LandOwner, that is correct. You hear many ways for removing ticks, like putting liquid soap on them, holding a match or cigarette to them, but a very small pair of tweezers is best. There are even tick removal tools made for removing ticks. I'm not sure how well these tools work, because I've never tried them. I do know that a small pointed pair of tweezers work well. The reason for not wanting to squeeze the tick is, because the Lyme bacteria is in the ticks gut and squeezing it while its attached can force the gut contents into the bite area.
They say it takes around 24 hours for the spirochetes (lyme bacteria) to move from the ticks gut through its mouth parts into the bite wound. So removing the tick as soon as possible is important. From what I know now about lyme disease. If I ever had a deer tick attached. I would remove it and send it to one of the labs that can test a tick for the lyme bacteria. Do not rely on waiting to see if the bulls eye rash appears, because forty percent never see a bulls eye rash. I didn't. Just because you don't see a bulls eye rash around the bite, does not mean the bacteria has not entered your blood stream. If you did see the rash, and or get flu like symptoms within a week after knowing a tick was attached. Get to a doctor that knows how to treat lyme disease and diagnose it.
Many doctors do not know much about lyme disease, and treat it how insurance companies tell them to. If caught early lyme disease can be cured. The general cure is two weeks of antibiotics, but many times this is not enough. I would want at least a month of treatment. I'm not a doctor, but I know more about lyme disease than many doctors do. Please don't take this as me being boastful, this is something I have experienced in just talking to general practitioners.
Once the bacteria is in your system for awhile it can lie dormant and become asymptomatic, and it can become very resistant to antibiotic treatment.