xt7hqb9v4d15 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7hqb9v4d15/data/mets.xml Kentucky 1963 newsletters English Eddyville, Ky.: Kentucky State Penitentiary This digital resource may be freely searched and displayed. Permission must be received for subsequent distribution in print or electronically. Physical rights are retained by the owning repository. Copyright is retained in accordance with U. S. copyright laws. Please go to https://exploreuk.uky.edu for more information. Castle on the Cumberland Kentucky State Penitentiary -- Periodicals Journalism, Prison -- Kentucky Castle on the Cumberland, April 1963 text Kentucky State Penitentiary v.: ill. 28 cm. Call Numbers HV8301 .C37 and 17-C817 20:C279 Castle on the Cumberland, April 1963 1963 1963 2021 true xt7hqb9v4d15 section xt7hqb9v4d15 f g f A Penal Press Publication ; a% I B UNFTHE APRIL 15’ 1965 M“HA,§59”W€fi:I 1U!” "This, too, shall pass" Volume II ’ Number X.» IN THIS MONTH'S CASTLE: CASTLE NEWS 1 FROM THE EDITOR'S DESK (Letter to a Reader) 6 THE FENCE (Fiction) A burglar gets revenge on a tight-fished fence 7 FIRST DAY ON PAROLE (Fact) An eat-convict barber runs into the unexpected ll PAGES FROM THE PAST The Bill of Rights -- , Concession'to the Common Man? 15 . ___ (, -—'—_—_—‘gl- -_.___.«_,.___._.—_._,-:-,._._.—« 5,," ,3. Hi5: EXCHANGE PAGE 16 y» lo, 3'." ii 5,3, 2 TALL TALES . 17 g 1‘ . A). {9'33" ‘_ kg 4. 33,3 7 . g3 ;;;¢ ggg DRPARTNENT REPORTS 18 .‘ ,I »".4 N‘ é é§a , - .; W LATE - NEWS; 20 \‘5"" I 1"." A V.‘ - v 3 er, “ NIGH TKEEPER'S REPORT 1886 2 l ‘CRossswoRD PUZZLE 22 STATISTICS A MOVIES 23 THE CASTLE IAUGHS; 25 , Volume II, Number.X. April 15, 1963 CASTLE ON THE CUMBERLAND ADMINISTRATION The Honorable Bert To Combs, Governor Wilson We wyatt, Lt. Governor DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS INSTITUTIONAL ADMINE3TRATION larshall Swain, Commissioner Luther Thomas, warden Department of Corrections Lloyd Armstrong, Deputy Warden Dr. Harold Black, Director Division of Institutions We To Baxter, Captain of the Guard Department of Corrections W. Zo Carter, Director of Education Reverend Paul Jaggers, Chaplain Department of Corrections Henry E. Cowan, Supervisor of Education William Egbert, Vocational Instructor BOARD OF PARDONS & PAROLES Dre Fred Moffatt CASTLE STAFF Executive Director Walter Ferguson Lawrence Snow, Editor Chairman 0f the Board Simeon Willis ' Leonard Rule, Associate Editor Member Ernest Thompson James Franklin McKinney, Art Editor Member John Busby, Multilith Operator The CASTLE ON THE CUMBERLAND is published monthly by the inmates of the Kentucky State Penitentiary at Eddyvilleo subscriptions, one dollar a year, payable by money order at: CASTLE ON THE CUMBERLAND, Box 128, Eddyville, Kentucky; and by inmates at the Chief Clerk’s officeo Articles are solicited, but the CASTLE re— serves the right to reject, edit or revise any material submitted. Opinions ex- pressed in this magazine do not necessarily reflect those of the administrationo Permission is hereby granted to reproduce any part of this magazine, provided proper credit is given to author and sourceo A marked copy of the quoting pub- lication will be appreciatedo G 8 FEE [217313.79 SUPREME COURT RULES IN FAVOR OF FLORIDA CONVICT DENIED RIGHT TO LEGAL COUNSEL SYNANON GRADUATE DONATES HIS FREEDOM: WILL STAY IN PRISON' TO AID ADDICTS The United States month upset the Supreme Court last conviction of Clarence Earl Gideon, a Florida convict who claimed he was tried without counsel. The decision of the court is exPected to affect three other Southern states «— Georgia, Mississippi and Maryland as which have in the past refused to supply legal counsel to indigent persons accused of non—capital crimes. In Florida itself, the ruling may bring about the release of more than half of all State prisoners. Gideon claimed in his appeal that he was forced to try his own case when the Florida court refused to appoint legal counsel for him. His plea to the Supreme Court was argued by a washington law firm which had heard of his~ single» handed fight to upset the Florida prac- tice. The law firm took the case with- out fee. A United Press International story in the LOUISVILLE TIMES quoted Justice Huge Black as saying in his opinion that "The right of one charged with crime to counw sel may not be deemed fundamental and essential to a fair trial in some count~ ries, but it is in ours." All nine justices voted in favor of Gideon. The decision upset an older ruling by the Supreme Court that the right to counsel was mandatory in cases which in» volve the death penalty, but did not specify that counsel must be supplied in lesser cases. Although the ruling made it clear that all persons accused of crime have the right to a competent attorney regardless of their ability to pay, it did not define what constitutes a criminal trial nor how low on the scale of offenses the ruling applied, according to the UPI story. 1 Candy Latson, a young Negro ex-addict who found the strength to" break away from narcotics at Santa Monica's Synanon House, is in prison today. But Candy is not in prison because he has committed a crime; he is there as a volunteer prisoner, and he plans to stay there indefinitely. He lives in a wing in the Nevada State Prison with thirty- one convicted felons who are also nar- cotics addicts, and he is using the techniques he learned at Synanon House to help them find themselves again. According to a story in the MENTOR, South Walpole, Massachusetts Refonnatory Candy Latson began his drug habit when he was fifteen years old -- a habit that took him through jails and numerous "cures" in Federal narcotics hospitals. Then, in July, 1960, Latson applied for help at Synanon House in California. Synanon House, a private experiment in the fight against drug addiction, is operated much like Alcoholics Anonymous. Drug addicts who ask for help are taken into the home, where they break the habit "cold turkey" -- without drugs or drug substitutes. Afterwards, they take part in merciless, soul-searching group discussions and finally, when they feel able, they leave the home to go out on their own. Thus far, Synanon House has the world's most impressive record for "cures" -9 a drug addict, like an alco- holic, is never really cured -- and a second Synanon House has been set up in Reno, Nevada. Like most of the other addicts who took the Synanon treatment, Candy Latson found that he was able to live without drugs. He also found that he had a mission in life -- to help other addicts fight clear of narcotics addiction. Last August, Candy asked Nevada penal CASTLEEON THE CUMBERLAND authorities to let him bring Synanon to the prisoners on a full-time basis and permission was granted. It was then that Latson took up residence in the narcotics wing of the prison. from the Reno prison to con- Twice each week, groups Synanon House enter the duct seminars with the prison group. Once each week, Candy and the other prisoners hold a private seminar. No holds are ions 0 The barred in these discuss- "dirty little secrets" of each of the men are dragged into the light before the entire group, and reason is slowly substituted for the emotions that make men susceptible to addiction. How effective is the program? According to research conducted by the MENTOR, it is far too early to say. But, signifi— cantly, not one prisoner aided by the Synanon process has so far.returned to narcotics addiction or crime. CAL IF‘OR NIA MAY ABO LIS H DEATH PENAL TY The State of California, long notorious for the number of convicted murderers, rapists and kidnappers sent to its gas chambers annually, may scrap capital punishment if Governor Pat Brown has his way 0 The Governor Sponsored a bill asking for a four-year moratorium on legal killings recently. The bill, if it becomes law, would not, however, exempt persons con- victed of murder for the second time, persons killing police officers, or the prisoners now on death row. THIEF JARRED BY JELLY, CANNED BY COPS In California, a thief broke into a market, made himself a jelly sandwich, dropped it, slipped on the jelly and knocked himself out. He was discovered by the manager and revived by the police. John'Wycliffe' made the' first English translation of the Bible in 1382-8h. The King James version appeared in 1611 YCASTLBiDN THE CUMBERLAND KENTUCKY HEALTH DEPARTMENT'S MOBILE UNIT X-RAYS 1100 INMATES FOR TUBERCULOSIS Just about 20,000 times each year, a young Madisonville X-ray technician named Beetie Bratcher exhorts his "clients" to "take a deep breath ... HOID it!" Last month, Bratcher repeated his in- cantation 1100 times in the Kentucky State Penitentiary alone as he examined the inmates and employees of the insti- tution for tuberculosis in a Health Department mobile X—ray unit. But Beetie Bratcher, who began working for the Kentucky Health Department last October, doesn’t mind repeating himself. During an interview with the CASTLE on the third of his five days in the peni- tentiary, he stated that instead of be— ing tired of his Work, he loves it. The slender young technician and his big white truck, a unit donated by the Kentucky Elks Association, have a big territory to cover —— 2h western Ken- tucky counties, including Lyon County and the institution. He gets around to each of the counties at least once every three months. In some of them ~~ especially Marion and Crittendon coun~ ties —- tuberculosis is rife, and he's responsible for uncovering a lot of cases in time for early treatment. In others, his visits turn up only one or two cases of the lung disease each trip. The plates he exposes are sent off to a radiologist in Frankfort, where they are examined for symptoms of tuberculosis. If definite symptoms of the disease are found, the patient and his doctor are notified by mail. If scars show up on the lungs, the patient may be asked to submit to further examinations to deter- mine if the disease is still active. some other example -- signs of for What happens if disease -- lung cancer, crop up in the plates? "well," said Bratcher, "the Association is primarily interested in tuberculosis, of course. But if cancer is spotted, 2 owr totm occaSional turned up in the film will be turned proper agency." He said cases of lung cancer are this manner. In order to photograph the internal organs of the nearly 1100 inmates and personnel, Bratcher worked from Monday through Friday of one week, photograph- ing some 500 men each day. Aiding him in the task were inmate volunteers who filled out cards to be submitted with the film. Working in the yard office during the week were wayne Stephenson, James Harris, Tom Evans, Haynes Robinson, Alford Cunningham, Raymond Forsting, Gordon Mercer, Donald Sills, Kenny 'England,"flwaterdog,u , and” Tom Brock. DRILLING BEGINS FOR NEW WATER TOWER Curious about the drilling activity that went on last month near the prison hospital? A reliable source close to the top (there‘s that journalistic cli- che again) tells us it's for the founda- tion of a new water tower. The new tower will be located on the highest level of the hill that forms the prison yard, directly opposite the existing 200,000-gallon water tank. With a capacity of about 600,000 gallons the new tower should solve the prison's water problem, which includes extremely low water pressure at peak use periods. Gregg Laboratories is doing the prelimy inary.drilling for the structure. LAW STUDENT TO GO TO PRISON A student of the University of Minnesota School of Law will soon, be admitted to the Minnesota State Prison. The commit— ment will not, however, be for a crime -- the purpose of the jaunt is to gain an inside view of prison life. The student will be given the assignment by Professors John Ellingston and Maynard Persig of the law school. The student will be mugged, printed and showered at the prison, just as would be any other new prisoner. He will then be assigned a cell, given a rule book and prison uniforms, and presumably he willw~ submit to the orientation classes all new men at the prison. given It is planned for the student to remain in prison several days before he is "pardonedfl' MINNESOTA TO PAROLE ALL PRISONERS (PP) -- A new Minnesota policy will re- sult in the parole of all prisoners, even those who would ordinarily not be considered "good risks." Stating that it is better to have every prisoner leave under supervision, a mem- ber of the said: "There are no objective scales for telling when a prisoner is ready for parole, but we are justified in risking premature release of prisoners, for if a": man is ready for parole now, now is the time to release him -- not a year from“ and the' now. It may be too late then, blame will be on our shoulders." GEORGIA WIS: TO EAT CD DIET IN HOLE The traditional bread—and-water diet for prisoners in solitary confinement in Georgia prisons is a thing of the past. Instead, inmates assigned to the "hole" for punishment will receive a 2000- calory ration of survival crackers to- gether with one full meal every fourth days Survival crackers are intended for use in fallout and civil defense shelters. CASTLE COSTS TAXPAYERS NOTHING The CASTIE ON THE CID/IBERLAND, now almost ‘ two years old, has never cost the tax- payers of Kentucky a penny. Although income from subscription fees do not yet entirely cover the cost of preparing and mailing the KS? monthly‘ magazine, the deficit is made up from the Inmate Welfare Fund, a special ac- count created mostly by profits from the commissary, operated by Joseph_Ruppell. CASTLE ON THE CUMBERLAND 1 Minnesota Parole Commission. a. PRISON'S EDUCATIONAL DEPARTMENT MAKES START . IN VOCATIONAL TRAINING FIELD KSP's Supervisor of Education Henry Cowan told the CASTLE early this month that significant beginnings have been made toward providing a vocational training program for inmates of the prison. In addition to the typewriter repair class, presently serving five inmates under the instructorship of Sam Young- blood, the education department intends to begin classes in masonry, barber training, and cabinet making. The masonry class, said Mr. Cowan, will consist of classroom theory and actual practice on a cement slab laid for that purpose outside the present quarters of the academic school. The first class will accomodate from six to ten pupils. If demand for training is greater than that, however, more instructors will be added and other classes begun. tion will fill most of each weekday. Barber training will be conducted in the existing barbershop. Because of the limited space available, no more than three students can be handled at one time, Mr. Cowan said. "We hope to set up a minimum educational requirement at the tenth grade level," Mr. Cowan said, "so that later on, the barber trainees can take the GED tests and get their high school diplomas." He said that a high school education is re- quired of applicants for harboring licenses in Kentucky, and that he hopes to have the school accredited in time. No definite plans have been made for training in carpentry and cabinet work. Again, existing facilities will be used, and probably the more skilled inmates now assigned to the cabinet shop will be used as instructors. Some classroom theory may also be taught. Other educational programs presently offered to KSP inmates include training in the first eight grades, a cram course CASTLE ON THE CUMBERLAND Instruc-- for those who want to try for equiva- lency high school diplomas, and a typing class. The new two-story education—recreation building now under construction will provide more badly needed Space for the education department upon its completion next year. MUHIENBURGER, 72, MAI GET SIGHT BACK William Litsey, 72, may be enabled to see again through efforts of doctors and the Lions Eye Bank of Louisville, ac- cording to the Central City, Kentucky TIMES ARGUS. Litsey, a resident of Martwick in Muhlenburg County, has been blind in one eye for ten years and lost the sight in his other eye three years ago. He was given a corneal transplant late last month, but results of the operation will not'be available until after presstime. More than 50 ESP inmates have pledged their eyes to the Bank from which the "eyes" for William Idtsey were drawn, and the outcome of the operation should be of considerable interest here. Eye pledge cards may be obtained in the CASTLE office below the cookshack. Eyes are not taken before death, and their is no charge to the donor or the recipient of the eyes. PRIEST SPONSORS RETREAT FDR CONVICTS Father Malcolm Maloney, Catholic Chap- lain at the Branch Prison at Marquette, Michigan, is sponsoring a three—day re- treat for the prisoners. The retreat will give prisoners what should be a much-welcomed opportunity to escape from the usual lack of privacy and the oppressive routine of prison life. Meditations, prayers, and confer- ences are scheduled for the event. * * a: U'.‘ s. pbpul‘atib'n'is. now‘.178,h6h,256. LI - I IKMATE SPEAKERS AID CRIME PREVENTION A unique crimewprevention program is being cenducted by inmates of the Texas penal system, and as far as Texas teeny agers are concerned, the operation is a success. ~ ."Operation Teenager," 'as the program is called, allows prisoners to travel under guard to schools to relate their experie. ences as unsuccessful thieves to teen age students. Four inmates.have so far Spoken to more than 300,000 individuals at hOO different gatherings, winning the acclaim of teachers, ministers, lawe enforcement officials, civic. leaders, and, -most importantly,‘ the. teenagers themselves. A film of the. h0=minute program has also become an item much in demand among Texas TV stations. The men participating. in. the program, [according to the .Texas. Prison's news» paper —- the ECHO ——-spend. their nights in county or city jails while they are on the road and receive no extra priviu leges beyond an occasional restaurant meal. They often work overtime upon returning to the prison to catch up on the work they have missed. dew from also "Operation Teenager" is prevent young peeple criminal activity, it paying understanding Although signed to entering seems to be public of prisons and prisoners. Most people who listen to the talks are surprised to learn that cons e "people just like we ‘are." And, according to one Texas Prison official, "This is the best publicwrelations pram gram the prison has ever'h‘ad.u Although the_program has been tion less than a year,_the speakers have received thousands of letters from young people telling them how much they appreml ciate their efforts. * 1 , I a ' , * First electrocution of a criminal was of William Kemmler in Auburn Prison,.Auburn New York, August 6, 1890. In 18h7, the state of Michigan abolished executions.- 5 SO MAYBE IT'S DEDUCTABLE »When they announced that it was (PP) :- A pair of bandits failed so miserably at a holdup attempt that they actually lost money on the deal. Using a basket of fruit as a pr0p, the bandits pretended to be delivery men to gain entrance to a suburban home. a hold— up, .the lady of the house screamed. Both bandits fled, leaving their basket of fruit behind them.. basket, The police estimate the cost between $10 and $15. WILLARD STRUNK DIES 0F PNEUMONIA Strunk, hB, was suffering from rich dividends in_ in opera—. ‘Strunk, serving five died in the of March Willard "Rooster" Iyears from McCreary County, Vprison hoSpital on the night 21.. anemia, but the direct cause of his death was a case of pneumonia. LIFE TEMMER COHMITS SUICIDE IN CELL h}, hanged himself last month and died who discovered him James Henry Cameron, in his cell late before the guards could cut him down. Cameron Was serving a life sentence from Daviess County, Kentucky. He was com- mitted to the prison in 1959. MCKINNEY BECOMES CASTLE'S ART EDITOR James Franklin McKinney, 35, will be doing the art work and art editing for the CASTLE beginning with this issue. McKinney, who formerly did covers for the Alcatraz FOGHQRN, submitted pencil sketches for the CASTLE's cover and two department pages (see pp 6 & 17),, and next month he will be drawing the plates himself .; which should result in better reproduction of his work. native of McKinney, is a .Lexington, _ Kentucky. CASTLE ON THE CUMBERLAND I WWW-WWW ' {aw Mm {MI/”re“ Eddyville Prison April 15, 1963 Dear Reader: No matter what the weather may'really'be like, the sun will seem to be shining brightly and the air will be incredibly fresh and sweet the day a prisoner finishes his term and walks through the big iron gate that is the "front door" of the Kentucky State Penitentiary. But, instead of entering the land of milk and honey he often pictures the free world as being, the newly released prisoner may find himself still in the wilderness as far as his opportunities for earning a decent living are concerned. Often unskilled and relatively uneducated, just as often an emotionally incomplete person, the ex-convict must also contend with the barriers presented by his police record and the habits and attitudes developed during years typically spent in idleness and frustration in the institutional jungle. Thus equipped, he is apt to find all but the most menial and unrewarding of jobs closed to him, at least for the first years of his freedom. I He usually faces still another handicap as well: that of entering the job market and the social world stone broke, completely without possessions or money except for the suit of work clothes and the five dollar bill given him at the gate. He must put whatever pride and dignity he has left in his pocket along with the gate money and take whatever he can get, realizing that it will be a long, hard climb before he rises above the subsistence level of existence and finds his place in the sun again. It is impossible to "blame" the employer for such a situation. The businessman's first goal is to make a profit. He needs and wants employees who can not only han- dle the work assigned to them, but who are trustworthy and reliable and who will be a credit to the company and the community as well. Understandably, the employer finds it difficult to fit the ex—prisoner into such a picture. Nbr is there any particular injustice in the situation. We are all equals in the sense that we live in a world that provides both a natural and a manmade system of (Please turn to Page 1h) CASTLE ON THE CUMBERLAND ( 6 "That's it. Take it or leave it," said Rinaldi. "Twenty bucks? It's worth at least fifty," exclaimed Johnny. Ifi/7////////fil} 57—7! Rinaldi turned to his son. "Get him," he said. "I been in the hocksh0p busi- ness fifteen years and he's telling me how to price thingsl" He turned to Johnny again. "Maybe you should learn your own business, kid. Maybe then you'd stay down river." "I do all right for myself," Johnny said. "Yeah, all right, he says." Rinaldi grinned at him. "What was it the last time, kid? A two-year stretdh in Kings- ton, eh?" "Just a little bad luck," Johnny grinned. "You play the game, you gotta pay. When you gonna pay, Pop? You been playing the game a long time." THE FENCE "““‘““‘ "Smart guys don't pay. Brains, kid -- it takes brains." A Short Story by Jonathan Parks . 4 , "I got brains, Pep. You just wait.n /4é5 "Yeah, well, if you got brains, you'll /Z know when I say twenty bucks, I mean ' twenty bucks," said Rinaldi. "No more hassling. If you think you can get more some other place, take the ring and beat it." "Look, Pop," Johnny said. "I need fifty bucks tonight. I'm taking a little trip. We done a lot of business to- gether, so why don't you break down?" Rinaldi shook his heado "I told you my price, kid," he said, "and that's it. Unless you got something else you want to get off your hands?“ "Damn it, if I had ... wait a minute: -- I How long you gonna be open tonight?" 2“” /’ I‘ , : "Ten thirty, as usual. Why? Since when you taking an interest in my hours?" A:- %6’/0 ,JZAfl.S¢A Jonathan'Parks is the prison librarian CASTLE ON THE CUMBERLAND , ,, ,!7, ,, ,7,7i,, ,, , , W ,fiiifiviii¥ "Never mind," said Johnnie. "Just give me the twenty." Rinaldi laughed and turned to the cash register. "wa you're getting smart, kid," he said. "I oughtn't even to mess with this -- only clear a little chicken feed on it. But you know me, soft- hearted, always willing to help an up-and-coming young fella." He took a twenty dollar bill from the register and handed it to Johnnie. As Johnnie left, Rinaldi's son left off his dusting and grinned knowingly at his father. "Gee, Dad," he said admiringly, "you sure know how to handle these riff- raff." "You just watch your old man, son," Rinaldi said, "and you'll get ahead in life." He laughed delightedly. "You know what this ring will bring, son? Three hundred bucks -- over two hundred fifty per cent markup. Not bad, eh?" Dad? "Who was that guy, You knew him, didn‘t you?" "Just another hoodlum. A petty, twowbit burglar with no brains." He put the ring away. "You learn one thing in this business, son. Keep your morals out of it. Don't ask no questions where a thing comes from. Just grab it up, boy. 2. Johnny walked slowly down the neon lighted street and stopped under a corner light. Seven thirty, his watch said: two hours left of the night, he calculated. Two hours to find a likely looking house. He walked on, his hand caressing the bill Rinaldi had given him for the ring. "That cheap, chiseling skunks" he mused. VTwenty dollars -- and for that I risk getting five yearsi in the joint." A sudden anger boiled within him. He saw himself as he'd been the night before ... creeping stealthily from room to room in a strange house, his body exud— ing a cold sweat of fear as he played the flashlight into drawers -— and for CASTLE ON THE CUMBERLAND what? So that someone like Rinaldi could make a couple of hundred: He turned into a side street and stopped hesitantly before the door of a bar. "Why not?" he asked himself. "Hell, you got two good hours of burglarizing time left." He went into the bar and took a stool. "Double vodka and Squirt," he said to the bartender, and then put his elbows on the bar and cupped his chin in his palm. Somewhere tonight he had to get thirty more dollars. At least thirty more ... a ticket to Cincinnati would set him back at least half a bill. And here he was drinking on his last twenty: It was starting again, the same old thing. Every time he got a few bucks in his pocket, he ended up in a bar. isn't it?" the drink in “Nice night out tonight, bartender said, placing the front of him. "Real nice," Johnnie agreed, and then, to keep the bartender talking, to get away from his own troubles, he continued the conversation. "Swell band you got tonight. New here, aren't they?" They talked for a time about the band, and at length Johnnie ordered another drink, giving the bartender the single bill he had in his pockets. He had the drink halfway to his mouth and was watching the bartender fumbling for change when the thought struck him. He burst out laughing. People began to stare at him after a minute, and the bartender came back with his change. "You all right, buddy?" he asked. "Must have been a great joke." laughing a phone said, have "Yeah, it was," Johnny again. "Listen, do you here?" The bartender pointed to a booth in the corner of the room, and Johnny crossed to it. Closing the door, he thumbed 8 through the directory until he found the name he was looking for. Chevy Chase .0. 857 Chevy Chase. It was a good adw dress° He dialed the number indicated and listened. No answer. He waited un» til the phone at 857 Chevy Chase rang twice more, and then hung up. He gave the bartender a wide grin as he left the ClUbo Outside, he hailed a cab and directed the driver to take him to woodland Park Auditorium, and when he left the cab, he tipped the driver a dollar. Lighting a cigarette, he waited until the cab disappeared, then started walking into the Chevy Chase district just across from the auditorium. It was six blocks to the 800 block, and he took a good ten minutes to walk the distance. It was 8210 when he arrived at the house at 837. Noting with satisfaction the plushness of the house, which was in keeping with the smart neighborhood in which it was situated, he pushed the doorbell. When there was no answer, he pushed it again and waited for several minutes. Finally he put his foot against the window pane nearest the lock and pushed until it caved in. Then he walked quickly down the path and hid himself 'bery. After ten minutes, he walked back to the door, reached through the broken pane, and let himself in. Ignoring the living room with its mam“ moth color television set and other eke pensive but bulky appliances, he turned on his pocket flashlight and headed for the bedrooms. Up the steps, then a quick check of all the doors found the master bedroom. and entered it to make a thorough search. There was nothing of value in the bedm room, but Johnny quickly found the dressing room that led off it. His light picked out a builtein vanity and dresser, and he selected a likely look= ing drawer. Nothing. He picked another one. This time, a large jewel box of 9 in the shrubm until he- inlaid wood rewarded his search. The beam of his pocket light sparkled and played over the jewels inside, and his heart skipped a beat at his find. After a cursory examination, his heartw beat returned to normal. Most of the stuff, however rich looking, was just well made costume jewelry. But one piece caught his eye. A woman‘s watch, it was encrusted with diamonds which he was sure were real. Slipping it into his pocket, he also selected a necklace that looked as if it might bring a good price, and then turned his attention to the closets. It was in the closets that he hit the jackpot. Setting on a top shelf, pushed all the way to ‘the back, was a large leather bag of the kind photographers carry. An expensive foreign camera, one he knew to cost at least 500 dollars, lay in one of the compartments of the bag. He stuffed it in his pocket and continued to search the bag. Ignoring a cheaper camera, he picked out a telew photo lens and a wide=angle lens and he pushed the bag back into the closet. "That”s it," he thought, "that's all I want from here tonight%" Without bothering to look further, he left the house and made his way back to the audi~ torium. The building was closed, but a small drugstore on the corner was Open, and he called a cab from there, then ordered a cup of coffee at the counter. The next step, he knew, was to take the stuff to his room to check it for identification of any kind. But, he reasoned, why go to all that trouble? There would be nothing on the camera ex» cept serial numbers e— and who remembers a long string of numbers? Just to be sure, he directed the cabdriver, who are rived at that moment, to take him to a bar in the downtown area near the pawn? ShDPo At the bar, he ordered a drink, then made his way to the restroom. Going inn CASTLE ON ms CUMBERLAND to a booth, he checked over the watch and necklace, then turned his attention to the camera. Just as he thought, no marks, no chips, no names engraved on the case. A cinch, he thought, and then laughed aloud again at the thought of what he was going to do. At 9:50, Johnnie was back at the pawn» shop. Rinaldi's son was sweeping the floor, and Rinaldi himself was at the rear of the room putting some watches in a showcase. He looked up as Johnnie entered. ‘ "well, what you got this time, kid?" he asked. "Something worth more twenty bucks," Johnny said, noticing with satisfaction the greed that came into Rinaldi's eyes when he pulled the camera from his pocket. He handed the pawnbroker the camera and watched as he examined it. than a measly "Yes, a nice little job," Rinaldi said, turning the camera over in his hands. "Dad..." interrupted his son. "Never mind, boy," Rinaldi said, and then, to Johnny: "Yes, it's a fairly nice little camera. You hit it about right, kid. I could give you the fifty bucks you need for this." "Come off it, Popt" Johnnie said. "You know that piece of equipment is worth five hundred if it's worth a penny. I'd have to have more than that for it." He pulled the lenses