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WEATHER FORECAST Some snow today and tonight with little or no accumulation. Not as cold Friday. Low tonight 10. (Full report on-Page A-2 ) Temperatures Today Midnight 19 6 a.m 12 n a.m 12 2 a.m—l6 Bam 12 Noon 13 4 a.m—l4 10 a.m 12 i p.m 14 105th Year. No. 17. Snow Flurries Due, 10 Above Likely Tonight High Today About 20 With Cloudy, Milder Forecast Tomorrow Snow flurries were reported in scattered areas of Maryland and Virginia this morning and the Weather Bureau predicted the District would get a light snow today. Forecasters said the new pre cipitation would not be enough to make roads hazardous. At 6:35 a.m. today the Na tional Airport weather station thermometer recorded 11 above zero, coldest since 10 above on February 2. 1954. Tonight’s low is expected to be about 10 in the city after a high today of about 20. The suburbs probably will be 3 to 4 degrees colder. Milder Tomorrow Friday will be cloudy and somewhat milder, the oureau said. Schools in the nearby counties which were closed yes terday resumed classes today. National Capital Parks today reported the Chesapeake & Ohid Canal is safe for ice skating in the Cabin John area above Lock 5. South of Lock 5. where n feed er canal enters the C&O and quickens the current, the ice is unsafe. Parks officials also warned against skating on the Reflect ing Pool or the Kenilworth Aquatic Gardens surfaces. They have not frozen to a safe thick ness. 2,500 Distress Calls The American Automobile As sociation said it has responded to more than 2.500 distress calls since Monday—2,2oo of them in volving dead batteries, frozen brakes and frozen gasoline lines. No general relief appears near as the season’s longest cold snap kept its clutch on the Eastern half of the Nation. Temperatures moderated today in some other sections but not enough to get the mercury above the freezing line. At Miles City. Mont., for instance, it was 22 above today compared to 13 below yesterday. The Northern Plains were hit anew by snow and gusty winds. The snow is expected to spread Eastward today, reaching through the Great Lakes region and mid-; Mississippi Valley and extending across the Ohio Valley and Ap palachians. By tonight it could advance into the mid-Atlantic and North Atlantic States. Conductor Loses Arm in Accident At Union Station A Pennsylvania Railroad con ductor lost his right arm at Union Station today when he stepped backwards into the path " of a train. Police said the injured man is George G. Schneese, 52. of Elkton, Md. He was talking to Engineer R. V. Booth when the accident occurred. He was struck by a backing yard engine oper ated by E. W. Hensbrough of 4700 Porter street, Bradbury Heights, Md. The Rescue Squad took Mr. Schneese to Emergency Hospi tal where his condition is listed as satisfactory. Soviet Tanks Reported Fighting Kiev Disorder BERLIN. Jan. 17 (£>*.—'The West Berlin newspaper Telegraf today reported widespread stu dent unrest in the Ukraine. It said Russian tanks were called in to put down a demonstra tion in Kiev, the capital In a dispatch from Vienna quoting Hungarian refugees, the newspaper said the Ukraine un rest was similar to what report edly erupted in Moscow, Lenin grad and Riga. The dispatch also reported that 50 students and two professors have been arrested in Stalingrad. PLACE YOUR OUT-OF-TOWN MAIL ORDERS NOW For (El)e ttucnmn Slur SOUVENIR INAUGURAL EDITIONS of MONDAY, JANUARY 21 and TUESDAY, JANUARY 22 The Star’s Souvenir Edi tions—complete with a Special Color Rotogravure Section—will provide a full start-to-flnish story of the Inauguration. For mailing anywhere in the U.S.A. and possessions, en close 50c in check or money order per order postpaid. Overseas mailing, $1 per order postpaid. Send your orders to The Evening Star, Room 204, Eleventh and Pennsylvania avenue Washington, D. C. Phone ST. 3-5000 * * .3 KhHI IP r * lag mm? • / * - f ■*' Ji fill Joljf' r jsf I ♦ f* v-'v / tm MUR' *•****•»*. A"" * 'V * ** . • >• :: fc>. • • V SKATERS’ HEYDAY—A cold weather windfall brought out this group of skaters on the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal in Glen Echo, Md., this morning. —Star Staff Photo. Civil Service Head Urges New U. S. Pay Policy Should Respond to Varying Conditions In Labor Market, Young Declares By JOSEPH YOUNG The Government needs a new pay policy In fixing the wages of its employes, Chairman Philip Young of the Civil Service Commission declared today. “We need a new pay policy for the Federal service and particularly we need a pay policy that will be responsive to varying labor-market conditions, both national and local, and to changes in Government pro-! grams,” Mr. Young said. The commission chief made his views known in a speech before the general assembly of :the Engineers Joint Council in New York City. Mr. Young said “the challeng ing subject of pay” has received a great deal of attention from the administration. Overhauling Needed “It has been clear to me for some time that the entire Gov ernment pay system is in need of ; overhauling.” While Mr. Young did not spell out the details of what he advo cated to change the Federal nay j system, he is known to look fav orably on a system whereby Gov ernment employes’ salaries would be based on comparable indus try rates in the areas where they are employed. Under such a sys tem, Congress would set the min imum and maximum pay rates of a particular job. but the Civil Service Commission would deter mine the exact pay within these limits that an employe would re ceive based on industry rates for comparable jobs in his particu lar locale. The Government's skilled Nehru Criticizes Doctrine's Effect NEW DELHI, Jan. 17 UP).— Prime Minister Nehru today said the Eisenhower doctrine on the Middle East could make the sit uation there “more difficult” be cause it links military and eco nomic aid. “To give economic help to; these countries is good,” Mr.| Nehru told newsmen when he arrived from Cajcutta. “but to tie it up with military help ties it up with the cold war and makes the situation more diffi cult.” Mr. Nehru's comments so far on the Eisenhower proposal are considered moderate. Info; vi ants say this is due partly to the influence of his recent talks with the American President and partly to his desire to see how the Middle East countries react to the new American policy. Syrian President Shukri A1 [Kuwatly also arrived today for a | state visit with Mr. Nehru. ! Their talks were expected to dwell heavily on the Eisenhower doctrine, which the Syrian gov ernment opposes outspokenly. j Aden Chiefs Agree To Yemen Talks LONDON, Jan. 17 UP).—Sul tans of the various tribal units of the Aden protectorate hav. agreed conditionally to Britain's proposal for peace talks on the Aden-Yemen border warfare. Yemen has not yet replied to the British proposal. The Foreign Office said the Aden rulers agreed to the talks —if Yemeni troops withdraw from the Aden territories first. Britain and the Aden Sultans contend that Yemeni troops are raiding the British-protected areas in the southwest corner of the Arabian Peninsula. Yemen countercharges that the British forces in Aden arc attacking Yemeni towns and Aden Nationalists who oppose British plans to federate the Aden Sultanates into a closer knit political unit. ©he ©betting, ©kf V J V WITH SUNDAY MORNING EDITION V-/ .crafts’ employes (per diem work ers* now have their pay set by : wage boards based on compar able industry rates. The pay of i classified and postal employes is set by Congress. Mr. Young said "the grade -1 and-salary structure is too rigid: 1 the pay ceiling Is too firmly fixed; the number of top-grade positions is too limited. The . Civil Service Commission has al ready recommended to Congress,' , and will continue to support, ' liberalization of its authority to . pay above-minimum salaries in ; shortage occupations, and a sub ’ stantial increase in the number of super-grade and scientific po ’ sitions.” I “Stop-Gap” Measures •! However, Mr. Young said these ’ were only “stop-gap” measures. What really Is needed is,a com • pletely new pay system of fix > ing Government salaries, he said. Postal and classified employe | unions generally have been cool ! to the idea of area-rate methods ’ of fixing Government pay. They; feel that this would tend to keep ' Federal salaries down in rural areas and in sections of the 1 country' where industry pay is : generally low. On the other hand, Mr. Young and others feel that such a sys tem would insure higher Gov- 1 ernment salaries in many fields such as engineering, scientific, . technical and other professional , jobs, by permitting Federal sal -1 aries to keep pace with pay in : industry. Economic Message To Be Ready Jan. 23 I By the Associated Press President Eisenhower’s eco nomic message will go to Con ’ gres January 23, the White I House has announced. Under the law this message | must be transmitted annually ' by January 20. This year the ■ White House asked an extension of time and Congress approved : a three-day delay by Joint reso i lution. Inauoural Parade to Get Test Run Tomorrow A miniature dress rehearsal of Monday's Inaugural Parade : will be conducted tomorrow morning over the route of the real parade. Deputy Police Chief Howard V. Covell said all traffic will be Other Inaugural Storin. Page A-21 stopped so the armed services and the police can make a test run. under simulated conditions, for the presidential section of the big procession. For police the dry run will come close to a full dress parade. Scheduled to take part in the rehearsal are 119 policemen be low the grade of lieutenant; three captains, four inspectors, three deputy chiefs and a num ber of nark policemen. The Military District of Wash ington will be in charge of as sembling units for the dry run. These Include a lead car for the police, a small wedge of police! t motorcyclists, two battalions of : the Third Infantry Regiment, the Army Band, a platoon of the service women, the colon guards WASHINGTON, D. C., THURSDAY, JANUARY 17, 1957—64 PAGES Burke Airport Action Urged Trade Board, County Groups Ask Approval By DON S. WARREN Spokesmen for the Washing ton Board of Trade and some Fairfax County groups joined i forces today in urging a Senate Appropriations Subcommittee to take speedy action in approving ! funds for resumption of devel ! opment of a second Washington airport at Burke, Va. These witnesses declared that ( there would be a tremendous economic benefit to Northern Virginia flowing from the devel-i opment at Burke of the proposed SSO million airport. Part of a , 6.000-acre Burke site already . has been acquired. Called a “Gold Mine” One of the witnesses, Henry • Rolfs, chairman of the Commit ’ tee for the Burke Airport and ‘ vice chairman of the Fairfax | County Chamber of Commerce, declared the airport would prove .“an economic gold mine.” ! Earlier, however, sharp oppo sition to the Burke plan was i,voiced by Representative Broy . hill. Republican of Virginia. He • declared the Burke project “will ■ not be in the best interest of . the people of Northern Vir ' ginia.” He brought out that all Sen i ators for Virginia and Maryland and all members of the House i from nearby districts were op i; posed to the Burke plan. Mr. • Broyhill told the subcommittee i the project at Burke “will not only be a nuisance but a seri ous hazzard for years to come.” Leveling Cost Cited He said that he may be “a little more prejudiced” than Rep resentatives from more distant States but that politically he had no choice because of the opposition of his constituents. He argued that the terrain in :the Burke area was not well suited for an airport and that it would cost thousands of dollars to level off the area for a landing : field. He said there were alternatives . and the Civil Aeronautics Au , thorlty had not been as objective '.as it should have been in select ing a site. ! Mr. Broyhill also said that the i\ commercial airlines, although . opposed to the use of Baltimore’s | Friendship Airport to relieve j congestion at National Airport, . were not putting up any money i Continued on Page A-4, Col. 1 of the President and Vice Presi dent and 10 open automobiles. The Army Band will play for the dry run and all units will move as if in earnest, to help euiho';ties determine whether the Monday parade can be ex pected to move as scheduled. | The units will assemble east of the Capitol at 9:30 am. tomor i row' and will begin moving at 10 , o’clock. If all goes precisely as planned, the procession should pass a given point within four minutes, and take 43 minutes to go the distance. If that happens, the Inaugural Parade officials will breathe audible signs of relief. Recent parades for Inaugura tions have bogged down and run too long. President Eisenhower has requested that the proces sion this year be squeezed into about two hours. That is the committee objective. Privately, however, the experts concede the elapsed time on Monday may approximate 2 */ 2 hours. The idea for the test origln : ated with the Military District of i Washington, Chief Covell said U. N. Urged to Order Israelis Out of Gaza Senate Probers! Charge Theft Os Union Funds Witnesses Invoke Fifth Amendment; 1 Johnny Dio Named By JAMES Y. NEWTON Charges of “stealing” union 1 funds and “hoodlumism” were J made today by Senate invest!- gators at a public inquiry into ’ !the affairs of two New York’ labor organizations. The charges came as the Sen- \ ate Investigations Subcommittee > started what is expected to de- | velop into a Nation-wide probe , into labor rackets. The hearing , was kicked off with testimony concerning the operations in: New York of locals of'the 1.4 million member International i Brotherhood of Teamsters, and | the Allied Industrial Workers, both affiliated with the AFL- 1 CIO. jl Johnny Dio Named Brought into the hearing fre- 1 quetly was the name of John , Dioguardi. also known as 1 “Johnny Dio." a hoodlum long associated with New York rack ets. Dioguardi. under indictment j |in connection with the acid-” blinding of labor columnist Vic tor Riesel. was said to have set ' up one of the local unions under investigation. Subcommittee Counsel Robert F. Kennedy gave the tangled 1 background of the labor situa-j tion under investigation. He said that both the locals figuring in the hearing originally were Local 496 of the Chemical Workers Union and were kicked out of that international because of | gangster infiltration. ( Mr. Kennedy said Dioguardi reorganized 496 Into Local 2271 1 of the Allied Industrial Union. 1 A year ago. the officers of Local 227 received a charter from I Teamster President Dave Beck : and set up Local 284 of the teamsters. | The subcommittee counsel said this was one of the "paper” 10-j cals whh.h was established to influence the teamster joint j council election in New York. Mr. Kennedy said that Local 284 had i no members for six or seven , months and several persons , served each union as officers. , False Forms Charged Mr. Kennedy charged that both locals had filed “false , and fraudulent” registration ! forms of financial reports with j the Labor Department. The first witness, Fred Vir-! gilio, 35, of Brooklyn, was lden- ‘ tified by Mr. Kennedy as a trustee of both locals 227 and ■ 284. He said that Henry Reiss, who will be called to testify later, is president of local 227 and secretary-treasurer of Team- . ster Local 284. Mr. Vigillo Invoked the Fifth , Amendment on nearly every question put to him by Subcom mittee Chairman McClellan. Democrat of Arkansas, and other members of the committee. ; The witness even refused to ' say whether he was a member 1 of a labor union and at one point invoked the constitutional 1 privilege when asked if he had 1 ever done any work. “These questions might open the doors to other things to in- i criminate me on,” Mr. Virgilio: 1 replied when asked why he re fused to answer many of the simple questions put to him. Mr. Virgilio refused to identify Continued on Page A-4, Col. 3 U. S. B-50 Crashes On Alaska Takeoff FAIRBANKS. Alaska, Jan. 17 ; WP). —An Air Force B-50 crashed ion takeoff from Elelson Air, 1 ! Force BRse near here early today.'i A crew of 12 was believed to be! aboard. There was no immedi ate information on the fate of the crew members. i Information officers at the base said it was "a serious i crash." The plane, attached to’< the 58th Weather Reconnals- i sance Squadron, was starting on i a regular mission. : "■■■ i i i .i..mi—— ' I 5 LONG HOLIDAY WEEK ENDS EACH YEAR PROPOSED By the Aesorltted Preae There would be at least five long holiday week ends each year under legislation proposed by Senator Potter, Republican of Michigan. Under his bill New Year’s Day, Washington’s Birthday, Memorial Day, Independ ence Dav and Vetejans’ Day would be observed annually on the Monday nearest their calendar dates. Thanksgiving and Christ mas Day would continue to be observed on the fourth Thursday of November and December 25. respectively. !Foke Anti-Nixon Wire Stirs Chairmanship Fuss Stassen Denies Appeal to Reece To Back Alcorn for G. O. P. Post By GOULD LINCOLN A telegram signed "Harold E. Stassen” but branded as fraudulent by Mr. Stassen, today was thrown into the growing | row over selection of a new Republican National Committee i chairman. The telegram called on members of the national committee “to keep the future of the party and the country safe from the Nixons and Knowlands” and to | elect H. Meade Alcorn, Jr., of, Connecticut as chairman to succeed Leonard W. Hall. Mr. Hall has resigned as of Febru ary 1. The telegram made public by Representative Carroll Reece of Tennessee, a member of the Na tional Committee and a former national chairman, was marked confidential and read: Fraud, Stassen Says “The time has come for liber als to take a stand. Let’s keep the future of the party and the country safe from the Nixons ;and the Knowlands. Let s elect Meade Alcorn chairman and really clean up the mess.” The telegram was sent from Stamford. Conn., Mr. Reece said. Mr Stassen, special assistant to President Eisenhower on disarm ament, when reached by the As sociated Press in New York, where he is attending a meeting ■of the United Nations, said the message w r as a fraud. Mr. Stassen received wide pub- Soviet Reported Fearing Eisenhower Mideast Plan I MOSCOW, Jan. 17 UP). —Foreign diplomats In Moscow say the Kremlin genuinely fears President Eisenhower’s Middle East program and is trying desperately to find an effective counter attack. The diplomats have talked With Foreign Minister Dmitri i Shepllov and other Russian leaders. They say the Soviet reaction : sums up to this: * 1. The Russians see the Eisen hower doctrine as another step toward Western encirclement of jthe Soviet Union. 2. Their opposition is not Just anti-West propaganda. 3. The Kremlin knows it has to come up with something con crete, not just propaganda, to defeat the new United States move. Drained by Satellites The foreign diplomats point out. however, that the satellites are draining the Russian econ omy so heavily the Soviet Union can’t hope to match United States dollers. Several diplomats in Moscow, including some friendly to the West, also say emphasis on the military side of the Eisenhower program, on the heels of the British-French invasion of Egypt, was a mistake. "If the military aspects had been dropped or minimized, the program would have been hard to beat,” one commented. One diplomat after discussing the Eisenhower proposals with i Soviet leaders said he believes the plan "still has the Soviet bosses off balance. They fear it and are seeking effective means of combatting it.” Another diplomat told a re porter: “They know public at ; tacks on the plan are not enough and that they must themselves offer some positive program if Gen. Gruenther Testifies jin House' on Mideast By J. A. O’LEARY The House Foreign Affairs Committee called Gen. Alfred M.! Gruenther, retired, former NATO commander, into closed session today to get his views on the situation in the Middle East. Although the general has been more directly concerned with the i defense of Western Europe, the! hearings thus far have indicated! that the administration regards | its plans for halting Communist' expansion in the Middle East as I essential to the future security of Western Europe also. Secretary of State Dulles has : testified that If the Communists took over the Middle East they | would have the throttle that could control the life blood of Western Europe. The House committee, consid ering the President’s request for authority to use the armed forces and economic aid to check communism in the Middle East, took testimony in open session yesterday afternoon from Rabbi Philip S. Bernstein, chairman of the American Zionist Committee for Public Affairs, and Kenneth M. Birkhead, executive director f of the American Veterans’ Com mittee. Rabbi Bernstein said his group welcomes the new Eisenhower doctrine. But he told the com mittee that if the internal prob Metropolitan Edition New York Morkets, Page A-13 Home Delivered* Dolly «n<i Sunday, Per Month. SI.AS *5 PPIMTS xiuuw ueuverca. Nlrht Plntl >nd Bund „ 52.00 * lO *] “ ’(llclty last summer when he lead i a drive to “dump" Vice Presi . dent Nixon from the G. O. P. na • tional ticket and substitute former Gov. Christian A. Herter ’.of Massachusetts for the second ’ place nomination. Mr. Reece said he knew of other members of the national 1 committee who had received an identical message. In New York. Mr. Stassen said: “I have sent no telegram. I have authorized no telegram. 1 This is a false and fraudulent 1 telegram apd I am starting an s immediate investigation to find lout who is responsible for my! j name on it.” Calls Reece by Phone i Mr. Reece said Mr. Stassen . had called him on the long dis tance telephone and denounced . the telegram as a fraud. "I imagine that Mr. Stassen . will be interested in questioning ; the Western Union in Stamford ■ to learn who sent the telegram, and that the press associations See STASSEN, Page A-4 • they hope to continue holding • the spot light with the Arab nations.” The Kremlin is des perately seeking something more ; effective than a mere propa ganda fight, the diplomats said, i They agreed that, despite • boasts of prosperity, the Soviet i Union is in no condition to i match United States offers of economic help in the Middle East. “Heavy demands at home and ; within the family of satellites ’ is placing a severe strain on the ’ Soviet Union's own liquid re -1 sources,” one source observed. 1 "Today the satellites are leaning on the Soviet Union instead of . contributing to its development. Satellite Costs Increasing. “And the cost of keeping other East European Communist na tions in even a fairly healthy condition gets higher and higher each year.” Published agreements with other Communist nations in the last two months reflect the heavy drain or Soviet foreign exchange and food reserves by Poland, Romania and East Ger ' many, as well as smaller de • mands by other Communist countries. “This economic picture shows the Soviet Union's master plan ners will be slow in recommend ing an attempt to match Ameri i can dollars with Soviet rubbles > in the Middle East,” a diplo ’ matic source said. lems causing unrest in the Mid dle East are to be left to the! ; United Nations for solution, he believes there should be a clear declaration outlining the policies the United States will follow in the United Nations. Mr. Birkhead said his organi zation believes it is imperative | that the United States act quickly in facing the danger of Red inroads in the Middle East. But he said Congress should 1 consider clearly defining the area to be governed by the Ei senhower proposals. : Mr. Birkhead also suggested ! that in considering the economic aid requested, Congress must also consider whether "this blank check” for funds is fully justified. Representative Fulton, Repub lican of Pennsylvania, announced ■ yesterday that he will propose I an amendment to the Middle ; |East resolution to earmark SIOO . million of existing foreign aid i funds to help Austria handle i Hungarian refugees. He also ; proposed earmarking S2O million ; of existing funds to care for i refugees and wounded or de •: pendent survivors of the recent fighting in Egypt. Mr. Fulton has a third amend i ment which would enable Con ■ gress to terminate the authority ■ being extended to the President ■ by concurrent resolution. Africa-Asia Group Seeks Ultimatum UNITED NATIONS, N. Y.. Jan. 17 (JP)—Egyptian Foreign Minis ter Mahmoud Fawzi declared to day that Israel’s failure to with draw her forces from Egypt is “threatening peace in the Middle East and beyond.” Mr. Fawzi led off a new round i of Middle East debate in the 80- nation General Assembly as 24 Aslan and African nations pro posed that the Assembly in effect give Israel five days to get tfil its , forces out of Egypt and the Gaza I Strip. Egypt, which requested the As sembly meeting, did not join in sponsorship of the resolution, which had been watered down | considerably In the past few dayi and apparently did not go far enough to satisfy the Egyptians. Two other members of the 27- nation Asian-Afrlcan group Turkey and Laos—also declined, ,for unexplained reasons, to spon sor the proposal. Israel Wants Safeguards Israeli Foreign Minister Golda Meir told the Assembly that Israel was ready to discuss with drawal from both the Gaza strip and the Gulf of Aqaba region, the only ones which will be held by Israels invading forces after next Tuesday, if the U. N. can agree on arrangements to safeguard Israel interest. Mrs. Meir said her govern ment would not be content with 1 a simple agreement to have the U. N. Emergency Force occupy the Gaza strip and the Sharm El Sheikh area, commanding the Aqaba approach. There would have to be assurances, she said, that the U. N. forces would re main until effective arrange ments were made to prevent a r return to the preinvasion situa tion. ' She said the Israel objective* ■ were to make sure that the Gulf of Aqaba remained open to I Israeli shipping and that tha l Gaza strip never again becansg a base for Egyptian commando* , (fedayeen* raids. > Atrocities Charged ’ Mr. Fawzi said the Assembly ! faced a “glaring case of aggres sion which Israel unleashed on • October 29 and which persists “ even until today.” | He accused Israel of destroying property and committing “count , less atrocities against individu als” in the territory it occupies. I Israel, said Mr. Fawzi, "con . temptuously refuses to comply” ! with Assembly resolutions order . ing it out of Egypt and "does everything it can to turn our work here into a mockery and > a sham.” He declared, “the Assembly is requested to decide whether or not aggression will be allowed to reign and rule.” He urged that • the Assembly uphold the U. N. See U. N„ Page A-4 L Severe Cold Slows ; Hungarian Refugees , VIENNA, Jan. 17 (VP). —Only . 270 Hungarian refugees have . crossed into Austria in the past . 24 hours, apparently because of ; severe cold and heavy snow. Austrian police reported a i woman refugee froze to death ■ and her 21-month-old daughter . suffered severe frostbite when . they got lost in a snowstorm dur s ing the trip across the frontier. BIG FOOD SECTION i IN TODAY'S STAR INAUGURATION WEEK END will be busy and housewives will be looking for brief tours of duty in the kitchen. The Star's Food Section features tips by Food Editor Violet Faulkner on speedy menus for burry-up meols. > Page B-l. DILLINGER'S DOWNFALL in o hail > of FBI bullets was brought about, not II because he was a killer but because he took a stolen car across a Stato line. Don Whitehead tells about it in the 10th part of his book, "The FBI Story," on The Star's Feoture Page, A-15. | GRANDMOTHER'S HERE to visit the Nixon children and they went to the airport to meet the Vice Presi dent's mother, Mrs. Frank A. Nixon. I The story is in the Woman's Section, , poge A-25, IT'S ONLY 88 DAYS until baseball ; returns to Griffith Stadium April IS, r The American League schedule ap pears today on page C-3, with « story on C-l. b Guide for Readers ! Amusem'ts B-18-19 Thursday Food J Business ond Section B-l-3 * Finance A-12-13 Lost, Found.. A-3 - Classified C-5-11 Music A-32 * Comics A-18-19 Obituary .. A-14 1 Crossword A 18 Rodio-TV A-16-17 ; Editorial A 8 Sports .... C-1-4 ‘ Edit'l Articles A-9 Woman's Feoture Page A-15 Section A-24-29 ■ Hove The Star Delivered to Your Home Daily and Sunday Dial STerling 3-5000