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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (March 29, 1957)
G apital AJourna THE WEATHER. MOSTLY CLOUDY wtlh scatlerod howers tonight, Saturday. Little change In temperature. Low ( Bight, 42; high Saturday, 60. 2 SECTIONS 20 Page$ 69th Year, No. 75 Salem, Oregon, Friday, March 29, 1957 Entered ai I ' nutter at Sa 'Key' Bill Wins by 4 In Senate School Fund Plan Passes After 2 " Hour Debate The Oregon Senate , passed 17-13 Friday the "key district" bill to redis tribute basic school money to school districts. The , lull goes to the House. The vote came after two hours frt of debate. i 1 The split was on geographical (.: . lines, with all the senators from Portland and Eastern Oregon vot ing against it. Sponsors argued it is vitally needed to equalize educational op , portunities in all districts. Recommittal Refused . But the opponents said it would seriously handicap the districts in Portland and Eastern Oregon by giving them less state money. Before the final vote, the Senate rejected 17-13 a motion to send the bill back to the Senate Educa tion Committee for further study. ' v Sen. Alfred H. Corbett ID), Portland, called the bill "a shot gun aimed at Portland, with pel lets scattering to other districts. Sen. Rudie Wilhelm (R), Port land, opened the attack. He said he favors the basic prin ciple that the state money should V be redistributed in order that every school district should be able to provide equal educational opportunity. Robin Hood Reminder But he said the bill reminds him of the days of Robin Hood "when the rich were robbed and the mon ey distributed to the poor." Sen. Monroe Swcetland (D), Mil waukie, chairman of the Senate ' Education Committee, which voted 4-3 for the bill, said ' Edu cational leaders of the country re gard something like the key dis trict bill as the best way to equal ize school taxes." Sponsors of the bill were confi dent they had enough votes to get . it through the Senate, but they said they wouldn't object if the House made minor amendments. Under the bill, Portland is the key district. Enough money would be given to other districts so that they could provide educational op portunities equal to those in Port land. The Portland School District es timated that the bill would cost it 4 million dollars a year. Many Eastern Oregon districts also would lose. (Continued on Page S, Column 5) Site of School Decided Upon At Mt. Angel MT. ANGEL (Special) Final decision has been made on the lo cation for the new boys high school near Mt. Angel, the Rt. Rev. Damian Jentges, OSB, an nounced Friday. Within the next few days deeds for the purchase of some 34 acres of property now owned by Albert Ebner will be signed. The prop erty includes a house. 11 is situated just outside the Mt. Angel city lim its on Marquam road. No price was announced. Extra property not required for the building site probably will be used to develop agricultural inter ests of the students. Construction will begin as soon as plans submitted by Louis Srhmerber, Salem architect, are approved. The building is expected to be finished in the fall of 19311. Since the school is being built for the benefit of students in the area, Mt. Angel and nearby com munities will be asked to contri bute to financing the project. Navy Boasts $150 Rochet Can KO Jet CHINA LAKE, Calif. OP The Navy announced Friday a new rocket - propelled missile named Zuni. and said the $150 non nuclear weapon can overtake a jet plane. An economy model among high explosives, Zuni can be used in air-to-air and air-to-ground at tack, said the Bureau of Ord nance, which made these claims for the folding fin. solid propel lant rocket: It can knock down a 10-million-dollar bomber, demolish solid con crete pillboxes and destroy tanks. lis launching device, enfolding four rockets, develops ultra-high velocity. The launcher can be stowed and operated on a plane and. afjer firing the missile, is easily jettisoned, thus increasing the plane's speed. Aside from cosn !;s. the S lnch Zuni saved money on pack ing, saves loading space, saves personnel formerly necessary for loading and is safer because it requires less handling. It has been approved for operational use in lij, fleet. Salem Heights Gets New lE..-: -v.-; j Fire-fighting equipment of the new Sa lem Heights fire station stands ready to go if called out in the South Salem area. The new concrete building is on Sunnyside First Convoy In Suez; Arabs Fire on Train By United Press A convoy sailed through the Suez Canal today for the first time since the triple invasion of Egypt five months ago, but a Jordani machineeun attack on an Israeli freight train ended hopes the per iod of. Mideast crisis was over. As Israeli military spokesman said macmnegun lire was opened on the train Thursday night from the Jordan strongpoint of Talkar em, 10 miles north of Qatqilya on the Israeli frontier, seem? of a ma jor Israeli retaliatory raid last Oct. 10-11. , No casualties were reported, but the attack north of Jerusalem where Jordan bulges into former Palestine territory was expected to inflame Israeli feelings, already tense because of recent ambushes and minor Fedayeen attacks. Ten ships entered the 101-mile- Iong Suez Canal at Suez shortly after Egypt suddenly declared the canal open to big ships. The ac tion was timed to come before the ; West could organize opposition to Egypt's demand for payment first and passage later. Egypt demanded and received full dues from each ship before it was allowed to sail from Suez: into the canal. NEW YORK un-The New York ! Times said today that Egyptian President Nasser's new plan for operation of the Suez Canal in dicates Egypt might let the World i Court decide whether Israel can use the Egyptian - controlled , waterway. The Times in a dispatch from Washington published the text of an Egyptian memorandum the paper said had been sent from Nasser's government to the U.S. government on future operation of the canal. Plane Crackup Hospitalizes 2 OSC Students Al Wood. 21, Salem, and Jerry Long. 20. Roseburg. were hospital ized at the Good Samaritan Hos pital, Corvallis. Thursday night after their light plane crash-landed at the Corvallis Airport. Wood, who is the son of Dr. and Mrs. John R. Wood. 1555 5th St.. was the pilot of the plane. Both he . and Long are Oregon State College students. Their plane, a Cessna 120, was owned by the Salem Pilots Assn. At Good Samaritan Friday morning, attendants said the con dition of both Wood and Long was not critical and that Jhey were in for observation and X rays. There had riot yet bn a reading of the X-rays to determine whether there were any fractures. Wood's parents were with him in Corvallis Friday. The plane, according to Asso ciated Press reports, cracked up in a swampy area about a mile from the airport hangar when Wood missed the landing strip at the airport. Both youths were re ported to have walked to the hangar. Ron Hardman of the Salem Pilots Assn. after returning from Corvallis Friday morning to check on the accident, said the plane was a total loss, and Wood anri rtna u.-ar lnrkv In ha altvp The accident occurred after dark , and there was fog in the airport area. M .ur tX hi IE v ,m H ' . South Salem Firemen Occupy New Quarters The Liberty-Salem Heights Rural Fire Department has a new home. It recently moved to its new location on Sunnyside road. The cost of the fire house Archbishop to Talk Truce in ;S-,:'-..- ' Only us, MAHE, Seychelle Islands Ml Archbishop Makarios told a news conference Friday he is not pre pared to take part in any political talks with Britain until he is al lowed to return to Cyprus. The black-bearded Greek Ortho dox patriarch said the question of Cyprus was not simply one ot enosis (union with Greece) but of the self-determination of the Cy priot people. British Colonial Secretary Alan Lennox-Boyd announced Thursday that Makarios. who has been ac cused of leading the campaign of violence on Cyprus against British rule, was being released from his year-long exile here, and would be allowed to go anywhere but Cy prus, i Boy Hit by Car DALLAS (Special) Lloyd Fa- ver, 8-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Ted Faver of Willamina, is being treated In Bartcll's Hospital here for scalp and facial lacera tions after being struck down by a car near his home Thursday night. His condition is reported to be good. FEARED DEAD 4 Iran Kidnapers Abandon Woman TEHRAN, Iran (UP) A U.S. official reported from the wild country southeast of Tehran today that the missing wife of a slain American has been abandoned by the bandits who kidnaped her. Clark Gregory, chief of the U. S. Point 4 mission to Iran, report ed by telephone from the town of Zahedan that Mrs. Anita Carroll, Issaquah, Wash., no longer was with the four fleeing bandits who killed her husband, another Ameri can and two .Iranians in an am bush in remote Baluchistan last Sunday. "There is only a 50-50 chance she is still alive," Gregory said. Gregory is on the scene direct inc the search by more than 1,000 Iranian police and army troops. Zahcdan is the point nearest the ambush site, 800 miles southeast cA Tehran which has communica tions with the capital. Iranian officials reported earlier that the kidnapers were fleeing across the Red Stone Mountains cl Baluchistan toward the Pakis tan frontier in a desperate attempt to evade the tightening police net. Gregory said the gendarmerie at first lost the bandits' trail and then picked it up again Thursday night after a heavy rainstorm. He said the manhunt was being conducted over "the wildest coun try I've ever seen.' Officials feared that Mrs. Carroll might vanish without a trace, as did another American, Peter Wi- nan'- and Swedish woman. Wmant. nrhw of the late (ambassador to Great Britain, John Fire Station road, just off Highway 99. An open house will be held when the upstairs living quar ters arc finished. (Capital Journal Photo) was $46,000. The building is of concrete construction. The quarters house four pieces of fire fighting equipment. They are a Mack pumper, a UMl pumper, which is also used for fighting grass fires, a tanker and a salvage truck. ..The, house has a meeting quar ters with a kitchen for the fire men and an upstairs apartment. It is planned to have someone live there and be on duty at all times. The district is bounded on the north by the city limits on the east by Pringlc road, on the south by a portion of Wiltsey road and on the west by the ridge of the hill east of Croisan Creek road. The Liberty Salem Heights, Four Corners. Salem and Keizer fire houses all have the same telephone number. When a fire call comes in, a trained dispatch er connects the right district. When the phone rings, the siren sounds and the doors open. Those within hearing distance come and take off with the trucks. Then the phone system which dispaiches the other firemen goes into effect. Norval Ilirons is the fire chief. Serving on the board of directors are Fred Fagg. Lou Kurth. 'yle Snider, Don Dufficld and Ted Thompson. Weather Details Maximum yesterday, 65: minimum today, 49. Total 34-hour precipita tion: .SI; for month: 7.41; normal, 3.S'i. Season prrrlpttatfon , 26.27; nor mal, 33.2)1. Rivrr heleht, .16 Ort. tltrport by U. S. Weather Ilureaii.) MRS. ANITA CARROLL G. Winant, vanished with his fian cee last June on the nearby Af ghanistan side of the vast Baluch istan desert mass while traveling toward Iran. No trace of the couple has been found and it is feared tribesmen killed young Winant anrMcidnaped his companion. Miss Gunnar Gun nison of Sweden. The case bore a close parallel lo the Carroll ambush, i V AFL - Beck limiCTED ON 2 COUNTS Portland's Mayor Schrunk 'Immediate 9 Trial ' PORTLAND Iffl Mayor Terry Schrunk, indicted Thursday night on charges of taking a bribe and of perjury, said Friday he would demand "an immediate trial and I shall also request that the attorney general personally prosecute the case." Hof f a, Lawyer Plead Innocent In Bribe Case WASHINGTON W .lames R. (Jimmy) Hoffa, Midwest boss of the Teamsters Union, and Hyman I. Fischbach entered pleas of in nocent Friday to charges ot con spiring and bribing to get secrets of the Senate rackets probers. Their trial was set for May 17. The pleas were entered before U.S. District Judge Richmond B. Keech. . The bouncy Hoffa ' responded, not guilty, your honor," when asked to plead to the indictment. Hschbach, a Miami attorney who at times has served as coun sel to congressional investigating committees, replied simply "not guilty." As Hotta lctt, he told reporters he had no comment other than to repeat what he had said before that he did not want to try the case in the newspapers. Judge Keech continued Hoffa under .a $25,000 bond posted through a bondsman at the time of his' arrest.'- v ' " Fischbach, however, was quired to post a new bond in lieu of the 510,000 bond he posted in Florida. F.dward B. Williams, Hoffa's attorney, asked a "reasonable time" to file motions in the case, saying there were some very complex legal questions that will be raised. M'KeniionWill Sub in As Job Frank McKennon, chief of the division of plant industry since 1935 was named by Gov. Robert D. Holmes today to serve as acting director of the State Department of Agriculture. McKennon will serve in the in terim period between April 1 and the end of the 1957 legislative ses sion, at which time Rep. Robert Steward, Keating Democrat, is scheduled to take over the post. McKennon succeeds J. F. Short, who had agreed to remain on at the request of Gov. Holmes. Last week he asked to be permitted lo leave at the earlier date to take another position. Cramer Found Insane; Faces Second Trial KLAMATH FALLS (UP) Guy Earl Cramer, 7B-year-old welfare recipient, was found innocent by reason ot insanity yesterday in connection with the Jan. slaying of Fred Peterson, 75, county Wel fare Commission chairman. The jury of 10 men and two women deliberated about one hour and 45 minutes. Circuit Judge David R. Vandcn- berg ordered Cramer remanded to the custody of the sheriff. The elderly welfare recipient is sched uled lo go on trial Monday on a charge of .assault with intent to kill in connection with the shoot ing of Mrs. Altha Urquhart, wel fare administrator, on the same day Peterson was shot. Cramer attorneys based their plea by saying their client suffer ed from hallucination and that he claimed that his guardian angel instructed him to "cast lire on thine enemies." Month's Rain Twice Normal It was more of the same In weather Friday for the vatfey, cloudy skies and some rain. And the five-day forecast calls for more showery conditions withc temperatures near normal. The showers were pretty heavy for Salem over Thursday, .63 of inch of rain being measured here for the 24-hour period ending at 10 M a m. Friday. The month's total rainfall up to this morning amount- to 7 43 19 ! normafe jg ttuB) 9 39 inches. CIO From Labor Council Demands Ally. Gen. Robert Y. Thornton has been in charge of the vice probo hero since last summer under governor's directives. The mayor said business would go on as usual at the city hall. Seeks Prosecution by AG -After a five-hour conference with his attorneys, Raymond Kell and Cliff Alterman, Schrunk issued his statement: ' "I welcome the opportunity to prove conclusively my innocence before a court of law. I shall demand an immediate trial, and I shall also request that the attor ney general personally prosecute the case. He is a duly elected public officer, the same as I. These indictments are his respon sibility. 1 am at a loss to understand why this third grand jury indicted me. Two grand juries already had examined the charge and found that there was no basis for it. Since that time, evidence that the charge was a "frame" has been made public. Indicting me on the charge that I took a S500 bribe on a lighted (Continued on Page 5, Column 8) 2,500 Gallons Of Gas Spill On City Street What could have turned into a disaster, but resulted only in the loss oi a large amount of gaso line, occurred Friday morning at the Richfield Oil station at Port land road and Lnna avenue. Breakage of a drain pipe at tached to one of the large storage tanks caused a loss of about 2500 gallons of gasoline that ran out of the tank and covered a large area of ground. Firemen were called and stood by in event of fire, and while at the scene assisted com pany personnel in salvaging gaso line. A crew of firemen remained at the scene most of the forenoon. The capacity of the tank, which is above ground, is nearly 20,000 gallons. It wasn't quite full. While gasoline poured from the broken pipe onto the ground pumps were put to work on the tank and trans ferred a larger quantity to tank trucks. With the assistance of firemen other pumps were applied to gas oline that had lodged in pools on the ground and it is estimated that about 750 gallons of the wasted fuel was pumped into containers. Some of it, it is believed, can be salvaged. Attached to the storage tank was a pipo for draining condens ed moisture. One of the personnel was unscrewing the cap on the pipe when the pipe, which had be come weakened by rust, broke and caused the big spill. Holmcr Appointed as Elections Freeman Holmer, 39. chief of the organization and methods section of the State Finance Department, was appointed Friday as state supervisor of elections. He succeeds Dave O'llara. who forced to retire because he has reached the age of 70. O'lfara has been in state service for 42 years, and has been elec tions supervisor since 1920. Secretary of Slate Mark Hat field announced the appointment. O'Hara will remain on the job until July 1, but he will bo working under Holmer from now on. Holmpr has been with the Fi nance Department for five years. At the same time, he has been on the political science staff of Wil lamette University, He spent the last two years as executive secretary of the Legis lative Interim Committee on Elec tions, which has submitted elec tion reform bills to the Legislature. He is a graduate f Concordia Collrw! and le L'tivtrsKy of Oregon. Hatfield psi this tribute to O'Hara: In the mi of many it is rogrettntle IJiat a public servant so able Dave O'Hara must retire at ". but that is the law 0 has be'O tPB'4 'O Mvi- before him. e-0 uesrt3 Prohe of Teamsters Union and Trial of Prexy Ordered as Possihle Ouster Prelim WASHINGTON (UP) - Council today ordered teamsters boss Dave. Beck to stand trial on charges of "bringing the labor movement into disrepute. In an extraordinary meeting lasting less than two Beck, Back in Seattle, Raps Theft Charges! SEATTLE Ifl-Davc Beck talked for half an hour Inst night, never once mentioned the Fifth or any other amendment and said it was preposterous" to suggest he may have stolen any Teamsters Union funds. It was not, however, in the pres ence of a Senate committee just a crowd of curious newsmen and onlookers who greeted him here upon his return from two days questioning in Washington by the S,cnatc Rackets Investigating Committee.' The reception was much quieter than a Teamsters meeting at Yakima. 130 miles to the cast, where 700 angry members wran gled with Bcck-appointcd officers, then hanged and burned Beck in effigy. In Seattle, the president of the nation's biggest union said he had no complaint on the treatment he received while reluctantly testify ing before the Senate committee. But, he said, such hearings are a "one-way - street" without the protection afforded a man in court of law. Asked about a statement by Sen. McClcllan (D-Ark), head of the Senate committee, that the word "theft" might apply if Bock used union funds without union consent and without repayment in full, Beck snorted It is preposterous and without basis in fact. It is easy for a man in his post to make accusations. In my opinion such langungo Is totally irresponsible." He said he had renaid the money he had' borrowed from the union and before ho was aware his affairs were being Investigat ed. Sen. McClellan's parting re marks that Beck had been "in utter contempt" of the ' Senate committee drew the remark: 'Not in the slightest degree. I have the highest respect for their offices but they cannot intimidate me." Quake Rocks Maine Homes PORTLAND. Maine (UP) - A house-rocking earthquake rumbled through a section of this city to day. Dishes rattled, pictures bounced off walls, chairs moved and hous es swayed. Jtobcrt Dole. Cape liznbelh, Maine, a retired mete orologist said it w a s "without doubt a small, localized earth quake." No serious damage was reporicn. Supervisor "A. A. FREEMAN HOLMER "We will feel his absence keenly. It is fortunate that there will be time for a smooth transition to occur and in Freeman Holmer, we have an intelligent, dedicated public servant who will adminis ter the division in the samo im partial way that is characteristic Atf Save O'Hara." s Sus The AFL-CIO Executive Hours tne council also: Suspended Beck AFL- CIO vice president. Ordered an Investigation ol the J.540,mw-membcr Teamsters Un ion to determine whether it "is substantially dominated or con trolled by corrupt influences." Beck Not at Session Beck, a vice president of the AFL-CIO, has refused on grounds of possible self incrimination to tell the Senate Rackets Commit tee whether he "misappropriated" more than $.122,000 of teamsters funds. Ho did not attend today's council session. The council is made up of AFL- CIO President George Meany, Secretary-Treasurer William Schnitz- ler, and 26 vice presidents, includ ing Beck. The council directed Meany to file charges against Beck as a vice president of the federation "for his action in bringing the la bor movement into disrepute and liis failure to explain the many charges brought against him re garding the mishandling of union funds." Beck was suspended pending the disposition of these charges. The council also directed the AFL-CIO's Ethical Practices Com mittee "to investigate the situation in the teamsters - to determine whether or not the Teamsters Un ion is substantially dominated or controlled by corrupt influences." The action against Beck was un precedented 'in the AFL and CIO in that the action involved an out ccr so high in the labor movement, The Teamsters Union is the fourth to be investigated by the AFL-CIO Ethical fractices Committee- on charges of corruption. Suspension Possible If the Ethical Practices Com mittee and the Executive Council should find the teamsters to be dominated by corruption, it could lend to suspension of the union from the AFL-CIO, Three small unions, the Distill ery Workers, tho Laundry Work ers, and the Allied Industrial Workers Unions, are presently on notice to "clean house" or be thrown out of the AFL-CIO on cor ruption charges, .. Unon a finding mat a union is dominated by corruption the coun- il has authority to direct It to take certain steps to clean house and to suspend it from the AFL- CIO if It fails lo do so. Meany called today s meeting last Tuesday shortly after Beck refused on grounds of possible self incrimination to answer Sen ate Rackets Committee charges that he "may have misappropriat ed" more than $322,000 in teams ters money. Deck protested In Seattle innt Mt-anv colled the council meeting with such little notice that he was deprived of his right to attend. WASHINGTON M The gen eral secretary-treasurer of the Teamsters Union, John' English, said Friday ho has never been consulted about a million-dollar publicity program announced by union president Dave Beck, and won't provide any money for that purpose. Beck was quoted Thursday both from Seattle and Chicago as say ing n new publicity office would be opened in Washington and the union would spend a million dol lars lo give the union's side of involvement of Beck and other teamster officers in current rack ets investigations. English said he knew of no un ion authorization for any such pub licity program, hod never been consulted about it, and as long as he was secretary-treasurer "1 will oppose any use of the union's funds for that purpose." Philadelphia Fire Kill 7 PHILADELPHIA ( Fire swept through a Philadelphia ten ement apartmrnt early Friday taking seven lives an injuring at least four others. Police said six of the victims were children, while the seventh also may he a child although no positive identification has been made. All of the victims were Negroes. Police said at least 12 persons were kiawn to be in the build ing at the fewe Hie fire broke out. The flames spread so q u I c K 1 y that none of the residents were able to get out through the front door. Firemen carried victims down ladders, while several of the trapped leaped from second and third floor windows to the pavement below. pend Demos Not To Act on Ike Asks Cabinet Decision on VP Taking Over WASHINGTON (APY- President Eisenhower pro posed Friday that the Cab inet be authorized to de cide when a disabled pres- iui-ui. la unauit; lu imiy uul Ills duties. But Democratic leader were said to have agreed informal ly that Congress will not act on the plan at this session. At a White House conference with congressional leaders of both nnrlipa PMienhnwpi cimanctnri constitutional amendment which would authorize the Cabinet to de cide by majority vote that the . vice president should take over Ihn rlnlinc nt a rticahlnH jihiaf t. ccutive. Such action would be taken, under Eisenhower's plan, if the President himself was unable or unwilling to make such a deci sion. Speaker of the House Raybum (D-Tcx) opposed this proposal. "It won't have much help out of me." he said. Sen. Johnson of Texas, the Senate Democratic lender, said F. spnhnwrr R man would be given "respectful con sideration." -Inltncnn nntnA Ilium la aroumanl over whether a constitutional amendment or mere legislation la needed. And he said thero had. been suggestions for a combined commission of Cabinet members and congressional leaders. He said some wanted to leave the deter mination to the Supremo Court. Eisenhower called F r i d a y'e meeting in an effort to resolve uncertainly left by the Constitu tion in its present form, as to procedure in the case of disabil ity of a president. An administration study of the matter during the last three months was promoted largely by the President's own two major ill nesses since September, 19SS. Boy Kills Self In Gun Gamble KLAMATH FALLS UH Vernon Lee Lugo, 17-year-old Sprague River youth, died early Friday morning from a gunshot wound in curred while he was playing what the police describe as a variation ' of "Russian roulette." Slate policeman Larry Bergman said the boy was riding in the rear seat of an automobile driven by his brother, Alfred, on the out skirts of Klamath Falls. He was playing with a .22 caliber revolver. ' After twirling the cylinder of the gun several times, according to Si mon Riddle, Sprague River, who was in the front scat with the dri ver, tho boy put tho revolver to his left temple saying, "Aw, this gun isn't loaded." Then he pulled the trigger. The bullet was imbedded in nil brain. Alfred Lugo drove the victim to Klamath Valley Hospital, wncre ho was pronounced dead. IS'ews in Brief For Friday, March 29, 1957 '; NATIONAL i Demos Don't Plan Action on President Disability Sec. 1, P. 1 Beck Suspended by AFL-CIO Council ...Sec. 1, P.(I LOCAL Armory Body Impressed by Mcdford structure . sec. i, r. School Heads Find Budget Making a Bit 'Tedious' See. 1, P. 5 STATE Linn County Plans Rodent Control Classes ....Sec. 1, P. i Pnuar Firms Favnr ' Service Monopoly ...Sec. 1, P. 1 FOItEIGN First Convoy StarLs Run Through Suez ..Sec. 1, P. 1 SPORTS Potgietcr-Buford Fight Called Ol! sec. z, r. 1 Willamette Relays Ready For Opening Sec. 2, p. 1 AAU Hoop Tourney Reaches' Semilinal Games ...bee. 2, f. 2 REGULAR FEATURES Amusements Sec. 1, P. 1 F.riitorials Sec. 1. P. 4 Locals Sec. 1, P. it Socicfy Sec. 1, P. -7 Comics Sec. 2, P, 4 Television Sec. 2, P. S Want Ads .. Sec. 2, P. - Markets Sec. 2, P, 8 Dorothy Dix Sec. 2, P. 10 Crossword Puzzla ... See. 2, P, 4