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Star Tribune du lieu suivant : Minneapolis, Minnesota • Page 47

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Star Tribunei
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Minneapolis, Minnesota
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47
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PL of the Navy's recently Woodrow Wilson, left San Golden Gate Bridge is in the quoted him a price of $12, and began to undress. When he placed her under arrest, Gladwin said she tried to warn the others in the house, but they were apprehended by the other officers. Johnson said in a signed statement that he received $2 from each girl who brought in a man. 14,000 Yule Trees Burned Nearly 14,000 Christmas trees piled in Bloomington's Kennedy Field for a bonfire next weekend blazed to an early death Saturday night. The trees had been gathered by the Jaycees from suburban residents.

They were to be arranged in a pyramid and set afire next Friday night as the kickoff bonfire for the Bloomington Snow Fest. The cause of yesterday's premature blaze was unknown. Mondale to Speak ST. CLOUD, Minn. (Special) Atty.

Gen. Walter F. Mondale will speak to Young Democrats at St. Cloud State College at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Stewart Hall Auditorium.

Your Men in Washington Notes from the Minneapolis Tribune's Washington Bureau About Upper Midwest Congressional Delegations. Loevinger Becomes Dissenter Lee Loevinger may soon win some public attention as the "great dissenter" on the Federal Communications Commission (FCC). The former Minnesota State Supreme Court justice drew some comment when he dissented in an FCC decision which favorably affected the radio television holdings of Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson.

In another recent case, Loevinger was the lone dissenter when the FCC approved -without public hearing--the transfer of two radio stations licensed to a firm that already holds 17 other radio and television licenses. "I believe the public is entitled to more vigilance and more vigor in this area from the commission," Loevinger said. Multiple ownership of broadcast licenses has been a special target of Loevinger's since he was named to a five-year term on the FCC last year. McCarthy Wins Notice A Capitol Hill worker was doing some last-minute shopping in a big store here just before Christmas when the store's public address system began paging "Sen. He ran into the Minnesota Democrat a few minutes later and jokingly congratulated him on fiding a new campaign technique.

It turned out, however, that the call was real--notification that the Senate would stay in session through Dec. 30 instead of quitting on Christmas Eve as planned. He Wins a Meal, Too McCarthy will benefit from a somewhat more practical, if less imaginative campaign device this week: the old-fashioned $100-a-plate dinner. The affair will be held in a hotel here Wednesday, under the sponsorship of the "National Committee for Good Government." Co-chairman Max M. Kampelman, a Washington lawyer and former aide to Sen.

Hubert Humphrey, is hoping a sell-out crowd will turn up to dine on an all-Minnesota menu featuring turkey with wild rice stuffing. MacGregor vs. Wheat Financing Rep. Clark MacGregor fires a final shot this week in the battle over using government credit agencies to underwrite the financing of wheat sales to Russia. "The private traders and their commercial bankers have the legal right to sell their grain and other products to the Communists on credit, instead of for gold or American dollars.

Private traders and commercial bankers are pot willing to extend their own credit to Communist countries I believe that the Congress has an obligation certainly to be as alert and energetic about protecting the finances of our taxpaying citizens as private firms are in protecting the investments of their own stockholders," he says in a press release. From Johnson to McGovern Sen. George McGovern of South Dakota got: a nice Christmas present from President Johnson when he appointed a nine-member committee to study the economic impact of defense spending and possible disarmament. McGovern had proposed such a study in a bill he introduced only a few weeks earlier; Mr. Johnson's action meant that McGovern achieved his aim without having to guide the bill through Congress--a doubtful prospect at best.

Charles W. bailey DEATHS MRS. ANNA BOBENDRIER. for Mrs. Anna Bobendrier, 90, 5505 Lyndale Av.

who died Friday, will be held at 10 a.m. Monday at St. Alphonsus Church, with burial in Crystal Lake Cemetery. Mrs. Bobendrier had lived in the Minneapolis area for 55 years.

Survivors include four sons, Raymond, Rogers, and Walter, William and Irvin, all of Minneapolis, and two daughters, Mrs. Art Gonyea, Elk River, and Mrs. Keith Bergeron, Minneapolis. will be a rosary service There, today at Knaeble Mortuary. CHRISTIAN A.

BRAESCH Services for Christian A. Braesch, 71, 4558 Russell Av. who died Friday, will be held at 1 p.m. Monday at Welander-Quist Mortuary, 1200 W. Broadway, with burial in CrysCemetery.

Mr. Braesch was a retired engineer for the Northern Pacific Railroad. Survivors include his widow, Flossie; two daughters, Mrs. Violet Butler, Anoka, and Mrs. Helen Butler, Minneapolis, and a son, Howard, Minneapolis.

FRANCIS M. CARLIN Services for Francis M. Carlin, 75, 205 W. 15th who died Saturday, will be held at 9 a.m. Tuesday at St.

Olaf's Catholic Church, with burial in Resurrection Cemetery. A rosary service will be held 7:30 Monday at Billman's Mortuary, 2121 Nicollet Av. Born in Pine City, Mr. Carlin lived in Minneapolis for 65 years. He owned and managed apartment buildings.

Survivors include his widow, Violet; a daughter, Mrs. John Fisher, Minneapolis, and a brother, Thomas, Preston, Minn. ARVID O. CARLSON Services for Arvid O. Carlson, 75, 36 23rd Av.

who died Thursday, will be held at 1 p.m. Monday in the Morris Nilsen Mortuary, with burial in Lakeville, Mr. Carlson, a resident of Minneapolis for 25 years, was a retired employe of Bros Manufacturing Co. Survivors include his widow, Mabel; four sons, Charles, Concord, Robert, Brooklyn Park; Arthur, Wyoming, and Kenneth, Minneapolis; three daughters, Mrs. Mary Tiedeken and Mrs.

Beverly Nesheim, both of Minneapolis, and Mrs. Astrid Larka, San Francisco, a brother, Galesburg, and four sisters, Mrs. Nan Excell, Seattle, Mrs. Marie Lindstrom, Denver, Mrs. Brandt, Pasadena, and Mrs.

Astrid Anderson, Minneapolis. MRS. BETTY CARTER ter, 71, Milton, forServices for Mrs. Betted Carmerly of Minneapolis, who died Thursday, will be held at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday at the SundsethAnderson Mortuary, with burial in Crystal Lake Cemetery.

Mrs. Carter, who moved to Florida three years ago, was a retired employe of the Dyckman Hotel. Survivors include two sisters, Mrs. Robert C. Anderson and Mrs.

Bert Pierotti, both of Minneapolis. The body will be at the mortuary from noon Monday. MRS. MERTELLA CHRISTIANSON Services for Mrs. Mertella Christianson, 76.

517 Asbury Paul, who died Friday, will be held at 2:30 p.m. Monday, in Welander-Quist Mortuary, 1200 W. Broadway, with burial in Sunset Memorial Park Cemetery. Survivors include her husband, Charles; a daughter, Mrs. Lois Smith, Pequot Lakes, and two sisters, Mrs.

Gladys Lee, Minneapolis, and Mrs. R. H. Pratt, Milwaukee, Wis. MRS.

RAY COPP Services for Mrs. Ray Copp, 75, 4015 Excelsior St. Louis Park, who died Saturday, will be held at 11 a.m. Monday at the Sons Mortuary, Paul, Aaron in The Sons of Jacob Cemetery, St. Paul.

Survivors include a son, Gerald Honolulu, Hawaii; two daughters, Mrs. Lawrence J. Berle, Minneapolis, and Mrs. Alan Manne, Stanford, and a sister, Mrs. Harry Perelstein, St.

Paul." Memorials are preferred to the donor's favorite charity. MRS. FRANCES CRAMB Services for Mrs. Frances A. Cramb, 80, 1931 1st Av.

who died Friday, will be held at 3 p.m. Tuesday in Werness Brothers Mortuary, 3700 Nicollet with burial in Lakewood Cemetery. Mrs. Cramb was a Minneapolis area resident for the past 30 years. Survivors include three daughters, Mrs.

Merrill W. Olson, Minneapolis; Mrs. Ralph Cassidy, Watseca, and Lois Chicago, and two sons, Roscoe Plymouth, and Thomas Tennessee. The body will be at the mortuary from 2 p.m. Monday.

JULIAN P. FARNAM Services for Julian P. Far6840 Sheridan Av. Richfield, who died Friday, will be held at 1:30 p.m. Monday at Lakewood Chapel.

The body will be at the Flynn Mortuary from 2 p.m. today. Mr. Farnam was an architect and mechanical engineer. Survivors include two daughters, Mrs.

Hugh G. Anderson, Excelsior, and Mrs. Clifford F. Zoller, Lisle, two sons, Manley Hopkins, and Robert Redondo Beach, a sister, Laura M. Farnam, Minneapolis, and a brother, Earl, Duluth, Minn.

MRS. ELIZABETH FITZHUGH Services for Mrs. Elizabeth Fitzhugh, 51, 2300 Stevens who died Saturday, will be held charities of the donor's choice. MRS. McCARTHY Services.

for Frank G. Mc- Carthy, 56, and his wife, Irene 46, 512 Plymouth Av. will be held at 9 a.m. Tuesday at Holy Rosary Church, with burial in Resurrection a Cemetery. Mrs.

McCarthy died Thursday and Mr. McCarthy Saturday, both of natural causes. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Tomasko, Long Beach, and Mrs. Judith Smith, McCarthy also sister, Mrs.

Loretta Spinnato, Minneapolis, and McCarthy by one brother, Joseph Hockrein, Chicago, Ill. There will be a rosary service for both at 8 p.m. Monday in Gleason Mortuary. JOHN F. REIMER Services for John F.

Reimer, 85, 628 E. 36th who died Friday, will be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the Central Lutheran Church, with burial in Valley View Cemetery, Shakopee. Mr. Reimer had lived in Minneapolis for 65 years.

He retired in 1947 from the Pillsbury Co. where he had worked for 26 years. He was a member of Central Lutheran Church. Survivors include his widow, Karen and a sister, Mrs. Augusta E.

Brown, Minneapolis. The body will be at the Billman-Hunt Mortuary from 1 p.m. Sunday. JOSEPH A. ROVERUD Services for Joseph A.

Roverud, 59, 1601 E. 43rd who died Friday, will be held at 2:30 p.m. Monday at the McDivitt1 Hauge Mortuary, with burial in Lakewood Cemetery. Roverud was a lithographer at McGill Graphic Arts Engraving, St. Paul, for 36 years.

Survivors include his widow, Frances; two sons, Jim, Clovis, N.M., and Jay, Minneapolis; two daughters, Mrs. Sharron Opseth and Susan Roverud, both of Minneapolis; and a brother, and a sister in Oslo, Norway. Memorials are preferred to the Minnehaha Lutheran Church building fund or the Heart Fund. DR. ROBERT THOMPSON Services for Dr.

Robert C. Thompson, 63, St. Croix Falls, who died Friday, will be held at 10:30 a.m. Monday in St. Patrick's Church, Centuria, with burial in' St.

Croix Falls. Dr. Thompson formerly practiced medicine in Cumberland, Wis. There will be a rosary service at 8 p.m. today in Cotones Mortuary, Cumberland.

Survivors include his widow, Alberta; a son, Robert C. St. Paul Park; a daughter, Nancy, Minneapolis; a brother, James and a sister, Mrs. Helen T. Donalds, both of St.

Croix Falls. Elsewhere ELLIS A. GIMBEL 66, son of a founder of the Gimbel Brothers department store and a former executive head of the store, in Miami Beach, Fla. Stretch pants are proportioned to fit so well 890 They're beautifully tailored to fit you wonderfully priced to fit your budget, too! In a soft, wearable blend of nylon winter flannel in patterned and basic solid colors. S-M 8-18, M-T 10-18.

Sportswear-2nd Floor, Dayton's Downtown; also Southdale, Rochester fRee. State of Minn, at 1 p.m. Tuesday Billman's Mortuary, 2121 Nicollet with burial in Lakewood Cemetery. Mrs. Fitzhugh was an office manager for Corrogated Box Co.

Survivors include her husMr. and Mrs. James Steep, Deband, Raynor, and her go parents, troit, Mich. The body will be at the mortuary from 3 p.m. Monday.

MRS. HELGA A. FOSHAUG Services for Mrs. Helga A. Foshaug, 78, 1815 13th Av.

who died Saturday, will be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the Norwegian Lutheran Memorial Church, with burial in Sunset Memorial Park Cemetery. Mrs. Foshaug was born in Norway and lived Minneapolis for 50 years. She was a member of Norwegian Lutheran Memorial Church.

Survivors include her husband, Ole, and two sisters and a brother in Norway. The body will be at WelanderQuist Mortuary, 1825 Chicago Av. from 10 a.m. Monday. The family prefers memorials to the Norwegian Lutheran Memorial Church or to the Ladies Aid of the church.

MATT GLASER Services for Matt Glaser, 67, 2424 Bryant Av. who died Friday, will be held at 10 a.m. Monday at the Sundseth-Anderson Mortuary, with burial in Gethsemane Cemetery, New Hope. Mr. Glaser was a retired employe of the Carr-Cullen Co.

include three sisters, Mrs. Theresa McLain and Mrs. Mary Michaud, both of Minneapolis, and Mrs. Margaret Fjorden, Luck, Wis. A rosary service will be held at 8 p.m.

today at the mortuary. MRS. MARTHA HOFACRE Mrs. Martha Hofacre, 73, Seattle, lived in Minneapolis for over 40 years, died Friday Seattle. The funeral will be held there.

Mrs. Hofacre, who was born Marengo, Iowa, went to Seattle two years ago. Survivors include two daughters, Margaret Hofacre, Minneapolis, and Francis Helen Hofacre, Seattle, and a brother, John R. Beem, Seattle. HAROLD A.

LARSEN Services for Harold A. Larsen, 83, 4316 Eton Morningside, who died Friday, will be held at noon Monday at Lakewood Chapel, with burial in Lakewood Cemetery. Larsen was head of the Harold A. Larsen Co. and did interior decorating of many theaters and public buildings.

He retired 10 years ago. Survivors include two daughters, Mrs. Gladys Hacking Mrs. Lorene May, both of Edina, and a son, Clifford, Cincinnati, Ohio. Memorials are preferred to Special! Dayton's Downtown Open Monday Southdale Lynn E.

Baker, Tonka Toys Board Chairman, Dies Lynn E. Baker, 65, board chairman of Tonka Toys, died Saturday in Miami, Fla. Mr. Baker, who moved to Miami from Mound 10 years ago, founded Mound Metalcraft, in 1946. A former Minneapolis automobile distributor, Mr.

Baker capitalized on his idea that youngsters like realism in their toys. The Mound company, which grew by leaps and bounds in its manufacture of metal, scale model trucks and trailers, was renamed Tonka Toys, in 1956. Funeral arrangements, being handled by the Van 1 Orsdel Mortunary, Coral Gables, were not complete last night. Services will be held in Florida. Survivors include his widow, Florence; a son, Frederick North Arm on Lake Minnetonka; a daughter, Mrs.

Marilyn Schroeder, Wayzata; MINNEAPOLIS SUNDAY TRIBUNE Jan. 5, 1964 11 Associated Press nuclear submarines, for a routine Father Was 'Girl' Before Sex Surgery ST. LOUIS, -A man who was brought up as a girl until surgery changed him into a normal male has become the father of a child, a plastic surgeon revealed Saturday. Dr. James Barrett Brown said it was the first time to his knowledge that a man who had undergone such surgery had achieved father- hood.

BROWN SAID the surgery was performed when the child and that he became a father recently at the. age of 23. a He emphasized the unidentified St. Louis man had not undergone a "sex change." "He was always a boy, but his parents didn't know it," he said. "He had a congenital anomaly which occurs quite frequently.

The operation was an anatomical change which completed the male sex for him." Brown, who is a professor of clinical surgery at Washington University, reported on the operation along with Dr. Minot P. Fryer, also of Washington University, in the current issue of the Journal of Surgery, Gynecology and Obstetrics. IN THEIR paper, Brown and Fryer said the child was mistakenly identified as a girl at birth and was brought up as if he were one. But he felt like a boy, they said, and practiced unintentional transvestism-dressing as a ber of the opposite sex.

Even though he looked like a girl and was accepted socially as one, the report said, "the patient's normal feelings and personal feelings prompted medical consultation." A sex chromosome study established the child was a boy, the report said, and attending physicians agreed unanimously that surgery should be undertaken. Brown, who performed the surgery, said it consisted of constructing genitalia and correcting malformation of an anatomic appearance that was more female than male. HEALING WAS complete in 10 days, he said, and the patient immediately changed his haircut and his name. "He could now, express previous suppressed, normal male actions and make longterm and decidedly masculine plans," the Brown Fryer report said. Marriage followed, a and the patient's wife recently gave birth to a girl, Brown said.

Mayor Vavoulis in Car Collision On official car driven by St. Paul Mayor George Vavoulis Saturday afternoon collided with a car driven by St. Paul newspaperman Gerald W. Montgomery, 24, 645 Grand St. Paul, police said.

The mayor said he was en route to speak at a meeting of newly elected mayors and councilmen at the University of Minnesota Continuation Center in Minneapolis. told police he was late for the engagement and was using his car's red flashing light and siren at the time of the accident. He admitted to police that he went through a red light. Montgomery was treated for minor cuts and bruises at Midway Hospital and released. No tags were issued.

Kenya Envoy Arrives PEKING, China (Reuters) Kenya's first ambassador to Communist China, Henry Mulli, arrived here Saturday. two brothers, Merrill Maple Plain, and Glenn Miami; a sister, Mrs. Wilbur D. Roberts, Mound, and six grandchildren. Woman Seized by FBI on Check Charges Sub Sets Sail One cruise in the Pacific Ocean.

Man, 3 Women Arrested, Face Morals Charge A man and three women face morals charges following arrest early Saturday at 311 13th Av. S. Police said one of the women propositioned a Minneapolis police officer. William F. Johnson, 25, living at that address, was charged with operating disorderly house.

Sandra Christine Porter, 27, 711 17th Av. was charged with being a common prostitute, and Windy Parker, 21, 911 E. 21st St. and JoAnne Woodson, 35, 2201 5th Av. with being found in a disorderly house.

Jake Sullivan, head of the morals squad, and three other officers went to the area at 12 a.m. yesterday, after receiving complaints of prostitution. Patrolman Gaylord Gladwin was approached by a woman later identified as Sandra Porter as he walked around in plain clothes. He said she led him to a room in the 13 Av. S.

address, A woman allegedly involved with two Minneapolis. men in a nine state check cashing spree was arrested by FBI agents Saturday. Marie K. Davis, 23, Sacramento, and formerly of Minneapolis, was arraigned yesterday and being held in Hennepin County Jail. According to the FBI, Miss Davis passed over $4,000 in money orders stolen in Minneapolis and other states.

William G. Ford, 22, and his brother, Melvin, 19, both of 3544 Clinton Av. were previously charged with passing the forged money orders, agents said. Minneapolis police also had a warrant outstanding for jumping bail after being convicted of prostitution. Dujia The flip-tie knit's a favorite and so is its tiny price 11.98 You'll love the easy charm of the flip-tie neckline the wonderful easy-care of the Orlon acrylic knit! Two-piece costume is in luscious colors you can wear right into spring, too! Pink, aqua, jade or navy, 10-18.

-2nd Floor, Dayton's Downtown; also Southdale, Rochester State of Mina. Order by mail, phone. In Twin Cities, suburbs, dial FE 2-6123.

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