©he ©hening ifef - Chronicling America

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WEATHER FORECAST Fair and cooler tonight, low around 65. Tomorrow fair and pleasant, “highest around 80. tFull report on Page A-2.) Temperatures Today Midnight 75 6 am... 71 11 a m... 83 2 am... 75 8 am... 75 Noon ...84 4 a.m.-.73 10 a.m...81 l p.m.,.84 104th Year. No. 196. Nixon at Farm, Tells President About Asia Trip They Will Review Legislative Situation, Perhaps Talk Politics Bv JOSEPH A. FOX Star Staff Correspondent GETTYSBURG. Pa., July 14 OP).—Vice President Nixon flew here today to report to President Eisenhower on his Asian trip, review the legislative situation—- and perhaps do a little poli- ticking. “Anything the President wants to discuss, we’ll discuss,” the Vice President told reporters who met him on arrival at the Get- tysburg airport in company withj Wilton B. Persons, White House legislative liaison aide. , Making an appearance that was delayed 24 hours by bad flying weather, the Vice Presi- dent arrived about 10 a.m. and was driven immediately to the President's farm home. A second plane brought sev- eral White House staff members with a batch of paper work for the President’s attention. Foreign Aid a Topic The Vice President was asked if the foreign aid bill would be among the legislative items taken up. and he said that it would, adding “we are very much in- terested in that.” That the President and his No. 2 man would get into politics seemed certain inasmuch as the President had just re-affirmed his backing for a second term for Mr. Nixon. The President and Vice Presi- dent have been together but once since the President was rushed ' to Walter Reed Army Hosiptal; five weeks ago for an abdominal operation, and on that hospital visit. Mr. Nixon told reporters nothing was said about politics. The President meanwhile was preparing to return to Washing- ton Monday or Tuesday to pre- pare for the Panama conference of the Presidents of American States. Under present plans, he will fly out of Washington next Friday night for the two-day session on the Isthmus, after participating in the initial stagii of “Operation Alert.” which calls, for a mock "dispersal” of Gov-j eminent operations from the Capital between July 20-26 in a program aimed at perfecting steps that would have to be taken under wartime conditions.' The President took part in a similar undertaking last year when he moved from the White! House to an undisclosed destina-1 tion. Just what his role will be this year has not been made public. His plans beyond Panama are indefinite and presumably will depend on what Congress does. Tank Veterans Meet Veterans of the World War I tank corps who trained at Camp Colt here in 1918 when Mr. Ei- senhower was a major, are hold- ing their annual reunion here this week end. They will have a ceremony this afternoon at the Eisenhower memorial tree which marks the site of Maj. Eisen- hower’s headquarters. The Presi- dent is sending a message to the gathering. At their banquet tonight, the tankmen will be addressed by Harry H. Semmes. Washington lawyer, who was decorated for gallantry in two wars while serving with the tank corps. Sale of Sheet Steel To Soviet Approved By Administration The shipment of *1,100,000 worth of sheet steel to Russia for use in making automobile bodies has been approved by the administration. This was dis- closed last night by a spokesman for the Commerce Department, who said the shipment would approximate 7.800 short tons of 2,000 pounds each and is of a type normally used in making automobile bodies. The export license was Issued May 15—45 days before the steel strike began. It was the first time the sale of any sheet steel to an Iron Curtain country had been made since 1947, the official said. The decisidh to approve the sale was made after full consul- tation between various Govern- ment agencies. SHOP ©IfT §>tar REAL ESTATE SECTION TODAY Today and avery Saturday in The Star you will find a wide variety of best home offering* by leading buildert and brokers throughout the Washington area Remember, for the home of your dreams, in the right location, at a price vou can afford to pay. SHOP THE STAR FIRST BEFORE YOU BUY J ©he ©hening ifef V ? J Vs ? WITH SU NBAY MORNING EDITION \^/ Phone ST. 3-5000 ??S WASHINGTON, D. C., SATURDAY, JULY 14, 1956—THIRTY-EIGHT PAGES. m > sßrj» $ V **' / l mm K ' m jp" jW f ¦ MM. ' v r M £#- W f ¦ jir :sj. v v & RED PLANE SElZED—lngolstadt, Germany.—The pilot and a passenger walk by a Hungarian airliner which was seized in midair by seven anti-Communist passengers after a fight with the pro-Red crew. The pilot was forced to land at the United States Air Force base near Ingolstadt, West Germany.—AP Wire- photo via radio from London. ’Walkout’ Talk Is Discounted By Dixie Chiefs Unity, Not a Bolt, Is Aim of Meeting, Georgian Asserts By JAMES Y. NEWTON Star Staff Correspondent ATLANTA, July 14.—"Wal- kout,” "bolt” and "third party” are dirty words to a group of Dixie Democratic chieftains gathered here for a preconven- tion strategy pow-wow. In fact, one Deep South poli- tician told a reporter that his mouth should be washed out with good strong soap for even i uttering such words. “As a loyal Democrat.” said John Sammons Bell, Georgia Democratic chairman, “I am getting fed up with those who. when Southern Democrats get together, imply that a bolt, a walkout or a third party move- ment is under discussion. “Others like the ADA i Ameri- cans for Democratic Action continued Mr. Bell, "keep one fopt in and one foot out of the Democratic Party. Georgia and in fact the South, has been the most loyal segment of the party. If it were not for the segregated States, the party would not t.a”e carried a single State in 1952 Wants to Win Election When asked in a television in- terview later if he would walk out of this convention should the Democrats approve a plat- form calling for racial iniegia- ition, Mr. Bell said, “A walkout is something I refuse to contem- plate. We want 10 win the elec- tion and the only way to do that is through unity.” The occasion was the open- ing of a two-day gathering of Democratic chairmen from States where segregation is still; i in effect. It was called by Guv.' 1 George Bell Timmerman of South Carolina, who'is not pres- ent. Party chairmen of 11 States representing 276 Democratic con- ¦ vention votes were invited to at- tend. The last count showed in attendance six States. Missing ! were Texas, Louisiana. Arkansas, Mississippi and Florida. A Flor- ida delegate was reported on the . way. t The meeting was both in- . formal and unusual. Specific ! reasons for it apparently were 1 unclear to most delegates when they met first at 8 o’clock last i night. After this session broke . up in the wee hours of morning.! [ seemingly not much light had been shed on the purpose There were no obvious developments. Virginia Decision Waits > State Senator Thomas H. Blan- ton. Virginia Democratic chair- - man, said he had received Gov Timmerman’s invitation and ac- cepted to see what the meeting was about. He said there wasn't much he could do toward com- mitting Virginia Democrats to anything, because the convention . policy would be set at the State convention later this month. Roy Mayhall, Alabama State , chairman, said it wasn't exactly clear to him why the meeting was called. “This occurs to me,” Mr. May- -1 hall told reporters who outnum- ber the delegates roughly by 10 * See DIXIE, Tage A-7 Israeli Is Killed In 100th Incident JERUSALEM, Israeli Sector, July 14 t/P). - A young Israeli' mechanic was shot dead to the i music of his car radio last night . near Lydda Airport by four men I'His girl friend narrowly escaped . abduction. Israeli authorities . said today. They blamed Arab infiltrators. , Foreign ministry sources de- \ scribed the killing as the 100th incident along the Israell-Jor- dan border since the latest cease-fire was agreed upon April 26. Previous incidents had cost six lives. The slain mechanic was Aryeh Grauback, 25, a native of Pales- tine. The girl was Helen Frank, 21, a nurse now in the Israeli . army, who came to Israel five I years ago from Poland. She was . marched off by the men but ! was finally freed and notified police. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT 1 NEW YORK Following are tna J»lfs (and tun hUh. low, closlnit pru:f and aft change ot the “0 most active I stocks (or the week: Sales High Low. Close Ch«e US Pine * P linn :111 s . at’* :»<>». + at, 1 Gen Motors 1505 4T 1. -(S’. 4i +1 | I South Prod 1 :11m) 4a 7 . 40 7 « 4'l'. a- T*s I Radio Cp I'.’lli 4H'4 47»a 4HU +UV 1 Sperry Rd Mill a*t». 'll*, at 5 .* ; U S Steel IIS* Hii*4 SS'a tin'. + l*. Am Bosch HMI •_•»»» •_’l> 1 4 •-'.l'a-S’s ¦ Sid Oil NJ IISS SH’, SMI, SMJ,_ > 4 Oen nvnam H 75 01 s , h:i»« Hs»»+ V An Prlch Oil *SH 411', :»»»»• 4'i -64 , Alleghany CP HIIH liMa li'/a ill. + Raytheon HSH ISV, 111*. 14 ’,l ilGar Wood H«:i It's 7** !i + Hal t (Mont Ward fl'N IHa 4'H/s 4.l*.+U hint Harvest him :iii ;im'. .'in' a + 'a .Chrysler HI4 Hl', HV, HS + IPanhan Oil Hll Hi'-a 17*. IM*a— »«. IllHldLlma Sno IH, Id*. 1H» + I<a| llyi' Dutch shhii.-i imi'« 11 a -t-S*a| Oen Electric 556 «a*. 8U 7 . dl’. + V. 7 Who Seized Plane Aloft Request Asylum in West 5 of Anti-Red Plotters in Hospital Along With 12 They Subdued in Big Battle INGOLSTADT, Germany, July 14 i.TV— Seven desperate anti-Communists asked political asylum today after seizing control of a Hungarian airliner in flight and crashlanding in West Germany. Twelve of the 19 Hungarian passengers and crewmen—includ- ing a secret policeman—were hospitalized with injuries received lydings to Quit, Lawyer Says Wife at Once Denies Pressman Report BALTIMORE. July 14 i/P>.—Hy- I man Pressman, lawyer and po- < litical badger, said today he'd heard that Millard E. Tydings will resign the Democratic nom- 1 ination to the Senate due to 'ill health. The resignation rumor was de- nied, however, by Mrs. Tydings. ! Mr. Tydings has been in Johns Hopkins Hospital with a facial skin infection since June 8. Tydings within the last week, however, issued his first cam- paign statements from the hos- pital. In one instance, it was a reply to criticism of a group which contributed money toward his election in November. Mr Pressman’s gossip that Mr. Tydings will resign the nomina- tion he won in the May primary was contained in a telegram to Mayor Thomas D'Alesandro. Mrs. Tydings Denies Mrs Tydings, in denying the Pressman report in behalf of her husband, said: “He hasn't withdrawn, nobody has asked him to withdraw and he doesn't intend to withdraw.” | She added that Mr. Tydings “was highly amused at the re- port.” She also said he did not in- tend to get into any discussion with Mr. Pressman. Mrs. Tydings emphasized her husband does not have a “serious ailment” and that “all it re- quires is a. complete rest and quiet.” She reported he is “a lot better, getting along fine and has gained eight pounds in the past week.” Mr Tydings' doctor had re- fused to permit delivery directly to him of a message asking for comment on the Pressman re- port. Only immediate members of his family are allowed to visit him and telephone calls are not accepted. Other Nominee Feared Mr. Pressman said he also heard that the Mayor plans to “influence a majority of the State Central Committee to nominate someone other than George P. Mahoney" in the event Mr. Tydings does with- draw. It would be up to the com- _ See TYDINGS. Page A-7 the secret police officer who drew a gun, and turned all the four crew members out of the control cabin except the chiei pilot. "Polyak sat down beside the chief pilot and together they flew the plane," Mr. Kiss said 1 "He kept a gun pointed at tne head of the chief pilot in case he tried anything more." 1 The pilot was forced to fly low. lat times only about 30 feet ¦ above the ground, Mr. Kiss said, 1 as the plane hedgehopped along the Danube through Austria and into West Germany. “We found our map—which ¦ we had lost in the chaos us the ride —after we got control of the plane," Mr. Kiss related. i "We decided to head for Munich. But we were running very low on gas. We flew by compass and the radio was out of order. : Over Ingolstadt we saw what looked like an abandoned air- field and decided to land We . were still not sure whether we were in East or West Germany.’’ It was the United States Air Force s still uncompleted air base at Manching, 150 miles from the ! Hungarian border. The first to emerge from the plane was one of the rebels, his face bloody. He shouted. "Bonn! Adenauer! Germany!" Before German police could get command of the situation. . several brief brawls broke out again between the rebels and the others. Bavarian officials today ques- tioned all aboard the plane in an effort to determine whether asylum should be granted the seven. In such cases before. West Germany has given asy- lum. Police said the plane, an American-built DC-3 of the state-owned Melav Airlines, will! be returned to Hungarian au- thorities after a check to see whether it is safe to fly. The plane had been en route See ESCAPE, Page A ll in a bloody, bruising battle for control of the plane and from loops made by the aircraft when the pilot tried to upset the plot. Five of those in the hospital were' members of the band, including one woman, which seized the plane late yesterday. The seven passengers and crew not injured were under police guard in the village of Man- ching, near here. Police said an eighth person aboard the plane who first had indicated he would join the plot- ters in asking asylum may have changed his mind about stay- ing in the West. Planned Far in Advance The daring break through the Iron Curtain—perhaps the most spectacular in a long series of such breaks—was planned far in advance. The leader. Gyorgy Polyak, a Hungarian World War II pilot referred to by his comrades as “the lieutenant,” was the only one with a gun. The others were armed with iron rods secreted in their clothes. At a signal, they attacked the other passengers with the iron bars because they had been tipped a secret police agent was aboard and they had no way of telling which one it was. One of the plotters, Joseph Jakaby, a 25-year-old Budapest student, said he had relatives in the United States. He slipped a message to reporters asking them to contact Mrs. William L. Farmer, Chicago. The message said, "Please send me money.” He did not indicate his rela- tionship to Mrs. Farmer. One of the other rebels, Gabor Kiss, a Budapest student, said at a prearranged signal in which! Mr. Polyak shouted "Look, there's Gyor 'a Hungarian, town*," the plotters pulled out their concealed iron rods and began hitting the other pas- sengers. Policeman Disarmed In the battle, which turned the interior of the plane into wreckage, Mr. Polyak disarmed Marilyn's Knees Set Off Stampede j Os London News Photographers Bv EDDY GILMORE Associated Presa Correspondent LONDON, July 14.—Marilyn Monroe crossed her shapely legs for the first time in Britain to- day—and started a mild oanic. It happened at a news con- ference in a large shed at Lon- Pieture on Page A-2 don Airport 45 minutes after the 'American film star arrived to | make a movie with Sir Laurence Olivier. About 100 reporters, ! photographers and television men were on hand. •Please sit down," said Sir Laurence with his wife, Actressj Vivien Leigh, at his elbow. Miss "Monroe sat. Then she gave a gentle tug at her tight-fitting skirt, revealing a goodly part of her shapely left-leg. 1 «iat started it. One photographer crashed into a newsreel camera, knocking i it to the floor. Another lensman lurched for- ward and fell on his face. A wall of photographers plunged toward Miss Monroe like ' ihe forward line of a football team. Police stopped them. The news conference began. “Are all your conferences » like this?" asked a reporter. “Oh,” said Miss Monroe in a . small voice, "this is very order- i ly." “We can’t hear a word." ech- oed a chorus of complaints ¦I from other correspondents un- able to fight their way to the front. "I'd better take charge." spoke up Sir Laurence in his well- known Shakespearian voice. i“Yqu ask the questions and I'll rep«t her answers." I 11 Another cameraman was : thrown to the floor. He screamed as someone trampled on his hand and halted Sir Laurence for a moment. By this time the photog- raphers scrambling for posi- I lions had wedged Miss Monroe, her playwright husband Arthur Miller, and the Oliviers into a ! corner. Beads of perspiration appeared 1 on Miss Monroe's face. Then Miss Monroe, her husband and the Oliviers barricaded . themselves behind a soft drink . stand and from that point the 1 conference concluded. In reply to questions. Miss ; Monroe said she had a pleasant trip, England is a wonderful! country, she expects to be here I * weeks and will live in the country. 45 Killed in Air Crash, District Man Escapes \ JH -..m iK - JH . COL. ROY A. WALL RICHARD C. BLANCHARD Crash Victim Survives Crash Two From Washington In Military Air Wreck A widely known Army officer i on his way to Europe for the : dedication of United States cem-|i eteries and memorials was among the 45 killed in the Na- tion's latest plane disaster. He was Col. Roy* A. Wall. 51. ' chief of the memorial division : in the Office of the Quartermas- 1 ter General. He lived at 10200 : Ridgemoor drive, Silver Spring, with his wife, son, and daugh- ter. Another Washington man. i Sergt. 1 c Richard C. Blanchard, 'i 31, whose wife lives at 1242 As- I pen street N.W., survived the crash, but was injured. He is a brother-in-law of Lt. Jacob Wolf, head of the police pawn squad. Mrs. Wolf said Sergt. Blanch- ard was "a little nervous" about Silver Spring Army Colonel Among Dead FORT DIX, N. J„ July 14 f/P). —A military transport plane, ap- parently caught in freakish air currents moments after takeoff, crashed in a remote, storm- lashed forest yesterday, killing 45 persons. The 21 others aboard were in- jured. five critically. Among the survivors was Sergt. l'C Richard C. Blanchard, 31. Deod and Injured Listed in Military Crash. Poge A-3 whose wife, Lillian, lives at 1242 Aspen street N.W., Washington. Sergt. Blanchard's injuries still are undetermined. Col. Roy A Wall, 51. of 10200 ißidgemoor drive, Silver Spring, Md., was among those killed, as were five women and two chil- dren. The plane went down in a storm of rain, hail and lightning. Violent Downdraft Survivors spoke falteringly of sudden, violent downdrafts that snook the plane seconds after it left McGuire Air Force Base, adjacent to this huge Fort Dix military reservation. The plane rocketed to earth in an isolated, swampy woods, breaking into fragments and rip- ping a 300-yard swath through the trees. “Everything happened so quick,” said Airman Albert J. Buck of Philadelphia, who was knocked unconscious when the plane hit. "We were going along steady, hit a downdraft and then she dropped.” Pvt. Thomas Kiley of Law- rence, Mass., who staggered bleeding and dazed from the j wreckage, said: "A tremendous j jarring” hit the giant C-118 be- fore it veered into the boggy i forest of tall pines. ! ‘T saw things flying off to the side and then tearing and breaking,” he said. making the plane trip and did not relish the journey. He was en route to an assignment in England and Mrs. Blanchard was to join him there later. The plane, a military trans- port. carried 50 militry pas- sengers and 6 civilians. It crashed near Fort Dix, N. J.. yesterday. Its destination was England. Col. Wall was to represent the Army in the dedication cere- monies for American cemeteries and memorials in Europe. He left Washington yesterday morn- ing and expected to spend a month in Europe. Col. Wall and his family had been here for two years and had lived at the Ridgemoor drive address for a year Before his See RESIDENTS, Page A-3 Soviet Jet Tronsports Ready for Regular Duty MOSCOW, July 14 <#).—•The Soviet Union plans to inaugurate regular service next month with its big twin-engine TU-104 jet transport, a Russian pilot said today. Gerald Dmitrievich Kuznetsov, 1 a command pilot for the Soviet | airline Aeroflot, said initial service will be between Moscow and Copenhagen and Moscow and Prague. The distances to ' the Danish and Czech capitals are about 1.100 miles. 1 Mr. Kuznetsov said service will - begin later this year between 'Moscow, Peiping, China, and : Jakarta. Indonesia. !| The 33-year-old pilot proudly showed off the liner that will be used on the international flights. It is the plane that impressed observers this spring when it . carried the Soviet security chief,; Ivan Serov, to London to pre- pare the way for the visit of Soviet Premier Bulganin and Communist Party Boss Nikita Khrushchev. i Mr. Kuznetsov also said he has flown a four-engine Russian jet airliner, the TU-110, which he ¦ said has greater speed, range and ¦ altitude capability than the TU-104 but is only a little bigger. He said the TU-110 is still being tested. Mi. Kuznetsov said a "typical . speed" of the TU-104 is 850 kilo- meters '5lO miles) an hour. ; Speaking through an inter- preter, the pilot said fares on the jet airliner will be only about 1 three-fourths the fares on the conventional piston engine craft currently in use—presumably be- cause the jets carry greater loads 1 faster and use cheaper fuel. The TU-104s are clearly mod- ifications of the Tupolev twin- , engine medium bomber, dubbed the "Badger” by the United States Air Force. The TU-110 is believed to be an adaptation jof Tupolev's four engine "Bison' heavy bomber. The TUIO4 has seats for 50 passengers plus a dining room with seats for four. Three lux- i urious forward salons have seats for 6. and 8 passengers respec- tively while the main cabin ac- commodates 28. Arlington Man Captures 'Peeping Tom' in Chase Bound for England There were 66 persons aboard the plane, a 10-man crew, 50 military and six civilians bound for Burtonwood Army Base, near Manchester, England. Lt Col. Richard Goss of the .air base, said there would be no statement as to the cause of the crash until an accident board looks into "all aspects of it.” Investigators were on the scene today, probing through the scattered remnants of the plane. ' Its wings were ripped off. its fuselage broken in parts. Bits of cloth and equipment hung in the treetops. One of the four engines was nearly buried in the mud. An air safety team from Norton Air Force Base, San Bernardino, Calif., was flying here to join in the investigation. In Air 90 Seconds The plane had been in the air only 90 seconds, a spokesman said, when it lurched and plummeted from an altitude of ;an estimated 500 to 700 feet. The crash was about three miles from the takeoff runway, "We hit some sort of down- draft when we neded power.'' said Sergt. Robert R. Ashley, of Wrightstown. N. J„ another in- jured survivor. Passengers still had their seat- belts on when the crash came. Some—both among the dead and injured—were still strapped to their seats when rescuers reached them an hour later. As the first rescue group ar- rived. after sloshing and chop- ping its way through water, mud and dense brush, one officer said Continued on Page A-3, Col. 4 Uganda Lions Kill 42 KAMPALA. Uganda. July 14 Lions have killed 42 per- sons in Uganda this year, the * game department announced to- day. Two African herdsmen were the latest victims. Game guards are hunting their killers. The brother of a convicted rapist was captured at gun- point today by an Arlington resident who caught him out- side his window, police said. Richard 1. Polk. 21. of the 900 block North Randolph street, W'as jailed in lieu of SSOO bond on a peeping tom charge. Police say Polk is the brother of John R. Polk, who is serving a 55-year sentence in the Vir- ginia Penitentiary for the kid- naping and rape of an Arlington Navy officer's wife in 1951. Richard Polk was captured about 1 a.m. by Roger H. Will- ard, 28. of the Buckingham Apartments. 4122 North Fourth street, an employe of the Inter- national Business Machine Corp , police reported. Heard Noise at Window Mr. Willard's wife Beatrice said she and her husband were getting ready to go to bed . shortly after midnight when she ' heard a scratching noise at the | bedroom window. The Willards live in a ground floor apart- ment. Mrs. Willard said she called her husband who got his pistol and ran outside, where he spot- ted a man. Mr. Willard ordered the man to halt and when kept mov- ing he fired a shot. Mr. Willard ¦ then forced the 220-pound man , to lie on the ground. ; Meanwhile, Mrs. Willard called < police Holes Poked in Screen ! Mr. Willard said three holes [ had been poked in the screen. ¦ apparently with the intent of .{opening the Venetian blind. A ; stick was left in one of the holes. ' Willard said. I l 1 TUr. Willard, whose hobby is I ROGER H. WILI.ARD i Catches Peeping Tom —Star BtafT Photo [ shootinc. won a first place medal I in a local match sponsored last , year by the National Rifle 'As- sociation. ! In 1951 John R. Polk and a ¦ Bethesda man. William R. Payne. I kidnapped a 20-.vear-old bride of 1 a Navy ensign from their ground- ! floor apartment in Colonial Vil- lage. Both men pleaded guilty to kidnap and rape charges and i were given long terms. Richard Polk was released re- -1 cently from the penitentiary ¦ after serving time for breaking . and entering an Arlington florist £fhop, Arlington police records i'ehow. PASTOR'S SERMON * BRINGS PAINTING LISTENER REMEMBERS—The pos- tor of the Colvory Baptist Church preached a sermon 21 years ogo. It inspired o painting by one of the con- gregation and recently she presented him the picture. Page A-8 SOCIAL SECURITY AT 7-An Oregon boy, 7, made SIOO last year and got a social security number. H# may be the youngest on the rolls. Read "Security tor You" on page B-12. Guide for Readers Amusements A-14 Edit'l Articles A S Churches A-8-11 Obituary A 6 Classified A-15-23 Radio TV 8 13 Comics B-12-13 Real Estate 8-111 {Cross-word B-12 Society ... All Editorial A-4 Sports A-12 13 Hove The Star Delivered to Your Home Daily and Sunday r Dial STerltng 3-5000 ——i —,r T REAL ESTATE SECTION Pages B-l to B-14 WMAL—RADIO—TV 5 CENTS

Transcript of ©he ©hening ifef - Chronicling America

WEATHER FORECASTFair and cooler tonight, low around 65.Tomorrow fair and pleasant, “highestaround 80. tFull report on Page A-2.)

Temperatures Today

Midnight 75 6 am... 71 11 a m... 832 am... 75 8 am... 75 Noon ...844 a.m.-.73 10 a.m...81 l p.m.,.84

104th Year. No. 196.

Nixon at Farm,Tells PresidentAbout Asia Trip

They Will ReviewLegislative Situation,Perhaps Talk Politics

Bv JOSEPH A. FOXStar Staff Correspondent

GETTYSBURG. Pa., July 14OP).—Vice President Nixon flewhere today to report to PresidentEisenhower on his Asian trip,review the legislative situation—-and perhaps do a little poli-ticking.

“Anything the President wantsto discuss, we’ll discuss,” theVice President told reporters whomet him on arrival at the Get-tysburg airport in company withjWilton B. Persons, White Houselegislative liaison aide. ,

Making an appearance thatwas delayed 24 hours by badflying weather, the Vice Presi-dent arrived about 10 a.m. andwas driven immediately to thePresident's farm home.

A second plane brought sev-eral White House staff memberswith a batch of paper work forthe President’s attention.

Foreign Aid a Topic

The Vice President was askedif the foreign aid bill would beamong the legislative items takenup. and he said that it would,adding “we are very much in-terested in that.”

That the President and his No.2 man would get into politicsseemed certain inasmuch as thePresident had just re-affirmedhis backing for a second term forMr. Nixon.

The President and Vice Presi-dent have been together but oncesince the President was rushed 'to Walter Reed Army Hosiptal;five weeks ago for an abdominaloperation, and on that hospitalvisit. Mr. Nixon told reportersnothing was said about politics.

The President meanwhile waspreparing to return to Washing-ton Monday or Tuesday to pre-pare for the Panama conferenceof the Presidents of AmericanStates.

Under present plans, he willfly out of Washington nextFriday night for the two-daysession on the Isthmus, afterparticipating in the initial stagiiof “Operation Alert.” which calls,for a mock "dispersal” of Gov-jeminent operations from theCapital between July 20-26 in aprogram aimed at perfectingsteps that would have to betaken under wartime conditions.'

The President took part in asimilar undertaking last yearwhen he moved from the White!House to an undisclosed destina-1tion. Just what his role will bethis year has not been madepublic.

His plans beyond Panama areindefinite and presumably willdepend on what Congress does.

Tank Veterans MeetVeterans of the World War I

tank corps who trained at CampColt here in 1918 when Mr. Ei-senhower was a major, are hold-ing their annual reunion herethis week end. They will have aceremony this afternoon at theEisenhower memorial tree whichmarks the site of Maj. Eisen-hower’s headquarters. The Presi-dent is sending a message to thegathering.

At their banquet tonight, thetankmen will be addressed byHarry H. Semmes. Washingtonlawyer, who was decorated forgallantry in two wars whileserving with the tank corps.

Sale of Sheet SteelTo Soviet ApprovedBy Administration

The shipment of *1,100,000worth of sheet steel to Russiafor use in making automobilebodies has been approved by theadministration. This was dis-closed last night by a spokesmanfor the Commerce Department,who said the shipment wouldapproximate 7.800 short tons of2,000 pounds each and is of atype normally used in makingautomobile bodies.

The export license was IssuedMay 15—45 days before the steelstrike began. It was the firsttime the sale of any sheet steelto an Iron Curtain country hadbeen made since 1947, the officialsaid.

The decisidh to approve thesale was made after full consul-tation between various Govern-ment agencies.

SHOP

©IfT §>tarREAL ESTATE

SECTIONTODAY

Today and avery Saturday in

The Star you will find a widevariety of best home offering*

by leading buildert and brokersthroughout the Washington area

Remember, for the home of your

dreams, in the right location, at

a price vou can afford to pay.

SHOP THE STAR FIRST

BEFORE YOU BUY

J

©he ©hening ifefV ? J Vs ? WITH SU NBAY MORNING EDITION \^/

Phone ST. 3-5000 ??S WASHINGTON, D. C., SATURDAY, JULY 14, 1956—THIRTY-EIGHT PAGES.

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> sßrj» $ V**'

/ l mmK ' mjp" jW f ¦ MM.

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RED PLANE SElZED—lngolstadt, Germany.—The pilot and a passenger walkby a Hungarian airliner which was seized in midair by seven anti-Communistpassengers after a fight with the pro-Red crew. The pilot was forced to landat the United States AirForce base near Ingolstadt, West Germany.—AP Wire-photo via radio from London.

’Walkout’ TalkIs DiscountedBy Dixie Chiefs

Unity, Not a Bolt,Is Aim of Meeting,Georgian AssertsBy JAMES Y. NEWTON

Star Staff Correspondent

ATLANTA, July 14.—"Wal-kout,” "bolt” and "third party”are dirty words to a group ofDixie Democratic chieftainsgathered here for a preconven-tion strategy pow-wow.

In fact, one Deep South poli-tician told a reporter that hismouth should be washed outwith good strong soap for even

iuttering such words.“As a loyal Democrat.” said

John Sammons Bell, GeorgiaDemocratic chairman, “I amgetting fed up with those who.when Southern Democrats gettogether, imply that a bolt, awalkout or a third party move-ment is under discussion.

“Others like the ADA i Ameri-cans for Democratic Actioncontinued Mr. Bell, "keep onefopt in and one foot out of theDemocratic Party. Georgia andin fact the South, has been themost loyal segment of the party.If it were not for the segregatedStates, the party would not t.a”ecarried a single State in 1952 ”

Wants to Win ElectionWhen asked in a television in-

terview later if he would walkout of this convention shouldthe Democrats approve a plat-form calling for racial iniegia-ition, Mr. Bell said, “A walkoutis something I refuse to contem-plate. We want 10 win the elec-tion and the only way to do thatis through unity.”

The occasion was the open-ing of a two-day gathering ofDemocratic chairmen fromStates where segregation is still;

i in effect. It was called by Guv.'1 George Bell Timmerman ofSouth Carolina, who'is not pres-ent. Party chairmen of 11 Statesrepresenting 276 Democratic con-

¦ vention votes were invited to at-’ tend. The last count showed inattendance six States. Missing

! were Texas, Louisiana. Arkansas,• Mississippi and Florida. A Flor-ida delegate was reported on the

. way.t The meeting was both in-. formal and unusual. Specific! reasons for it apparently were

1 unclear to most delegates whenthey met first at 8 o’clock last

i night. After this session broke. up in the wee hours of morning.!

[ seemingly not much light hadbeen shed on the purpose Therewere no obvious developments.

Virginia Decision Waits> State Senator Thomas H. Blan-

• ton. Virginia Democratic chair-- man, said he had received GovTimmerman’s invitation and ac-

‘ cepted to see what the meeting’ was about. He said there wasn'tmuch he could do toward com-

• mitting Virginia Democrats to• anything, because the convention

. policy would be set at the Stateconvention later this month.

Roy Mayhall, Alabama State, chairman, said it wasn't exactlyclear to him why the meetingwas called.

“This occurs to me,” Mr. May-

-1 hall told reporters who outnum-• ber the delegates roughly by 10

*

See DIXIE, Tage A-7

Israeli Is KilledIn 100th Incident

JERUSALEM, Israeli Sector,July 14 t/P). - A young Israeli'mechanic was shot dead to the

i music of his car radio last night

. near Lydda Airport by four menI'His girl friend narrowly escaped. abduction. Israeli authorities. said today.

They blamed Arab infiltrators., Foreign ministry sources de-\ scribed the killing as the 100thincident along the Israell-Jor-dan border since the latestcease-fire was agreed upon April26. Previous incidents had costsix lives.

The slain mechanic was AryehGrauback, 25, a native of Pales-tine. The girl was Helen Frank,

21, a nurse now in the Israeli. army, who came to Israel five

I years ago from Poland. She was. marched off by the men but! was finally freed and notifiedpolice.

STOCKSIN THE SPOTLIGHT

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7 Who Seized Plane AloftRequest Asylum in West

5 of Anti-Red Plotters in Hospital AlongWith 12 They Subdued in Big Battle

INGOLSTADT, Germany, July 14 i.TV—Seven desperateanti-Communists asked political asylum today after seizingcontrol of a Hungarian airliner in flight and crashlanding inWest Germany.

Twelve of the 19 Hungarian passengers and crewmen—includ-ing a secret policeman—were hospitalized with injuries received

lydings to Quit,Lawyer Says

Wife at Once DeniesPressman Report

BALTIMORE. July 14 i/P>.—Hy- Iman Pressman, lawyer and po- <

litical badger, said today he'd ’heard that Millard E. Tydingswill resign the Democratic nom- 1ination to the Senate due to'ill health.

The resignation rumor was de-nied, however, by Mrs. Tydings. !

Mr. Tydings has been in JohnsHopkins Hospital with a facialskin infection since June 8.

Tydings within the last week,however, issued his first cam-paign statements from the hos-pital. In one instance, it wasa reply to criticism of a groupwhich contributed money towardhis election in November.

Mr Pressman’s gossip that Mr.Tydings will resign the nomina-tion he won in the May primarywas contained in a telegram toMayor Thomas D'Alesandro.

Mrs. Tydings DeniesMrs Tydings, in denying the

Pressman report in behalf ofher husband, said:

“He hasn't withdrawn, nobodyhas asked him to withdraw andhe doesn't intend to withdraw.”

| She added that Mr. Tydings“was highly amused at the re-port.”

She also said he did not in-tend to get into any discussionwith Mr. Pressman.

Mrs. Tydings emphasized herhusband does not have a “seriousailment” and that “all it re-quires is a. complete rest andquiet.” She reported he is “alot better, getting along fine andhas gained eight pounds in thepast week.”

Mr Tydings' doctor had re-fused to permit delivery directlyto him of a message asking forcomment on the Pressman re-port. Only immediate membersof his family are allowed to visithim and telephone calls are notaccepted.

Other Nominee FearedMr. Pressman said he also

heard that the Mayor plans to“influence a majority of theState Central Committee tonominate someone other thanGeorge P. Mahoney" in theevent Mr. Tydings does with-draw.

It would be up to the com-_

See TYDINGS. Page A-7

the secret police officer whodrew a gun, and turned all thefour crew members out of thecontrol cabin except the chieipilot.

"Polyak sat down beside thechief pilot and together theyflew the plane," Mr. Kiss said

1 "He kept a gun pointed at tnehead of the chief pilot in casehe tried anything more."

1 The pilot was forced to fly low.lat times only about 30 feet¦ above the ground, Mr. Kiss said,

1 as the plane hedgehopped along• the Danube through Austria andinto West Germany.

“We found our map—which

¦ we had lost in the chaos us theride —after we got control ofthe plane," Mr. Kiss related.

i "We decided to head for Munich.But we were running very lowon gas. We flew by compassand the radio was out of order.

: Over Ingolstadt we saw whatlooked like an abandoned air-field and decided to land We

. were still not sure whether wewere in East or West Germany.’’

It was the United States AirForce s still uncompleted air baseat Manching, 150 miles from the

! Hungarian border.The first to emerge from the

plane was one of the rebels, hisface bloody. He shouted. "Bonn!Adenauer! Germany!"

Before German police couldget command of the situation.

. several brief brawls broke outagain between the rebels andthe others.

Bavarian officials today ques-tioned all aboard the plane inan effort to determine whetherasylum should be granted theseven. In such cases before.West Germany has given asy-lum.

Police said the plane, anAmerican-built DC-3 of thestate-owned Melav Airlines, will!be returned to Hungarian au-thorities after a check to seewhether it is safe to fly.

The plane had been en routeSee ESCAPE, Page A ll

in a bloody, bruising battle forcontrol of the plane and fromloops made by the aircraft whenthe pilot tried to upset the plot.Five of those in the hospital were'members of the band, includingone woman, which seized theplane late yesterday.

The seven passengers and crewnot injured were under policeguard in the village of Man-ching, near here.

Police said an eighth personaboard the plane who first hadindicated he would join the plot-ters in asking asylum may havechanged his mind about stay-ing in the West.

Planned Far in AdvanceThe daring break through the

Iron Curtain—perhaps the mostspectacular in a long series ofsuch breaks—was planned far inadvance.

The leader. Gyorgy Polyak, aHungarian World War II pilotreferred to by his comrades as“the lieutenant,” was the onlyone with a gun. The others werearmed with iron rods secreted intheir clothes.

At a signal, they attacked theother passengers with the ironbars because they had beentipped a secret police agent wasaboard and they had no way oftelling which one it was.

One of the plotters, JosephJakaby, a 25-year-old Budapeststudent, said he had relativesin the United States. He slippeda message to reporters askingthem to contact Mrs. William L.Farmer, Chicago. The messagesaid, "Please send me money.”He did not indicate his rela-tionship to Mrs. Farmer.

One of the other rebels, GaborKiss, a Budapest student, saidat a prearranged signal in which!Mr. Polyak shouted "Look,there's Gyor 'a Hungarian,town*," the plotters pulled outtheir concealed iron rods andbegan hitting the other pas-sengers.

Policeman DisarmedIn the battle, which turned

the interior of the plane intowreckage, Mr. Polyak disarmed

Marilyn's Knees Set Off Stampede jOs London News Photographers

Bv EDDY GILMOREAssociated Presa Correspondent

LONDON, July 14.—MarilynMonroe crossed her shapely legsfor the first time in Britain to-day—and started a mild oanic.

It happened at a news con-ference in a large shed at Lon-

Pieture on Page A-2

don Airport 45 minutes after the'American film star arrived to

| make a movie with Sir LaurenceOlivier. About 100 reporters,

! photographers and televisionmen were on hand.

•Please sit down," said SirLaurence with his wife, ActressjVivien Leigh, at his elbow.

Miss "Monroe sat.Then she gave a gentle tug at

her tight-fitting skirt, revealinga goodly part of her shapelyleft-leg.

1 «iat started it.

One photographer crashedinto a newsreel camera, knocking

i it to the floor.Another lensman lurched for-

ward and fell on his face.A wall of photographers

plunged toward Miss Monroe like' ihe forward line of a footballteam. Police stopped them.

The news conference began.• “Are all your conferences

» like this?" asked a reporter.“Oh,” said Miss Monroe in a

. small voice, "this is very order-i ly."

“We can’t hear a word." ech-oed a chorus of complaints

¦I from other correspondents un-able to fight their way to thefront.

"I'd better take charge." spokeup Sir Laurence in his well-known Shakespearian voice.

i“Yqu ask the questions and I'llrep«t her answers." I

11 Another cameraman was: thrown to the floor. He screamedas someone trampled on his

• hand and halted Sir Laurencefor a moment.

’ By this time the photog-• raphers scrambling for posi-

I lions had wedged Miss Monroe,her playwright husband ArthurMiller, and the Oliviers into a

! corner.Beads of perspiration appeared

1 on Miss Monroe's face.Then Miss Monroe, her husband

and the Oliviers barricaded. themselves behind a soft drink. stand and from that point the

1 conference concluded.In reply to questions. Miss

; Monroe said she had a pleasanttrip, England is a wonderful!country, she expects to be here

I * weeks and will live in thecountry.

45 Killed in Air Crash,District Man Escapes

\ JH -..m iK

- JH .

COL. ROY A. WALL RICHARD C. BLANCHARDCrash Victim Survives Crash

Two From WashingtonIn Military Air Wreck

A widely known Army officer ion his way to Europe for the :dedication of United States cem-|ieteries and memorials wasamong the 45 killed in the Na-tion's latest plane disaster.

He was Col. Roy*A. Wall. 51. 'chief of the memorial division :in the Office of the Quartermas- 1ter General. He lived at 10200 :Ridgemoor drive, Silver Spring,with his wife, son, and daugh-ter.

Another Washington man. iSergt. 1 c Richard C. Blanchard, 'i31, whose wife lives at 1242 As- Ipen street N.W., survived thecrash, but was injured. He isa brother-in-law of Lt. JacobWolf, head of the police pawnsquad.

Mrs. Wolf said Sergt. Blanch-ard was "a little nervous" about

Silver SpringArmy ColonelAmong Dead

FORT DIX, N. J„ July 14 f/P).—A military transport plane, ap-parently caught in freakish aircurrents moments after takeoff,crashed in a remote, storm-lashed forest yesterday, killing45 persons.

The 21 others aboard were in-jured. five critically.

Among the survivors was Sergt.l'C Richard C. Blanchard, 31.

Deod and Injured Listed in MilitaryCrash. Poge A-3

whose wife, Lillian, lives at 1242Aspen street N.W., Washington.Sergt. Blanchard's injuries stillare undetermined.

Col. Roy A Wall, 51. of 10200ißidgemoor drive, Silver Spring,Md., was among those killed, aswere five women and two chil-dren.

The plane went down in astorm of rain, hail and lightning.

Violent DowndraftSurvivors spoke falteringly of

sudden, violent downdrafts thatsnook the plane seconds afterit left McGuire Air Force Base,adjacent to this huge Fort Dixmilitary reservation.

The plane rocketed to earthin an isolated, swampy woods,breaking into fragments and rip-ping a 300-yard swath throughthe trees.

“Everything happened soquick,” said Airman Albert J.Buck of Philadelphia, who wasknocked unconscious when theplane hit. "We were going alongsteady, hit a downdraft and thenshe dropped.”

Pvt. Thomas Kiley of Law-rence, Mass., who staggeredbleeding and dazed from the

j wreckage, said: "A tremendousj jarring” hit the giant C-118 be-fore it veered into the boggyi forest of tall pines.! ‘T saw things flying off tothe side and then tearing andbreaking,” he said.

making the plane trip and didnot relish the journey. He wasen route to an assignment inEngland and Mrs. Blanchardwas to join him there later.

The plane, a military trans-port. carried 50 militry pas-sengers and 6 civilians. Itcrashed near Fort Dix, N. J..yesterday. Its destination wasEngland.

Col. Wall was to representthe Army in the dedication cere-monies for American cemeteriesand memorials in Europe. Heleft Washington yesterday morn-ing and expected to spend amonth in Europe.

Col. Wall and his family hadbeen here for two years andhad lived at the Ridgemoor driveaddress for a year Before his

See RESIDENTS, Page A-3

Soviet Jet TronsportsReady for Regular Duty

MOSCOW, July 14 <#).—•TheSoviet Union plans to inaugurateregular service next month withits big twin-engine TU-104 jettransport, a Russian pilot saidtoday.

Gerald Dmitrievich Kuznetsov,1 a command pilot for the Soviet

| airline Aeroflot, said initialservice will be between Moscowand Copenhagen and Moscowand Prague. The distances to

' the Danish and Czech capitalsare about 1.100 miles.

1 Mr. Kuznetsov said service will- begin later this year between'Moscow, Peiping, China, and

: Jakarta. Indonesia.!| The 33-year-old pilot proudly

showed off the liner that will beused on the international flights.It is the plane that impressedobservers this spring when it

. carried the Soviet security chief,;Ivan Serov, to London to pre-pare the way for the visit ofSoviet Premier Bulganin andCommunist Party Boss NikitaKhrushchev.

i Mr. Kuznetsov also said he hasflown a four-engine Russian jetairliner, the TU-110, which he

¦ said has greater speed, range and¦ altitude capability than theTU-104 but is only a little bigger.He said the TU-110 is still beingtested.

Mi. Kuznetsov said a "typical. speed" of the TU-104 is 850 kilo-meters '5lO miles) an hour.

; Speaking through an inter-preter, the pilot said fares on thejet airliner will be only about

1 three-fourths the fares on the’ conventional piston engine craftcurrently in use—presumably be-cause the jets carry greater loads

1 faster and use cheaper fuel.The TU-104s are clearly mod-

ifications of the Tupolev twin-, engine medium bomber, dubbedthe "Badger” by the UnitedStates Air Force. The TU-110is believed to be an adaptationjof Tupolev's four engine "Bison'heavy bomber.

The TUIO4 has seats for 50passengers plus a dining roomwith seats for four. Three lux- iurious forward salons have seatsfor 6. and 8 passengers respec-tively while the main cabin ac-commodates 28.

Arlington Man Captures'Peeping Tom' in Chase

Bound for EnglandThere were 66 persons aboard

the plane, a 10-man crew, 50military and six civilians boundfor Burtonwood Army Base, nearManchester, England.

Lt Col. Richard Goss of the.air base, said there would be nostatement as to the cause of thecrash until an accident boardlooks into "all aspects of it.”

Investigators were on thescene today, probing throughthe scattered remnants of theplane. '

Its wings were ripped off. itsfuselage broken in parts. Bitsof cloth and equipment hung inthe treetops. One of the fourengines was nearly buried inthe mud.

An air safety team fromNorton Air Force Base, SanBernardino, Calif., was flyinghere to join in the investigation.

In Air 90 SecondsThe plane had been in the

air only 90 seconds, a spokesmansaid, when it lurched andplummeted from an altitude of;an estimated 500 to 700 feet.

The crash was about threemiles from the takeoff runway,

"We hit some sort of down-draft when we neded power.''said Sergt. Robert R. Ashley, ofWrightstown. N. J„ another in-jured survivor.

Passengers still had their seat-belts on when the crash came.Some—both among the dead andinjured—were still strapped totheir seats when rescuersreached them an hour later.

As the first rescue group ar-rived. after sloshing and chop-ping its way through water, mudand dense brush, one officer saidContinued on Page A-3, Col. 4

Uganda Lions Kill42KAMPALA. Uganda. July 14

Lions have killed 42 per-sons in Uganda this year, the

*

game department announced to-day. Two African herdsmen werethe latest victims. Game guardsare hunting their killers.

The brother of a convictedrapist was captured at gun-point today by an Arlingtonresident who caught him out-side his window, police said.

Richard 1. Polk. 21. of the900 block North Randolph street,W'as jailed in lieu of SSOO bondon a peeping tom charge.

Police say Polk is the brotherof John R. Polk, who is serving

a 55-year sentence in the Vir-ginia Penitentiary for the kid-naping and rape of an ArlingtonNavy officer's wife in 1951.

Richard Polk was capturedabout 1 a.m. by Roger H. Will-ard, 28. of the BuckinghamApartments. 4122 North Fourthstreet, an employe of the Inter-national Business Machine Corp ,

police reported.

Heard Noise at WindowMr. Willard's wife Beatrice

said she and her husband weregetting ready to go to bed

. shortly after midnight when she' heard a scratching noise at the

| bedroom window. The Willardslive in a ground floor apart-ment.

Mrs. Willard said she calledher husband who got his pistoland ran outside, where he spot-

ted a man.Mr. Willard ordered the man

to halt and when kept mov-ing he fired a shot. Mr. Willard

¦ then forced the 220-pound man, to lie on the ground.

; Meanwhile, Mrs. Willard called< police

Holes Poked in Screen! Mr. Willard said three holes

[ had been poked in the screen.¦ apparently with the intent of.{opening the Venetian blind. A; stick was left in one of the holes.

' Willard said. Il 1 TUr. Willard, whose hobby is

I

ROGER H. WILI.ARDi Catches Peeping Tom

—Star BtafT Photo

[ shootinc. won a first place medalI in a local match sponsored last

, year by the National Rifle 'As-sociation.

! In 1951 John R. Polk and a¦ Bethesda man. William R. Payne.

I kidnapped a 20-.vear-old bride of1 a Navy ensign from their ground-

! floor apartment in Colonial Vil-lage. Both men pleaded guilty tokidnap and rape charges and

i were given long terms.Richard Polk was released re-

-1 cently from the penitentiary¦ after serving time for breaking. and entering an Arlington florist£fhop, Arlington police recordsi'ehow.

PASTOR'S SERMON*

BRINGS PAINTINGLISTENER REMEMBERS—The pos-

tor of the Colvory Baptist Churchpreached a sermon 21 years ogo. Itinspired o painting by one of the con-gregation and recently she presentedhim the picture. Page A-8

SOCIAL SECURITY AT 7-AnOregon boy, 7, made SIOO last yearand got a social security number. H#may be the youngest on the rolls.Read "Security tor You" on page B-12.

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