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Weather Forecast! r Guide for Readers Cloudy, scattered showers afternoon and Page Page tonight; high, 86; low, 64. Tomorrow r Amusements.. A-16 Lost and Found A-3 cloudy, cooler, chance of showers. (Full • \ ^ Wm Classified.. B-ll-16 Obituary_ A-14 rejrort on Page A-2.) gX ■ ■ - Comics_ B-18-19 Radio-TV_ B-17 Midnight..69 6 a.m. ..69 11 a.m. ..77 A I I Editorial_ A-12 Sports_A-17-19 2 a.m. —68 8 a.m—70 Noon ..80 Edit’l Articles. A-13 Woman’s 4 a.m. ._69 9 a.m. ..73 1 p.m. ..83 'w * -w Finance_ A-21 Section_B-3-7 New York Markets, Page A-21. _** An Associated Press Newspaper_ 99th Year. No. 155. Phone ST. 5000 5?me D*M»«y. Monthly Rate*: Evening and Sunday. S1.50: S' pTP'VrTC! Evening only. $1.10: Sunday only, 45c; Night Final. 10c Additional ® vJjix J. O Russia Agrees to Parley Here July 23 if Ministers Discuss Atlantic Pact and U. S. Bases A ■ ■ . . ■ ■ ....... 1 Gromyko Delivers Reply to Message Of West Big 3 By the Associated Press PARIS, June 4.—Russia agreed today to meet with the Western powers in a foreign ministers' conference at Washington July 23 on condition they discuss the North Atlantic pact and American bases overseas. Soviet Deputy Andrei Gromyko handed the deputy foreign min isters of the United States, Brit ain and France identical notes with this agreement at a Paris conference today. The note, which came from the Kremlin in response to a Western invitation sent last Thursday, said the meeting could be held if the Western powers agreed to Russia’s suggestion that the Western world's defense prepara tions were a subject* for Big Four discussion. The deputies, who have been meeting here almost daily since March 5 to write an agenda for a Big Four foreign ministers’ meet ing, adjourned until Wednesday after receiving the Russian note. The question of discussing the Atlantic pact and American bases overseas has been the stumbling block in the efforts of the four power deputies to arrive at an agenda for a foreign ministers’ meeting. Agreement has been reached on all other points of an agenda. Russia has insisted all along that these two subjects must be discussed. The Western Big Three are willing to discuss them, but refuse to have them put on the( agenda in such a way as to imply i that the Western powers have; done anything wrong, or con-) tributed to international tension,; by signign the pact and making) other defense preparations. The Russian conditions do not) appear to automatically rule out; the possibility of a Big Fouri) meeting, but the likelihood of! such a meeting appears to hinge; on how the Russians desire tO; discuss the Atlantic pact and' American bases. One-Fifth of Nickel Supply Set Aside for Civilian Uses By th« Associated Press The Government today ordered that one-fifth of the total nickel; supply—all that can be spared; from defense production—be set aside for civilian uses. The agency directed nickel s<ip-! pliers to furnish to steel mills producing alloy and stainless steel 15 per cent of the steel companies’ receipts of the metal in the first half of 1950. Suppliers of molybdenum are to provide steel mills with 35 per cent of their scheduled civilian re quirements during June. i Army Ambulance Stolen, j Fort Myer Reports An Army ambulance was stolen _ from Fort Myer, Va., last night, j the post public information office reported today. The 1950 Packard ambulance,, painted regulation olive drab, was ] taken between 11:30 p.m. and midnight, while the driver was eating. Former Policeman Facing Trial Dies In New York Leap • By the Associated Press NEW YORK, June 4.—A retired policeman plunged to his death from a sixth floor window of Brooklyn’s Central Courts Build ing today, minutes before he was 'to go on trial on bribery con spiracy charges. The former patrolman, Charles V. Panarella, 44, was one of 21 present or former policemen slated for trial in connection with an al leged gambling-protection setup in Brooklyn. , Court attaches said he jumped or fell just before the trial was to open before Kings County Judge Samuel Leibowitz. The 21 policemen were indicted May 8 by Brooklyn’s racket-in vestigating grand jury. They were accused of conspiring to accept ‘ bribes to protect bookmaking op- 1 erations. Army Radio Carries Messages Free to Soldiers in Korea By tht Associated Press TOKYO, June 4.—You can send a free radio greeting to your GI in Korea. The Armed Forces Radio ► started a 45-minute Sunday program of messages beamed to United Nations forces in Korea. Messages may be mailed to Tokyo Armed Forces Radio Service, APO 500, c/o Postmaster, San Francisco. 4 i U. N. Flying Column's Dash Fails In Daring Try to Cut Off Reds Unexpected Opposition Foils Effort To Trap 2 Chinese Red Army Corps By Tom Bradshaw Associated Press War Correspondent WITH 187th AIRBORNE REG IMENT, East-Central Front, Ko rea, May 29 (Delayed by Censor). —An Allied flying column that tried to dash 50 miles through Communist territory to cut off thousands of retreating Reds was halted before it really got rolling. The task force, 622 vehicles spearheaded by 72 tanks, started This story by Associated Press Corre spondent Bradshaw is an uncensored account of action reported in censored form a week ago. Mr. Bradshaw spent three days and nights with the task force. from Hangye, 13 miles south of the 38th Parallel, at 1 a.m.. May 27. It was trying to cut off the! retreat of two North Korean Army corps and untold thousands of Chinese Communists. It was stopped cold 4 miles northeast of Inje, less than half' the distance to its goal—the port city of Kansong on Korea’s east coast. Allied officers said that if the column had reached Kansong the same day it would have trapped the Reds as they fled northward before the powerful Allied counter offensive. By stopping the Allied column when they did, the Reds probably enabled those retreating troops to make good their escape. The column was commanded by Brig. Gen. Frank S. Bowen, com manding officer of the 187th Air borne Regimental Combat Team. He said it packed enough fire power to cope with almost any thing it might have encountered. But time defeated it. “If we could have started when we originally planned on May 25." said Gen. Bowen, "it would have been an easy and rapid march to the sea. We just ran into more resistance than we expected.” The operation got underway when a spearhead of tanks and infantry barreled up the Hong chon-Inje highway road under the command of Col. George Gear hart of Philadelphia. The task force fought through Red road blocks and ambushes and (See BRADSHAW. Page A-4.) Allied Troops Beat Off Savage Counterattacks Near Big Red Redoubt U. N. Forces Battling in Driving Rain to Repulse Communist Thrusts By the Associated Press TOKYO, June 4.—Allied troops lighting through driving rain to ward the main Communist re ioubt in North Korea beat off :avage Red counterattacks today Artillery thundered over the ;ound of hand grenades as United nations forces threw back the hrusts. Reds attacked all threat inning U. N. spearheads. They ought stubbornly everywhere igainst the crunching Allied ad vance. U. N. officers said the offensive ippeared to be reaching the main Red defense line. Flame Throwers Used. On the Eastern front Chinese fought from heavily constructed fortifications built by North Ko eans in prewar days. Foliage had grown over them in natural cam ouflage. Chinese waited until ad vancing Americans came un snowingly within a few yards rhen they opened up. Doughboys burned them out vith flame throwers. “You can’t call tnis a delaying iction any more,’’ one high officer laid. “The way the enemy is set tnd dug in and shooting from veil-prepared bunkers and the de ermination of his defenses shows, ve are really hitting a main line.”; Small but sharp battles flared ill along the saw-tooth front rom newly captured Yonchon in he west to Kansong in the east, i'here Reds attacked the Allies’ leepest penetration of North Corea. Tank-led U. N. forces hacked Dut gains of 1 to 3 miles—in; spots. In other places they stood still. • Gains Won Slowly. Allied gains were chipped out slowly in tough, often hand-to iand fighting. Spears of infantrymen and ar mor pushed northward trying to reach and break the Reds’ “iron triangle,” tipped by Chorwon, Kumhwa and Pyonggang. They vere thrusting up from Yonchon, 13 miles below Chorwon; from Sfongpyong and Yongong near the 38th Parallel, and from Hwachon, 18 miles from Kumhwa. The 8th Army was willing to pay the cost of taking the triangle )f cities because: 1. The triangle dominates an mportant network of highways. 2. If masses of Allied tanks :ould reach Chorwon, they would Ind flat country, excellent for iheir type of fighting. In the flat; (See KOREA. Page A-6.) 1 ReutherUrgesEquality In Sacrifices Under Economic Controls UAW Chief Would Cut 'Standard of Luxury' Before Living Standard The fight over economic con trols which expire June 30 unless continued by Congress, pushed forward today as Walter P. Reuther, United Automobile Workers’ president, demanded “genuine” prices curbs and equal sharing of the burden. “Equality of sacrifice requires that we reduce the standard of luxury of the few before we re duce the standard of living of the many,” he declared In a state ment prepared for the Senate Banking Committee. This committee, as well as a corresponding one in the House. are1 holding hearings on proposed extension of the Defense Produc tion Act. President Truman has asked for a two-year extension and strengthening of the act which covers the controls. As the deadline approaches there is talk of a stopgap extension with out the broader powers sought by the President. Mr. Reuther, repeating labor's uvci i/xxc pxcbcnt wage price ceiling, urged “dollar-and cent price ceilings for all signifi cant items entering into the cost of living and into the defense program.” That is the only way genuine price control will be achieved, he added. CIO Stand Is Stressed. The CIO, with which UAW is afiiliated, is willing to accept wage stabilization but only “as a part of a thoroughgoing program of equal ity' of sacrifice,” particularly in sharing the costs of rearmament, he said. He told the committee that there is a “shocking lack of aware ness on the part of many groups as to the gravity of the situation that confronts our Nation and our allies throughout the world ” He accused some industry wit nesses of “flooding the press with dangerous delusions” that the crisis is over. He also complained that the committee has been hear ing more representatives of busi ness interests than “representa tives of the people.” Attacks Sales Tax Flan. Criticizing what he called “ad vocates of business and profits as usual,” he asked: “How many rapes of Czecho slovakia, how many Berlin airlifts, how many Koreas does it take to convince these people that the overwhelming fact of life today is the standing threat of world con quest by the forces of world com munism as the tool of Soviet imperialism?” Mr. Reuther maintained that (See CONTROLS, Page A-6.) Acheson Orders His Assistants To Clear Speeches With Him secretary oi state Acneson nas nstructed his assistant secretaries; rot to make any speeches on con ;roversial subjects without clear ng them in advance with him per sonally, it was learned today. This order is an outgrowth of “mbarassment to Mr. Acheson by a speech made May 17 by Assistant Secretary of State Dean Rusk which was widely interpreted as indicating a change in poliey more favorable to the Chinese National ist government. Mr. Acheson has insisted that the Rusk speech was not intended to suggest any change in Ameri can policies. He defended it at a press conference shortly after i, I me speecn was maue as merely restating well-known matters of policy. But associates said Mr. Acheson was greatly disturbed by the tim ing of the speech and the use of language which was open to mis interpretation. Mr. Rusk did not clear the speech with the Secretary’s office. Such clearance long has been considered standard procedure for speeches of any importance by other Department officials. But a general laxity in observing the rule had grown up, officials said. After the Rusk speech, Mr. Acheson forcibly reminded all as (See SPEECHES, Page A-4.) 1 Yalta Gave Reds Legal Claims, Acheson Says Declares Russia Got Less in Pact Than It Could Have Taken By Garnett D. Horner and George Beveridge Secretary of State Acheson to day defended the 1945 Yalta agreement as giving the Russians less than they had the power to take anyway. He told a joint Senate com mittee investigating Far East Partial Text of Secretary Acheson's Statement on Page A-3. policy that at the time of Yalta— January, 1945—“we did not know whether we had an atomic bomb or not” and it was considered urgent to get Russia into the war against Japan. It was not proved until some months after the Yalta confer ence that American scientists had succeded in developing the atomic bomb, Mr. Acheson said. He stressed military opinion at |the time that Russia’s help was needed in what was feared would be “a very bloody and terrible battle” in finally defeating the Japanese. Little Doubt of Soviet Action. There was very little doubt that the Russians would come into the war, Mr. Acheson added, but “the grave danger was that they would really wait until the war was over” and then “come in and do what they wished.” Looking to tic prospect of a bloody fight in the Japanese home islands, he said it was of the “utmost importance” that Russia be in a position to tie up as many as possible of the 700,000 Japanese troops in Manchuria and the 1,235,000 in China. The “price paid” for this, Mr. Acheson said, was that Russia “should have the southern half of Sakhalin, the Kuriles, that their former rights in Port Arthur and Dairen should be returned to them and their former interest in the two railways in Manchuria.” Chiang Accepted Pact. He stressed that the Russians “had it in their power” to take by force what was conceded to them at Yalta apd “much more besides.” The Yalta agreement, he said, only gave them “the basis for a legal claim to something considerably less than they might have taken without a legal claim.” He added that the Chinese Na tionalist government at the time “regarded as very satisfactory” the August, 1945 treaty it made with Russia on the basis of the Yalta agreement. Earlier, Mr. Acheson said that American aid cannot by itself in sure the survival of a government that this country is trying to help against aggression. ••wnat our am must ao ana can do is to supplement the efforts of: that recipient government and that people itself. It cannot be a substitute for those efforts.” Sketching the history of Amer ican policy, Mr. Acheson said the main problem faced in China at VJ day in 1945 “was in effect how to create a nation.” He pointed out that for almost an indefinite period in the past there had not been any Chinese nation “in the sense of a govern ment in control throughout that area.” Recalls Chiang Weakness. He recalled that the Chiang Kai-shek government was effec tive only in the extreme south western part of China at the end of the war. Manchuria was occu pied by Russian troops. The north central and southeast parts of China were in control of the Chinese Communists and the Japanese, he recalled. In addition, he said, the prob lem was complicated by all of China being in the “grip of a very profound social revolution.” He recalled that Gen. MacArthur had told the committee earlier about “the depth and strength of this social revolution.” The 1945-46 period was the “first great moment of decision” ' in this Government’s China policy, Mr. Acheson said. He traced the visits made to try (See FOREIGN POLICY, A-4.) Man Shot in Argument Over Children Dies ; Herman Fleming, 21-year-old j truck driver, died of a bullet' wound in the face early today at j Gallinger Hospital, where his wife , is a maternity patient. Police said Mr. Fleming, who ' lived in the 400 block of H street J N. W., was shot early yesterday ■ during an argument with his J brother-in-law, Alexander Paul, 25, of the 600 block of I street S.W. , Paul was ordered held without j bond on a charge of murder when ] be appeared before Judge Thomas j C. Scalley in Municipal Court to- - day. He will be given a hearing ( June 21. The Pauls, police said, had , agreed last Thursday to care for the Flemings’ two small twin sons ‘ when Mrs. Fleming went to Gal linger to bear her third child, a , girl. The argument ensued, police said, when Mr. Fleming went to j the Paul residence and tried to take away one of hia sons. Police ' quoted Paul as saying Mr. Flem ing had been drinking, and that ■ during the argument he shot his ’ brother-in-law when Mr. Fleming ] went into the kitchen to get a < knife. ! * Stop the Music! Send a Kid to Camp Marie and Alice Share Hope For Year—Camp This Summer Healthy and Happy Vacation for 2 Weeks Can 6e Assured Through Gifts to Star Fund Marie and Alice are 10. Bothj have shared one hope for a year.' Last summer Alice went to camp. In two fun-filled weeks, she learned: how to take her first swim strokes,; ate ravenously, slept soundly, and; made new friends. She came home healthier and happier than her family could remember. Marie lives next door. Hearing, of Alice’s wonderful two weeks, she made her mind up right away that; she would go to camp too this year. Marie is pale and needs to gain weight. But she is full of energy, and can hardly wait to join camp activities. She and Alice made firm plans to go together. Their families can’t afford to send them. Both Marie’s father and Alice’s, work in the building trade. But Marie has six younger brothers! md sisters, and Alice has five.' Food bills run from $40 to $45 a week, and even with the low rent af their Government housing proj ect. there’s nothing left over. “I try to give them balanced meals,” says Marie’s mother, “but It’s awful hard.” Yet the crowded homes make a summer vacation for the two grow ing girls even more important. It is almost within their reach. A welfare agency has recom mended both girls for a free camp vacation this summer. Beds are all but reserved for them at Camp Good Will, in near ay Virginia. So are places around the council fire and the family style dining table, and daily in (See CAMP, Page A-2.) Late News Bulletin II Top Reds Lose In Supreme Court The Supreme Court today upheld, 6 to 2, the conspiracy conviction of America’s 11 top Communists. Chief Justice Vinson deliv ered the majority decision which held that the Red leaders “in tended to overthrow the Gov ernment of the United States as speedily as circumstances would permit. “Their conspiracy to organize the Communist Party and to teach and advocate the over throw of the Government of the United States by force and vio- . lence created a ‘clear and pres ent danger’ of an attempt to overthrow the Government by . force and violence.” The decision upheld constitu tionality of the Smith Act. Aga Khan's Weight To Be Matched in Platinum in 1954 By the Associated Press KARACHI, Pakistan, June 4.— Moslem followers of the Aga Khan will weigh him in when he be gins the 70th year of his reign as 1 ;heir spiritual leader and will pay iim off pound for pound in plat XlUiXl. At last available reports the i Vga Khan weighed 240 pounds or thereabouts. Provided the price )f platinum remains about the >ame and the Aga Khan doesn’t! tain any more weight, when 1954 •oils around he will be paid about >3,000,000. i It is just a coincidence that this i s precisely the amount that his i laughter-in-law, Actress Rita > layworth, is asking from the Iga’s son Aly in a divorce settle nent. Prince Aly some day will nherit the Aga’s title and his , noney. 1 The Aga, now 74, began at the , ige of 8 his reign as the spir tual head of the Ismaili sect Mos ems, of whom there are millions cattered throughout the world, rhe sect honors him as a direct lescendant of the prophet Mo- ] lammed and a sort of deity on ;arth. They weigh him on his' ubilees in various precious metals \ md pay him pound for pound. , Windsor in London i LONDON, June 4 (>P). — The 1 5uke of Windsor, in porkpie hat ‘ md tweed topcoat, dropped in: rom Paris today to see his folks. 1 le expects to spend & few days j pith his mother, Queen Mary, at £ Jarlborough House. His duchess r lid not accompany him. She Is ] n Paris. n y Survey Group Urges Free Flow of Data From Juvenile Court Committee Asks New Study to Determine if Law Must Be Amended By Miriam Ottenberg The Juvenile Court study com mittee today called for a free ex change of information between the court and other community igencies but steered clear of the controversy over whether that would take a new law. Instead, the four-member study committee, in its long-awaited re _ rext of Juvenile Court Report on Con fidential Records. Page A-5 port, called for the appointment )f another committee. This one would examine the whole ques tion of inspecting court records md exchanging information “for the purpose of developing sound policies and procedures and rec cmmending changes in legislation where necessary.” While the protests over Juve lile Court Judge Edith H. Cock rill’s recent ban on information ’ocused the spotlight on the study committee’s recommendations on , that score, the committee also called for an overhaul of many of : the court’s long-standing proce- : lures for dealing with both adult md juvenile cases. These findings and recommen- ! lations highlighted the 64-page •eport: 1. Court hearings of juvenile i cases are being conducted in an I itmosphere of formality “equal to . >r greater than that” in adult courts. The judge should elimi- ] Continued on Page A-6, Col. 2.) i 11 Police Inspector Ends Life in Philadelphia; ; Second Within Year Death Increases Total Of Suicides Among City Workers to Six By th« Associated Press PHILADELPHIA, June 4.—Po lice Inspector Warren W. Hobson, 59, shot and killed himself today in the basement of his West Phil adelphia home. Inspector Hobson was the sec ond police Inspector to commit suicide here in less than a year. Last October 17 Inspector Craig j D. Ellis, head of the vice squad, | shot himself on a roadside near Media. A total of six city employes, in- j eluding Inspector Hobson, In-! spector Ellis and another police officer, have committed suicide since May 22, 1948. The first was William C. Foss, head of the amusement tax di vision of the Receiver of Taxes. He left a note naming eight per* sons besides himself as being re sponsible for a $200,00'* shortage. An investigation resulted in con victions of a number of people. Detective Sergt. David Hemp hill, who investigated the Hobson death, said a pistol w’as beside the body. There were no suicide notes. Inspector Hobson, a veteran of 34 years’ service in the police bureau, appeared as a- witness be- i fore the special grand pury in-, vestigating police graft six weeks ago. 1 Assistant District Attorney Vic- ■ tor H. Blanc, one of the officials in charge of the grand jury in- j vestigqtion, said “there is nothing 1 in the investigation to date which would indicate that there could : be any connection between In- 1 spector Hobson’s suicide and the 1 investigation.” Trial of Trenton Six j Hears Alibi Witness i By tlx Associated Press * TRENTON. N. J„ Juae 4.—The Onal defense witness in the “Tren- < ion Six” murder case testified ‘ ;oday that one of the defendants J vas working in a butcher shop ^ .he morning of the crime. Mrs. Anna Binder, a former rrenton resident who now lives ' n Brooklyn, N. Y„ said McKinley £ ’’orrest cleaned a chicken for her 1 lefore noon on January 27, 1948. f That was the day the State j :ontends Forrest and five other : 'Jegroes engaged in the holdup- f .laying of a shopkeeper, William Homer, at about 10:30 a.m. They I vere convicted once and all sen ienced to the electric chair but £ State Supreme Court ordered a * lew trial. e The retrial, going into its 14th . veek, is expected to wind up in £ ibout two weeks after rebuttal ® estimony and summations to the v ury. 3 The defendants are Forrest, talph Cooper, Collis English, John c JcKenzie, James Thorpe and £ Horace Wilson. ® Corning to Suggest Changing White Junior High to Colored By Coir Hendley, Jr. s Transfer of a white junior( ligh school to colored students 1 rill be recommended by School ] >upt. Hobart M. Coming at the c loard of Education meeting on c Vednesday. t £ Dr. Coming would not reveal rhich junior high he wanted to £ ransfer. He said the recom- j nendation will be news to the < loard of Education and he wanted J hem to know about it first. He said the proposed transfer j tad involved an extensive study nd he hoped to complete a re- . ort to submit to the School l loard by Wednesday. Such a transfer would be de I igned mainly to. relieve badly vercrowded conditions in one or aore colored junior high schools, ill of the nine colored junior ligh schools now are either at apacity or overloaded. Only three f the 12 white junior highs are ,t capacity. The contemplated transfer pre- J umably will involve the Eliot, ' line or Stuart Junior High Ichools, all of which serve white hildren in a small area between he Capitol and the Anacostia liver. Last May, in a report concerned < nth possible shifting of junior : lgh schools into senior high > - I (See SCHOOLS, Page A-4.) I f Jonkel Is Fined $5,000 After He Pleads Guilty Corrupt Practices In Butler Campaign Bring Penalty By J. B. Zatman Star Staff Correspondent BALTIMORE, June 4.—Jon M. Jonkel, 35, who managed the suc cessful campaign of Senator Butler, Republican, of Maryland, last fall, was fined $5,000 in Bal timore Criminal Court today after pleading guilty to violating Mary land’s Corrupt Practices Act. The maximum penalty for Mr. Jonkel was a $1,000 fine or two years in jail or both, on each of six indictments against him. • The charges were that he failed to keep required detailed accounts of money handled by him, to report campaign finances properly and on time, and was not a designated political agent and resident of Maryland. Judge Joseph Sherbow, in im posing the fine, said the case “in volved serious violations of the Corrupt Practices Act.” “The fact that they occurred under the pressure of a political campaign by one not a resident of this State and unfamiliar with our laws and our practices is no excuse,” the judge continued. Record Is Considered. “It is apparent that the de fendant made no serious effort to acquaint himself with the provi sions of the Corrupt Practices Act. “While these violations are much more than mere technical violations, the court takes into consideration the background and record of the defendant.” Judge Sherbow imposed a $1. 000 fine on each of four indict JON JONKEL. ments and a $500 fine on each of the remaining two. The fines were paid immediately by the defendant’s attorneys, G. C. A. Anderson, Baltimore, and Edward Bennett Williams of Washington. Senator Butler issued a state ment at the Capitol saying: "I am very shocked to hear the results of the trial in Baltimore. I am satisfied that Mr. Jonkel is the victim of an effort to make me appear in an unfavorable light. I know that he had no intention whatever of violating any law and I have the fullest faith in his integrity and ability.” A spokesmen- for the Senator later explained that he meant that the prosecution of Mr. Jonkel was the effort to embarass him. Called Technical Violation. In a statement issued after sen tence was imposed, Mr. Jonkel said the violations to which he pleaded guilty were technical ones, and that he had not intended to im pair “the protective measures es tablished for the election proce dures of this State.” He said the campaign which ;nded in a smashing victory for Senator Butler over veteran Dem ocrat Millard E. Tydings, “has mdergone an examination that las no parallel in modern times.” These months of intensive in vestigation,” he said, “finally dis posed only technical violations of he election statutes. “The administration did not Ind the improper election tech liques that were implied in the iress because they did not exist. "The hundreds of men and vomen who worked with us have irst-hand knowledge that the :ampaign was clean and that vic ;ory was the result of tremendous :ffort and careful planning. “Everything possible has been lone to repudiate that victory ind to smear the integrity of those vho contributed to it. Today’s iction by the court is the end >f this frantic effort.” When the hearing opened, State’s Attorney Anselm Sodaro ;aid Mr. Jonkel had been hired as Senator Butler’s political agent in (See JONKEL, Page A-4.) Resorts Popular With Vacation-Goers More thon 25 per cent of the fam ilies in the Washington area go to some kind of summer resort on their vacations, it was revealed by The Star's. 1951 Con sumer Analysis Survey. If you are among this large and fortunate group of vaca tion-goers there is no reason why you shouldn't en joy The Star while you are away. Before you ge oil you hove to do is phone Sterling 5000, ask for the Circulation Depart ment and arrange for vacation de livery of The Star, Washington'! Number 1 newspaper. I