Weather Forecast Cloudy tonight, low 72. Tomorrow chance of thunderstorms, not as warm by night. (Full report on Page A-2.) Temperatures Today. Midnightf7s 6 a.m 69 11 a.m—Bl 2 a.m 73 8 a.m 72 Noon 84 4 a.m 71 10 a.m 78 1 p.m —88 An Associated Press Newspaper 102 d Year. No. 173. Senators Vote Restrictions on Jenkins' Work Won't Be Allowed To Prepare Final Report on Hearing BULLETIN The Senate Investigations Subcommittee agreed today to permit its special counsel, Ray H. Jenkins, to do preliminary work in boiling down testi mony in the Army-McCarthy inquiry, but decided that he would not work on the com mittee report itself. The group also decided to question the Defense Department about the alleged failure of two Mc- Carthy committee staff mem bers to obtain security clear ance. By James Y. Newton Democrats on the Senate In vestigations subcommittee today were expected to question the fitness of Special Counsel Ray H. Jenkins to assist in the work of drafting a report on the Army-McCarthy controversy. The Democrats, it was under stood, feel that Mr. Jenkins showed bias in favor of Senator McCarthy in a Nation-wide tele vision program Sunday. In it Mr. Jenkins said, in answer to a question, that he would ac cept help from Senator Mc- Carthy if he decides to run for the Senate in Tennessee. The question of Mr. Jenkins remaining with the subcommit tee for the report-writing phase of the long investigation was to be brought up at a meeting of the group at 11 a.m. Moves Uncertain. Committee Democrats were said to feel that Mr. Jenkins should disqualify himself from further services to the group since the Army-McCarthy case is “about to go to the jury—the committee—and he was sup posed to be our lawyer.” If he doesn’t it was understood they will move to have him disquali fied. Whether they could do it was uncertain in view of the Republicans' 4 to 3 control of the subcommittee. Ironically, Joseph N. Welch, who represented the Army side of the controversy, said today that he would back Mr. Jenkins, should he run for the Senate. “I’d vote for Jenkins any time 1 had an opportunity.” said Mr. Welch, a Republican, at the Harwichport (Mass.) home of a friend. Mr. Welch said he had de veloped a “high regard” for Mr. Jenkins, whom he faced across the legal table in the long ses sions. Acting Chairman Mundt wishes Mr. Jenkins to go over the nearly 2 million words of Army-Mc- Carthy testimony and prepare an “abstract and synopsis” for the benefit of committee members. Mr. Jenkins would do the work at Knoxville, Tenn., where he practices law. Senator Mundt also requested committee members to bring to the meeting in writing the issues they feel should be dealt with in the committee report. Potter Visits President. Meanwhile, Senator Potter, Republican, of Michigan, said after a visit with President Ei senhower yesterday that he had not changed his position that heads should roll on both the McCarthy and Army sides as a result of testimony given in the 36-day hearing. The legless war veteran charged that the record of the hearing was “saturated” with untruthful statements indicating perjury on both sides. He said he would demand dismissals both (See HEARING. Page A-2.) Mrs. Ferriday Upset- In District Title Golf Mrs. Edward C. Ferriday, jr„ defending champion in the Dis trict women's golf championship being played at Chevy Chase Country Club, was upset 3 and 2 in the first round today on her home course by Capt. Lucille Busch, U. S. A. F.. of Argyle. Capt. Busch was 2 up at the turn after being 2 down at the end of four holes of play. Betty Garber, champion in 1952, defeated Mrs. H. H. Good man of Washington Golf and Country Club, 5 and 4, and Mrs. George Noble of Kenwood, last year's medalist, defeated Mrs. Jack Smith of Prince Georges, also 5 and 4. (Earlier Stgry on Page A-17.) Baby Furniture Sold First Day by Star Ad Mr*. M. F.'s baby was no exception to the rule that children grow. Lika all youngsters he out-grew his crib which also included a mattress. Desir ing to sell the items, Mrs. M. F. placed an ad in Star Classified. She found a buyer the first day her ad appeared. In all, she received 19 calls! If you have something to buy, trade or sell, tell the long-established au dience of Star readers about it. You'll enjoy speedy results. Because it produces the best re sults, The Star publishes more classi fied ads than the other Washington newspapers combined. Phene Sterling 3-5000 and ask for an ad-taker. Phone ST. 3-5000 Des Moines Braces for Flood As Levees Get First Big Test lowa Property Loss Mounts Into Millions, 1,000 Homeless Under Record Inundation By the Associated Press DES MOINES, June 22. lowa’s capital city braced, it self today for the greatest Des Moines River flood in history. Efforts of city workers were centered on a new levee system which protects much of the cen tral area of the city north of the downtown business district. The river is expected to rise late tomorrow to a crest of 1 to 2 feet higher than the June, 1947, flood which broke through levees and flooded a wide area. The stream cuts through the i heart of Des Moines. With a forecast of fair weather I as the main cheerful note, the crisis eased at Sioux City, Mason City and Fort Dodge. The Boone and Webster City areas were battling all-time flood stages, however. Sandbag Battle at Boone. Boone itself was not in danger, but guardsmen and volunteers fought a battle of sandbags as the river rose to 24.5 feet at the waterworks outside town. This was nearly 5 feet over the all time record. United States Highway 30 was closed just west of Boone by flood waters but east-west routes across lowa south of Boone, in cluding U. S. 6 were open. Nearly all main north-south routes were open, some with detours. At Sioux City, the Floyd River Mrs. Smith Defeats Jones in Maine by Margin of 5 to I Carries All but Four Os Over 600 Precincts; Rival Blanked in 19 By the Associated Press PORTLAND, Me., June 22. Maine Republicans overwhelm ingly renominated Senator Mar garet Chase Smith in yesterday’s primary and cut down in crush ing defeat the challenger she said Senator McCarthy, Repub lican, of Wisconsin, apparently put up against her. Mrs. Smith won by a margin of more than 5 to 1, over Robert L. Jones, Senator McCarthy’s 34- year-old protege. G. O. P. nomination is tanta mount to victory in Maine. A nearly complete count, from 613 of Maine’s 626 precincts, showed 96,159 votes for Mrs. Smith, 19,203 for Mr. Jones. Carries Only 4 Precincts. Mr. Jones carried only four of those precincts, one of them his home city of Biddleford. In 19 others he failed to get a single vote and was almost shut out in many more. President Eisenhower was “highly pleased” by Senator Smith’s victory. White House Press Secretary James C. Hagerty told reporters he showed the Maine returns to the President this morning and would like to announce: “The President has great ad miration for Senator Smith and was highly pleased by the re sults.” Mr. Jones’ defeat scarcely could be translated into ohe for Sen ator McCarthy for the Wiscon sin Senator never was a solid is sue during the campaign, and neither contestant contended he was. Furthermore it wasn’t until the eve of the primary that Sen ator Smith came out and said that it appeared Senator Mc- Carthy deliberately planted Mr. Jones in the race against her. The Smith Jones bajtle was the only State-wide contest in 1 the primary In the September general election, it will be Senator Smith versus Democrat Paul Fullam, Colby College history professor, j who had no competition in the primary The only other major races were both in the Ist congression (See MAINE. Page A-2.) Truman Doing Well, Gets Good Wishes By the Associated Prosi KANSAS CITY, June 22. Harry S. Truman, recovering from a Sunday operation in which his gall bladder and ap pendix were removed, sat up i about 45 minutes today reading telegrams and letters. Mrs. Geraldine Blakemore. a nurse, said the former President was feeling much better this morning after a good night’s j rest. _ Dr. Wallace Graham, Mr. Truman’s physician, visited him briefly early today. Mrs. Blake more reported Mr. Truman’s temperature was down from yes terday, when it was reported above 100 degrees. Dr. Graham said last night , Mr. Truman is getting along as well as expected but added, “it’s ! a pretty rough situation.” Dr. Wallace Graham said he had not allowed his patient to walk yet and he was not yet out of danger. The 70-year-old Mr. Truman, however, was talking about getting out of the hos pital. (Ek lEtomitta L. J l y WITH SUNDAY MORNING EDITION L/ *★ WASHINGTON, D. C., TUESDAY, JUNE 22, 1954—FOETY-TWO PAGES. crested for a second time and all levees held. At Fort Dodge, waters were falling. Many of the 1,000 lowa fam ilies made homeless by flood con ditions the last four days were returning home, but new evacu ations were occurring at down stream points. The death toll still stood at one, but crop and property losses ran to many mil lions. One Town Surrounded. The small town of Turin, about 40 miles southeast of Sioux City, was surrounded as flood waters of the Little Sioux and Maple Rivers cut across the low lands. Upstream on the Little Sioux a secondary crest of 22 or 23 feet was anticipated at Cherokee today. A 22.7 crest, second worst, was recorded there during the 1953 flood. Another series of flood crests surged down tributaries of the important Cedar and lowa Rivers in Northeastern lowa. Waterloo and Cedar Rapids prepared for crests later this week. The lowa office of the Federal Soil Conservation Service esti mates 725,000 acres of crop land has been under water during the last three weeks from torrential rains. This figure does not in clude the overflows of the last two days. Living Costs Dip in District, Rise in Nation The cost-of-living index rose slightly during May in most cities but declined slightly in Washington, the Bureau of Labor Statistics announced today. The national index for all items was 115 per cent of the 1947-1949 average, the bureau said, which ruled out any possi bility that the Nation’s rail workers might lose a cent an hour in pay. The national increase, which halted a downward trend of the, last three months, resulted prin- i cipally from advances of 0.8 per cent in food and 0.3 per cent for housing. Other goods and serv ices were substantially un changed, the Bureau said. The Washington decline was four-tenths of 1 per cent. The consumer price index for May stood at 113.7 on a scale on which 1947-49 prices are 100. The dip was due to lower prices for clothing, housing, personal care and recreation and reading. Food prices went up. The bu reau said average retail food prices advanced 1.8 per cent be tween February and May to a level 1.9 per cent higher than a year ago. Fruits and vege tables were up 5.5 per cent and meats, poultry and fish rose 1.9 per cent. There was a drop of 2.9 per cent in dairy products as a re sult of the April 1 cut in butter support prices. • Rents for homes went up two tenths of 1 per cent between November, 1953, and May, 1954. The composite housing index dropped, however, because of lower prices for oil and solid fuels and some house furnishings. Lower prices reported for tele vision sets, sports goods and theater admisisons were given as reasons for a 4.7 decline in the index for the reading and recrea tion group. Cancer and Credit Stir Stock Reaction By tho Associated Press NEW YORK, June 22.—The stock market generally gained ground today as investors in terpreted the Federal Board’s re duction of commercial bank re serves as an inflationary gesture. But tobacco company stocks were under strong selling pres- Cigarettes May Shorten Lives of Men Past 50, Doctors Says. Page A-5 Reserve Board Eases Controls to Spur Business Credit Flow. Page A-4 sures. Yesterday, the American Cancer Society reported a link between cigarette smoking and cancer and heart disease. It took nearly three-quarters of an hour for brokers to combine buy and sell orders on American Tobacco. Then the Nation’s leading tobacco producer opened at $56 a share on a block of 12,- 100 shares, off $3.50 from the last sale and a new 1954 low. f Philip Morris declined $2.50 at $37.50 a share and Reynolds Tobacco B at $35 a share was ] off $2. Also down at least $2 ! were Lorillard and Liggett & : Myers. Other sections of the stock market improved, especially steels, motors, chemicals, rail roads, utilities and aircraft makers. Yesterday the market inched to its highest levels since October, 1929. After the market closed yes terday the Federal Reserve low ered bank reserve requirements, paving the way for credit ex pansion through the Nation’s banking system of more than $7.5 billion. Rival Forces Claim Victories In Guatemala Major Battle Seen For Key Rail Town On Line to Capital By tho Associated Press TEGUCIGALPA. Honduras, June 22.—Government and rebel forces trumpeted rival victory claims today in the four-day-old battle for Guatemala. Both sides appeared to be mobilizing for a major fight over the key rail town of Zacapa. President Jacobo Arbenz Guz man’s Communist-backed gov ernment claimed a success lor its armed forces at Gualan, east of Zacapa about 20 miles inside Guatemala. It said the rebels were run out of town after a brief skirmish, but mentioned no casualties. The “liberation radio,” speak ing for the anti-Red invasion forces of exiled Guatemalan leader Col. Carlos Castillo Armas, claimed the rebels held 25 towns in Guatemala. Associated Press dispatches from Guatemala City said Ar benz’ troops were massing in the area of Zacapa. a city of some 8.000 on the main rail line be tween the capital and the Caribbean port of Puerto Bar rios. Five-Hour Battle Reported. A rebel flyer interviewed near the Honduran border said Cas tillo Armas’ men also were mov ing by truck towards Zacapa. He said the invaders headed for the rail center after seizing the cathedral town of Esquipulas in a five-hour battle. Three Guate malan soldiers were reported killed in that engagement. An informed source at Tegu cigalpa indicated a fight for Zacapa was shaping up. He pre dicted the rebels would abandon their guerrilla tactics within the next 24 hours and seek a pitched battle with Arbens’ army. The source also said: 1. At least two Guatemalan pilots have fled their country in training planes since the inva sion began Friday. 2. T*o railroad bridges at Gualan had been destroyed; sabotage along the line between Gualan and Puerto Barrios has increased; a train which left Guatemala City for the port of San Jose has “simply disap peared.” 3. The rebels have taken over the rail town of Morales, some 50 miles from Puerto Barrios. 4. A rebel plane machine gunned and dropped grenades on San Jose. The rebels also an nounced that their planes had bombed Coban, a garrison town in Central Guatemala, from a base inside the country. Rebels Proclaim Government. The rebel radio broadcast a threat to bomb Guatemala City for the fourth time since the in vasion began. The previous three bombings were. by single planes and apparently did little damage. Castillo Armas has proclaimed his command the only legal gov ernment of Guatemala and called on his countrymen to diasvow the Arbenz regime. A spokesman here said the re volutionary “government” would announce its cabinet later today. Prince Georges Arrest Made in Fireworks Sale Prince Georges County police issued a warning today against the sale of fireworks as the first arrest of the season was re ported. Detective D. D. Forsht charged William White, 24, colored, of 1301 Eastern avenue. Fairmont Heights, with selling fireworks. Mr. White posted collateral of $38.50. A hearing was scheduled Friday in Hyattsville Police Court. Maryland law prohibits the sale or display of fireworks or firecrackers by individuals. A conviction of possession of fire works can bring a maximum fine of SSO, and the maximum fine for selling fireworks is S2OO. Large displays by organizations are permitted by the State In surance Commission, which has authority to issue permits on 10 days’ notice. Congress Ball Game To Help More Youngsters Go to Camp On Thursday morning, 240 excited and happy children will leave Washington’s sweltering streets for a 12-day stay at Camps Good Will and Pleasant. About one third of them will make the trip out of the ad vance sales of tickets for the annual Congressional Baseball game tomorrow night. Hundreds more are awaiting their turn to go to camp, but funds to send them must be provided. The Congressional game offers away to send many of those waiting. There are many good seats available for the game, and hundreds of eager and needy children are hoping they will be filled. While the game has no $50,- 000 bonus baby to put on dis play, the man who discovered 17-year-old Harmon Killebrew S’—* - White House Opposes Move To Block Hiss' Retirement Pay Budget Bureau Cites Contract Rights; Views Rouse Hostility on Capitol Hill By the Associated Press The Eisenhower administra tion opposed denying Gov ernment retirement pay to Alger Hiss or any convict who became entitled to it as a Federal em ploye. The administration stand sur prised many Congress members. Representative Clardy, Republi can, of Michigan said he was “shocked, aghast, enraged, boil ing mad.” Representative St. George, Republican, of New York called it “inconceivable.” The administration’s position was stated by the Bureau of the Budget, which customarily speaks for the President, and the Civil Service Commission to a House Civil Service subcommittee. The subcommittee is consider ing bills applying specifically to Hiss, and generally to all Fed- DON HOLLENBECK. TV's Don Hollenbeck Found Dead of Gas By the Associated Press NEW YORK, June 22. —CBS TV commentator Don Hollen beck was found dead of gas in his midtown hotel apartment to day and police said it apparently was a case of suicide. Police said there were five open gas jets in # the apartment. He won the Polk Memorial Award from Long Island Uni versity in 1950 for distinguished reporting on his weekly “CBS Views the Press” broadcasts. He was a war correspondent during World War 11. Mr. Hollenbeck, 49, was born in Lincoln, Nebr., March 30, 1905, the son of Clyde and Clara (Dacey) Hollenbeck. He attended the University of Nebraska and worked for 10 years on the Omaha Bee News. for the Senators will be there in uniform and playing for the Republican team. Senator Welker of Idaho, who was a pretty fair semi-pro player in his younger days, is one of Man ager Runt Bishop’s pitchers. He will be on hand to step in if Representative Glen Davis of Wisconsin, first-string pitcher who doubles in brass as clean up hitter, should falter. The 40 or so members of the two teams have worked hard getting into shape for the game, and they will put on a good exhibition. Tickets sell for sl, $1.50 or $2.50. They may be obtained in Room 724 of The Star building, from Congressional secretaries and at Griffith Stadium. The parade starting the game will begin promptly at 8 p.m. After that, there will be a wonderful show for about 2 1 /a hours. eral workers convicted of felonies involving moral turpitude. Hiss, former State Department official convicted of lying when he denied giving secret Govern ment documents to a pre-World War II Communist spy ring, was invited to state his view on the proposal to take away his pen sion. Through the Prison Bureau and an attorney, he sent word from Lewisburg (Pa.) Prison that he did not wish to make a statement. Hiss had a total Government service of 14 years, 9 months. Under present law he will be en titled to retirement pay of S7OO a year starting December 1, 1966, after he reaches age 62. The Budget Bureau, in a letter to the subcommittee, said the courts have held retirement rights are contractual rights “and that when the United States enters into an employ ment contract it is governed by the same laws that apply to con tracts made by private citizens.” The bureau further expressed “grave doubt” that any one meeting the conditions of the law “can be divested of rights which have accrued to him.” $2.20 Realty Tax For District Fixed; Rise of Five Cents The- Commissioners today formally fixed the District’s new real estate tax at $2.20 per SIOO of full property value. The rate is the minimum per mitted under terms of the new Public Works Revenue Act. It is 5 cents higher than the prevailing levy. The Commissioners renewed the tangible personal property tax of $2 per SIOO valuation. They formally repealed the tax on personal household effects. Under the schedule approved today, taxes must be paid on boats valued at more than sl,- 000. The taxes are applicable in the fiscal year beginning July 1. Taxpayers are required to file personal property informa tion next month. They will be billed for payment in full in September, or half in September and the rest next March. Join the Ranks Summer Camp Fund Contributors Listed There are children in the Washington area looking to }#*■ for a helping hand this summer They would like a summer vacation at camp. But their families couldn't manage the expense. You can step in and make their trips possible. For $35.72 you can send a child to camp for 12 days. Send your contribution to/The Evening Staj Summer Camp Fund at The Star Building. You can pay for 12 days, or chip in with as much as you care to give. The following contributions are acknowledged today: Previously acknowledged $7,087 81 i Mary Willson Hilliard 10.00 S. B. A. 10.00 Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Davis 5.00 John A. Riggles 5.00 i Charles H. Pierce. Jr 2.00 ! Anonymous 25.00 ! E. H. B. 10.00 I Anonymous 2.00 Mrs. William W. Eagles 20.00 Garnett Stackelberg 17.80 Anonymous 5.00 Mrs. Austin Kautz 5.00 Mrs. Leo H. Frelburter __ 10.00 In memory ol son. J. H. E.- 35.72 Philip S. Pierce .. __ 20.00 O. J. Singleton - Son i Gilbert J. and Wayne J. Gusi 10.00 Kathryn D. Pout 17.80 Mrs. James MacGregor Byrne 35.72 Equality-Waiter Reed Post No. 284. Veterans o t Foreign Wars 35. ,2 James Willis Robb 5.00 Col. Everett L. Cook 20.00 Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Wil liams „ 15 00 Daniel C. Vaughan 1 • .*6 Alice M. Griffith 3--. . 2 Total t# data *7.468.07 Problems of Paris The problems of France, declining in strength midst a modern world of com plex political and economic conflicts are analyzed in the second of a series on the shaky French empire on Page A-11. New York Markets, Poges A-18-19 Bom* Delivery, Monthly Rates. Evening and Sunday 51. 76; T PI?\TTC! Evenings only 51 .30: Sunday only 66e; Night Pinal. 10c Additional «* ID Slum Code Drafters Told to Drop All Else, Produce by July 1 Prentiss Sets Deadline For Three Officials In Housing Campaign By Miriam Ottenberg Engineer Commissioner Louis W. Prentiss today told the city’s housing code drafters to drop all their other work and come up with the long-awaited code by July 1. Obviously impatient with the long delay in getting a code, Gen. Prentiss set the deadline for action at a two-hour closed session with the city’s legal, en gineering and health officials. The housing code, on the drafting board for the past nine months, is aimed at bringing all forms of housing within the purview of District inspection. The goal is to improve housing and prveent further deteriora tion of sub-standard dwellings on their way to becoming slums. Executive Session Ordered. The housing code subcommit tee of the Slum Prevention and Rehabilitation Committee is ! headed' by William Cary, direc ; tor of the Health Department’s ; Bureau of Public Health Engi neering. District officials serving with him are Assistant Corpora tion Counsel Robert F. Kneipp and R. Donald Kinney, assistant superintendent of inspections in the District Department of Li censes and Inspections. Gen. Prentiss told the three men to free themselves of other duties before Thursday and go into executive session that day to i get the code completed. He made it clear that he wants a finished J draft one week after they start meeting. He said the non-Government members of the code committee also would be invited to sit in on these sessions, although he could obviously not order them to do so. These include Ralph J. John son, Washington Housing Asso ciation; William S. Harps, Wash ington Real Estate Brokers As sociation; Alvin L. Abinoe, Washington Real Estate Board, George R. Linkins. Building j Owners and Managers Associa ; tion and Herman Schmidt. Home Builders Association of Metro politan Washington. Draft to Go to Committee. The completed draft, the gen eral said, will be submitted to ! the large housing code advisory ! committee which is still in pro cess of appointment but is sup posed to be completed by June 30. Then the Commissioners will take a look at it. Gen. Prentiss planned to em phasize the forthcoming housing code at session with -Chairman O’Hara of the House District Judiciary subcommittee this aft ernoon Representative O’Hara has been holding up a bill sought by the District to put teeth into the law for the condemnation of insanitary building. The leg islator wants standards for con. demnation written into the law. District officials, however, want the legislation to give the Commissioners authority to es tablish standards without writ ing them into law. Code May Serve as Guide. Gen. Prentiss said that he felt . that once the housing code is written it can be used as a guide for condemnation of insanitary buildings. Gen. Prentiss said the board which condemns these buildings is now using the build ing code which applies to new construction. He said the board should rec ognize that certain aspects of old buildings cannot be brought to the standards of new con struction, but can be made rea sonably safe and sanitary. That : was the attitude that he ex pected to take to Capitol Hill i this afternoon. Budget Hearing Gets Pleas for Fund Boosts Protest Made on Plan for C. St. S.E. To Be Major Artery Citizen spokesmen appeared as witnesses today to wind up Sen ate subcommittee hearings on the District’s record-breaking $170.7 million budget. Liberalization of spending pro grams were asked for in various services, including schools and welfare. Special stress was placed on the need for expansion of the District's civil defense program and for extension of the auto mobile training program in the high schools. Perhaps the sharpest debate developed over the proposals of District Highway Director J. N. Robertson to develop C street S.E. into a major traffic artery leading to the East Capitol street bridge. Road Project Opposed. Victor M. Brennan, represent ing the Capitol Hill Southeast Citizens’ Association, and Donald Montgomery, 203 C street S.E., led a delegation denouncing the road project as one that would wreck property values in the Capitol Hill area. They protested such a through road would hamper the restora tion of old houses near the Capitol. Senator Dirksen, Republican, of Illinois, chairman of the sub committee in charge of the sup ply bill, directed the subcommit tee staff to ascertain the status of the C street project. Speaking for an outlay of $35.- 000 for the high school driving courses were representatives of the Commissioners’ Traffic Ad visory Board, the American Au j tomobile Association, the Key stone Automobile Club and others. Witnesses included Mrs. George C. Thorpe, Mrs. Harvey W. Wiley and Washington I. Cleve land speaking for the American Automobile Association; A. Julian | Brylawski and Nathan Lubar of ! the Traffic Board and Ernest R. | Brent for the Keystone Club. Used in Nine Schools. Mrs. Thorpe said the full fund was needed so that the training program, now used in nine high schools, could be extended to all 16. One proof of the value of driving training, she said, is to .be noted in the fact that insur ance companies charge a lower premium if the policy is taken out by trained high school drivers. Senator Beall, Repuolican, of Maryland, who was in charge of the hearings part of the day, spoke up to declare that he per sonally would vote for the full sum. He recalled that some years ago, when a member of the House, he sponsored legislation to authorize the driver-training courses. Senator Dirksen promised wit nesses that serious attention would be given their demands for more money for civil defense. The Commissioners had asked for $208,000. as against $90,000 appropriated for the present fis cal year. The House slashed the request to $75,000. In the Senat® hearings, the city heads are ask ing restoration of the full $208,- 000. Witnesses supporting the res toration included Robert E. Stein, an air raid warden: Mrs. Sterling McKittrick. Herbert P. Leeman of the Commissioners’ Advisory Council, and George A. Berger of the Arkansas- Ave nue Community Association. Representatives of the Fed eration of Citizens’ Associations submitted a relatively brief list of appropriation requests. Burden on Citizens. ! Mrs. Henry A. Bartlett, newly elected president, asked that something be done in budget re ports to make it clear that Dis trict residents carry most of th® burden of financing the city. She said there was a general miscon ception among people in th® States that the Federal Govern ment supports the District be (See BUDGET, Page A-2.) Libyan Minister Here \ Dr. Mansour Fethi El-Kekhia presented his credentials to Pres ident Eisenhower today as th® first minister to this country from Libya. Tough Divorce Laws Encourage Perjury DIVORCE GRANTED —Although New York State has stringent divorca laws, judges and lawyers know that New York divorces are easy to obtain and annulments even easier. People just perjure themselves. Page A-4. 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