THE WEATHER. PARTLY CLOUDY this evening with chance of showers or thunder showers. Partly cloudy tonight, Tuesday; little cooler. Low tonight. ; high Tuesday, 75. Sen. Gill Bids Vice Jury to Submit Views Gives Up Idea of Summoning for Testimony Indicted Officials After Parley With Judge Redding By PAUL W.' HARVEY, JR. Associated Press Writer Sen. Warren Gill (R), Lebanon, chairman of the Sen ate Judiciary Committee, announced Monday he 1 would invite members of the Multnomah County Grand Jury to testify before his committee on what recommendations they might have to make about changes in laws relating to grand juries. At the same time, Gill said he has abandoned any ideas of re- ceiving testimony from persons who have been or might be indicted. The grand jury, in its report rnaay night, criticized Atty. Gen. itonerc Y. mormon, who is con ducting the Multnomah County vice probe, and suggested that he be replaced in that probe, TO SPEAK TO SENATE Gill made his statement to reporters, and planned to tell the same thing to the Senate during the afternoon. His statement means that the committee won't talk to Portland Mayor Terry Schrunk or further to Thornton, he indicated. The Judiciary Committee heard testimony from Thornton and Multnomah County Dist. Atty, William Langley on Friday night. Gill said he talked Monday morning to Circuit Judge Charles W. Redding of Portland, to whom the grand jury submitted its report. ."Judge Redding." Gill said "said he had excused the grand jury, but that he didn't discharge It. "It is not our intention to probe the vice situation in. Portland, nor Is it my plan to invite any per sons who' have been indicted, - to testify." IMMUNITY PROVIDED' ' Gill explained that the law pro vides immunity from prosecution to any person who talks before a legislative committee. "We are fortunate." Gill con tinued, "that the committee did not ask. Mr. Langley Friday night any questions about his own con duct, "Judge Redding says he sees nothing improper with our calling the grand jury, but he cautioned that it should not be asked, and that we should be careful not to let them volunteer, anything about their secret proceedings. "Judge Redding said he felt they were very conscientious and will ing to assist the Legislature in our study of what changes in the law, if any, should be enacted." One item under study by the (Continued on Page 5, Column 3) Strato Balloon Down in Iowa MINNEAPOLIS Wl A strato sphere balloon flight, designed to test high altitude parachute equip ment but frustrated by a scien tific snafu, ended in a tree in northeastern Iowa Monday. A spokesman for General Mills. Inc.. builder of the balloon and gondola which carried dummy parachutist "Sad Sam" to 90,000 fee!, said cither the gondola or balloon or both had come to earth i near Crcsco. Iowa, about 140 miles smith of here. Flash Flood Pours Through Wenatchee WENATCHEE, Wash. . Wl A flash flood, spawned by a sudden, violent summer storm, sent torrents of water stream ing through Wenatchee and its environs Sunday, causing Widespread damage. There were no deaths. An undetermined number ofS homes were evacuated as the flood waters surged out of No. 2 Canyon southwest of Wenatchee shortly before dusk after a thun der and lightning storm accom panied by heavy rain, high winds and hail passed over the area. Flood waters stood two feet deep in Wenatchoc's main street at one time during the flood and the basements of most business houses in the city .were flooded. In West Wenatchee, neighbors rigged a lifeline of garden hose and rope by which Mr. and Mrs. Chuck Morrow and their two chil dren fought their way to safety from their home, through which three fect of water was flowing. In East Wenatchee, the flood waters smashed through the rear door of a drug store and coursed through the building, breaking out through a glass window in the front. Power was off in Wenatchee for several hours, and most of the telephones in the city were put cut of commission by the storm and flood. Weather Details Mutmnm yrtlrdiy. St; minimum tnriay, 4. Toul 34-hour precipita tion: : for month: M: nnrmil. J. ffitnn prfrlpMitlon. 2Jr: normal. 3 11. Rtvrr helr.nl. .4 fooL (Brport by C. S. nmtf. Ways-Means Favors State Pay Increases $4,500,000 Fund Bill Approved; Civil Service Formula Endorsed By JAMES D. OLSON - Capital Journal Writer Salary increases for the major ity of 16,000 state employes as wen as six elected officials and the State Police were approved by the Joint Ways and Means Committee Monday. Specific salary increase for em ployes were not announced, the sub-committee recommending that Institutions Shift Asked InNewBill A substitute version of the pro posal which would allow state in stitutions to be located outside of Marion county without a vote of the people, has been introduced in the Oregon Senate. The resolution, proposed by the Senate Committee on State and Federal Affairs, would enable the legislature to order any institution located outside of Marion county but action would have to be rat ified by the voters.' The previous proposal called for outright repeal of the present constitutional pro vision which limits the institution location to the county. The resolution also provides the Legislature may "reduce, enlarge or terminate the use or purpose of any institution located outside of Marion county at any time aflcr 10 years from the year of the general election at which location outside Marion county was or dered." Italian Chief Segni Quits ROME Wl Prime Minisler Antonio Segni Monday night called on President Giovanni Gronchi to resign. Segni, flushed and feverish from a sore throat, drove to the pres ident's palace after a 10-minutc Cabinet meeting al which Vice Premier Giuseppe Saragat and three other ministers resigned. The flood hit Wenatchee the day after the windup of Apple Blos som Festival events in the city. The localized storm did not af fect the running of the first Apple Cup hydroplane race on Lake Che lan, to the north. Freak Cold Wave Grips Most Of Europe; Crops Wiped Out LONDON CB A freak cold snap gripped Europe Monday. Snow fell over much of the continent. There was heavy dam age to crops in Britain, France and Italy. The northern Yugoslav city of Ljubljana had a May snow for the first time in 58 years. Widespread damage was report ed in Italy. In Lombardy, after a night of cold, near-gale winds, trees lay uprooted and blossom ing flowers collapsed. In the rich Po Valley north of Rovigo, hail destroyed 80 per cent of crops. Radio Belgrade reported "great damage" to crops in Yugoslavia, where the snow lay 10 inches deep in places. Many telephone lines were cut. In France, the frost damaged fruit trees, which had been well advanced due to a hitherto warm sriac. Outdtor cafes of Paris 14. C afrit al jLJounial 69th Year, No. 106 Late Flashes The House today approved a J4.042.JM budget lor Oregon state penitentiary. Included in the budget were provisions for hiring a new farm accountant, plumber and prison counselor. The Bouse today approved House bill 80S tightening and clarifying the state's election laws. The vote was SI to I. The 160-page bill, a substitute for the House bill 606, dubbed "Big Bertha," gives the secre tary of slate more control over election procedures and re quires -him to conduct election classes for county clerks. PORTLAND HV-Tape record ings, which brought federal wiretap charges against gam bler Big Jim Elkins and Ray mond Clark, were copied in the office' of then Sheriff Terry U. Schrunk by a radio station tech nician, a U.S. District Court jury was told Monday. the salary plan prepared by the Civil Service Board be returned for adjustments, particularly in the lower salary brackets. A bill appropriating $4,500,000 to the State Emergency Board to be used in granting employes' sal aries, was approved for passage. The final salary plan of Civil Service must be approved by the State Department of Finance, the Governor and finally by the Emer gency Board. An additional $350,000 was ap proved to provide for salary ad justments from time to time in the next biennium. The effect of the Civil Service salary plan would be to eliminate one to three of the lower steps in the grade and perhaps one step at the top. Under this revision less than 400 of the existing 1800 em ployes now receiving less than $200 a month would start work at $198, and go beyond $200 with, the first merit raise, MORE FOB GOVERNOR Under one of the bills approved the Governor s salary would be in creased from $15,000 to $17,500 a year with $400 a month expense account. The Secretary of State, State Treasurer and Attorney General would each receive a $1,500 yearly increase from $11,000 to $12,500. In the same bill the salaries of the Superintendent of Public In structions and Labor Commission er would go up to $11,500. The Su perintendent of Public Instruction is now paid $10,500 and the Labor Commissioner, $8,500. Salaries of Slate Supreme Court justices would be increased from $13,500 to $16,000 annually. Circuit court judges would go up from $11,000 lo $13,000 a year. Sen. Dan Thiele, chairman of the sub-committee on salaries, said after studying the salary plans for state employes presented by the Civil Service Commission, the Ore gon State Employes Association and the AFL-CIO, that the com mittee favored the Civil Service plan. FURTHER HEARINGS PLANNED However, the committee was not entirely satisfied wilh the Civil Service plan as it relates to the lower salary grades. The commit tee requested further hearings by Civil Service before the final plan was formulated. Stale police would get salary in creases in two steps, the first on July 1, 1957 and the second on January 1, 1958. In addition to in creases in all grades, the state of ficers will get 4 days extra pay a month to compensate them for the extra day worked. State police work six days a week while most other stale employes work five. Two bills, one providing for in creases for District Attorneys and the other for increases for about 69 stale officials whose salaries are set by law, were put over until Wednesday. Under the proposed pay sched ule for District Attorneys Marion County's District Attorney would be placed on full time status and the salary would be increased from $5,800 to $12,000 a year. In Denmark, thousands of farm ers will haveBto replant seeded fields that were scored by high winds. Potato crops were damaged in parts of southern England. Fruit growers were advised to take spe cial precautions to protect their crops from cold temperature Mon day night. Prague Radio said the parks and gardens of the Czech capital, famed for their May blossoms, were under a carpet of snow. The fields and forests of Bohemia, Mo ravia and western Slovakia were also snow covtrca Salem, Farewell Said to McCarthy Church, Senate Eulogies Laud Anti-Red Fight (Picture on Page 6, Sec. I) WASHINGTON (UP) - Ihe capital said farewell to Sen. Joseph R. McCar thy today with eulogies in church and Senate Cham ber for his campaign against Communism. In high vaulted St. Matthew' Cathedral, where McCarthy was married four years ago, his griev ing widow and friends heard him praised as a courageous "watch man of the citadel." BURIAL IN APPLETON Then in the Senate Chamber where he rose to prominence and later was condemned by his col leagues, the controversial Repub lican from Wisconsin was extolled as an intrepid fighter against the "malignant powers of darkness." The two ceremonies preceded the departure of an airplane bear ing McCarthy's body back to his home town, Applelon, Wis., for fi nal burial rites Tuesday. McCar thy died unexpectedly Thursday at Bethesda Naval Medical Cen ter of a liver ailment. At St. Matthew's, before 2,000 mourners Archbishop Patrick A. O'Boyle sang a solemn pontifical mass of requiem over the llag- draped casket. The cathedral's pastor, the Rt. Rev. Msgr. John K. Cartwright, praised McCarthy as a courageous watchman who alerted his countrymen to the menace of Communism. WIDOW. WEEPS BRIEFLY Mrs. McCarthy, the beautiful 31-year-old Jean, held back her tears until the very end of the ca thedral service. -When Archbishop O'Boyle took her hand and spoke a few gentle words, she bowed her head and wept for a moment, In the' chamber where he had served more than 10 years, Mc Carthy was praised by the Sen ate chaplain, the Rev, Dr. Fred erick Brown Harfis, as an introp. id fighter against "insidious ene mies of the republic, malignant powers of darkness. The senator's body was brought (o the chamber from St. Mat thew's in a flag-draped casket which was placed before the flow er-banked rostrum. METHODIST, CATHOLIC Dr. Harris, as chaplain, spoke for the Senate. He is a Method ist. Then the priest who married McCarthy and the former Jean Kerr in 1953, the Rev. William J. Await, conducted Catholic serv ices. Dr. Harris called on McCar thy's Senate .colleagues to pledge anew never to falter in fighting Communism "until this torn and tortured earth is made sale for decency, truth, honor, and the pledged word. The senate cnapiain acxnowi (Continued on Page 5, Column 21 Chicago News Wins Pulitzer Service Award NEW YORK UPi The Chicago Daily News Monday received the 1957 Pulitzer Award for meritori ous public service for exposing the Hodge scandal in Illinois. Eugene O'Neill won his fourth Pulitzer prize, the first ever awarded posthumously, for his play "Long Day's Journey into Night." It was the first time a play wright had been given four Pulit zer prizes. There was no fiction award made by the trustees of Columbia University, which has awarded Ihe prizes since 1917 under the will of Ihe late Joseph Pulitzer, pub lisher of The St. lxnus rost-uis-patch and the old New York World. Navy Airmen Rescued 175 Miles at Sea MIAMI. Fla. A Navy plane which vanished Sunday on a flight from Fort Lauderdale to Key West was found Monday, far out in the Atlantic. Its two occupants were picked up by a merchant ship. The Coast Guard said Ihe pilot. Lt. jgl Mason G. Maddox, and a crewman. Marion Howell, were taken aboard the freighter Van ncssa, en route to Houston, lex. A Navy helicopter will be sent from the Key West base to take off the two men. Baseball Score NATIONAL Chicago 000 024 0006 New York 000 000 101-2 7 1 S 1 Kaiser and Nocman; Ridzik '6. Worlhinzton Gomez, (8) and J Wktm W' (81. Oregon, Monday, May A T71T AJF jl-l,iu Against 3 Highway f:'4 .. "SL 'WI'ij Mission Street and North Santiam highway will be directly connected this summer when this stretch of dirt is paved. Grading and rolling is now being done on the quarter-mile stretch. View looks west from present tri Major Riot in Polish Town Stamped Out WARSAW W-A major riot was reported today from Jaroslaw, a garrison, .(own , in,-? outhwest Poland. t.. , " . More than 1,000 police and troops were called in to quell the disturbance, which apparently oc curred just before the weekend, A report in the Warsaw news paper Szpander Mlodych suggest ed it was one of the most serious of recent outbursts against Com munist state authority. It carried indications of a military mutiny. These indications were: 1. The arrival in the town of Gen. Kuropicska, a district mili tary commander, 2. Appointment of a military in vestigation commission to deter mine responsibility for the trou ble. The paper said the outburst started with the arrest of a young soldier on a charge of drunken ness. It said other soldiers and "young hooligans" sided with the arrested man, went lo the police station and "started a fuss." A crowd of several hundred gather ed outside Ihe police station and flung stones through the windows. The paper said: "An appeal by police for calm and order brought no response. The trouble in creased. A number of soldiers were hurt and police were forced lo use lear gas." Ihe paper said a battalion ol reserve police and a second bat talion of the army riot squad were brought in. A battalion is about 800 men. City-Ch amber B udget Meeting Set May 20 A procedure new to Salem will be used by City Manager Kent Malhcwson in presenting the Salem budget for 1957-1958 to the City Budget Committee and to the public. This will be done simultaneously at the regular noon meeting of Ihe Chamber of Commerce on Monday. May 20 by a cooperative arrangement between city authori ties and Ihe Chamber. Members of the budget commit tee, who are the mayor, the coun cil members, and nine citizens at large, will have special tables at the luncheon mecling, and will be given the budget in book form by the city manager. Following the luncheon, City Manager Mathewson will deliver a budget message, which will be a narrative summary of the budget, and the public will be invited to listen to Ihe message. This will be the first lime that a message has accompanied pres entation of the budget. Hereto fore a simple letter of transmittal has been printed on the flyleaf. The manager s message will be Ihe regular Chamber of Commerce address for the meeting that day, which will be devoted to public service. For several weeks following the meeting the budget will have con sideration by the budget commit tee in the usual way at a series of meetings, prior to lis approval by Ihe committee and later by the City Council. Members of the budget commit 6, 1957 Entered as mitter at Sale; TiTY Link to Speed 4 Budget Meet Virtually Assures County Employes Higher Wages By FRED ZIMMERMAN Capital Journal Writer, Marion county employes are vir tually certain to receive pay boosts for the 1957-58 fiscal year, but the amount had not beon determined Monday noon when the budget committee look t. recess. ' Whether it will be based upon a flat across-the- joard increase or based upon a certain perccnlngc, also had not been decided. MOTION DIES Commissioner Roy Bice present ed a motion early in the delibera tions suggesting a flat $20 a month increase, but it died for want of a ocond. Then ensued discussions dealing wilh job classifications, and the possibility of some injus tices of a flat increase. The feeling was general, how ever, that a complete survey of jobs available under the jurisdic tion of the Marion County Court should be made. Judge Rex Hart Icy said he felt an appropriation covering the cos' of such a sur vey would be justified. Leo Butts, representing those members of the road department who arc affiliated with' union la bor, repeated his request for an increase of 35 cents an hour. Butts' proposal would cost the county $53,1100 a year. Frank Stone of the Marion County Employes Assn. advocated $20 across - the - board increase pending a reclassification of jobs survey. Such an increase would crcato better feeling among the lower paid employes, he said. tee outside the City Council are Gerald Paulson, E. D. Crabtrcc, Harvey Michaelis, Dan Fry, James McGilchrist, Jack Lochcad, Law rence N. Brown, Carroll Meeks and Harold Philippi. Terms of the first three have ex pired and they will be reappointed or replaced. B47s Achieve 'Toss' Maneuver For Delivery of EGUN AIR FORCE BASE, Fla. OTI The Air Force an nounced Monday tho Boeing B47 Stratoiet lias successfully accomplished the "toss bombing" maneuver for delivery of an atomic bomb, The announcement said this was "a revolutionary addition to stra tegic bomber tactics" and "a complete departure from earlier employment of this tactic." The Air Force said the first public demonstration by the six jet medium bomber was to be made during tin aerial firepower demonstration by the Air Proving Ground Command ot Eglin Mon day alternoon. The Air Force said in the past "this maneuver has been limited to fighter aircraft which weigh from one-eighth to one-quarter as much as Ihe Mratojct. In the toss bombing maneuver, the aircraft enters the bombing run at low altitude to avoid radar deteclion and then pulls into a sharp climb. ejo eueSng UOSSJQ JO A"16 J3Alif) narges Top Teamsters North Santiam Traffic angle junction towards Mission Street and city limits. State Highway Engineer W. C. Williams said the paving will be completed this summer. (Capital Journal Fhoto by Jerry Clausscn) Ar. ttiA ftlilKet rtf ttiA hurlcret do- liberations, Judge Hartley, who was named chairman of the gen - eral "committee, eald that while the budget appeared some $150,000 out of balance, tho situation was not as bad as it looks. , 1 ' He pointed out Uiat certain du plications of appropriations asked in the road dcparlmont, would cut tho apparent deficit by $70,000. Moreover, ho added, slnco the bud get items had been in Iho process of formation for some two months, anticipated revenues had in creased. Expected cash balances in the various departments would IN PORTLAND CASE Teamsters Lose High Court Fight WASHINGTON (ill The' Teamsters Union lost in the Su prcme Court Monday a bitter , ol r cw snowers Due to Mar Golden Days Sunday was another of the golden days for Willamette valley, result ing in crowded highways as Salem folk flocked to Iho countrysldo or to tho beach and mountains. High temperature for the day was 80. Forecast is for a chance of showers or thunder showers this evening and slightly cooler tem peratures for Tuesday. Precipitation for the five-day period is predicted to be below normal, however, occurring main ly as showers this evening and again about Thursday. Tempera tures, too, are due to average below normal. Atomic Bomb The bomb is released while the cralt is climbing and Ihe plane rolls out on top of a half loop and speeds away in the opposite direction. The bomb travels through a high arc and falls on target a great distance from the point of release. Tho maneuver enables the bomber to be a considerable dis tance away when tho bomb deto nates. Under orthodox bombing tactics, the plane would bo almost directly above Iho point of deto nation. "The toss bombing capability of the B47 has given the U.S. Air Force a high degree of versatility in the employment ot this six-Jet bomber," t! .-announcement said. A SECTIONS 28 Pages iiuiwSwfirv tnrl to. further trim th Hr.flfl0nrv he said. 1 Requests of the budget are $3,- 607,162,- an -increase ol $47T,I over a year ago Nevertheless, Judge Hartley e& pressed the belief that the com mittee would be able to balance receipts against expenses with out exceeding tho' 6 per cent llm itntion. This would mean .that there would be no necessity of going to the voters for apornvul. In addition to tho county com missioners, members of the com mittee include V. T. Golden, Sa lem; William Merriott, Woodburn. and Erne Henningscn, Jefferson, fight to keep its own office em yn loves out ot anotner union. On two points at issue involving charges that tho embattled Team sters organization has engaged in unfair labor practices against its own workers, the high tribunal ruled: 1. Unanimously, that labor un ions are employers within tho meaning of the Taft-Hartley Act, and 2. By a 5-4 division, that the Na tional Labor Relations Board must act on charges of unfair labor practices brought against a un ion. Justice Clark delivered Ihe courts opinion. Justices Bronnan, I' ranktiirtcr. Burton and Harlan dissented on the second point. They contended Iho NLBB should have discretionary authority not to act in sucn cases. The case originated with the Of fice Employes International Un ion, Local No. 11 of Portland. Ore. That union complained to the NLRB that the Teamslcrs Union there had unfairly discouraged membership by Teamsters cm ployes in the Olfice Employes Un ion and that the Teamsters had fired one of it employes who had been active in behalf of office em ployes, The NLRB said the case was Ihe first in its history of unfair labor charges being brought by one union against another. But the board ruled it lacked authority to act on the complaint McChord Pilot Brushes' Dead MCCHORD AIR FORCE BASE A pilot brushed close to dis aster here Monday morning when tho tire on the noso wheel blew out in a landing ol a new delta- wing F102A jet interceptor. The plane burst into flames while skidding 2,000 fect along the runway after the landing gear col lapsed. McChord firemen quickly quenched the flames and pulled 1st Lt. James Wakefield from the plane, uninjured. Wakefield, from Hamlin Station, Pa., is attached to tho 317th Fighter-Interceptor squadron. Beck Jolted By 22-Page Particulars By MAUREEN GOTHLIN United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON (UP) The AFL - CIO 'today; charged Teamsters Presi-i dent Dave Beck and Vice President Frank Brewster. with using union funds for "perSi sonal purposes" and using their- imion positions for "personal profit . or advantage. . i Teamsters vice President Sydney ' Brcnnan of Minneapolis, who has been convicted of accepting money ! from an employer, was charged : with "corrupt activities" by the ' AFL-CIO. And the entire Teamsters Union . leadership was charged with fail-' lng to take action against the three. ' 22-PAGE STATEMENT i The bill of particulars was con tained in a 22-page statement pre--;' scnted before the AFL-CIO Ethical'! Practices Committee as it started ' its hearing on the question whether - the big Teamsters Union is domin- s atcd or substantially influenced by ; corrupt influence. . ; The AFL-CIO specjficallv aues- - tloned the teamsters leadership's "apparent failure" to determine for Itself whether Beck is in fact guilty of "personal corruption in , the handling of union funds and in tne conduct of union affairs , and invoked the Fifth Amend- ment. . . to conceal the fact." Beck was accused by the 'Sen- i ate Rackets Committee of using J more than $320,000 in union funds ' for personal matters, but he rt- ! sorted to the Fifth Amendment j 117 times in refusing to answer-) the committee's questions1 about 5 his financial dealings .with the; union, ' - i i ' t The AFL CIO charges wera j spelled out after Beck himself ac-: cused the parent union in an open- j ing statement of conducting a "me- i dlcval inquisition and witch hunt" .' at tho hearing. - Beck, backed up in his statement by other members of the teamsters ' Executive Board, denounced tht j general charge of corruption as ; "malicious and unfounded sland- er, f DEMANDS PARTICULARS Beck demanded that the commit-.' tee provide teamsters leaders a bill of "particulars" as to the charges against the union. He said the board members had come to ; tho hearing "solely" to find out ; whether they would get a detailed breakdown of the allegations. -' It was after he spoke that the committee came up with a 22-page statement detailing the charges, f The committee s statement of de-' tailed charges against the teamst-' ers alleged that Beck used union; unds for personal purposes when he was chairman of the union's: Western Conference. ( A similar accusation was made' against Brewster. And both were charged with using their "official, union positions" for "personal prof it ana advantage." , ; Tho committee then cited the 'corrupt influences" of Brennan.; The committee also questioned) 'the apparent failure" of . ths. Teamsters Union to investigate tha activities of the three officers. -'j NO MENTION OF HOFFA No mention was made of Teams ters Vice President James R. Hof- . fa of Detroit, who was present at the closed hearing. He has been indicted on charges .of trying to bribe his way into the files of:. Ihe Senate Rackets Committee" which also has been investigating; ; corruption in the Teamsters Un. ion. , (Continued on Page 5, Column if ' Tf. News in Brief - For Monday, May 6, 1957 ' . ; NATIONAL AFL-CIO Accuses Team- sters Chiefs Sec. 1, P.I LOCAL Hndassah Convention Underway Hero Sec. i, P. I Salem Lions to Note 35th Anniversary Sec. 3, P. 1 STATE , Four Drown in Two Sun- day Mishaps Sec. 1, P. J FOREIC.V t Nicaragua, Honduras t Sign (-ease-lire sec. 1, P, J SPORTS Senators Win 2, Return ' Home ......Sec. 4. P.J Coaching Changes in District Told Sec. 4, P. I REGULAR FEATURES Amusements Sec. 1, P. 1 Editorials .......Kcc, 1, P. 4 Locals . Sec. 1, P. 5 Society ..Sec. 2, P. 1,2,3,4 Comics ... ... ,. ...Scc.2,P,4 Television Sec. 4, P. 3 Want Ads Scc.4,P.(S Markets Sec,4,P.3 Dorothy Dbt Sec, 2, P. IB Crossword Piuzlo g....Sec.2,P,4) t