with the youngsters in the Pond beside a freeway under construction. The bodies of Lovett and his wife were recovered still fully clothed the two boys wore Bath ing suits. Ervin Baker 27, who lives neat the Pond said he drove by about 3 . And saw a parked car and some people in the water. Baker said he drove by again two hours later and saw the car still there but no one in the found picnic objects shoes some coins and a woman s purse along the Shore and saw an inflatable raft and a red object float ing in the 150-by-400-foot Pond. The red object was mrs. Lovett Blouse. All four bodies were recovered the Pond was in what la called a borrow pit where fill dirt is scooped out for the construction . 10 freeway. What a Lovely mess to be trapped in new York a Newsweek Magazine said astronaut John h. Glenn or. Has run into a bizarre financial problem since returning from space. His checking account is a reporting from Arlington vs., Newsweek said that when Glenn writes checks to pay his Bills admiring suppliers refuse to oath them preferring to keep them As i film up f cent the tee men not Hod to in trac com won real Sheb we per act Ort ets Agato then t in Toma i Cor pic1 sex Cdr res Bure de Misa amur the a of m Behr a w to Nie 1, it to Catt e Iati
