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WEATHER FORECAST Clear and quite cool tonight, low near 42, and chance of frost in the suburbs. Sunny, cool tomorrow. (Full report. Page A-2.) Temperatures Today Midnight 58 6 am.—46 11 a.m—s2 2 a.m— 51 8 a.m....48 Noon 53 4 a.m—47 10 am 50 1 p.m 55 105th Year. No. 123. Bond of $5,000 Posted by Beck On Tax Charge Faces Arraignment In Tacoma, Silent On Indictment Teamsters Union President Dave Beck surrendered to United States marshals here today and posted $5,000 bond on income tax evasion charges. The 62-year-old labor leader appeared briefly before Federal Judge Edward M. Curran after being fingerprinted in the United States marshal's cell block at the courthouse. Beck was indicted on two counts by a Federal grand Jury in Tacoma, Wash., yesterday. The grand jury had been con vened only a few hours earlier. After his appearance before Judge Curran who set the bond: In line with bail set by a Federal Judge in Tacoma after the in dictment was returned. Beck, ac companied by his attorneys, was taken to the Criminal Court clerk’s office in the courthouse to post the bond. The next step calls for his return to Tacoma for arraignment at which time, he will enter a plea on the charges. Beck Won’t Comment Beck declined any comment on the indictment, saying: "I wouldn’t say one word about It because I don’t know no more about it.” The bond was in the form of a cashier's check issued by the American Security St Trust Co. It was handed the clerk by one of Beck's attorneys, Gerard Tre anor. Judge Curran later disqualified himself from hearing any of'the cases involving the Teamsters Union. Judge Curran told The Star he had long been friendly with: the late Dan Tobin, former head of the union. Members of Mr Tobin’s family are also friends, of his. the judge said. In addi tion, he stated. Attorney Treanor is a neighbor. The voluntary disqualification was revealed when a motion for, dismissal of an indictment for contempt of Congress against Nugent La Poma. secretary-treas urer of the Seattle (Wash.), Teamsters Local 174, was called for argument before Judge Cur ran. Judge Curran declined to hear the motion, ana it will have,' to be reassigned to another Judge at a later dote. Accused of Contempt La Poma, together with Frank W. Brewster, West Coast Team ster boss, and Harry Reiss, sec retary-treasurer of New York Local 284 are accused of con tempt in refusing to answer cer- : tain questions asked by the Benate Investigations Subcom mittee last January. Also under indictment on identical charges: is Binar Mohn. vice president in See BECK, Page A-i» Sackful of Quarters Lands Man in Jail On Theft Charge NORFOLK, Va., May 3 UP).— Robert Glen Evans, 21, walked Into a downtown Norfolk used ear lot yesterday and pretty soon found just the model he was looking for. The car cost $445, and in pay ment, Evans offered 1.780 quar ters. The used Car dealer went through with the sale but didn’t like the looks of thingfc. He told Evans to drop by again in a couple of hours and pick up his license plates. When Evans left, the dealer called police. Two hours later, Evans re turned and the police were wait ing for him. He was promptly jailed on a charge of breaking into a concession company ear lier this week, making off with $1,196.83 in small change from a safe, and stealing a truck to carry atoay the Jingling loot. ACT NOW! CALL TODAY YOUR WEEK-END WANT ADS in STAR CLASSIFIED NOW The deadline tonight for want ads to be published in the Saturday or Sunday Star is 10 o'clock by tele phone or 9 o'clock at the business counter in The Star lobby. CALL STULING 3 5000 Phone ST. 3-5000 McCarthy Services Set For Mohday at Capitol Body Will Be Moved to Appleton, Wis., For Catholic Rites and Burial Tuesday A funeral service for Senator Joseph R. McCarthy will be held at 11 am. Monday in the Senate chamber—scene of many events in his turbulent political career. The 47-year-old Wisconsin Re publican. one of the most con- Obituary on Fog* A-7 troverslal figures in American history, died late yesterday of an acute liver ailment. He was serving his second term in the Senate. The end of the Senator’s tem pestuous career came in the quiet of a Bethesda Naval Hos pital room. He was admitted to the hospital last Sunday with acute hepatitis and his condition, the hospitql said, “progressively failed.” The services in the Senate chamber will follow a high requiem mass that will be cele brated at 9 a.m. at St. Matthew's Cathedral, 1725 Rhode Island avenue, just off Connecticut ave nue. The body will be brought to the Senate chamber and placed in front of the rostrum for serv ices lasting approximately 30 minutes. The Rev. Dr. Frederick Brown Harris, chaplain of the Senate, will officiate at the service with a Catholic clergyman. Burial in Wisconsin Senator McCarthy will be buried in his home town of Ap pleton. Wis. The official funeral party will depart Monday after noon by plane for Appleton for services to be held Tuesday noon at St. Mary's Church there. The Senator’s body will lie in state ! at the Appleton church from Monday evening until Tuesday morning and burjal will be in St. Mary’s Cemetery. Senate officials, who an nounced the arrangements, said the body will lie in state at Oawler’s funeral home. 1756 Pennsylvania avenue N.W., from late this afternoon through { Sunday. Senator McCarthy will be the 18th Senator for whom services 'Getaway 7 Car Checked For $52,000 Theft Clues The FK and police today were h Inspecting a car which may have 1 been used In yesterday’s $52,000 street holdup and then returned I to Its original parking place In i a clever getaway plan. 1 ■ The lead developed from in- 1 formation offered by a witness 1 to the sttckup of a Government ' Services, Inc., station wagon at ; 1 Sixteenth and K streets N.W. P If the theory is correct, the ] two bandits took the car from : its parking place, slipped their i own ear into the same space, then returned the “borrowed"! car and sped away in their machine. All this occurred with out the owner of the stolen car T knowing it had been moved. |! Saw Bags Transferred The witness to the robbery drove up behind the 081 station wagon and the robbery car wheni they stopped side by side tor a traffic light. He saw Charles! Hepler, 29, one of the GSI em-| ployes, hand two canvas bags t through the window to the other car. but thought little of it. The witness, who wished his name withheld, drove on a block! to his regular parking area at 1 Seventeenth and K streets N.W.j There a “sixth sense” told him to jot down the number of the car he had seen—District license NP-879. This car was traced to Leslie Banderlin, a fingerprint clerk for the FBI, and was found parked at Virginia avenue and Second street S.W. Difference in Color Mr. Sanderlln told investi gators he had parked the car there as usual at 7:30 a.m. yes terday. It was still locked and in the same spot when detectives and FBI agents began examin ing It. The car was described as white and turquoise, while the robbery Choice Weather Due to Continue Over Week End Some more of that weather! mostly everyone wishes would remain all summer is due for the week end, complete with a slow warmup, the Weather Bu reau said today. Rain, not more than a quar ter-inch is Indicated as showers Tuesday or Wednesday, the bu reau’s five-day forecast said | today. I * I Premature topcoat - shedders | wished they’d had them for a brief time this morning when dawn came with the tempera ture under SO degrees and little likelihood of it going over the lower SOs today. A low of 42 Is predicted tonight with a chance of scattered frost In the suburbs. The five-day forecast calls for temperatures 5 to 7 degrees below the normals of 71 and Si for the dally high and low. Small craft warnings were lowered this morning on the lower Potomac and Chesapeake! Bay areas, although winds occa-1 sionslly up to 25 miles an hour; are forecast for today and to-; n|no«. ©he ©betting Star* V J \ WITH SUNDAY MORNING EDITION ** B WASHINGTON, D. C., FRIDAY, MAY 3, 1957-30 PAGES M j s * jKI imSm HP *9F j|Hp 49 senator McCarthy —AT Phot* ’ have been held in the Senate ' chamber starting with Senator ‘ Solomon Fott of Vermont in 1866, according to available Sen [ ate records. 1 The last funeral service for a ' Senator was that of William ’ Borah of Idaho in 1940. As a Communist-hunting in -1 vestigator, Senator McCarthy ■ was in the headlines for years ' with charges and Inquiries which brought turmoil into the Gov ernment. Censure Launched Decline I: Growing out of his free . wheeling Investigations was a; . Senate inquiry into his own con , duct which resulted in a vote of , censure. That marked the be > ginning of his eclipse as a polit j ical figure. In recent months, the Senator ,'had seldom appeared on the Senate floor and seldom spoke in . that forum. And when he did. I few stayed to hear what he had t to say. I His death reduces to 46 the t number of Republican Senators , and his successor probably will be chosen at a special Wisconsin . election this fall. Wisconsin law t See MtCARTHY, Page A-6 victims hid fCDMinbircd the bandit car as blot mid cream. Mileage of Mr. Sander tins car had been recently checked at u service station. Using this fig ure. mod learning everywhere the FBI employe had been since the mileage was checked, the FBI went over the same route. Then they drove from the Government Service office at 1136 Twenty first street N.W., to Sixteenth and K streets snd back to the Vir ginia and Second parking area. Possible Bobbery Cur This "dry run” resulted in a total mileage adding up to within one-tenth of a mile of the mile age-figure on the speedometer of the Sanderlin car. This led to| the theory that the car may have! been used in the robbery and re turned to its parking place. The FBI is searching the car jfor fingerprints in hope of pick-' jtng up a valuable clue in the bandit hunt. Mr. Hepler and Paul Gabossy, the two GBI employes who were robbed, were recalled to police! headquarters today to aid in the: investigation. They continued to study photographs from criminal flies. . Rails Lead Rise To New 1957 High NEW YORK. May 3 OP).—An advance by rail shares pushed: the stock market to a new, 1957' high today. Eastern railroad stocks went ahead on news that the Inter state Commerce Commission had I approved an increase about 15 per cent in their first class pas senger fares. At mid-day, the Associated Press average of 60 stocks was up 40 cents at 6182.30, a new peak for the year. The AP average at noon eclipsed the previous 1957 high of $132.00 reached on January 4. The market has been climbing slowly since hitting Its low for the year in February. School Safe Robbery Nets $450 Ball Game Receipts Robbers broke open two safes at Ml Vernon High School to day and got away with approx imately 1450, most of which had been collected last night at a school baseball game, Fairfax County police reported. The money was In a 500- pound safe, which was locked Inside a larger walk-ln safe In the school office. • Fairfax Detectives Dennis O’Neill and Willard Bonnett said when the door of the larger safe was forced open, an auto matic teargas cylinder was trig gered. fllllng the office with fumes. To escape the fumes, police said, the robbers moved the In side safe Into anotMei office where they smashed It open with a crowbar and probably a sledge |£nmor. Wilson Grants Civilians More Defense Power Million Employes Get Greater Opportunity F»r Advancement By JOSEPH YOUNG Secretary of Defense Wilson nas issued a far-reaching direc tive designed to give the Defense Department’s 1 million civilian employes greater opportunities to rise to key executive jobs. Mr. Wilson’s order proposes to open up better-paying and more Important positions to civilians in the Pentagon as well as in military units throughout the' country that are now filled by military personnel. He said civilians are needed in “great numbers” in essential defense executive jobs. The directive was Issued after months of study, which showed that civilian employes in defense agencies had relatively few opg portunlties for advancement to responsible positions, mainly be cause these jobs are now filled by the military. In his directive, Mr. Wilson ordered that all positions in the defense agencies be designated as either civilian or military after July 1, 1958. Designation Deadline Set He ordered that semiannual reports be made to the Assistant Defense Secretary for Man power to relate progress of the program. In detailing the criteria to be used in designating jobs as mill- 1 tary or civilian, Mr. Wilson made it plain that liberal: standards should be used to fill administrative jolp in support activities wherever possible with civilians. In a radical departure from past practices, Mr. Wilson said that “the line of authority and supervision in support of military activities need not necessarily be military.” “Any level of supervisory au thority may be exercised in sup port activities by either civilian or military personnel," he added. This means that civilians can now be in charge of support ac- , tivitles and in control over mili tary personnel, something which has not occurred in the past. Mr. Wilson, ip defining the criteria to be used In the utilisa tion of civilian employes, de clared: “Civilian personnel normally will be assigned to management in the civilian economy and con tinuity of management and ex perience is essential and can be better provided by civilians. Proper civilian career develop ment will be essential in these determinations.” Mr. Wilson defined use of military personnel in these situa tions: “Military personnel normally ' will be assigned to management , positions when required by law.. when the position requires skills i 'land knowledge acquired pri- { marily through military training aqd experience, and when ex perience In the position is essen tial to enable the officer person nel to assume responsibilities 1 necessary to maintain combat related support and proper career , development." * To End Dual Staffing i The Secretary also acted, to ' end dual staffing in defense ' agencies, whereby civilians and 1 miltary personnel sometimes had identical duties. He ordered: "Maximum utilization of Sec JOBS, Page A-U U.NEF Guard Kills i Palestinian Arab 1 CAIRO, May 3 OP).— The United Nations Emergency Force , today reported 4 Palestinian Arab was killed by a UNEP guard from Indonesia who discovered 'four civilians trying to make off with army equipment. The shooting occurred at an Indo nesian camp in the Oasa Strip town of Rafah. UNEP spokesmen reported an other Palestinian Arab was shot in the thigh at the same camp today. They said Arab tried to enter the camp, attacked the ■entry on duty and wu wounded when the soldier's rifle went off during the struggle. ii A crowbar was found In the office. j Fairfax Police Lt. Richard Utx , said the robbery must have oc curred some time between mid- , night, when the night janitor went off duty, and 6:30 ajn.. I when the broken safes were dis i covered by the morning janitor. In addition to losing the i money, which was mostly In sll . ver, Mount Vernon lost the ball ' game to Falls Church, 7 to 4. Entrance to the school was gained by breaking the pane out > of a window In a side door and reaching through to the Inside i door handle, police said. Mount Vernon High School Is i on U. 8. Route 1 at Engleslde In i Fairfax County. Directly acroas. i the highway Is a Virginia State; police substation. 1 Dulles Calls on Russia To Reunite Germany Wy"' t Vi ?! TRUMAN LAYS IT ON—Former President Truman, speaking in his old ag gressive style, attacks the Eisenhower administration.— |T ruman Drops AtomT ext, Puts Bomb Under G. O. P. Policies Drive Him Toward Socialism, He Says in Spirited, Off-Cuff Talk ' By MARY MeGRORY Harry Truman, in spite of obvious Intentions to the contrary, gave the Republicans hell at breakfast this morning. The ex-President had a sedate enough prepared text in hand for the benefit of the Electrical Consumers Information Committee, but one of the other speakers at the early morning Mayflower meeting had a few remarks about peaceful uses of the atom, and Mr. Truman threw away his speech and < treated fellow-breakfaaters to an i off-the-cuff speech which was delivered at the speed of a | roller-coaster and covered as i much ground. "I wish you hadn’t started me up on these things,” said the ] OssaserehT pjdj^Pciiwi' light! It**. Pag* A-5 ex-President, pausing briefly In 1 hU rapid-fire comments that; ranged from the state of the world to the state of his own 1 mind. I Mr. Truman summarized hid < sentiments on how he thinks ' things are going with this final: rap at the opposition: 1 "I’m not a Socialist, but they're driving me that way.” "Just a Has-Been” i The early-rising Mr. Truman, I who is here for the Democratic conference which openM today,' l started out by saying: “It’s a 1 wonderful thing when a retired: farmer from Missouri can be < introduced as the President of 1 the United States, especially when he Is just a has-been.” < Leading off with a few ad- 1 verse remsurks about tbe ad ministration's atomic develop-< mcnt program. Mr. Truman soon found himself speaking I heatedly about Its whole attitude i on powgr. I “You ought not to get me 1 started because I am steamed up about this.” he said. “And I know what I'm talking about, l! went to the dedication of Hun gry Horse Dam and told the peo ple to take a good look at this because It's the last one you are I , going to see if the Republicans get in. "What they are trying to do is 1 to take this thing and put it in hands of the utilities in a part-! ' nership proposition.” he said i scornfully. “It means that the' utilities will have the dam and i the Government will have the fish-ladder and they will charge the fish toll to get up that lad ; der.” While his audience roared, Mr. Truman said staunchly, "I am not making a political speech,” which caused more laughter. He noted with ap proval that the Electrical Con sumers Information Committee Railroads Granted 15% Fare Increase Sr th« A.toclkttd Prwa The Interstate Commerce Commission today authorized six : large Eastern railroads to in crease first-class passenger fares | again by about 15 per cent. This gives them an over-all ln-i crease of 20 per cent above the fare levels of January 1. < The authority to raise fares ' was issued to the Chesapeake & < Ohio, New York Central. Nor- 1 folk Western, the Pennsyl- 1 j van la. Pennsylvania - Reading i Seashore Lines, and the Pitts burgh 4k Lake Erie. ! Tbe Increase may be made ef fective after five day's notice to 1 the traveling public. The six railroads granted a 15 per cent advance for travel In I sleeping and parlor cars today i had originally asked for a 45 per I .cent increase In the first-class i >Mtes. but limited their coach i J|ke request to 5 per cent. was “bi-partisan,” not "non partisan.” Then be told them something they already knew. “I don’t like non-partisan.” he said, “because there ain’t no such thing.’’ Leland Olds, former Federal Power Commissioner, was pres ent and that reminded Mr. Tru man that these commissions were "never intended to be any thing but representatives of the people of the United States.” “When those commissions are padded with people who have one point of view, then the country it on the road to 1929—and I'm no prophet of doom ... I wish you hadn’t started me on these things.” Watches HU Globe Mr. Truman said he was not against Treasury Secretary Hum phrey's hard money—he likes to hear it jingle—but he said that ithe Secretary is “trying to choke us to death with interest rates.” Mr. Truman made a lightning quick transition to the world sit uation “I keep a 40-inch globe in my office. I keep it turned to the trouble spots. I like to try to figure out what the hell is going to happen next.” He referred fieetlngly to his prepared speech which lay un read by his plate, and said he thought he had covered the whole situation. Hirohito's Palace Fire Is Revealed TOKYO. May 3 UP).— News got out today that a teen-age boy making a liquor delivery to the Imperial Palace two months ago tried to set the place afire. It was the first time on record I that any Japanese had sought to harm Emperor Hlrohito’s home. Police hushed the case up until now. The boy set fire to a two-story building used for storage of furniture. A palace spokesman said the interior was badly dam aged. but that the flames did not threaten the Imperial residence some distance away. Police said the boy told them that he had seen a palace de stroyed by flames in the Japanese movie “A Cobweb Palace” and thought a real palace fire would be “a magnificent sight.” The boy is in Jail awaiting trial. Lifer Has Chance to Stay On Perch 100 Feet Up BALTIMORE, May 3 UP). —A man serving a life sentence climbed 100 feet up a prison smokestack scaffolding today and the warden said he could sit there until he gets hungry enough to come down. \ Robert Smith, 43. serving life for rape, had caused trouble be fore at the Maryland Peniten tiary. In January, 1066. he climbed to the top of a 50-foot high cell house window. Tear gas fired in an effort to dislodge him drifted Into a cell block and touched off a demonstration by 100 other coaricta. C-’Jlth scaled the smoke stack Metropolitan Edition Ney York Markets, Page A-23 Home Delivered: WmSKS CENTS Town Retaken, Nicaragua Says Victory Is Credited To Small Force MANAGUA, Nicaragua, May , told a cheering throng last , 3 t A*). —President Luis Somoza night a tiny Nicaraguan force , had wrested the border town ' of Mocoron from a Honduran 1 garrison five times its size. As the crowd exulted, the' - President’s brother. Gen. Anas-! tasio Somoza, jr., shouted that l the Niciraguan flag is flying over : the Indian settlement on Cen : tral America’s Caribbean coast. The two countries have disputed 1 the border for years. Nicaraguan and Honduran - accounts of the border va s ried. Each country insisted that - Mocoron was traditionally theirs. t A Nicaraguan National Guard unit reportedly occupied the t town two weeks ago and t Honduran troops took it back f Wednesday. 1 Honduras Bans Dispatches i In Tegucigalpa, the Honduran - capital, the ruling military junta ordered a blackout on any dis patches about military opera , tions except official announce -1 ment*. Ground and air clashes * between Honduran and Nicara -1 guan forces were reported yes , terday. , The Honduran government claimed today it still holds “ Mocoron. ‘j The Honduran government ordered all men between 18 and , 32 to register for possible mili : tary service. * In Washington, the council of the Organization of American . States voted unanimously to 1 send a fact-finding mission to jthe area. It also called on the [ Western Hemisphere's Foreign ' Ministers to con£tlt on the situation. 42 Men Triumph Gen. Somoza said 42 Nica raguan soldiers defeated 250 Hondurans In the battle for Mocoron, a town of 1,000 popu s lation. * Thf President's i brother, who , is chief of the armed forces, said 28 of the 40-man Nica raguan garrison which held ■ Mocoron until Wednesday were 1 missing after the Honduran at -1 tack. 5 The President had said first 5 that 35 Nicaraguan soldiers were killed in the attack. I i Cash Just Wastepaper ■ BELO HORIZONTE. Brazil, t May 3 (A*).—Paper factory work ? ers here who found wada of United States currency in a bale i of wastepaper thought it was * stage money and fed much ol it s Into grinders until one of them I checked. The factory owner 1 estimated several hundred dol s lara was made into wrapping paper. scaffolding today while on a trash detail. Warden Vernon E. Peppersack said he did not Immediately plan to risk sending anyone up for Smith. "We’ll just let him sit it out until he gets cold and hungry." Peppersack said. / The warden said there was no chance for escape since the stack Is 45 feet away from the nearest wall. . The scaffolding was put around the 300-foot stack for renovations to It and a power house. Smith climbed 100 feet Up. straddled a 3xo beam and jftegan yelling at other prisoners. Split Causes Injustice, He Tells NATO BONN, Germany, May 3 (A>>. !—Secretary of State John Poster Dulles called on Russia today to end the division of Germany “before its injustices become in tolerable.” Mr. Dulles told the North At lantic Council of Foreign Min isters the Soviet Union’s pro- NATO Backs Adenauer, Tries to Appear Neutral. Page A-J testations of peace “indeed ring hollow when they forcibly divide a great people.” He said that both on humani tarian and legal grounds the continued split of the country could not be justified. The American statesman spoke after West German Foreign Min ister Heinrich von Brentano called upon the 15-nation alli ance to support his government's demands for reunification quickly. Effort to Aid Adenauer Mr. Brentano’s statement was, in part, an effort to bolster Chancellor Konrad Adenauer’s political stock for general elec tions coming up in September. Mr. Brentano told the minis ters the leaders of the Federal German Republic are doing all j they can to insure that the Red ruled people of East Germany take no "imprudent actions" 1 which could only aggravate their misery and lead to terrorism. He was then quoted as issuing this warning: “But there are situations in which the suffering, caused by oppression, and where the moral and material misery reach lim its where reason no longer dic tates action and where despera tion and a just anger break out with the violence of a volcanic eruption.” Another Appraisal Due Mr. Dulles declared the 1945 allied armistice terms never con- I tern plated division of Germany indefinitely. 1 The council was reported to ' have endorsed plans for another ’• appraisal of the German prob lem—presumably with the aim I of exploring ways of speeding ' the quest for a settlement. The I United States, Britain, France : and .West Germany decided to j assign senior diplomats to the task in Bonn around mid-May. 1 The group will have at least i j Continued on Page A-13, CaL $ 6th Fleet Units Sail Westward For Exercises By the Aieociated Preu The Navy announced today that the major fighting ships of the 6th Fleet are moving out of the Eastern Mediterranean where they were rushed during the Jordan crisis last week. It said they are returning to the Central Mediterranean area to take part in previously sched uled North Atlantic Treaty Or ganization naval exercises. Amphibious elements of the fleet, including the reinforced Marine Cdrps battalion of IJOO men, will remain In the Eastern Mediterranean with a number of escorting ships. The carrier Forrestal, the bat tleship Wisconsin, and the heavy cruisers Salem and Des Moines are the principal warships now steaming westward to take part in exercise “Green Pivot.” a phase of general exercises involv ing naval forces and ships of ' most of the maritime powers of NATO. TODAY'S KITCHEN : A FAMILY ROOM EASY DOES IT n tka slogan tar (ha ' modara, wall-equipped kitchen (hat it ! becoming mare and more '• family • roam and (ha ntae( important in (he 1 haste. VMs( Faafcner, The S(ar‘t toad editor, titei ap (ha traad aa ' page 1-4. A HEART-BREAKING VISIT (a #»' old lady ha know at a yooth it da tcribed by Jim lithop Hi anathar at hit reporter'! rtminiicencet. Tarn (a Tka Star'i Feature Page, A-31. LIFE ON A LUXURY YACHT it in Mart far a University of Pennsylvania archeologist. Hit ntw power ersitar, which want dawn thy ways this weak at Annapolit, it described an page 1 C-5. Guide for Readers ‘ Amaaam'ts 1-11-19 Gardens. A-34-35 lusinass and Lott, Found .. A-J \ Finance A-22-23 Musk: $-23 Classified . C-6-16 Obituary ....A-ll Comics .. A-31-39 Outdoors C-5 1 Crossword . A-3* Radio-TV A 36-37 ! Editorial ... A-20 Sports C-l-6 1 Edit'l Articles A-21 Woman's Feature Fsga A-33 Section ..1-4-16 v r Hqve The Star Delivered to Your Homo Doily and Sundoy j • Dial SToHing 3-5000