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Star Tribune from Minneapolis, Minnesota • Page 16

Publication:
Star Tribunei
Location:
Minneapolis, Minnesota
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Page:
16
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Enro Imenf Data Soviet Aircraft to Aid Poultry Industry Production DINNER THURSDAY FOR State College Attendance Record Seen lypiioon mis Hong Kong; 15 Killed Campuses TOTAL OPINING RING ATTENDANCE FRESHMEN (Fulltime dav stud.) Governors' Parley Needs a Speaker By RANK PRF.MACK Minneapolis Tribune Slaff Writer The Midwestern Governors Conference, running Wednesday through Saturday in Minneapolis, is lookmp for a mam speaker for its fancy dinner Thursday night, the evening Barry Goldwater comes to town. Planners for the meeting of the 12 governors, Democrats and 4 Republicans, had hoped to put on a joint appearance of the two major parties' vice presidential can From State I. ASM START University of Minnesota (all campuses) STATF COLLMiFS fiemidii Mankatn Moorhead St. Cloud Winona Sept. 28 Sept.

21 Sept. 23 Sept. 2 Sept. 23 Sept. 14 Total State Collepes STATE JUNIOR COLLEGES Austin Sept.

14 Sept. 21 Sept. 14 Sept. 2 Sept. 10 Sept.

8 Sept. 4 Sept. 9 Sept. 8 Sept. 15 Sept.

3 Firainerd rly Eveleth Fergus Falls Hibbing Itasca (Cnleraine) Rochester Virginia Willmar Worthinglon TOTAL STATE JUNIOR COLLEGES This Last This Last vear year year year (est.) (est.) 38,500 35,112 8.500 7,184 2,428 2.009 900 666 7,000 6,122 2,700 2,433 2,463 2,158 750 614 4,600 4,179 1,430 1,275 1,925 1,459 800 473 18,416 15,927 6,580 5,461 625 517 450 350 250 180 190 125 180 165 105 88 144 123 93 70 260 219 180 137 530 505 340 310 300 284 210 143 1,000 805 550 428 500 475 280 280 600 445 475 321 475 366 300 239 4,864 4,084 3,173 2,491 New York Times Service MOSCOW, U.S.S.R. The Soviet Union disclosed Saturday that its aircraft industry would provide equipment and machinery for an expanded and modernized poultry-raising program. A decree of the Communist party's State Committee on Aviation Technology has been charged with the production of machinery and equipment for poultry farms and commercial broiler factories over the next six years. By 1970, according to the decree, the Soviet Union is to build and expand 508 mechanized chicken farms for egg production and 258 broiler factories. Assignment of the machine-production job to the aircraft industry suggests at least partial conversion of existing manufacturing capacity to the making of brooders, waterers, feed hoppers and other equipment required by the modern poultry-raising industry.

Soviet Premier Nikita Mrs. Flynn, Top U.S. Red, Dies at 74 Willmar figures include academic and vocational students at "community college." Brainerd figures are for academic only, excluding area vocational school. 141 124 90 64 120 250 261 124 340 64 1,250 1,175 425 338 835 756 330 294 1,380 1,337 421 369 1,800 1,725 625 536 575 474 275 225 1,300 1,221 500 373 977 958 339 324 1,650 1,456 560 478 345 309 123 116 245 242 85 69 510 485 180 165 1,400 1,337 400 373 1,250 1,284 425 361 1,110 1,090 335 308 2,212 2,074 742 662 1.100 1,014 370 345 1,660 1,664 540 522 19,599 18,601 6,675 5,858 81.640 73,848 25,268 21,058 OFFICE CLOSED TODAY LABOR DAY! EJCCELLEtlT REASONS POB SOLONG MGHTNOWt Khrushchev disclosed during his recent visit to Czechoslovakia that the poultry expansion program alone will cost 2.7 billion rubles ($3 billion). Khrushchev returned home yesterday.

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Sand oninn to OlUl CONTEST. H. I. ullar Mnpan. ny.

tuetis street, St. Paul, Mlnneaota U1M. FULLER'S GLUE ft OR XC CAN TM6 PMWOK PAY NOTHING 'TIL SUMMER 1365 1 Positively no charges addep ob pplce increase for delaying A SUSSU. OCCLUSIVE! WITH NO DOWN PAYMENT A Garaqe consufanf can call at your home any day or evening wth pictures Wcoj ove you a Residents Call Collect fuaranveJ price? DISPLAY OKH SUtf il ro S- P.M. 50 1 ITlK nil 1 II.

t.11. 1 yo oi student, union, cost undisclosed by church policy. Macalester: dormitories and dining hall, Fine Arts Center, including theater, music, visual arts, humanities and heat ing plant, Olin Hall of Science, stadium, athletic field, $170,000. St. Benedict's: Bendicta Art Center, for music, art, speech and drama (in full use), $3 million.

St. Olaf: Men's Tower (10 stories) and Agnes Larson Hall for women (12 stories), dormitories, $3 million total. St. Teresa: Assisi Hall, residence for sisters in the juniorate program, $981,000. Mexico Cancels Fees MEXICO CITY, Mexico (JV) Landing fees at Mexican airports for U.S.

tourists piloting their own planes have been cancelled by the Ministry of Communications, a spokesman for the National Tourist Council announced Saturday. Wft 0t YOU CAN DO THS IrVOSK KEEPS YOUR CAR CLE AM AND ATTRACTIVE "YOUR CAR FOR BETTER TRADE-IN VALUE. Uppv Midwttt f0ft MODELS ON ON ttrnfF- "'fi SUNS upptif midwksts tWffJ' LEADING ftjf company: HONG KONG Ty phoon Ruby hit Hong Kong Saturday, leaving at least 15 persons dead, 35 missing and feared dead and 250 injured. Property damage was heavy. The Weather Bureau said it was the first typhoon to score a bull's-eye on Hong Kong in 20 years and called it one of the worst storms to hit the British colony.

Twenty seven of those missing were aboard the ship Dorar, of Panama registry, which sank in the harbor. THIRTY of the ship's crew were rescued. More than 20 ocean-going vessels snapped their moorings in the harbor and were swept around like toys. Hundreds of sampans and junks capsized and went to the bottom. Heavy rains accompanying the typhoon, packing 160-mile-per-hour winds at the center, caused flooding and landslides that wrecked many homes and trapped occupants.

More than 50,000 refugees from Red China were made homeless as the wind wrecked shacks in which they lived. Many of those injured were slashed by jagged sheets of flying metal ripped from buildings under construction. Others were slammed against walls by cars blown from the streets. MEANWHILE, a new tropical storm, Ethel, joined Doro in the Atlantic yesterday and was expected to quickly whip herself into a full-fledged but harmless hurricane. Both storms were hundreds of miles from each other and hundreds of miles from land.

On their courses, they presented no threat to the United States. Typhoon Sally Passes Over Southern Guam AGANA, Guam () Police reported today that Typhoon Sally did relatively light damage as the eye of the storm passed over the Island's southern tip. No casualties or serious injuries were reported, but crop losses were expected to be heavy. 0SPARIMIHI SWUf Vf 10 iV" SATSPyiNS tlift')j)t CUSTOMERS "y.yji 3 since s.JF didates at the black-tie din- ner. Some of the planners had said that Rep.

William Miller of New York, the GOP choice had been invited. And the! Democratic party's pick, which turned out to be Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, was to have been invited by Minne- sola Gov. Karl Rolvaag, who: will preside at the dinner and is the conference host.

RUT THAT all fpll thronph i when Goldwater decided to make a campaign stop in Minneapolis and Miller became unavailable. What is now scheduled for the dinner, being paid for by Minnesota Mining Manufacturing St. Paul, are twn bands, choruses and a master of ceremonies: R. F. Hurleigh, president of the Mutual Broadcasting System, a 3M subsidiary.

While the conference planners are having difficulty with the dinner, they are having none with the rest of the four-day program: Wednesday Arriving governors will be treated to a boat trip from Sunnyside to Bayport on the St. Croix River in the late afternoon, following by dinner and square dancing. Thursday Conference business begins, with a morning session on federal research and development contracts, a prime concern of the region's governors, and an afternoon session on economic growth and its problems. Luther H. Hodges, secretary of commerce, and James E.

Webb, National Aeronautics and Space Administration boss, will be key morning speakers, with the governors, who feel the Midwest is being short-changed on federal contracts, expect ed to question Webb sharply. THE AFTERNOON session will include discussion of an economic growth study of the Midwest by the North Star Research and Development Institute, Minneapolis. Speakers will be Charles Kimball, president of Midwest Research Institute, Kansas City, Al president of Otter Tail Power, and John W. Clegg, North Star president. Lunch for the Republican governors Archie Gubbard of South Dakota, John Anderson Jr.

of Kansas, James Rhodes of Ohio and George Romney of Michigan will be furnished Thursday by former Gov. Elmer Andersen, defeated by Rolvaag in the 1962 elections. The Democratic governors presumably will fend for themselves. They are: William Guy of North Da kota, Harold Hughes of Iowa, Frank Morrison of Nebraska (conference chairman), Otto Kerner of Illinois, John Dal-ton of Missouri, John Reynolds of Wisconsin, Matthew Welsh of Indiana and Rolvaag. Friday A workshop on the criminally insane and highway safety problems in the morning and higher education in the afternoon, with panel sessions and guest speakers slated for both.

In the evening, after pool-side cocktails and buffet dinner, the governors will attend a performance of "Volpone" at the Guthrie Theater, followed by a party at Walker Art Center. Saturday Interstate cooperation in the field of nuclear energy is the topic of a morning talk by Dr. J. R. Maxfield of the Medical Center Station, Dallas, Tex.

This will be followed by the final business meeting, where such things as resolutions will be taken up. By RICHARD P. KLF.EMAN Minneapolis Tribune Staff Writer This is the year postwar babies go to college, and in Minnesota they'll help send college and university attendance soaring this fall to a new high of more than 81.000 students. A Minneapolis Tribune survey of the state's 37 public and private colleges and universities shows the University of Minnesota on all campuses and all five state colleges anticipating record total enrollments and record freshman classes. WITH a handful of colleges already in session and all due to reopen within the next three weeks, fall fulltime day student attendance is expected to total at least 81,640, a 10.5 per cent increase over last year's record of more than 73,800.

(Nationally, according to the U.S. Office of Education, college students are expected to number 4.8 million, a 6.7 per cent increase over last year's 4.5 million.) Minnesota's crop of new college freshmen, however, represents nearly twice as large a percentage increase as the total enrollment. Expected to number 25,268 this year, the freshmen are almost 20 per cent more numerous this year than last year's 21,058. TO HOUSE and instruct this growing crop of college students, the state's colleges and universities will open or put into full use during the coming academic year more than $35 million in new buildings or additions. Largest numerical student increase is expected at the university, where all-campus fulltime enrollment is expected to total 38,500, a 9.6 per cent increase over last year's 35,112.

The university's Duluth campus expects 3,600 students compared to last year's 3,221, and the Morris campus, 850 against 690 a year ago. The state 11 public junior colleges newly brought under state control register the largest percentage of attendance increase. Their rise from last year's 4,084 students to this year's estimated 4,864 represents growth of more than 19 per cent. SCORING, high in both numerical and percentage growth are the five state colleges, where the 18,416 student attendance expected this fall is 15.6 per cent above last year's 15,927. Private four-year colleges, many operating at capacity and not subject to major growth, still expect to add 998 students this year for a total of 19,599.

This is 5.3 per cent more than last year. New this year to the private two-year college fold is the junior college to be operated in conjunction with, but legally separate from, St. Mary's Hospital, Minneapo- 1S. REPLACING St. Mary's School of Nursing with an institution granting degrees in seven health-related fields, St.

Mary's Junior College ex pects a total opening enrollment of 250 students, 190 of them in the nursing program recently given interim ac creditation by the State Board of Nursing. Tuition at the university and state colleges has not increased this year. At the 11 state junior colleges, substantial increases were mandated by the 1963 law creating the state system. Junior college tuition now is the same for all Minnesota residents and the increase amounts to more than 50 per cent for students living in junior college communities, who used to pay a lower rate than "nonresidents." Now the only "nonresidents" paying a higher rate are students from out of state. MOST private colleges report tuition and fee increases, with $100 the most common amount.

At Macalester in St Paul, the increase of $100 in tuition and $200 in board and room charges raise the total annual cost for a boarding student from $1,688 to $1,988. Carleton's all-inclusive fee, highest among the state's private colleges, is up $100 to $2,500. A number of new developments new programs, calendar changes and reorganizations will be in effect at Minnesota's collegiate insti- YOU CAN SHOP GEM LABOR DAY! A.M. TO 6 PRIVATE JUNIOR COLLEGES Bethany Lutheran St. Mary's (Mpls.) Sept.

Sept. TOTAL PRIVATE JUNIOR COLLEGES PRIVATE COLLEGES Augsburg Sept. 16 Bethel Sept. 17 Carleton Sept. 28 Concordia (Moorhead) Sept.

I Concordia (St. Paul) Sept. 14 Gustavus Adolphus Sept. 7 Hamline Univ. Sept.

21 Macalester Sept. 10 Mpls. Schl. of Art Sept. 4 Northwestern Sept.

1 1 St. Benedict Sept. 17 St. Catherine Sept. 17 St.

John's Univ. Sept. 17 St. Mary's (Winona) Sept. 16 St.

Olaf Sept. 8 St. Scholastica No reply to survey St. Teresa Sept. 4 St.

Thomas Sept. 21 TOTAL PRIVATE COLLEGES GRAND TOTAL. ALL COLLS. AND UNIVERSITIES tutions and will be reported in a subsequent article. Following are major new buildings opening this fall or during the coming year at the state's colleges and universities: UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA (Total $9.8 millions) Minneapolis and St.

Paul campuses: science classrooms, Washington and 15th Avs. 5th and 6th floor addition to Diehl Hall (medical school), 4th floor addition to Electrical Engineering, rehabilitation of Jackson Hall (anatomy), Physics building addition, 40-bed Children's Rehabilitation (enter, Church and Essex Forest Products building addition (St. Paul campus), two-story connection between Main and Electrical Engineering, rehabilitation of Station 22, University Hospitals, Van de Graaff laboratory and ion accelerator building (to house $3 million atom-smasher financed by Atomic Energy Commission). $653,073, building only; three-level addition to Washington Av. parking ramp, $249,494.

Duluth campus: Home Economics and general classrooms, 4th floor addition to Humanities, including language laboratory, Kirby Student Center remodeled to add cafeteria space (no legislative appropriation funds used) and faculty-staff club being completed with private donations. STATE COLLEGES (Total $6.6 millions) Bemidji: Industry and Arts (Bridgeman Hall), 200-bed dormitory (Linden Hall), $700,000. Mankato: Education and English (new campus), $2 million. Moorhead 200-bed addition to Snarr Hall dormitory, $655,000. St.

Cloud: 200-bed Case Hall dormitory, $700,000 (estimated). Winona: Art and Industry (Wat-kins Hall), psychology, education and English (Gilde-meister Hall). 200-bed dormitory (Prentis Hall), $720,000. STATE JUNIOR COLLEGES (Total $504,000) Brainerd: separate building for the first time, about $500,000. Willmar: building remodeled for art and music, $4,000.

PRIVATE COLLEGES (Total $18.6 millions) Augsburg: Art studio for temporary use as student center, $84,000. Bethel: Eight-unit apartments for married students and two houses for classroom, office, music-practice, $94,000. Carleton: Men's gym (in full use), women's recreation center (January 1965), $700,000. Concordia, Moorhead: administration building, $535,000. Concordia, St.

Paul: 100-bed Wollaeger Hall, dormitory and "Arcadia" HEARING AID HAS IT! 1 Zenith's tiny, new micro-miniature amplifier contains 22 electronic components, incfud-ing 6 transistors, to give you more performance, greater amplifier reliability. Micro-Lithic circuit smaller than a match head. Amplifier seated against dirt and moisture. Be one of the first to enjoy better hearing through the advancements of space technology. ASK FOR DCMOMSTMrrtOM $OOM TEW MTNMtZEO KftlEft ryTTTTrTnTTl T.

F. BENECKE 1 ONLY 1 New York Times Service MOSCOW, U.S.S.R Mrs. Elizabeth Gurley Flynn, 74, chairman of the Communist party of the United States HieH herp "sat. Urd.ay' ft" ine was tne third interna- tional Commu nist leader to die in the last two months. Maurice Thorez of Mrs.

Flynn France died aboard a Soviet ship on his way to Russia in July, and Palmiro Tog-liatti of Italy died last month in the Crimea. Izvestia, the government newspaper, devoted half its front page to her obituary, a photograph and a message of condolence from the Soviet Central Committee to the U.S. Communist party. The message described her as a "militant organizer of the masses, untiring fighter, fiery orator and remarkable publicist." THE NEWSPAPER said she died at 5:45 a.m. yesterday in the Central Clinic of the Soviet Health Ministry, where she was hospitalized about a week ago.

She came to the Soviet Union on a visit early last month. A medical report made public last night said she had long been suffering from high blood pressure, hardening of the arteries and "severe disturbances of her basic metabolism." The report added that an inflammation of the lining of the stomach and intestines started a week ago and was aggravated by a blood clot in the lung artery that led to her death. HER BODY is to lie in state today in the Hall of Columns o'f the Trade Union House, the traditional place reserved for such occasions. Mikhail A. Suslov, a Soviet Communist party secretary, heads a commission charged with making funeral arrangements.

But American Communist sources said it had not been decided yet whether to fly her body to the United States or to bury her in Moscow. A stout, formidable woman with blue eyes, gray hair and a ready smile, Mrs. Flynn re sembled more an old-fash ioned grandmother than a political revolutionary. She was born Aug. 7, 1890, in Concord, N.H.

At the age of 15, in 1906, she was an organizer for the Industrial Workers of the World. In the next 10 years, she participated in the IWW strikes in the West; the textile workers' strikes in the East, and the iron-ore miners strikes' in the Midwest. THOUGH the Communist party was formed in the United States in 1919, Mrs. Flynn did not embrace it until 1937. She rose quickly in the ranks.

On Jan. 21, 1953, she was convicted of conspiring to teach and advocate the overthrow of the U.S. government by force and violence. She served two years and four months of a three-year sentence in the federal women's reformatory at Alderson, W. Va.

She emerged unrepentant. "I had no reason to reform or recant," she said, "so I just reduced. IN 1961, she was elected chairman of the National Committee of the Communist party, the first woman to head the organization. Mrs. Flynn's husband was John Archibald Jones, an IWW organizer from Bovey, whom she married in 1909.

She lived with him for only six months, however, and their marriage ended in divorce. They had one son, Fred, who died in 1940. All 1UTTER PECAN COFFEE (AXE SARA LEE )(, Of'' IHl mm MIMSIKSHIP avl ONE MONTH'S COST OF LIVING FOR SOME LUCKY WINNER GEM WILL PAY ALL THE FOLLOWING BILLS FOR ONE LUCKY WINNER FOR ONE MONTH: GEM will pay your cost of living expenses up to $300! RENT $75 FOOD $10o CHURCH $20 UTILITIES $25 AUTO PAYMENTS $40 MOVIES BARBER AND BEAUTY SHOP 0 BABY SITTER $10 GASOLINE ga REGISTER IN THE FRONT OFFICE DRAWING 5:30 P.M. SEPTEMBER LABOR-DAY WINNER MUST BE PRESENT TO WIN Anyone 18 yrs. or older may win.

.41 All meetings, except for the formal dinner in the Radisson Hotel, will be held at the Sheraton-Ritz. Chrysler, UAW Close Negotiations to Press DETROIT, Mich. UP) Chrysler and the United Auto Workers (UAW) suddenly clamped a news blackout on their contract negotiations Saturday. The policy has been used in auto industry negotiations in the past at a critical point in negotiations. The UAW threatens a Chrysler strike at 10 a.m.

Wednesday if a contract settlement is not reached, GEM COST OF LIVING CONTEST TEAR OUT THIS COUPON AND DEPOSIT IT IN THE REGISTRATION BOX IN THE FRONT OFFICE, LABOR DAY, SEPT. 7 NAME. Worci "Dear Fashionables" Schlampp's Fridays ai 4, Channel 4 GEM 7900 CEDAR AVENUE SOUTH MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA 13-OZ. EACH 79 ADDRESS INC. 372 South 8th St.

Mpls. 2 FE 8-4496 BIG TEN FOOD STORES i (Acroii from Dayton') .18.

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