bv September by the New York THE EVEHING STAR, Washington, DC. ** B-17 J' JHKHS -X'MS:-'' P firm of Harrison & Abiamovitz. , FMHAT. MSCW if 1057 K Sway Justice, designers of the United Nations I UKaßWr^tfg^ Tear Gin IJF iH V* fBIsg£3o 'Austere' CIA V| Hm v .-x ;,-'wv'.v-^^pte' building. Completion of the approval of the board, which will ft xC IBH - v v project is expected in late 1959 50 as Starting Age meet Wednesday. i or In 1960, Col. White j J o Claims Attorneys Told said. In other action, Supt. Hobart fffr r&^i Gross square footage of the Asked for i *¦ lag ipS Home Teachers M. Corning asked that the board I fc.» fa A significantly sway Forecast teardrop justice, can the scales of a icentral building and wings will i 1 study, meeting, jB ,? \M nationally known trial attorney yesterday advised A special committee of the at its next a # iH§s: \j3FtjgJ 5® Mw several hundred The Central Intelligence i be 1.75C.000 and the net will be plan to use surplus Air Force Washington lawyers meeting in the Agency Board of Education yesterday * f J|Li# Shoreham Hotel. is planning, an “austere : 1,200.000, he added. This com- uniforms, dyed a shade darker, jy* Bfl "You can’t just say my client lost leg. want » -^i: a I $100,000,” but attractive” eight-story build- pares with about 6,000.000 square recommended raising from 45 to!ifer cadet uniforms. Some schools, ’* Melvin Belli Francisco, at opening ’fl*la— said M. of San the session ing for Its new $46 million home i feet in the Pentagon. 50 the age limit now required it was explained, prefer the blue of the Association of Claimants’ at Langley. Va. uniform over Attorneys day meeting. Concessions at the agency’s for appointment of teachers in the khaki one but b two to get juries to consider that a Col. Lawrence K. White.'USA, parents objected ¦ The association composed ; Langley location will be kept to the public schools. some have to is * man who has lost his leg “can retired, deputy director of the the cost of supplying a cadet of area lawyers who handle per- agency, told ; a minimum. Col. White said, be- The action still requires full associa-, no longer feel the dew with his the McLean Lions ’ cause money with blues. sonal injury cases. The Club last night at Franklin- is not available to was toe football.” anything Both types of uniforms now tion formed to increase the i and can’t kick a Sherman School that build like the concourse professional efficiency of its construc- ' at the Pentagon. by the end of next month, Col. are in use. Meanwhile, Dr. Corn- ; Mr. Belli recently was named tion may possibly 1 1 members through exchange of start next De- White said. ing recommended that the Cadet honorary dean of the Interna- cember. but probably later. Convenient to Homes ! Corps adopt information and educational j| A saving of at $3.5 \ the blue uniform as tlonal Academy Lawyers, Completion By least mil- programs. Earl H. Davis is the i of Trial 1960 A mass movement of CIA em- lion] a year will be realized by i its official uniform and asked many ployes Langley-McLean that schools now using presiding officer. j Too lawyers parrot the The structure will be in a to the !<centralizing the agency’s opera- the unlikely, khaki uniform until Sep- It is relatively easy for an at- words of physicians who have no secluded rustic setting on a 140- area is the deputy di- | tions. now carried on in 35 tem- have torney to rector said, because the new tember. 1948, to make the transi- describe his client’s ’ idea about the law, said Dr. Paul acre tract near the Potomac site porary, buildings “a'l over town.” pain and suffering. Mr. Belli de- River that has been the property will be “reasonably White said. This tion. , D. Georgetown professor, iCol. does not clared, but his ability to point Cantor. of the Bureau of Public Roads. to the homes of most employes.' include "intangible” saving He asked, however, that ac- up of the more nebulous things as i Dr. Cantor, a lawyer and a doctor The building will be about the Contracts for grading the ex- i employes’ time but takes tion on his recommendation be ridicule, embarrassment and hu- of medicine, Is into an expert in medi- size of the Commerce Depart-' tension of George Washington ! 'consideration present cost of deferred until the surplus •m miliation cal jurisprudence j uni- measure his worth. at the univer- ment In Washington. Memorial parkway to the CIA t telephone service, shuttle buses, plan thoroughly urged attorneys! sity's form has been Mr. Belli the medical and law schools. Final plans are to be submitted site are scheduled to be awarded'] rent and utilities. i explored. .‘ '• *s“ •-'.. ¦•¦ -.,-v ‘» »«ii ? |||i| Kip *p I I -ai «L *m c ? 4 ROYALLY ATTENDED WEDDING - Helene d’Orleans, 22, daughter of the pretender to the *°j UP IN nonexistent throne of France, leaves St. Louis Cathedral SIZE? at Dreux, France, with her husband Evard, Count of Lim- bourg Stirum, who is 28. The Bishop of Chartres con- ducted the religious ceremony, which followed a civil wedding. The rites drew some 6(J members of European royalty.—AP Wirephoto. UP IN POWER, PERFORMANCE, LENGTH, WEIGHT, BEAUTY— UP IN EVERYTHING PATH TO GREATNESS Toscanini Appeared SuT To Be Indestructible By W. G. ROGERS Associated Press Arts Editor This is the second of three articles re- high spots in VP).—l viewing the career of NEW YORK. Jan. 18 Tosconini, died Wednes- long conductor Arturo who _jLOW For half his life day at the age of 89. IN PRICE! Arturo Toscanini was associated with music in this country. Hitler. He came here first in 1908 best of him, and he defied to conduct seven seasons at the But now he encountered the one Metropolitan Opera. After tour- indomitable enemy: age. ing the United States with the He had a phenomenal memory, La Scala Orchestra of Milan and he had bad eyesight. All in 1921, he returned here in his life he had committed scores 1925 for a decade as conductor to memory, and he conducted of the New York Philharmonic. without a note in front of him In 1936, when he was thinking! —it was an accomplishment unwisely of retiring, he was persuaded which some audiences by Broadcasting expected other conductors to the National developed Co. to come here to lead an manage there a solely fashion for conducting without ONLY orchestra to be created for him—the NBC Symphony. scores. For 17 years, including 16 or; But at the last couple of con- more weekly concerts every year, certs —after a winter of some he conducted this symphony, remarkable performances—not building it up and never relaxing only his eyesight but his mem- his severe discipline as he devel- ory. too, failed. At rehearsals, oped it into one of the world’s it was said, he was forgetting top musical organizations. parts of even the scheduled Wagner numbers. At perfor- Had Occaisional Guests mances he had to put on his Once in a while he had guests glasses. He took his place on on the podium. He was the first the podium, bowed, swung to introduce to American audi- : around to his orchestra, sneaked ences the highly talented young on the glasses surreptitiously, Italian. Guido Cantelli, who lost and slipped them off again his life in a plane accident only before he turned to face the ago. presented BUYS THIS BIG M MONTEREY a month He also applause. Jp here for the first time the mature 4P He was not quite so chipper conductor Ernest Ansermet from in those last unhappy appear- Switzerland. ances. His step to and from the But the NBC was his orches- podium was slower. He some- tra, and Toscanini was not times leaned on the hip-high always satisfied at least unoffi- rail that ran around the back cially—with substitutes on his of his stand on the stage at podium. Returning to it after Carnegie Hall. it had been in the hands of Family someone he had not chosen, he Born of Poor was known to tell his men he But before this failure there had listened to a broadcast and had been so many extraordinary hadn't liked it. He would then triumphs. To millions of people, drill them even more relentlessly Toscanini had come to mean until they were worked back music. into the condition that satisfied Born in Parma, Italy, of a poor his exacting ideal. tailoring family, he studied both He seemed to be indestruc-j piano and ’cello in the con- tible As he grew old he let many servatory of his native city. He birthdays go by with his rehear- tried composing, too, but he kept sal and performance schedules the results of that effort care- fully unchanged. At 83 on his tour hidden. of the United States with the By 1931 he was so distin- NBC Symphony, he proved he guished a figure he could chtil- had the vim and nerve to match lenge the Fascists. When he anybody else’s by taking a hair- refused to play their anthem, raising ride in a ski lift in a a gang of bullies attacked him resort in the Rockies where the in Bologna. He quit both the musicians had a day’s rest.
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