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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (April 1, 1957)
G apit al AJourniai THE WEATHER CONSIDERABLE CLEARING to Bight; mostly clear Tuesday. Cool er tonight. Low tonight, 34; warm tr Tuesday, low, 64. 2 SECTIONS 20 Pages 69th Year, No. 77 Salem, Oregon, Monday, April 1, 1957 Entered as second class matter at Salem. Oregon Price 5 c HodgeLinked Banker Slain In Gang Style Marcus Hauled Into Car, Body Found 6 Blocks Aivay; He Was Carrying $300,000 in Cash, Checks CHICAGO (AP)-Leon Marcus, a prime figure In the Orville Hodge scandal, carried more than $300, 000 in cash and checks when he- was slain, police reported Monday. ; , - ; Marcus, 61, onetime majority stockholder in the 'Ride? Victim No-Picket Halt Loses In Senate Southmoor Bank and Trust Co. was put to death in gangland fashion Sunday night, William Touhy, deputy chief of detectives theorized 'that the mo tive for the killing may be found in the victims financial affairs J He said he plans to question the pi llllipclia ill me nuugc mac in CHICAGO Leon Mar cus, 61, former board chair man of the Southmoor Bank and Trust Co., which figur ed in the Orville Hodge scan dal which' rocked Illinois last year, was kidnaped and shot . to death last night.' (AP WIrephoto) Air Base Dead For Good, CC. Told bv Chief That there is no chance to re vive the Willamette Valley air base project, recently cancelled by the Air Force, is indicated in a letter received by the Chamber f ol Commerce from George S. Robinson, deputy special assistant (or installations. The letter is in reply to mes sages and letters sent from Sa lem after word of the cancella tion was received. The letter, written by Robinson at the request of the Secretary of the Air Force, says: "At the time the original sur- vevs were made in January, 1056, a requirement existed for a base capable of supporting the Air De fense command mission now at Portland International Airport, and one that could be expanded, If necessary, to meet possible in creased reouirements. "An overall detailed review of the utilization of the Air Force base structure was completed in January, 1957. This review took Into account all factors, such as available and anticipated re sources, weapons development and a reduced force structure, which form the basis of our re quirements. Our findings indi cated a probable downward trend in the number of bases through fiscal year 1961. Therefore, the decision was made not to begin the construction of new air bases at this time. "This was a painful decision to make in view of the splendid co operation we have received from the officials of the State or Ore gon and the residents of the Wil lamette Valley. We also sincerely regret that the plans of the state for the construction of two insti tutions have been disrupted." an effort to find out more about Marcus' dealings. He Carried Hodge's Checks Hodge, ousted Illinois state audi tor cashed more than $600,000 in phony state checks at the South moor bank. Marcus was seized by several men after he had left the Alfred Radn home on Slst St. on the South Side. He was dragged into an automobile and whisked away. His body, with a .45 caliber bul let wound in the back of the head, was found shortly afterward in a vacant lot six. blocks away Touhy said a $300,000 check made-out to Marcus was found in the victim's wallet. The officer said the check was drawn on the Society National Bank of Cleve land, Ohio, was dated June 28, 1956, and was signed "J. A. Harmon." - Touhy said a revised inventory also showed that Marcus also car ried $3,600 in other checks and $1,640 in cash. Had $8,000 in Cash ' Rado, the last friend to see Mar cus alive, said Marcus had $8,000 in cash. That :would indicate ,that some $6,300 in cash-was missing. I This isnt robbery, Touhy commented, pointing to the cash and jewelry found on the body. Marcus, his brother Hyman, so, an attorney, and Marcus' son-in-law Martin J. Rosene, 36, were under federal indictments charg ing misapplication of bank funds and making false entries in 'bank records.. . . . . Hodge. ' former Southmoor Pres ident E d w a r d A. Hintz and Ed ward A. Epping, former office manager . for the high state offi cial, are serving prison terms in connection with Hodge's theft of nearly two million dollars in state funds. The indictments against the Marcus brothers and Rosene al leged unlawful diversion of bank money from real estate loans. Alfred Rado, owner of the La- vine Lumber Co., told police Mar cus was leaving his apartment over the lumber firm's office after Sunday dinner. Five or six men grabbed him as he was about to enter his car. Rado said the victim shouted: "Leave me alone and I'll give you anything I got. , 16-14 Vote Again Balks Repeal Attempt . By PAUL W, HARVEY, JR. Associated Press Writer The 1953 law banning unions from picketing non union businesses for the purpose of organizing them was upheld by the Oregon Senate Monday. The Senate refused, 16-14, to reconsider its vote of last Friday. when it rejected, also 16-14, a bill to repeal the law. Monday s action means that the repeal legislation is dead as far as this Legislature Is concerned. Sen. Monroe Sweetland (D, Milwaukie, had moved to recon sider. He said that if his motion were approved, he would then move to send it back to the Labor and Industries Committee for further study. Cites Ohmart Remark He pointed out that Sen. Lee Ohmart, Salem, had said Friday that the committee hadn't studied the 1933 law. Monday's vote was identical, to that of Friday. Sen. Carl Francis R, Dayton, was the only Republican who voted for repeal. Sens. Harry D. Boivin, Klamath Falls, and Dan Thicl, Astoria, were the only Democrats who opposed repeal. There was no debate on Sweet land's motion. He was the only senator who spoke. Meanwhile, the first concrete proposal to revise the slate income tax law was made. - It came from Democratic Speaker Pat Doolcy, who proposed a ' plan whereby tax rates would be increased in the lower brackets and decreased in the upper brackets. The present effective income tax rate, including the surtax,, runs from-3 to llvi per cent,, . .. 10 Per Cent Maximum Dooley proposed that the rate be S per cent on the first $1,000 of taxable income, 6 per cent on the next $1,000, 8 per cent on the (Continued on Page S, Column S) Late Flashes WASHINGTON HI Rep. Wal ter (D-Pa), prompted by the Sen ate Investigation of alleged finag ling by Teamsters Union olfi-' dais, Monday lntroduefd- bill designed to safeguard the funds of labor unions. DICKSON, Tenn.. W Nine persons were kiled when a mili tary plane crashed 8 miles south of here shortly before noon Mon Iran Pren Quit Over Massacres: U.S. Halts a JO easSng JBJqfj UOSajQ i O n6J3ATUn Aid AFTER 4-YEAR STUDY O&C Timber Mart Restrictions Lifted By Interior Bureau PORTLAND Wl The U.S. Department of the Interior" Mon day abolished marketing area restrictions on the two million acres of rich O&C timberland in Western Oregon. The decision means that O&C timber no longer has to be processed or manufactured in the area where it was purchased. applies also to the loos Bay Airports Get Federal Aid WASHINGTON un The Civil Aeronautics Administration Tues day will announce a federal grant of $821,557 for the Portland Inter national Airport, Rep. Norblad (R-Ore) said Monday. Norblad said the money will be given to build taxiways, aprons, water and electrical systems and to acquire new land. Another grant of $137,403, under the federal program to aid airport construction, will be given to Eugene, Norblad said. Norblad said that other Oregon grants that will be announced Tuesday include: Grants Pass $56,411, Medford $48,750 and Pen dleton $10,365. Tornadoes and Hard Rains Hit Areas in Texas DALLAS Wl Tornadoes and heavy rains pounded parts of Tex as yesterday but despite the vio lence there was a bright side to the weather picture the drought showed signs of casing its long grip on parts of the state. A squall line plowed across eastern Texas into Louisiana last night. Tornadoes lashed at least five places. Only two persons were injured, but property dam ace was high. A two-mile path of destruction was cut in the southeast Texas town of Huntsville, apparently from a tornado. Damage was esti mated at half a million dollars. The path of destruction, about a block wide, included unroofed houses, smashed power lines and trees and shattered windows. Hard rains fell in north central Texas. Dallas got almost 3 inches, heaviest rainfall in one day since last spring. Dallas and San Antonio rainfall totals pushed past the normal mark, the first time in five years at San Antonio. Minor property damage was re ported from tornadoes at Austin, Boerne and Bryan. A twister at Baytown damaged at least three houses and knocked down the 295 foot tower of radio station KRCT. Lightning set fire to three of five storage tanks of the Ruford Oil Co. 10 miles west of Goliad. Damage was estimated at $10,000. HC Low Dams Review Denied By High Court WASHINGTON lfl The Su preme Court Monday dealt a blow to public power advocates by re fusing to review Federal Power Commission licensing of three pri vate power company dams in Hells Canyon. The case for years has been the center of a political and private-versus-Dublic power dispute. Public power groups appealed to the high- tribunal after the U.S. Court of Appeals here up held the FPC license for private power dams on the Snake River bordering Idaho and Oregon. The Supreme Court's refusal lo review was announced in a brief order, ' which noted only that Justice Douglas . felt the case should have been reviewed. The- public power groups have been . seeking approval tor con struction of a single high federal dam in Hells Canyon. The com mission license was given the Ida ho Power Co. for dams at Hells Canvon. Oxbow and Brownell. These dams would flood' the pro posed federal project site. The National Hells Cany oh Assn., National Rural Electric Co operative Assn., and eight Wash ington State public utility districts joined in appealing to the Su preme Court. Briefs as "friends of the court" were filed by Wash ington and Oregon in support of the appeal. Wagon Road grant lands, Undersecretary of the - Interior Hatfield .Chilson said abolishment of the restrictions will boost un employment in logging areas "as the end result of better utilization." He said that knocking down the marketing barriers will promote "conditions conducive to competi tion with the end that prices will naturally channel timber to the most efficient manufacturers." Many lumbering communities will be aided by the new program, Chilson said. He added that "any possible injury will be minor." The federal government's deci sion lo end the controversial marketing areas followed four years of study and a hearing in Portland March 1. Chilson said the federal govern ment will oontinue to impose its sustained yield program on. the broad belt of Douglas fir that covers most of western. Oregon. The. timberland has been admin istered by the Bureau of Land Management since 1936, It verts to the federal government in 1916. The land originally was given to the Oregon and California Railroad Co. in 1866, but. the firm later failed to comply with stipulations of the federal grant. Desegregation Pleas Refused By Top Judges WASHINGTON UV-The Supreme Court Monday rejected two more appeals from lower court desegre gation orders. The tribunal's refusals to review let stand decisions requiring the admission of Negroes to: 1. The municipal "spa pool" and bathing beach of St. Petersburg, Fla., and, 2. The cafeteria , in the Harris County Courthouse in Houston, Tex. The U.S. Circuit Court in New Orleans previously had upheld orders issued by local U.S. district courts. St. Petersburg contended in its appeal that the 14th Amendment to the Constitution guaranteeing equal rights under the law is not applicable to a municipality when it acts in a proprietory or private capacity. The Houston case was appealed by county officials and W.F. Der rington. who operates the cafe teria under a lease from the coun ty. They argued: "To give one man the right to mingle with another against the will of the latter is to deprive the latter of his right to refuse to mingled." Cars Jump Track Near John Day : y ' iCjr 'iXJ CJy tJ ',T'''.t''' I JOHN DAY, Ore. Three tanker cars of a Union Pacific freight train were derailed near Biggs, cast of here. No one was hurt but the mainline track was blocked for seven hours. Workmen are shown survey ing damage. (AP WIrephoto) " . Senator Bares Store Sale of Schools' Food Sen. Monroe Sweetland (D),' Mil waukie, advised Safeway Stores Monday that it is selling canned tomatoes that have been bought by the U.S. Department of Agri culture for use in the school lunch program. He said that underneath thef Safeway "Gardenside" label- is pasted a government label saying that the tomatoes are for use only in the school lunch program, and that the can is not to be sold or exchanged. - Sweetland wrote George Man Ran, Safeway district manager at Portland, that "It would appear that one of your suppliers has been grossly at fault, or worse." He also said he has asked Sen. Neubergcr (D-Ore) to investigate in Washington. Sweetland said he found the canned tomatoes on sale in sev eral Safeway stores. New Passport For Newsman Turned Down WASHINGTON Wl The State Department disclosed Monday that newsman William D. Worthy, who defied a ban on travel to Red China, has been refused a new passport on grounds that giving him one would be "prejudicial to the interests of the United States." State Department press officer Lincoln White made public a let ter to Worthy, dated last Friday, from Passport . Office Director Frances G. Knight. The letter said Worthy's Feb. 25 request to renew his passport was tentatively turned down. It advised him he could appeal this ruling before it becomes final. 'This nr-tion is Drcdicted UDOn your recent travel to and within j rnmmnnUt China which was con- i trary to known and e x i s t i n g j ready Israel Vows to Go to War If Egypt Impedes Its Shipping 'Mac' Tells Commons: No Secret U.S. Deals JERUSALEM tfl Israel has served notice she will consider as "an act of war" any Arab move to impede her shipping in the Suez Canal or Gulf of AqaDa. The Foreign Ministry issued the warning after a report that Presi dent Nasser told visiting U. S. newsmen that Egypt would permit Israel to use the canal and gulf only if Palestine Arab refugees "are given back their rights, prop erty and land." "We are not interested in the pretexts Nasser puts out from time to time to justify his deter mination to interfere with the free dom of navigation of Israeli ; ships," a ministry official assert ed. the refugees and the Suez Canal. The spokesman was comment ing on reports from Cairo that Egyptian President Nasser had told visiting American newsmen Egypt would permit Israel to use the canal and the Gulf of Aqaba only if the refugees "arc given back their rights, property and land." Israel has announced she will send shios flvina the Israeli flag through the gulf as a test and will also test Egypt's ban on shipping in the canal. Foreign-flag ships chartered by Israel are already sailing unmolested through the gulf, which is still under protec tion of the u. N. 1 vrgency Force. The ForctfW cilitate raids by Arab comman dos into Israeli. Israeli Foreign Minister Golda Mcir warned in a speech last night that "we are in the midst not at the end of a battle for exist ence, and we have not yet won that battle ..." Mrs. Meir told the fourth meet ing of the International Council of Jewish Women that Israel's inva sion of Egypt last October was a battle "not only fought for the dignity of Israel but for the dig nity of the world." In Cairo, ?:gypt's Suez Canal Authority said several U. S. and British ships have asked permis sion to sail through the waterway next week, despite advice of their Birmingham's Buses lied Up By Pay, Strike BIRMINGHAM, Ala. Ml A strike of 500 Birmingham Transit Co, bus drivers and mechanics left thousands of Birmingham area residents without transporta tion Monday. The walkout at midnight Sun day night came only three days after the company notified the City Commission it was going out of business because of declining revenues, segregation and labor troubles. Members of the Amalgamated Assn. of Street, Electric Railway and Motor Coach Employes struck in support of wage demands. They had asked a pay increase of 46 cents an hour which the company said it couldn't meet. Present pay is $1.69 per hour. LONDON Wl Prime Minister Macmillan told the House of Com mons Monday ho did. not enter into any secret engagements in his Bermuda conference with President Eisenhower. , There had been some whispers within . Macmillan's own Conser vative Party that he "sold out" Britain to the United States in ex change for guided missiles to cut British defense expenditures. It would be absurd to . sup pose that in a few days we would find solutions to all the immense problems that confronted ,us," Macmillan said in opening a de bate on the Bermuda meeting. But we covered much ground and we did reach agreements on certain matters set out in the com munique. I want to make it clear that there were no secret engagements. There were some matters on which we were not in agreement." - without elaborating, he cau tioned against placing too much importance on the disagreements. He declared that, as a result of the talks, Britain and the United States "understood each other better."" "I made plain our view that just trusting to the United Nations is no subsitute for a foreign policy," he said. . He clearly implied ' that he pressed for lifting of. Western re strictions on trade with Red Chi na. Britain recognizes Pciping. The United Slates does not. Dr: Masatoshi Matsushila, per sonal emissary of Japan's prime minister, arrived here Monday lo ask personally that Britain stop the tests. The British already had rejected five Japanese prolesls against the tests in the Christmas Island area, some 4,000 miles from Japan. Russ Refuse H-Test Halt Until All Do LONDON m The Soviet Un ion refused Monday to abandon H-bomb tests until other powers do. At the same time, Britain again rejected a Japanese appeal that British H-bomb tests in the Pacific Ocean this spring be abandoned. The Soviet position was reslated in a note to Japan distributed here by Tass, the Soviet news agency, Japan, in a note dated March 9, asked Russia to discontinue tcsls. Prime Minister Macmillan told the House-of Commons Britain's H-bomb tests "must go on." He said radiation effects from the tests would be insignificant." Military Plane Blows Up; Five OrMoreKilled DICKSON, Tenn. IB -y Five per sons were reported killed when a mililary plane from Langley Field, Va., "blew up and crashed Monday eight miles south of this central Tennessee town. The plane carried 10 or 11 per sons, it crashed shortly before noon. Five bodies have been recov ered," said Dr. W. A. Crosby of the Bell and Crosby Clinic here. Two injured men have been brought to this clinic. Each has a broken leg. One is critical," These came down by parachute, he said. 'One of the two brought here said: 'It just blew up.' " A bystander said that when one dazed victim came to he said the plane was "loaded with classified matter" and asked precautions be taken to guard it. 1 his same survivor was quoted that the plane carried "high pow ered Washington military per sonnel. . . A rescue worker reported that he helped recover the bodies of 10 persons but there was no con firmation immediately that this number had been- killed. April 1 'Foolery Absent in Salem Pranks involving any properly damage appeared to be absent Monday, the traditional day for practical Jokers to display their so-called talents. No April Fool's Day damage was reported by police or school officials up to noon Monday. COUPLE HURT IN WRECK Hard Luck Again Hits Scio Family April Brings Rain Respite A new month seems to bring a change in the weather, at least in the forecast. Clearing is in prospect for to night and Tuesday. It was wel come news following the week end. Rainfall for the 48-hour period ending at 10:30 a.m. Mon day amounted to .63 of an inch in Salem. Five-day forecast is for near normal temperatures, precipita tion also to be near normal. Ministry also de-; governments to sMcr cla.r f lb A Foreign Ministry spokesman clared a reported sugpyietion for a casai fer tse time seinfi. N u. I., ulri Monday Israel is always security zone extcndii mart n Iritis r Freic iis bav yt to discuss compensation 2.000 teet on Both sines oi we uoa. United States foreign jaolicy and j payments for Arab refugees from Strip border would not b awepv tn. teih.l-.. in the Uie Palestine war but there is "no aWe to Israeli. A r.inisy o.ial interests of the prejudicial to the the Palestine war but there is "noJaWetolsr i United Suits. , ."JconnecUon whatsoever' l)ecilJi$Btt82j'. use! tfft watenuop frithoaoh ves sel Hi 11.000 ton ik aiuvri" Mlvntti n thinly V&mw Wratker Details Ytaxlmum jMtfrdir, SI: minimum trmv, 39. Total 24-hour prr-elplutlon: .01: for month: .tl : normal. .OS. Rra- on pMrlpllaUon, 27.ai: normal, 33.(4. RNMor htiartt, I S tM. (Report by V. B. VavauftraBaresa.) SCIO (Special) Howard Trol- linger, 40, Scio, Is in a critical condition at Lebanon Community Hospital as the result of a skull fracture suffered In a one-car ac cident on Highway 226 Sunday aft ernoon. , His wife, Norene Sims Trollin ger, suffered several fractured ribs and an injured shoulder. Her condition was listed as good at the Lebanon hospital. On Way lo Albany The Trollingers were on their way to Albany from their farm home on Smallman Creek near Scio. Their car skidded when it hit a patch of slick pavement, slid across the road and turned over three times. State Police Officer Charles Halbrook of Albany re ported. The accident happened between Scio and Crabtree and tied up traffic briffiy. The mishap became the most recent of a long aeries in which have been involved over the post 15 years. Trollinger s father, James Trol- linger, suffered fatal injuries in a farm tractor accident a few weeks ago. Their youngest daughter, Denise, 15 months, was run over and killed by an oil truck last year. I he 14-year-old son, Calvin, was hospitalized for many months with an injure! hip and his brother, Harold, underwent long hospitali zation following an operation. Suffered Burns ebe of m Tollliigec ftmUjmao, Sharon, now 17 and a Scio High School senior, started the long series of accidents a few years ago when she suffered severe hums as the result of matches she found in the family car. Several skin grafts were necessary as a result of the burns. The Trollingcr's barn was burned several ycrs ago as an other link in the series of acci- J.. tki,.h Ii-ofa hll Ihn famiW Mrs. Trollingcr is the daughter of Mr. ar4 Mrs. WV)w I Teamsters in Oakland Roar OK of Ouster OAKLAND, Calif. (UP) East Bay teamsters expressed over whelming approval Sunday of a motion to oust International Fresi dent Dave Beck,, western leader (rank Brewster, and Jimmy Hof fa, head of the midwest teamsters. However, the move was tempor arily blocked by Cy Shilling, Beck appointed president of Local 70, who said the motion had to be read at three meetings. The motion, result of current sen ate investigations into labor rack elccrmg. was cheered lustily by the some 3500 local members who attended the mass meeting at the Oakland Auditorium. But before it could be brought to a vote, Suiting shelved it with his ruling. Merle Bigenho, 44-year-old truck driver for the University ot Cali fornia, presented the ouster mo tion, which would have had the cllect ot placing the local on rec ord as supporting the AfL-uiu suspension of Beck. Bigenho said after the meeting that Stulting's ruling was contrary to the local s bylaws. He said trie only motions which require three readings are bylaw amendments. Mrs. Carroll's Body Found In Desert TEHRANTlran (AP) - ; Sources close to the Iranian government said Monday Prime Minister Hussein ' Ala has told associates he, will resign as a result of the desert' bandit massacre of three Ameri cans. ; . I These informants said the prima minister's resignation will be an nounccd Wedesday, after the de- - 4 parture of West German Chancel- ' lor Konrad Adenauer, . now in Tehran as a government guest, so as "to prevent embarrassment" to Adenauer. The sources said Dr. Menuche her Eghbal, vigorous president of Tehran University, court minister and close associate of the Shah, will be proposed as new premier. ' Stronger Hand vs. Bandits The change reportedly was to give the government a stronger ' hand in dealing with banditry and -tribal defiance of the government. ' Earlier, the United States an nounced that the Point Four pro- -gram in southeast Iran has been suspended until the killers are caught. The American victims of the bandits were Mrs, Anita Carroll and her husband, Kevin, A U.S. Poir.t Four program official; Brewster W'lson, development specialist for the i"c;r Ft Foun- dation. Mrs. Carroll s body - was found Sunday two miles from the . spot where -her husband, Wilson, and two Iranians were slain In- amousn a week ago aunoay. t ! Not Stern Enough "7 ' Clark S. Gregory, director of the Point Four program in Iran, an nounced that aid- had - Deen sus pended because he was not wholly satisfied with measures taken so far to wipe out the desert bandits , responsible for the killings. Greg ory made the announcement after an on-the-spot investigation. . . The bandit band, reportedly afoot and whittled down by sev eral runaway fights with pursuing police and troops, is pushing through bleak desert mountain country of southern Baluchistan in a desperate attempt to escape across the frontier into Pakistan. The government announced it had rushed arms to the loyal Baluchistan frontier tribes, enlist ing them to help cut off the es cape route to the border. A $10,- 000 reward dead or alive was put on the head of each bandit, Follow Vultures to Body. Police reported they had finally found Mrs. Carroll's body by fol lowing the circling course of vul tures flying over the desert. : She had one gunshot wound through the heart. Her body was fully clothed. Police said the bandits apparently started to car ry her away as a hostage, then shot her when they became afraid she would impede their escape. They said the condition of her shoes indicated that she nan not fled across the desert afoot. The body was flown to Tehran, where street crowds watched si lently as a flower-banked ambu- lance carried the remain rrora the airport to a mortuary. Local tribesmen had aided in the hunt for the body of the 35. year-old American woman. . IKE TO MEET PBESS V WASHINGTON (UP) - Prcsl. dent Eisenhower will hold a news conference at 7:30 a.m. P5T, Wednesday, the White House an nounced today. Engineers' Building Chief Inspects Dams PORTLAND (A Maj. Gen. Walter Wilson Jr., supervisor of Army Engineer construction proj ects, Is in the Pacific Northwest this week to Inspect Columbia fliver dams. Wilson is scheduled to address of 1 the Northwest Public Power Assn. i meeting Wednetdaj at Seattle,, News in Brief For Monday, April 1, H57 NATIONAL Hodge-Linked Former Banker ' 1 , rtubbed Out' Sec. 1. P. X Supreme Court Refuses Hells Canyon Kcvicw ...Met. i, r. i LOCAL : i '; 3 Autos Damaged in , Sunday Smash 5ec. I, P. S ; Planners Want Permanent Status ..Sec. 1, P.' I STATE Slate Traffic Toll ' 9 for Weekend Sec. 1, P.':l O&C Marketing '' Areas Abolished ....Sec. 1, P.,1 i FOREIGN Air Farce Threatens Revolt ; I Argentina Sec. 1, r. I Iran Premier to Quit Over ! Moseocre of Yanks Sec, 1, e, U SPORTS Samm Show Power - In Relays -!cc. I. r. i April Fool's Day Find's Major's Camps Confused ....Sec. 2, P. J REGULAR FEATURES Amusements Sec. 1, P. 3 Editorials - . Locals Society Comics Television ..... ..Sec. 1, P. 4 ....Sec, 1. P. S i .Sec. 1, P. -1 , ....Sec. 2, P. .Sec. J. P. 7 Want Ads .-...Sec. 2, P.8-9 ' Markets r Vi.'n .7 Dorothy Dj viSKJ39 o ' U-1 t 1