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Star Tribune from Minneapolis, Minnesota • Page 1

Publication:
Star Tribunei
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Minneapolis, Minnesota
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Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Snow 'Y1 Minneapolis High, 38 id un 34 10 a m. 34 6 m. 36 7 p.m. 38 8 p.m. a m.

41 10 m. 40 om. 43 u. 40 40 40 41 3 35 3 a m. 4 a.m.

5 a.m. 6 a m. 7 a.m. Bam. 9 o.m.

33 1 1 o.m. 72 Noon 30 I p.m. 30 2 p.m. J3 3 p.m. 31 4 pm.

32 5 p.m. 40 m. Vol. XCIM No. 155 MINNEAPOLIS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 26.

1959 In Twin Citiet Area Details Page 18 Unofficial FE 3-31 1 1 Eisewhgra i in ii 4fi ir At umnratin iff Eagles Rally, Beaf Cardinals, 28-241 2 Killed Ka Lakers Lose to Royals, (DETAILS lit Spcrti Peach) I i A I 1 parate Steel Pad By A. H.RASKIN had no intention of follow- jvelopment came as From the New York Times ing Kaiser's example. They ordered negotiations to settle the crippling strike drifted said the terms on which Kaiser was about to settle would be "inflationary" if accented bv the rest of the industry. ThP Kakpr rlprkinn. whirh PITTSBURGH, Pa.

The Kaiser Steel Corp. broke the united front of the steel industry Sunday night and pre- pared to sign a separate strike settlement, It was the first break in to case the pinch of sted shortages since the company, ninth largest in the industry, accounts for only 2 per cent of the total normal production. On this basis it seemed improbable the return to work of Kaiser employes would cause the White House to end its moves for an 80-day no-strike injunction under the Taft-Hartley act. Federal district Judge Herbert P. Sorg signed an in- inn rwinH nffters here yesterday after- the 103-day-old strike, which5prrpt talk-s with thP UnitpH steelworkers of America, be-! came known after the Com inanv had notified the chief President Eisenhower a caIled a Peril t0 the national health and safety.

HOWEVER, the i major steel producers im-1 'mediately announced they executives of the other nanies it was about to make an individual pact. The de-iscr RUSS SURGEON MAKES TRIAL RUN ON DOGS to Get 2nd Heart Human By ALINE MOSBY MOSCOW (UPI) Russian surgeon Vladimir De-mikhov, creator of a two-headed dog, said Sunday he is preparing to give a second heart to a human patient suffering from heart disease. He already has given two dogs extra hearts in preparation for the surgery. Demikhov, who revealed recently he intends to graft a new leg onto a woman amputee, said he would share his knowledge with other surgeons all over the world. "BEFORE THE END of this year or the beginning of next year," Demikhov said, he will attempt to save a heart disease victim 103 102 Wte JMkx 4Me4 full year of work.

The report said in the period covered states began to make substantial requests to the agency for the assistance. which the acencv was able 3 to meet. iv riir nrmftn j. nn. me icpun me agency dp- gan building its own Vienna laboratory, started working; out regulations for safe- guards against cheating with: supplied materials, organized! its first scientif mihlished much more in fnrmntinn with ability to pay to make up j(S yearly budget of 225.000 and working capital! fund of two million dollars, The United States pays the most $1,698,648 to the bud get and $650,200 to the fund.

rtn. nwiuiti in i -v MINNFAPOl'S TS'SUNf PHOTO (V CHARLES M'll BIELSKI, EAGLE END, LEFT, MISSED PASS; NORTON COVTRED IT Olhrr Van Broeklin pat.se connected, however, an Eaglet overcame 21-0 diadvanfage through a second day with- out progress. Union and management teams met for only an hour and three-quar noon, despite a call by Labor Secretary James Mitchell for iround the clock efforts to end the longest national tie- in the steel industry. THE PROSPECTIVE Kai- settlement will do little attacks when they are young." lie said he had successfully performed two-heart operations on dogs on Oct. 16 and on Oct.

23. The two-hearted dogs were led into his operating amphitheater by nurses for inspection by this correspondent. THE DOGS, Andrei and Svetlana, both scrawny from their recent hungry days as strays had only bandages to show for their operations. "You can feel the pulse of a second heart here," Demikhov said as he picked up Andrei. Also on hand was a Surgeon Continued on Page 15 Vacation Over, Nikita Plans Major Speech MOSCOW (UPI) Nikita S.

Khrushchev returned 1U1UJ) rom a surprise 1CW -sp- -r-i to prepare for the opening of the Soviet parliament Tuesday and what is x- on nis recent tours abroad. Khrushchev 1 ne sup erne soviet (parlia- i.mui nm iwntne in ine; Kremlin in an atmosphere of! optimism sparked both by! yuiu iarr ujj. An economic plan and state budget for I960. A new labor code with bet ter rights and privileges for tratie unions. Ratification nf 1 Cgislation enacted bv the presidium, (ruling body) since the last iar! lament session.

Khrushchev was expected EXPERTS COMPARE ECONOMIES in Traffic Crashes 4 Young Women Die in Accident Near Hudson Twelve traffic fatalities, in cluding four young women killed in an accident near Hudson, were reported Sunday by Upper Midwest authorities. i in th HnHcnn mich.n the four women's small, foreign-; made auto struck a parked truck on a closed-off section of new highway Saturday night. Two persons were killed and five injured Saturday in a collision near Winnebago, Minn. It was the third double fatality recorded on Minnesota highways Saturday. Two Borup.

men were killed yesterday when; a train struck their grain! truck at a crossing near Far- go, N. D. In another North Dakota' accident yesterday, a young; man was killed after he seized the wheel of a car from his fiance in an attempt to bring the vehicle out of a skid. He was tossed out, and the car rolled over him. Dead are: Joan Ryan, 25, Cedar Mills, Minn.

Patricia Glaser, 25, Hudson. Joan Hanson, 24, Camden, Ark. Patricia Mentele, 24, Spen-i cer, S. D. Max Weir, 34, Frazee, I Minn.

William Osterman, 64, Frazee. George Sorenson, 50, rural Elbow Lake, Minn. Darrell Nelson, 21, 134 Peninsula road, Medicine Lake. Marvin A. Hasz, 40, Borup.

Charles Deinhart, about 40, Borup. Richard llelland, 23, Cas-selton, N. D. Mrs. Barbara Cochran, 54.

Drayton, N. D. The four young women, roommates in an apartment at Siimmif Av St Paul died at the scene after their way uepanmeni irucK aooui iu p.m. less man a mue easi of Hudson. Ray Hanson of the Hudson! police department said Miss' Ryan was the driver.

The victims auto somehow 'i? that mtnir. tin apparently had driven west half a mile before striking the truck on the road's shoulder. HIGHWAY, being re- surfaced, is in perfect con- Traffic Continued on Page 13 nine iiimimiii turn with Pore John last spring in Rome. It was a big dav for 50 rnnHolipr from Vpnir Ifalv when they were received by Pope John. He had been the cardinal patriarcn ct ineir city and he expressed to them a desire to see once presented a glass gondola to, 1 i U.N.

Told A-Power Is Still Uneconomical Russ Outstrip U.S. in Pace of Expansion Warren Beson, Carleton Coach, Dies Special to the Minneapolis Tribuna NORTHFIELD. Minn. Warren Beson, 35, head football coach and athletic director at Carleton college. died of a heart 1 ailment early 1 Sunday.

ran- ttin nf thr WASHINGTON (UPI) A croup of experts on the! Soviet economy said Sunday Russia has been exnandins iu puuumuii issici uuu wc United States in a move cer- lain 10 sircngmen us ccon- omVj military and political' position throughout the world. UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. The International Atomic Energy Agency Sun- day reported nuclear power: still uneconomical and therefore far short of Presi- dent Eisenhower's atoms-for-peace goal. The two-year-old, 70-na-tion agency is an outgrowth of Mr.

Eisenhower's proposal to the U.N. general assembly Dec. 8, 1953. that the atomic comparison tween the United t0 a ue 5-' States and Soviet economies, 1 1 'The hp.irinoc will rot i.nHor 1948 Univers-iPwrs 1)001 nuclear mater-r Uals and information for peaceful use by other junction in Pittsburgh Wednesday. HOWEVER, enforcement of the strike-stopping order Steel Continued on Page 13 U.S.

Physicists to Get Nobel, Reports Say ROME UPi Italian newspapers reported today the 1959 Nobel prize in physics had been awarded to Dr. Emilio Segre and Dr. Owen Chamberlain of the University of California at Berkeley. The papers also reported the Nobel prize for chemistry had been awarded to Ja-roslav Heyrovsky of Czechoslovakia. Rome's i independent daily, II Messaggero, said in a front-page story the prizes had been awarded by the Swedish Academy of Science.

The story carried no dateline. L'Unita, the Italian Communist organ, said in a dispatch from Stockholm, Sweden, that the awards had been confirmed by what it called an unofficial an- nouncement. The official announcement of the prize winners is to bo made by the Swedish academy this afternoon. The newspapers said Segre. an Italian-born scientist, and Chamberlain were honored for discovery of the anti-proton in 1955 and that Heyrovsky was honored for his methods of polargraphic analyses.

Rain, Snow, Yind to Give City Taste of Winter Wet, windy and wicked is the weatherman's prediction for the Twin Cities today. Snow, which Sunday began spreading a two to four-inch blanket over North Da- kota and northwestern M.n- is scheduled to nioc info thp Twin Cities mav be dJuted with ram during the dav. the 'weatherman said, but hy to- a t.t urdjy and early yestcrdav dumped up to 10 inches of snow in Wisconsin's Rhine-lander resort area and Mich- igans iifpcr peninsula. Associated Prc-s reported. Nine families were evacuated from horr.es on the h-Kolay nrr Michigan, and f.vo corr.mun.t.es M.ch-ig.imrc rd Grand Mirais ere js SI ,500 in Jewelry Stolen From Home Jov.

dry wtnth 1, ua strslcn I "X'n 7 i Jev Av re 1-1 S'irdiv r- i rs- ki a i -e let t' -r A and a il a-J rth JJ-1 r- a-ht a et i tries. THE AGENCY, based economy was growing as Premier Khrushchev and ir'cr OIIlcia's nave cidiiiiru. in any ism-, iiity said, the United States had a big head start. Vienna, Austria, said in its.hrr rountrips in armrnfc sot a football team, had suffered a heart attack in Jan-! Beson uary 1953 ancj again in April 1959. A college spokesman said Bcson complained of short-; ness of breath during the Carleton Monmouth college football game Saturday.

He refused to leave the field and by giving him a healthy heart taken from a recently-deceased person. The 43-year-old scientist said he plans to attach the second heart outside the patient, who is yet to be selected from a number of persons who have volunteered for the experiment. If the new heart functions, it will be inserted inside the body of the patient to ease the load on his diseased heart while it mends or to replace com-p 1 1 the unworkable original heart. "WE MAY be able to give the heart of a young man to an old man and thus prolong his life," he said. "Or we could stop people from dying of heart stantially increased.

Another said Russia would use its 'growin; production rate to trv to vnlnnH ntinn. to imuviu tuiduw communism. ine experts views were sought by a house-senate economic subcommittee in nrenaration for its hrarinrx; tri nhtain an im.tr.-Hatn mm. The first witness will be ".1,.. agency (CIA).

MEANWHILE, the Catholic unitilin.c utiwifjl lilt Uillliu States and Soviet Russia con cerns not the amount of consumer goods each can pro-1 duce but the rights of men." The report issued by the house -senate subcommittee was the second group of pa pers released by the group on the Soviet cconomv. In the new report, Morris Soviets Continued on Page 11 -Slmmmc- Boy Considers Moncy-tAaking Top Science Monday, (hi. 3J9 A 0-year-old Richf.rld boy solemnly announced his intention nf heennr: a scientist when le grows "What kind of s( tenti-t." asked his gratif-ed father. "The k-rd that Tikes everv two said the co flnin or (ndr.y in tht Tit in i tit, chenginq in nnir tnniqhl. Ui(h tnf'ru toniqht w' vrs en the Oi.ern Av.

is a as rr r. r-o-e so than nost. Arriving st thcff ce. he puiled nut and received a cf rgg'es from the secretaries. He was cle.i his w.th of wife ankle x.

his AT LEAST one said, how- Association for International Khrushchev's visits to Amer-ever, that Russia may' opr-! PciCC holding its 32nd an-jica and Red China and Rus-t ike' the' United States in the nua conference in the cap-ia's economic and scientific not too distant future unless uWd "renewed stress achievements. American production is sub- the fact that the essential Tress reports said If POPE JOHN'S FIRST YEAR latest annual report to the :82 nation assembly: "The technology of power reactors, although steadily evolving, is still at a relative-1 early stage, and the cost of nuclear power production, according to present esti-' showed the agency had fcel- ers from Finland, Austria and Tunisia for so-called special fissionable materials, which High, Low Visit Pontiff spent the second half in a mates, has not yet been re-chair on the sidelines. jduced sufficiently to make it: AFTER THE GAME he was economically attractive ex- examined bv a doctor and under certain technical given permission to attend and economic conditions." a surprise party in Minne- THE REPORT brought out I apolis for Mr. and Mrs. Bill that so far the agency has! Kelly, parents of Carle- supplied atomic materials to! ton co-captain Tom Kelly.

only one country, Japan. Beson was stricken after Natural uranium is a so-returning here and died source material and 12.45 a.m. as a doctor was needs special treatment be-examining him. The doctor fore use. But the report to deliver a speech assessing tl in- the latest international dc- Temperatures are expected vHnpments.

particularly drnp as winJs howI up t(, hose connected with his m.t!t an hour. today Amer can trip visit to bc r3 degrees, low to-p and forthcoming -m him. his ho thanked the rrxd workers of Venice that occupy a special phu in the ncari vi ii.e father." Qjpen Mother Lliabcthj and Princess Margaret called on Pope John in Apnl for an affable 20 minute visit. The conversation was in French, but John did apologize for Tope Continued on Page IS I The agency signed agree- a view of the pontiff from aa'n pr canaIS-jments May 11 to get fission- among a throng of a thous-: And when the gondoliers. able materials from the three' and or more in a general dressed in gala uniforms.

atomic powers. The United 1 States agreed to sell it 5.000 kilograms of uranium 235, the Soviet lTnion 50 kilo- 'grams of enriched U-235 and (Second in rrir nf t't articla) By BARRETT AUGURN Chief Jf the New Vork Herald Tribune Rom Bureau VATICAN CITY Almos everyone who travels to Rome wants to see the pope, audience. It is estimated that Pope Pius XII received more than 10 million visitors, which is more than those seen by al! warm, human and kindly uncle, a man who can be stem and will r.ot tolerate wTonguomc. but wr.o more often cons.drred jovial, pl.ic-id. tolerant and forgiving Mary types nf people v-s the pope and their reactions are varied.

Neal Fraer said g- gest thrill was rot in help- Australia regain the Pa- Britain 20 kilograms nf en- the other popes combined riched uranium. The United since St. Peter. States agreement was pegged Prus XII was a man who to a complicated matching seemed as delicate and nys-' formula. tical as an engraved rrayrr.

i BELGIUM. Canada. Cevlon, who inspired awe, respect. -Czechoslovakia, India. For- enthusiasm and sonetirr.es tucal and South Africa have love by his appearances, offered ta sell the agency Now, there is John, who is 'atomic source materials short stocky and round and' uranium, uranium oxides, makes people thirk cf a Beson Continued on Page Eight Lose 10 Pounds in 3 Weeks Overweight is shortening the lives of Americans, the Society of Actuaries re ported last week.

Five mil- lion persons were "weighed in ana on xne average were found to be at least 10 pounds over ideal weight. Dr. Karl W. Anderson, vice president and medical director of Northwestern National Life Insurance Co. and past president cf the Minnesota Heart association, says that "not since Sputnik 1 have so many citizens been so aroused bv a comrr.cn 'He tells jou how to that dangerous 10 pouri; in a seres cf articles today on Page 21 the illinncapolis fllorninrj tribune with French President: Charlcs dc-Gaulie in Paris.

The Tass news agency re-potcd that he returned to Moscow yesterday from Ro-runa. It was the firt he had not been in Ku-sij. ers in Austria spec-iihi'ei that KhrjhcliCv's il with Rumanian may centered a re.v rn to reconcile Ti! nf to t5- lej eastern Fu rsak nwh V. ICt 'e cir.tir e-i" in rr rew the Ur ate- live in deahn: Peace ar; -I wis 1 '-a-ter nf Vr 1 ou' TURN THE PAGES TO: 1 c. I i i Mr.

Fivt ....17 Thfa'crs .2) Iv V) certain salts and thorium- bearing monazite. In the last year, the report said, the agenev's work on atomic energy to consist largely cf helpirg merr.Vr states to prepare for the eventual use cf nuclear pow er." The agency cane be rg Ju'v 23. 1937. The re- port, f-r the year ended June I FRtSIDLVT SLTCRNO TALKED TO TOrF JOHN Indortcn'tn trader net gstrn nvdirxct ftf rr'mSf was the first covenr.2 a.v:s cup. it was hs audicr.ee.

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