WEATHER FORECAST
Fair, milder tonight, low 48. Partly cloudy
and warmer tomorrow, high 75. (Full
report on Page A-2.)
Temperatures Today
Midnight 52 Bam 45 11 a.m 58
2 a.m 48 8 a.m 49 Noon 62
4 am—4s 10 am.... 58 l p.m 62
104th Year. No. 146. Phone ST. 3-5000 ★★
Thousands Get
Civil Service
Job Security
Career Status Given
Those Hired During
Korean War Period
By JOSEfH YOUNG
The Civil Service Commission
today issued new regulations,
effective July 1, which will give
permanent career status to thou
sands of Federal workers.
The employes involved are
those who have been filling posi
tions vacated by workers who
transferred to tne defense and
security agencies during the Ko
rean war and afterward.
Since 1950 the employes who
transferred to Federal jobs es
sential to defense have had re
employment rights to their old
jobs and their replacements have
been denied the right to career
status and were subject to re
placement at any time.
The CSC’snew regulations end
the re-employment rights for
'mployes who transferred to de
fense agencies. These workers
will have a period of six months
in which to exercise their re
employment rights. At the end
of that time, their re-employ
ment rights will be abolished.
However, very few of these
workers are expected to return
to their old jobs, since most of
them are making higher salaries
in their present positions. In
fact, that is why most of them
transferred in the first place
during the Korean war.
Security for Thousands
This will result in giving per
manent job security to the
thousands of employes who re
placed them. Until now these
employes have not been given
any permanent claim to these
jobs, nor have they been able to
count their years of service in
these positions towards secur
ing career status.
Under the new regulations,
these employes will be allowed to
count the years they spent in
the jobs for career-status pur
poses. This will result in career
status for most of them, since
it only requires three years of
service to qualify *for career
status and most of them have
put at least that much time in
the jobs. For those with less'
than three years of service in
the jobs, the time they already
have spent will be counted‘to
ward the three-year require- i
ment.
For those employes who al-j,
ready had enough years of service 'j
previous to the Korean war to ,
qualify for career status, the !
CSC’s new program will give ,
them permanent rights to the
job in that they no longer will;,
be subject to displacements. This '
protection against displacement'
also will apply to employes re
ceiving career status for the first
time as a result of the new order.
Standby Program Set Up
The commission's new program
also sets up a standby program
In the event of critical emer
gency situations.
Employes will be allowed to
transfer to defense and security
agencies with re-employment
rights if the CSC determines that
the job they will fill is "immedi
ately essential to the national!
security.” Even then, the em-|
ployes’ re-employment rights 1
will expire after two years.
Until now, employes who had
transferred to defense and re
lated security bureaus had un
limited re-employment rights,
provided they lost their jobs in
a reduction-in-force program. In
its move to abolish these re-em
ployment rights in six months’
time, the CSC is giving these em
ployes the right to take their old
jobs back whether they are laid
off or whether they merely want
to return to their old positions.
The CSC said it expects very
few of these workers to return
to their old jobs, thus clearing
the way for career status and
much greater job security for
the thousands of employes who
have replaced them in their old
Jobs since 1950.
Dulles Plans Vacation
By the Associated Press
Secretary of State Dulles ar
ranged today to spend the next
10 days at his island retreat in
Lake Ontario. The State De
partment disclosed that Mr.
Dulles would leave Washing
ton this afternoon and fly
to Watertown, N. Y.. from
where he will go to Duck
Island. He will return to his
office here June 4.
DEADLINE
10 TONIGHT
FOR PLACING
YOUR WEEK END
WANT ADS
In the Big
£>tar
CLASSIFIED
The deadline tonight far want
adi to b« published in the Satur
day or Sunday Star it 10 o’clock
by telephone or 9 o’clock at the
buiinoti counter in The Star
lobby.
If you have something to buy,
trod* or Mil, got fast action by
putting Woihington’o Stor iolei
man to work for you.
Coll STerling 3-5000
.djfe lor on ad-tnkrr
* 1 , :jff- •
Jfek- Hi
■•••■' v»-o*v •' -•'
THE MIDDIE WAY —Annapolis.—Victim of custom, Tecumseh, the old fig
urehead from the battleship Delaware, gets another dose of warpaint from
midshipmen at the Naval Academy. He is painted every time Navy engages
Army in athletic competition, which will happen five times tomorrow during
June Week. Applying the colors are, left to right, Bert Melnick, 23, of
1300 North Adam street, Arlington; Richard Rodney, 19, of Rock Hill, S. C.,
and Hugh Bestick, 21, of Laurinburg, N. C. (Story on Page A-13.) —Star Staff
Photo.
Capitol Building
Funds Boosted
$27.8 Million OK'd
By House Group
The House Appropriations
i Committee, in a mood to push
[ahead with Capitol Hill construc
tion projects, today recommended
!an outlay of (27.8 million in the
fiscal year beginning July 1 for
the architect of the Capitol. |
This is an increase of $16.1;,
; million over grants made for the
I current fiscal year. Most of this
is due to the desire of House
leaders and the House member
ship generally to keep rolling
on projects for the legislative
branch.
Included in the bill, which is
expected to come up for House j
action next week, is an item of!
$lO million toward the construc
tion of the third House Office
Building, for which a site has
been acquired west of the present
New House Office Building, and
sl2 million additional for the
[extension and rebuilding of the
east front central section of the
Capitol Building itself.
SIOO Million Total
The construction and remodel
ing program is now estimated to
cost a total of SIOO million, in
cluding $64 million for the new
House Office Building. Remodel
ing of the old House Office Build
ing will cost about $9 million and
remodeling the present new
House Office Building about $9.5
million.
The newest office building will
be four stories above ground with
a multiple-level structure under
ground ranging from three level?
below the surface at the west
end to five levels underground at
the east end. It will provide
underground parking accommo
'idations for between 1,800 and
2,000 automobiles. The structure
will be built in an area bounded
by South Capitol street on the
[east. Independence avenue on
the nprth, C street on the south'
and First street on the west,
i At the Capitol, the big plaza!
now filled with automobiles
[would be cleared and an under
ground garage could be built to
(take care of them, according'to!
;J. George Stewart, architect of
ithe Capitol.
Avenue Widening Deferred
In regard to long-pending
recommendations for widening
of Independence avenue. Mr
Stewart said it had been defi
nitely decided by the House
Office Building Commission that
they want no action taken now.
For the east front project Mr.
Stewart and other officials nad
asked for sl6 million but this
was cut back by $4 million be-
See CAPITOL, Page A-5
Wilson Aide Hails
Far East Defenses
MANILA, May 25 (/P).—United
States Deputy Secretary of De
fense Reuben B. Robertson, jr„
said today he is encouraged at
the build-up of defenses against
communism in the Far East.
He called for continued Ameri
can aid to the program.
Mr. Robertson arrived from
Saigon on the last leg of a tour
of East Asian military installa
tions of the United States and
its allies.
iEhe Ibraitw Sfar
y J Vy WITH SUNDAY MORNING EDITION K^/
WASHINGTON, D. C., FRIDAY, MAY 25, 1956—SIXTY-FOUR PAGES.
Deal to Buy Out Holdings
Possible, Wolf son Says
Promises Early Meeting With Bell
On Capital Transit Proposal
By HECTOR McLEAN
Louis E. Wolfson has indicated it would be possible to work
out a deal under which Capital Transit Co. might buy out his
stockholdings by August 14.
This was disclosed today by Representative Harris, chair
man of the House Commerce subcommittee handling the.
Washington transit crisis. He also is the ranking member of
conferees who will meet with a
Senate group Monday, when an
attempt will be made to recon
cile the widely divergent transit
bills passed by the two houses
iof Congress.
Mr. Harris said his group had
asked Mr. Wolfson for his re
; action to a plan proposed by
j Daniel W. Bell under which CTC
would buy out Mr. Wolfson, us
ing the proceeds of a mortgage
bond issue on company property.
At the same time, the invest
ment firm of Alex. Brown & Sons
would promise to buy and try to
resell all stock turned in by other
stockholders at the same price
paid to Mr. Wolfson.
Mr. Wolfson’s letter said:
“Mr. Bell, president of the
American Security and Trust Co.,
Unable to Raises2s Bond,
Boy Stays in Jail 6 Weeks
An 18-year-old youth who i
came to Washington to help sup- 1
port his family in Hemphill, W. j
Va„ was released today after
spending six weeks in District'
Jail because he could not get $25 1
to pay his bond on traffic charges..
Municipal Court Judge George
D. Neilson, who ordered the
youth to jail on April 13 for
failure to make SSOO bond on
i charges of unreasonable speed
rand failing to yield the right of
way to a pedestrian, today re
leased him on his personal bond.
The youth, Charles Ray Rec
tor. was charged after an acci
dent April 13 at Nineteenth street*
and Columbia road N.W., in
which Mrs. Louise Howie. 64. of
2100 Connecticut avenue N.W,
was injured. Mrs. Howie was
admitted to Emergency Hospital
with a fractured left leg and
head injuries. She will be re
leased in several days, the hos-:
pltal said today.
Young Rector told police he is
one of 15 children in a coal-)
mining family. His father is a
disabled miner suffering from
silicosis. The youth came here
a year ago, found a job as a
, soda fountain clerk and started
sending money home.
When he lost his job and could
not pay his room rent, he moved
in with a friend. He was driv
ing a borrowed car when the
I accident happened.
On April 13. the case was con-
Itlnued in Municipal Court be
,! cause Mrs. Howie was in the
. hospital and could not appear,
j Sympathetic policemen tried un
successfully to find a friend to
put up the $25 for young Rector's
. bond.
An investigation ordered to
day by Judge Nellson disclosed
> the youth had been a model
prisoner both in police custody
and the banking firm of Alex
Brown 61 Sons, are both fully j
and financially able to discharge
any agreement that they may
make.
I “You have my personal assur
. ance that either lor Mr. J. A. B.
■Broadwater (president of CTC'
: will meet with Mr. Bell and his
. associates at the earliest possible
i time convenient to all parties
. and endeavor to formalize a plan
. that will be mutually satisfac
i tory to Mr. Bell and his group
i as well as the stockholders of
• Capital Transit Co.
“I concur with Mr. Bell that
the stumbling, block preventing
further movement on behalf of
. either party is the lack of a
See TRANSIT. Page A-8
and at the jail. In ordering him
released on his personal bond,
Judge Neilson continued the case
to June 22.
Police Pvt. Russell L. West. 1
who investigated the case, said
today he would try to get the
boy a room at the YMCA and
find him a job in a drugstore.
At the jail, he had no visitors.
British Blueblood Party
Troubled by Wet Guests
LONDON, May 25 (/P).—River
•police hovered anxiously around I
\ today as champagne-inspired ;
■young British bluebloods cli
■ maxed a debutante party by egg
-1 ing two guests to dive fully
clothed into the Thames. |
1 The fun-loving Duke of Kent, ]
20-year-old cousin of Queen.
Elizabeth 11, was one of the 300
revelers aboard the 190-toot mo
' torship Royal Princess. But he
didn't take part in the swtm
ijmlng.
i The party off the picturesque .
' Chelsea section of London cele
brated the social coming out ot 1
I Felicity and Penelope Drew 18- (
year-old twins who were pre
l sented to the Queen in March.
Young Kent—son of the Duch- ;
ess of Kent—attended with a
■ pretty blond whom newsmen <
could not identify.
Champagne flowed even more I
freely than the Thames, which I
i is somewhat sluggish off Chelsea. I
. The guests became gayer and
■ gayer. i
i Midway through the celebra
i tlon somebody cast off the moor
ing lines and the boat began to
. drift on the ebb tide. Skipper
I Herbert Whincup hurried to the
I bridge, started the engines and
’ brought his craft back to dock.
Teach Science Abroad,
i
Eisenhower Proposes
Army Payoff
Charge Denied
By Cap Maker
Senate Probers
Order Witness to
Produce Records
By CECIL HOLLAND
A New York military cap
maker today branded as "a lie";
sworn testimony that he received
kickbacks allegedly to “pay un
der the table” to Government
personnel but refused to produce
records to support his story.
The manufacturer. Sol. O.
Schlesinger of Lawrence, N. Y.,t
pleaded his constitutional priv
ilege under the Fifth Amend
ment against producing the rec
ords and said they might tend
to incriminate him. He added
that he was under an income tax
investigation.
Mr. Schlesinger was a witness
before the Senate Investigating
subcommittee which received
testimony Wednesday that he
had been given $27,745 in kick
i backs on two 1950 contracts
land said the money was to go
'to Government personnel.
Records Are Ordered
Chairman McClellan peremp-i
torily ordered Mr. Schlesinger
to produce his records at a hear
ing next Tuesday. The Senator
issued the direct order after the
witness admitted that he had
not brought any records in
'answer to a subcommittee sub
poena.
Mr. Schlesinger contended
that the $27,745 he received by
i six checks from the J. Mackey
j Shoe Co., was for “returned
'damaged merchandise.” The
! Mackey firm supplied visors and
chin straps for Air Force caps
being made by the Id,eal Uni
form Cap Co. owned by Mr.
I Schlesinger.
Mr. Schlesinger said, however,
he had no specific records to
show the amount of returned
damaged goods because he had
turned over the receipts to Miss
.Jane Mackey of the shoe firm
after he had received credit.
At a hearing Wednesday Miss
.Mackey said Mr. Schlesinger de
manded the kickbacks and told
her the money was to be used
“to pay under the table” on the
Government contracts. She
flatly denied that the payments
were for returned goods.
Colonel at Hearing
Mr. Schlesinger described as "a
downright lie” and “utter false
hood” testimony that he said the
kickbacks were for payments to
Col. Louis H. Shirley, of the
1 Army Quartermaster Corps.
Col. Shirley, who was the of
ficer who awarded the contracts
to the Schlesinger firm, was an
attentive listener at the hearing.
He was scheduled to testify at
the afternoon session.
Subcommittee Counsel Robert
Kennedy placed in the record an
affidavit by Mrs. Marie O. Dor
man, who was a bookkeeper for
Mr. Schlesinger’s company. She
swore that she had no knowledge ;
of large quantities of goods being
returned to the Mackey company
and no knowledge of the checks
that Mr. Schlesinger received.
Mrs. Dorman’s affidavit also
said she had no knowledge of a
separate bank account Mr.
i Schlesinger maintained at the
Baldwin National Bank. Bald
! win, Long Island, in which the
checks were deposited.
Mr. Schlesinger said Mrs. Dor-
Continued on Page A-5, Col. 3
More champagnp corks popped,
then one guest, shouted. "How
about a swim "
A friend offered to bet him £5
(sl4> he wouldn't jump In.
The guest took the bet, popped
his bowler hat on his head and
leaped off the bow end, yelling
“The fiver is minp.''
A lifebelt was tossed to him
and he was retrieved, still wear
ing his bowler.
A second guest then offered to
jump in for 10 pounds.
Annoyed at this inflationary
trend, some of the other stags
tossed him into the Thames.
He was rescued by a passing
vessel manned by British Sea
Scouts. They ceremoniously piped
him back aboard the Royal Prin
cess amid cheers.
At this point a police patrol
boat arrived to Investigate and
skipper Whincup said it might be
a good idea if they stood by.
Wealthy Mrs. H. M. Drew,
mother of the twins, commented:,
“Everybody seemed to have
had a splendid time. I had no
idea two men had jumped in
the river until we were saying
goodbye. Then when I shook
hands, noticed they were ter
ribly wet.’’
Stevenson Is Accused
Os Aiding Big Business
Kefauver, in Florida Talk, Mentions
Retention by RCA in Monopoly Case
By GOULD LINCOLN
Star Stuff Correspondent
TAMPA. May 25.—1 n the closing days of the Florida
presidential preference campaign, Senator Estes Kefauver of
Tennessee is trying to pin a big business label on Adlai Steven-,
son, his active rival for Florida's 28 votes in the Democratic
National Convention.
Senator Kefauver developed this new line of attack in an
address yesterday in Plant City.
He called attention to the fact 1
that Mr. Stevenson was employed i
last year by the Radio Corpora
tion of America to argue its case J
Stevenson Hits G. O. P. Arms Policy. I
Poge A-7]
in the Supreme Court against an j
anti-trust action brought by the j
United States. He said Mr.,
Stevenson has been strangely
silent during the campaign on
the growing concentration of |
economic power in America and 1
its effect on individual initiative 1
and enterprise—to the detriment l
of small business and industry.
“I did noi mean to criticize a
House Fight Due;
On Housing Bill
Rejection of Senate
Figures Expected
By J. A. O’LEARY
The 1956 housing bill is on its
way to the House today, where a
fight is in prospect over the lib
eral low-rent public housing pro
gram the Senate approved yes
terday.
Senate Republicans failed. 41
to 38. to reduce the authorized
number of public housing units
from 135,000 to 35,000 a year for
the next two years.
But public housing always has
faced an uphill road in the
House, and this year is not ex
pected to be any different.
If the House goes along with
the lower administration figures,
the end result probably will be
a compromise in conference.
Interest Plan Defeated
The Republicans also failed by
a one-vote margin <4l to 40 > to
raise the interest rate on Gov
ernment loans for housing proj- '
ects on college campuses. They
argued that the lower interest
rate discourages private investors
from co-operating on college
projects and will tend to put the i
whole job on the Government.
The vote on the interest rate[
was so close both parties re
sorted to parliamentary delaying!
tactics to give absentees time to ]
reach the chamber. On the first!;
roll call the Republicans were i]
ahead by one vote. But the Dem- i
ocrats were more successful in i
rounding up absentees and fin
ally came out on top. The device ,
used to gain time for Senators (
who were en route to the cham- ,
ber was to have members arise |
one by one and ask the chair how ]
they were recorded. ,|
Helps Older Persons 1
Highlights of the bill are:
1 1. A new section would help '
elderly persons to obtain better
• housing, both through more lib- (
1 eral FHA mortgage insurance
and by making it easier for them
' to get in rental housing projects. '
Authorizes a special program of .
15,000 public housing units an- \
! nually for five years for elderly !
persons in addition to the regu- [
lar public housing units.
2. Increases to $3 billion the ,
authorization for FHA insured ,
mortgages for the coming year. ,
3. Extends FHA home-repair ,
loans for three years, with the;
See HOUSING, Page A-8
Body of Woman
Found in Closet
CARSON CITY, Nev„ May 25
i/P).— I The body of a young blond
woman, possibly garrotted, was
found last night in a clothes
closet of an apartment here.
Identification was not immedi
ately possible.
Sheriff Lester Smith said the
, apartment where the body was
found formerly was occupied by
a Carson City bartender. He
asked authorities throughout the
West to help locate the man,
whom he named as William E.
Boswell.
Fingerprints were to be taken
from the body to be compared
with those taken from a motel
room registered to a Mrs. Ann
Harris Van Ryen. who sheriff
Smith said is missing. Also
[missing is Mrs. Van Ryne's 1953'
station wagon.
Mrs. Van Ryne's attorney, j
Prince Hawkins of Reno, said
her family is socially prominent
in Philadelphia, but declined to
name it. ,
Metropolitan
Edition
Ntw York Markets, Pages A-22-23
WMAL—RADIO—TV
lawyer for representing any side
in a law suit,” said Senator Ke
fauver. "Mr. Stevenson's case
was somewhat different. At the
time he accepted the RCA re
tainer he was titular head of the
Democratic Party. What he said
and did might well have been
regarded as reflecting the views
of the party and the direction it
was going.”
One of the main lines of at
tack by the Democrats against
President Eisenhower and his
administration is that the Re
publicans provide a government
of, by and for big business. Sen-
Continued on Page A-8, Col. 1
i
LIGHT FROST NIPS <
RURAL REGIONS ,
48 DUE TONIGHT S
j
Unusually late frost ap- !
peared in Washington sub
urbs early today as ther- ,
mometers hovered around (
freezing in some areas.
The lowest temperature ]
officially recorded for Wash- j
ington was 43 degrees at 4:15 j <
a.m. But a 28 was recorded ,
at Berryviile, Va., and frost
was reported at Vienna, (
Winchester, Aldie ana An
nandale. There were few re
ports of crop damage.
In New England, however,
record-breaking low temper- ;
atures were reported and
there was millions of dollars'
damage to fruit trees and
vegetables. The Massachu-
I setts loss was estimated at
$5 million.
The Weather Bureau pre
dicted, however, that the un
usually cool days are on the
way out. It won t be quite
so cool tonight, with a low
around 48.
Saturday will oc partly
cloudy and slightly warmer,
the bureau predicted
(New England Crops Hit, Pg. A-21 ;
U. 5., Reds Study
Trading Visits
The administration today ap- j
patently has embarked on a .
course of action which could
lead to an exchange of Russian
and American official visits on [
the highest level.
The word “apparent” is neces
sary. because the maneuvering
over invitations was obscured by
denials and deliberate confirma
tory hints yesterday in the White
House. Pentagon and State De
partment.'Curiously enough, the
most solid news of the exchange
came from the usually silent i
Soviet Embassy.
This much was clear today: 1
Both the Soviet Union and the ]
Government of the United States
want to try out a small-scale;'
exchange of official visitors.
But further than that, Krem- 1
lin leaders Bulganin and Khru- i
'shchev have hinted they would i
like to visit this country them-j]
selves. President Eisenhower
has indicated he would like to i
see his old World War II “friend” |
and correspondent, Soviet Mar
shal Zhukov, come over. And the
Joint Chiefs of Staff showed
yesterday they would like to i
visit Russia.
If both nations are willing to
make lower-level exchanges at
this time, both obviously are
willing to consider the top-level
visits if all goes well with the
initial experiments.
|
Soviet Being Prodded
The key action yesterday was
the indirect notification to Rus
sia that the Joint Chiefs of Staff
would probably accept an invi- :
tation to inspect the 3ovict
armed forces—if such an invi
tation is forthcoming.
The' matter was handled in
; such away as to leave no doubt
that the Soviet government was,
being prodded to bid the ameri
' can military high command to
visit Moscow and tour the coun
try.
The unusual affair was han
dled by the White House and the
I Defense Department. Th*- state
I Department remained—perhaps
i skeptically—silent.
Gordon Gray, Assistant Secie
ijUrjr of Defense, reportedly went
i : over the matter with Unde; sec-'
retary of State Herbert Hoover, 1
■jr., at a luncheon meeting.
The White House's contribu
tion was a remark by Assistant
, Press Secretary Murray Snyder
[ Continued on Page A-S, Col, 1:
5 CENTS
Asks Schools
To Instruct
Free Nations
WACO. Tex., May 25 (/P). —
President Eisenhower, terming
communism essentially “a gi
gantic failure." today urged
America’s great universities to
help provide needy free nations
with modern science education
centers in a “dynamic" move to
promote world peace.
The President also sounded a
strong new appeal for a Euro-
Partiol Text of President’s Speech ot
Baylor University. Page A-11
pean union. He declared it
“seems nearer today than at any
time in centuries" and would
amount to “a mighty pillar of
free strength in the modern
world.” He added:
'"A free United States of Eu
; rope would be strong in the skills
of its people, adequately endowed
with material resources and rich
in their common cultural and ar
tistic heritage. It would be a
highly prosperous community.”
Says U. S. Must Help
In a foreign policy address de
livered in connection with Baylor
! University commencement exer
icises, Mr. Eisenhower hammered
at the idea of need for free world
co-operation in the struggle
against communism—and at the
idea of need for the United
States to play a leading role in
providing help.
In what seemed to be a plea
for congressional enactment of
the administration's $4,908,000,-
000 foreign aid program, the
President spoke out against be
ing “penny wise" in that field,
saying it could lead "only to
greater risk and greater cost.”
About 12,000 persons were at
James Connally. Air Force Base
when the presidential plane Co
lumbine landed at 11:04 a.m.
EDT. The official welcoming
committee included Gov. Allan
Shivers, a Democrat who sup
ported Mr. Eisenhower in 1952,
and Jack Porter, Texas G. O. P.
national committeeman.
Warns of Red Threat
Speaking in the big Heart O’
Texas Coliseum in his native
State, the President said in his
speech, nationally televised on
the Columbia Broadcasting Sys
tem:
“Today a militant, aggressive
communistic doctrine is domi
nant over much of the world's
surface and over hundreds of
millions of the world's people.”
He called communism "cruel,
intolerant, atheistic . . , com
mitted to conquest by lure, in
timidation and force.” and added
it “poses a threat from which
even this mighty Nation is not
immune.”
The President flew here from
Washington this morning for his
address and to accept his 38th
honorary degree, this one a doc
torate of laws.
Mr. Eisenhower's proposal that
American universities set up sci
ence education centers in needy
free nations was set forth in
See EISENHOWER. Page A-5
Mysterious Blast \
Kills Chicago Man \
CHICAGO. May 25 UP).— A
man was killed today in a mys
terious blast of a bomb or other
high explosive he walked in a
North Side street.
Police said the victim's body
was blown at least 10 feet from
the point of the explosion. The
body was found lying down on
the sidewalk in a pool of blood
near 1252 Catalpa avenue. Both
legs were torn off by the blast.
Police theorized that the man
may have been carrying the ex
plosive and it exploded acciden
tally or prematurely if it had
been a time bomb.
Papers found in the victim's
pockets bore the name C. W.
•or Mike i Campbell, 58, of a
South Side address, some 20
miles from the scene. A car
listed under Campbell's name
was parked across the street
from the spot where the man's
body was found.
KAYAK STAR AIMS
FOR 'DOWN UNDCR'
BOATING—Ken Clark is paddling
his little "Shillelagh” seven days a
week on the Potomac, training for
the Olympics nest fall at Melbourne,
Australia. Wheeleer Johnson tells his
1 story on The Star's new weekly
Boating Paget. There's lots of other
news for boating font, too. Pages
C-6 and 7.
Guide for Readers
Amusem'ts A-24-25 Financial A-2? 21
Classified C-8-19 Obituory A 6
Comics A-30-31 Radio-TV A-2.' i
Editorial A-10 Sports C-i 7
Edit'l Articles A-II Woman's
Feature Page A-27 Section B 1 5
Hove The Slat Delivered to Your
Home Doily and Sunday
Dial STerling S 5000