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Chicago Tribune from Chicago, Illinois • 59

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Chicago Tribunei
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Chicago, Illinois
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59
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Section IB 11 CHICAGO TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1966 ASKS JUSTICES Lands His Plane on Beach, Cambodian Message to United States U. S. ASKS FUND TO SPUR WORLD TO BLOCK NEW Repairs It, and Wings Away APAflAia 1 lfW 1 1 'I UtUKUIA VU 1 1 Borrows Wrench FOOD OUTPUT Rostow Urges Loans to Washington, Nov. 25 (UPD sX I 'i I (III IVt to Tighten a Georgia Atty. Gen.

Arthur K. Bolton told the United States Supreme court today that un 3 i 1 1 1 less the state legislature, is al lowed to settle Georgia's gov ernorship election deadlock, a Sparkplug A single-engine plane towing an advertising sign over the downtown area made a forced landing on the North avenue beach yesterday after developing engine trouble. The pilot, Thomas Otis, 47, of Arlington, said a series of indecisive runoff elec tions might wind up in a stale I mate. '1 'j Ill II I mill I III II The claim was made in one of three briefs filed. The court has been asked to untangle the ran Card section of fans -at opening of Cambodian Games in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, flash sign race in winch 'neither Lester urging United States to withdraw from Asia while 20,000 Cambodian boys and girls are doing Maddox, Democrat, nor Rep.

calisthenics on the field. Photo wag sent to Tokyo by Peking's New China News agency. Howard IBoJ Callaway, re ceived 51 per cent of the votes cast Blame Woman for Bolton attacked alternative proposals to a runoff election or a special election open to all candidates. In either case, he said, voters could insist that Plane belonging to Thomas Otis, of Arlington, Tez on North avenue beach, where he landed when his plane had Needy Nations IN. Y.

TtMM-CMoM TribMt StntaJ PARIS, Nov. 25 The United States proposed today that the western industrial powers establish a new aid fund aimed specifically at the food problem of under-developed countries. The fund, which might amount to several hundred million dollars at the outset, would be used principally to stimulate private investment in agriculture and in industries related to it fertilizers, pesticides, farm machinery, irrigation, and research. As tentatively conceived, the fund could guarantee private loans in these fields, and could also be used to help defray interest charges on the loans. Use Farm Subsidies The proposal was made by Eugene V.

Rostow, United States undersecretary of state, in a closing session of the annual ministerial meeting of the 21-nation Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, which groups the United States, Canada, Japan, and 18 countries of western Europe. Blaze; 135 Homeless write-in votes be counted. "In that way a bloc of voters ond floor of the Mayfield apartments-Detective Walter Roehl said could require runoff after runoff and block the election proc REVEAL LATIN REDS AMONG 82 AIR VICTIMS VIENNA, Nov. 25 (UPD Five Latin American delegates to the recent Sofia Communist party congress were among 82 persons killed in the crash of a Soviet-made Bulgarian air liner yesterday in Czechoslovakia, it was announced in Sofia ess," he said. the apartment occupant, Wil Urges Runoff Election (TRIBUNE Staff Photos port, 13202 S.

Cicero Crest-wood, in a PA 18 Supercub, and spent nearly three hours towing the sign over the downtown area, before trouble developed. He said his first thought was to fly back to Howell airport, but fearing that he wouldn't make it, he landed on the beach. mechanical trouble yesterday. a park district employe, tightened the plug, and took off from the beach. He said the sand, packed hard from Thursday's rain, made a good landing strip and the plane suffered no damage.

The only loss was the sign promoting a bank's credit card- Otis jettisoned the sign over the lake before landing. Otis took off from Howell air- In a reply brief, a citizen's group supporting Callaway urged the court to order Thomas Otis with plane he runoff election between Calla landed on North avenue beach. way and Maddox "at the earliest possible date." Philadelphia, Nov. 25 (UPD A woman spurned by her boyfriend was blamed today for setting a four-alarm fire which wrecked a north Philadelphia apartment building and left 135 homeless on Thanksgiving day. Two adults and three children were overcome in the fire and were rescued by police and firemen.

They were admitted to Temple university hospital. Warrant Is Issued Magistrate George Woods issued a warrant for the arrest of Sandie Stevenson, 25, on an arson charge. She was accused of setting the fire in her boyfriend's apartment on the sec sparkplug came loose while he was in flight Otis borrowed a wrench from The group said it doubted today. liam Richardson, 29, told him he was drinking in a nearby bar with another woman when Miss Stevenson entered and told him, "I just set your apartment on fire." 2 Floors Burned Out The blaze swept the third and fourth floors of the L-shaped building. Nearly a score of apartments were burned out, and about 50 residents lost all their belongings.

Those made homeless were sheltered by neighbors and in a Red Cross shelter set up in a church. that write-in votes could be The Hyushin-18 turboprop used to defeat the effectiveness of a runoff. A runoff election crashed shortly after take-off from Bratislava airport on a Sofia-to-East Berlin flight, kill Art Lovers of World would permit the names of only the top two runners to be REVEAL OWNER OF STORK CLUB placed on the ballot It said the state had raised Go to Florence's Aid the question "in an attempt to FLORENCE, Italy, Nov. 25 ing all 74 passengers and eight crewmembers. The Czech CTK news agency said three persons left the plane after its unscheduled stop at Bratislava.

A Czech investigation commission reported the air liner was off course and flying "unusually low." A passenger list released by CTK showed no Americans aboard the four cast doubt on the ability of a runoff to achieve the majority vote required by Georgia law" in order to advance legislative DIED PENNILESS W) In a spontaneous outpouring of affection for this flood- selection as the only solution. Pastor Is Fined $25 in Bible Tract Case A third party to the case, the ravaged city of Renaissance treasures, art lovers around the world have rallied to help IN. Y. Nows-ChiCM TribMt DlsNtch New York, Nov. 25 Sherman American Civil Liberties union, is seeking a special election Billingsley, the restaura Florence heal its wounds.

open to all candidates. The cause has linked bankers The deadlock was caused by teur whose Stork club was the favorite dining, drinking, and dancing oasis for celebrities for three decades, was broke when write-m votes for former Gov, posit, lay, place or scatter any placard, handbill, pamphlet, circular, book, notice, pap and beatniks, connoisseurs and common laborers, the famous and the unknown of at least 35 lands. Ellis C. Arnall. In event of lack At the same meeting Thorkil Kristensen, the 0.

E. C. secretary general, said the advanced countries should be able to cut their farm subsidies soon, and that they should reroute these funds to aid programs. Kristensen noted that farm subsidies in the major western countries are greater than the total foreign aid they extend to the under-developed. Enough Now Some delegates, commenting on the Rostow proposal, said that the world has enough aid programs now.

But one aid expert noted that the creation of more and more new programs has been an effective way of increasing the total amount of money committed. In their final statement, after prolonged wrangling, the ministers agreed that aid programs should place "greater emphasis" on the development of agriculture, "and possible ways should be studied of stimulating private investment" in this sector. be died Oct 4 at the age of of a majority for one candidate, 66. it was learned today. er of any kind, coal, ashes, dust, manure, rubbish, garbage the Georgia constitution pro According to a close family vides that the legislature choose friend, the man whose bistro between the two front runners took in more than 3 million But a three-man federal court declared the provision unconsti engine aircraft The Bulgarian air liner crashed into a bill shortly after take-off after making an unscheduled landing at Bratislava because of heavy snow and poor visibility.

The 11 other passengers came from western Europe, South America, Japan, and Africa. Victims included Bulgaria's ambassador to East Germany, Ivan Buchvarov, Katia Popova, Bulgarian opera star, and four members of the Hungarian national judo team and their coach en route to the international judo championships in Prague. dollars a year in the club's best years, had no securities, no tutional Nov. 17. The state appealed the deci m.

The Su preme court, will hear oral arguments Dec. 5 and will issue stocks or bonds, no real estate, and no bank account. The only material possessions Billingsley left behind were his clothes and other personal belongings. refuse or article or thing." Backed by Magistrate Magistrate Maurice W. Lee of Jury court, who levied the fine, rejected Sutton's criticism of the ordinance, stating that the ordinance is valid if applied in a reasonable manner.

The Rev. Mr. Lyons, pastor of the Ashburn Baptist church, 3647 83d was arrested in the Grant park's Monroe street parking lot June 24 as he and six children from his church placed booklets containing the Acts of the Apostles, a book in a written decision later. The group attacking legisla The Rev. Vernon C.

Lyons, 34, was fined $25 yesterday on a charge of littering stemming from his placing of religious booklets under the windshields of parked cars in a park district lot. The Rev. Mr. Lyons' lawyer, S. T.

Sutton, said he will appeal the case to the Illinois Supreme court Sutton attacked the ordinances covering littering on park district property as being so loosely worded that a person who places material in a litter basket could be charged with littering. Could Be Entrapment He added that the city could be guilty of entrapment by allowing such a broadly worded ordinance to remain on the books. The Rev. Mr. Lyons was convicted under a section of the ordinance which reads in part: "Littering Prohibited: No persons shall throw, pass, de- tive selection of a winner said No Will Found Since his death, reporters, the situation was "further ag estimates at millions of dollars.

More help has come from established private groups. The United States state department said that by Nov. 16, Catholic Relief had sent $100,000 in cash and 50 tons of clothing. It said the Red Cross had given $25,000 in cash, $4,600 in clothing, and $47,610 in medicine, with Trans World Airlines giving free transportation. As the appeals grow, salvage and restoration work in Florence is still in the emergency first stage.

Art students and other volunteers spend long hours carefully brushing away layers of mud from fragile canvases and frescoes. Carpenters are building long shelves at the Pitti palace, where a huge hall is being equipped as a drying room for all the soaked canvases. Humidity and temperature will be controled and air will be kept circulating among the racks of paintings to prevent cracking. Prof. Bruno Molajoli, government director of antiquities and fine arts, says the work will last months or even years before actual restoring can begin.

But the greatest damaged masterpiece of all, Cimabue's "Crucifixion," can never be restored. Nearly 80 per cent of the painting was washed away in water that rose more than 14 feet. Dikes Resist River ROME, Nov. 25 Ufl Speedly built dikes resisted the crest of the swollen Ombrone river late today, protecting the tense city of Grosseto from further remembering that Billingsley gravated because 229 of the 259 legislators were Democrats who had pledged to support once was a millionaire, had been watching Manhattan Surrogate's court for the filing of Democratic nominees as a con the New Testament of the Bible, Three weeks after flood waters ruined some of the world's most precious art relics, these art lovers have set in motion a far more friendly flood pouring into Florence millions of dollars in cash and supplies, thousands of hours of volunteer labor, and the knowledge of scores of art experts. Helps Homeless, Too Much of the assistance has gone to save the poor, homeless, and sick of this city of 450,000 as well as to salvage its art.

The job of restoration is enormous. Dr. Ugo Procacci, superintendent of Florence galleries, has estimated it will take more than 30 million dollars and at least 20 years. Experts have listed damage to 1,300 painted masterpieces and several million books and ancient manuscripts. But the response so far has been impressive.

From Italy have come cash gifts to a government relief fund totaling more than 1.9 million dollars. Money gifts from other countries are expected to reach several million dollars-Dozens of aid committees the will. dition for their participation in Georgia's Democratic primary But, the family friend re Mout fytfomen in fyifa 6 ii 1 ton election. called today that a thoro search GREEK PREMIER under car windshields. During the trial, policemen testified that they warned the Rev.

Mr. Lyons to stop and arrested him only when he refused. He was found guilty of the littering charge on Oct 17. THREATENED BY of Billingsley's home in Manhattan's East 83d st. and of his office failed to turn up a will.

No one concerned with the noted host's affairs knows of VOTE DISPUTE SIMON WANTS ATHENS, Nov. 25 Reuters The 14-month-old Greek gov the existence of any such document It is believed no last testament will be found. Victim of Plane Crash FOREST NAMED BY LOUISE HUTCHINSON (Chicat Trtbvnt Press Service WASHINGTON, Nov. 25 A great deal has been written about the election this month of Edward Brooke, Republican of Massachusetts, to the United States Senate, the first Negro sent there since Reconstruction days. But Washington has a long roster of Negroes who have come a long way.

Thurgood Marshall, the 33d solicitor ernment was threatened with collapse today in a dispute Listed as Serious FOR DOUGLAS Family Lived Well The friend noted that during about how members of parlia ment should be elected. Seymour Simon, the outgoing Democratic president of the Cook county board, proposed Billingsley's life-time, he provided handsomely for his family. At his death, he had nothing to bequeath. yesterday that a new The 99 deputies of the conservative National Radical Union warned they would withdraw support from Prime Minister Stephanos Stephanopoulos unless he dropped plans to re general of the United States and the first Negro is one. It was Marshall, now 58, who as chief legal counsel for the National Association for the Advancement nf rnlnred PeoDle.

nleaded the case in forest preserve be named in Asked for a possible reason honor of Sen. Paul H. Douglas, for Billingsley's impoverished the Democrat defeated at the state, the friend said that in introduce a system known as Nov. 8 election. ii 1954 in which the Supreme court struck 1 1 simple proportional represen recent years he had poured large sums of money into the Stork club in East 53d st just Miss Melinda Rosdail, 23, daughter of J.

Hart and Dorothy Mae Rosdail of 286 Elm st, Elmhurst, remained in a serious condition in an Omaha, hospital yesterday with injuries she suffered Wednesday in a plane crash near Elk Horn, la. Miss Rosdail, one of two survivors of the crash which took two lives, suffered head injuries, multiple lacerations, and possible back injuries. The four Colorado State university students were flying from Fort Collins, to Cedar Falls, for the Thanksgiving holiday. Simon announced he would ask the county board to name off 5th av. and other enterprises the preserve as a tribute to Douglas at a meeting Monday.

have been hastily organized. Mrs. John F. Kennedy is honorary president of the New York-based Committee to Rescue Italian Art, which hopes to obtain 2.5 million dollars for emergency "first aid" restoration. Runs Into Millions Governments rushed to help hours after the disaster became known.

The state department in Washington said that following the Nov. 4 floods across to keep them afloat when they were in financial trouble. He Because of the Democratic ma Those who know Marshall say he is not the least self-conscious about the subject of race or Negroes. Nor is his wife. Mrs.

Cecilia Suyat Marshall is as proud to be of Filipino descent, and an American, as is husband to be a Negro, an1 on Amaffoan A jority, it appeared certain that tation. This system favors smaller parties, and when used in 1950, it brought 31 parties into parliament and was blamed for causing great confusion. The system allows parliamentary seats to be divided among contesting parties on the basis of the votes they polled. finally closed the club in late 1965. the board would approve Simon's DroDosal.

Roy M. Cohn, who was Bil- Mrs. Marshall The tract, which ingsley's lawyer for many now is being acquired by the forest preserve district, is in years, declined comment on the report that the widely known Palatine township, and is restaurateur died virtually northern and central Italy, American military forces in "If you think people can discriminate here, think of a situation where a Filipino girl in Hawaii, as I was, was frowned upon for dating a Filipino boy who spoke a different Filipino dialect," said Mrs. Marshall, 38, laughing. This is what happened to her.

Altho she described Hawaii as a perfect example of the democratic way of life, where the bounded by Freeman, Central, Honest Youth Gets Italy flew 800 hours of heli damaging floods. Altho some rivers in devastated Tuscany and elsewhere continue to rise slowly, clearing weather eased the threat of more floods in the north and central regions, More than two days of steady rain had swelled the Ombrone, which posed the biggest hazard to Grosseto since that provincial capital of 50,000 inhabitants was inundated Nov. 4. Farther north, in hard-hit Florence, the Arno river was still above its normal level but there were no fears it would flood the city or its surrounding area again. Downstream from Florence, the Elsa river overflowed its banks today, flooded a wide area of farmland near Empoli and cut rail lines between Empoli and Siena and between Florence and Pisa.

The Po river Italy's largest was rising slowly in the northeast, but officials said there was no danger of further flooding from it. Roselle. and Algonquin roads copter rescue operations. They Within the area but excluded also air lifted a German water from the acquisition are portion i'AKE COP ROBS A MAIL TRUCK, SLUGS DRIVER filtration plant and 24 Dutch of Hoffman Estates, the rosi Reward-Reluctantly water-tank trucks and distillers. races mingle, go to school together, and, since World War II, frequently intermarry.

In the case of her father, the differences in dialect between her and her boy friend made their dating road subdivision, and a church It said Americans delivered 18.600 rations, 1,500 cans of Silver Springs, Nov. 25 and a portion of a cemetery, WILSON ASKS unthinkable." (3 Armed robbers held up a nO SHE CAME TO NEW YORK in 1947 to take a course in BOYLE TO STUDY ft court reporting and to test, by her father's edict, her affec mail truck today and hit the driver on the head with a pistol, a United States postal inspector said. BY SHEILA WOLFE James Frischkorn, 18, didn't really want to come to Tribune Tower yesterday. He cannot understand what all the fuss is about. True, he found a purse containing $90 and returned it to the owner three weeks ago and CURB ON NEWS evaporated milk, 2,600 blankets, quantities of diesel fuel, 150,000 vitamin tablets, and other medicines and supplies.

The state department said the over-all amount of financial assistance from American governmental and private sources already has been put by some tion for her boy friend. She loved New York; soon got a job with the N. A. A. C.

and, in 1955, after Marshall's first wife died, Police Supt O. W. Wilson One of the robbers said he married him. said vesterdav that be has was a deputy sheriff and car ried a .45 caliber pistol, offi 0 lllllliMiii 1i mi inr -inn The Tribune carried a cials said. The truck, owned by the Las Vegas-Tonopah-Reno "I tell people there still is hope for the prejudiced," she said gaily.

"Look at my father who has come to live with the fact that people must make their own decisions. I'm married to Thurgood; one brother married a girl from Guam; a sister married a Texan, and another brother is about to wed a Jap story about the incident But Burglars Get $20,000 Stage Line, was under contract to the postal department. that, as far as the deaf news carrier is concerned, does not make him anything special Officials said the truck was A lot of people felt different southbound between Silver Springs and Yerington in West from Bank in Illinois ly. Some who read about Jim's honesty wrote him letters inclosing money. The Tribune ern Nevada when the driver, Ed Gerard, was forced to pull to the side of the road.

Gerard also decided to express regard TRIBUNE Staff Photo James Frischkorn with new for the youth. was slugged and handcuffed. So, accompanied oy ms wristwatch he received from asked Chief Judge John S. Boyle of Circuit court to study a proposed police order which would bar policemen from giving news reporters certain information about criminal cases. -Wilson released the text of his proposed order on Wednesday but did not put it into effect, after meeting with representatives of Chicago's major newspapers and radio and television stations.

The proposed order would prohibit policemen from divulging an arrested person's prior criminal record, confession, or similar details before he is brought to trial, or to reveal results of investigative procedures such as fingerprint and polygraph examinations, ballistic and laboratory tests, and identifications. Such information now is available to the public thru the news media. Police Seek Identity Tribune as reward for his hon mother, Sarah, Jim went thru a picture taking and presentation session. He accepted from Stanley Harvey, Tribune home of Body Found in Yards Paloma, Nov. 25 (UPD Burglars took almost $20,000 from the Paloma Exchange bank Thanksgiving night They may have been helped by an open bank vault, police said.

Clean Out Vault Police said Cashier Curtis Hibbert told them he could not recall if he set the time lock on the bank vault to extend thru the Thanksgiving holiday rather than for the ordinary overnight period. Hibbert also could not recall delivery manager, a watch with an engraved commendation "for outstanding honesty." "He's very much out of anese." Mrs. Marshall moved here with the couple's sons, ages 10 and 8, in September, 1965, a few months after Marshall, a judge on the federal Court of Appeals in New York, accepted the $28,500 job as solicitor general, third ranking job in the department of justice. For awhile, she reported, they were rushed socially because Marshall as a Negro had achieved such a position. Now they see only the people they like.

FOR 25 YEARS, when Thurgood was chief legal counsel for the N. A. A. C. it was rush, rush, rush ali over the country," she said.

"Now he wants to enjoy some home life." Home currently is what the Marshalls call 'camping out" Because of the baste of moving from New York and lease commitments, they took, temporarily, 'a two-bedroom, two-story townhouse in Washington. If too small. But because of high, interest rates and high property prices they have decided to postpone buying for awhile. So Mrs. Marshall hews to a daily schedule familiar to mil-Eons of American women.

She drives both sons to a private school. She returns home, picks up her husband, and drives him to the justice department In the afternoon, the route is repeated. She does her own cooking and her own housework. She also has a philosophy that it's better to look on the bright side of things with an infectious iauch to back it up, so that a visitor, who arrivesat the Mar-filial home a strangefTis happy to linger over a cupof tea. if he spun the vault's combination lock before leaving Wednesday, police said.

Failure to do both would have meant the vault was open when the burglars The thieves cleaned out the cash vault altho the lock did not appear disturbed, police said. They made several false starts, such as trying to crack thru a brick wall and pry open a steel door, before finding an easier way to get inside the vault, police ssid. Rifle Cash Drawers In addition to looting the vault, they rifled cash drawers and took $1,000 in coins, police said. Among the loot missing from the Vault was a coin collection belonging to and valued at $3,000, they said. Paloma is in western Illinoij, about 18 miles north of Quincy.

sorts about all the attention," Mrs. Frischkorn sal d. "He thinks that what be-did was nothing." esty. Letters commending Jim's honesty have poured in. The money they contained $88 will be used toward the purchase of a new hearing aid.

After contracting measles, Jim started losing his hearing when he was 6 and became completely deaf at 14. A senior at Chicago Vocational High school, he plans to study machine drafting. Mrs. Frischkorn said Jim was only doing what comes naturally. "Honesty always has been uppermost in my mind," she said.

"I was brought up that way and so were my children." i who lives at 11219 St Maxwell street homicide detectives were attempting to identify the body of a man found yesterday morning in the railroad yards at Grand avenue and Des Plain es street by a Chicago North Western railway switchman. Police said the man apparently died of natural causes. Hint Murder, Suicide in Shooting of Couple Peoria, Nov; 25 W-lran T. Gambrel, 77, and his wife, Lelia, 78, were found shot to death in their home yesterday circumstances; that police said indicated homicide and suicide. Volkswagen Produces Lawrence found the purse Oil Fire in Bombay at 111th street and a Kills Four Worker Grove avenue at, 6 a.

m. Nov. 5 when returning from his paper route. Inside was $90 and the name of Mrs. Marie Ba-sile, 11147 Vernon av.

12 Millionth Auto WOLFSBURG, Germany, Nov. 25 Reuters The 12 millionth car produced by Volkswagen, Europe's biggest automobile manufacturer, rolled off the assembly' line of the company's factory here today. BOMBAY, Nov. 25 Reuters Four oil workers died and three were injured in a blaze A surprised Mrs. Basile got the purse back that day.

She that swept thru part of an oil refinery in Bombay early today. gave Jim a $10 reward. 4.

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