Friday, June 1' 5, 1973 THE SUAAMER DAILY Page Nine. Passengers stranded on I tramwa) ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. I - Thirty-two sightseers, including a three-month-old baby, remained traped in a cable car dangling 650 feet above ground on the wes- tern side of the Sandi Mountains. Officials said there was no danger of the car's falling. AN ARMY helicopter from Ft. Sill, Okla., failed in its first at- tempt to realign the tramway's main basul cable to alaow the car to move again. Eight other passengers, who had been stranded in the Sandia Peak Aerial Tramway's other car at a lower altitude, were low- ered 250 feet by rope just after noon. They had spent the night traped in the cable car. But the lawer car's twa spur- star's remained an baard, await- ing another effort by the helicop- ter to get the cable realigned. "WE'RE SATISFIED, except that we'd like to move . . ." re- ported the operator in the top car. "We're out of chicken, but we're happy and warm." Among the passengers a t il l trapped was three month old Marian Morrow and her parents Mr. and Mrs. Carey Morrow. Tramway officials. said the ac- cident was a "one-in-a-million" occurrence. They said the main cable used to haul the cars jump- ONE_- TIME ONLY!!! this SUNDAY NITE over n ed its tracks during a thunder- storm late Wednesday. THE TWO 7,000-pound, 60-pas- senger capacity cable cars haul sightseers from the base term- inal at 6,559-feet elevation to the summit terminal at 10,378 feet where a restaurant and ski area is located. A view of hund- reds of square miles of desert and mountains unfolds at the top. During the night, more than 600 pounds of supplies, including food, water, portable tailets and a bottle warmer for the infant, were hauled into the stranded cars by rope. Clark Speakman, member of a iountain volunteer Albuquerque search and rescue unit, described the sit- iation: 'They've just got a cable lapped over another one. They can't move the cars until they get it up. There's nothing dam- aged, nothing hurt and absolute- ly no danger whatsoever. There's just one piece of cable misplac- ed." ONE OF THE rescued passeng- ers, Rosemary Sheldon, of Kings- ville, Tex., said she and the sev- en others "had a ball" during their predicament. Another rescued passenger, Linda Caraglio of Houston, Tex., said, "We sang and danced, made up stories and told jokes." Jewish dissidents detained MOSCOW (UPI) - Secret police detained 10 Moscow Jewish activists Wednesday and warned them not to cause trouble during the forthcoming visit to the United States by Communist party leader Leonid I. Brezhnev, Jewish sources said today. The Jews also were told that their chances of getting permission to emigrate to Israel would be improved if they did not demonstrate in connection with the visit, which starts Monday, the sources said. They said the Jews were warned that if they attempted to demon- strate they would be arrested for the duration of the visit. SOME 40 PERSONS were stranded when two cable cars on the Sandia Peak Tramway got stuck during a thunderstorm, Wednes- day night. The cable car system - billed as "America's longest tramway" - goves to the top of 10,300-foot Sandria Peak near Albuquerque, New Mexico. Senate to press for bomb halt WASHINGTON (/P) - Senate critics of the Nixon administra- tion's Southeast Asia policy vow- ed yesterday to push ahead with attempts to cut off funds for U.S. bombing of Cambodia despite Dr. Henry Kissinger's appeal for "a finite amount of time" to achieve a new agreement there. And Senate Republican Lead- er Hugh Scott said he has reach- ed a "personal decision" to drop support of the bombing after the end of June. Sen. Thomas Eagleton, (D-Mo.), sponsor of a Senate-passed amendment directed mainly at U.S. bombing in Cambodia and Laos that is currently beforena mittee, Senate-House conference Senate-Mouse conference com- mittee, saidhe feels even more strongly after hearing Kiosinger that his amendment is needed to stop the bombing. This wFIPKaRD $2 .00 8:30 FRI.-SAT. Bill Vonaver Make This a Medieval Summer 4th Annual Medieval Festival OPEN MEETING TRY-OUTS ORGANIZATION 3529 SAB Friday, June 15 7-9 p.m. PLAYS - MUSIC - DANCING 4 ... dazzling ... hilarious . a virtuoso on three in- struments. He simply has to be one of the best guitarists in the country today . y -Mich. Daily 1411Kill 31TRjT 1&I1'IASI goes blatantly commercial with a concert by DAVID BROMBERG AND HIS BAND to kick off a fund-raising drive to save the Ark. 2 different shows! $2.50 each 9 & 11 P.M. 1411 Kill STRET 111SI Alpha Waves Biofeedback Monitoring Device " COMPLETE VOLUME AND THRESHOLD CONTROL. * BAND PASS SWITCH FOR THETA, ALPHA, BETA FREQUENCIES. . CALIBRATED GAIN CONTROL. " BATTERY STRENGTH INDICATOR. * DURABLE ELCTRODES WITH HEADBAND. UNASSEMBLED KITS with schematic, easy-to-follow instructions-$60 ASSEMBLED KITS with warranty-$85 Send check or money order to BIOMATIIIC COMPANY 809 Hill St.-Suite 2 ANN ARBOR, MICH. 48104 ntti" ;J . :f: fL -j,{ .ifr^ .j% :%J Glass, Ceramics, Photography JUNE 13th-24th at the UNION GALLERY 1st Floor, Michigan Union Work done by: Poultry Glass Studio, Detroit Noell S. Lemmen, Lansing S David Mueller, Ann Arbor ~~Opening ReceptionFrd yE e i g u f5I7-0 PM New Gallery Hours: Tues.-Sat. 10-5; closed Sun. & Mon. . 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