Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 217, Decatur, Adams County, 15 September 1958 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

French And German Leaders End Parley Urge Cooperation Os Both Nations COLOMBEY -, LES - DEUXEGLISES, France (UPD — West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer and Brerich Premier Charles de Gaulle have agreed on the need to end forever ‘'ancient hostility” between their two countries. They said in a communique Sunday night after nearly six hours of talks that cooperation between the traditional military rivals was the “foundation” for all constructive effort in Europe and the basis for a new era of unity. The two most dominant political figures in Western Europe also decided to join the United States in; refusing to accept Soviet domina-’ tion of Eastern Europe as' a permanent state of affairs. Adenauer. 82. and De Gaulle. 67/ met for the first time Sunday. Adenauer traveled here from Ba-| den Baden for the one-day meet-) ing at De Gaulle's high-walled es-| tate “La Boisserie,” 150 miles I southeast of Paris. They announced: “We are both deeply cosscious-

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of the importance and significance' which clothe our meeting. We be-, lieve that the ancient hostility: must be ended forever and that; French and Gerrpans are summoned to live in harmony and work side by side. “We have the conviction that the glo’se cooperation of the Federal German Republic and of the French Republic is the foundation ' of all Amstructive effort in Eu-; rope. It is indispensable for the; ; world.” ■ r — The Army Way HUNTSVILLE. Ala. — CJPD — I ’! The Army custom is to welcome I ' an officer's bridle to a post by t '! riding the happy couple around > : the installation in a vehicle from the bridegroom's branch of serv-1 ice. Therefore, when the former. Elizabeth Danish Jabas arrived at the Ordinance Guided Missile s ; School here, she and her husband, i i Lt. Col. William B. Harding Jr., | made the traditional trip in a guided missile mobile launcher. | Asphalt has been used as a build- j ling material since at least 3200 i BC. i 4 A four-lane boulevard in Ber-| i lin is named Clayallee, after Gen.H I Lucius D. Clay, former U. S. mili- >' tary governor of Germany.

James Hoffa Slated For More Quizzing Justice Department Scored By Counsel WASHINGTON (UPD — The Justice Department was embroiled ;in an angry row today with the chief counsel of the Senate i Rackets Committee. I Simultaneously the committee scheduled additional hearings on the controversial Teamsters Union this afternoon with Teamsters I president James R, Hoffa slated Ito appear for more quizzing. | The counsel, Robert F, Kennedy, j touched off the dispute Saturday by charging the department with Idragging its feet on prosecuting! leases unearthed by the commit-1 I teo - i I Sunday night Asst. Atty. Gen.J 'Malcolm Anderson angrily denied; I thd eharge and termed Kennedy's; attack “destructive and rhischie-i I vous.” Surprised At Charge He voiced particular surprise! I the statement came "on the evej lof the presentation of two such | leases to the grand jury, especiallyj since on PTiday, prior to your iKennedy’s) press conference, you!

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

> were asked to be a witness in one |of these cases and declined for personal reasons.” Knnedy, reached by United Press International, denied he had been asked to be a witness in any such case and stuck by his. charge of foot-dragging. Sen. John L. McClellan (D-Ark.) chairman of the rackets group, said Kennedy was' speaking for himself and not members of the committee. The senator said he had refrained from criticizing the Justice Department and had not authorized his counsel to issue a criticism. Involve Perjury Anderson did not identify the two cases to be presented to a grand jury except to say they involved alleged perjury, before the rackets committee. A department [spokesman said the cases were I “ready to go” and would be submitted to a federal grand jury here this week. j Informed of Anderson’s reply, Kennedy said he was “glad” two leases were going to a gijand jury ibut added: “As of this time, despite 18 I months of hearings, nothing has I been done by the Justice Departj raent as far as any positive | action. . .I’m not going to stay I silent about that.” Andersdn/mbTsletter to KenI nedy, said 8 of 14 possible perjury

I cases referred to the department Iby the committee had been | dropped for lack of sufficient I evidence to convict and 6 still | were pending. Life Can Survive In Liquid Oxygen Feat Achieved By Japan Scientists By DELOS SMITH I’PI Science Editor NEW YORK (UPD — Life can survive a full day of being submerged in liquid oxygen. That news won’t excite you until you realize oxygen stops being a gas ' and becomes a liquid only when | its temperature is brought down to 362 degrees below zero. I The life which survived that I kind of super-deep, deep freze was two.varieties of insects. So far as is known, no crature has done it before — or can do it on jits own. Bringing life through such lan extreme ordeal was a scienj tific achievement which advances knowledge of the life processes. The scientists who achieved it Were Eizo Asahina and Kiyoshi Aoki of Hokkaido University. Sapporo, Japan. They proved by it

that if you can freeze the whole insects without freezing the interiors of their body cells, the insects will continue to live even in liquid oxygen. Application Questionable Whether that principle can be applied to life higher and more .complex than the larvae of the slug caterpillar and of a particular kind of butterfly remains to be seen. The most complex form of life — people — now can be reduced in temperature 30 or so degrees below normal in order to slow life processes for delicate surgery. Asahina and Aoki qtiick-froze their insects in a special refrigerator in which the temperature was 86 degrees below zero. They were stiff in 40 minutes but were kept in the cold box four hours. Then they were put into the liquid oxygen and after a full day were taken out and returned to the refrigerator for another fourhour period. After that they were permitted to thaw in room temperature. There were 20 slug caterpillar larvae, 10 in the cocoons into which they spin themselves, and 10 which had been removed, naked, from that protective covering. All the cocooned larvae revived, and so did nine of the naked ones. They were alive but their lives had been arrested at the larva stage, since none could be made to undergo the normal metamorphosis into the insect s adult form. Must Be Quick In other experiments, the scientists demonstrated the slug larvae couldn’t survive liquid oxygen if the preliminary quick-freeze was less than very quick. When they found out just how quick it had to be, they showed the sarhe principle worked in butterfly larvae. Presumably, they are now trying it in other and higher organisms; The explanation is that the individual body cell is the indispensable essence of life. Freeze it from the inside and its liquid content expands and bursts it, and it is destroyed. But dehydrate it and it can’t be frozen from the inside. When frozen from the outside it contracts but remains intact. The scientists figured a very quick-freeze would serve to dehydrate the cells The blood froze first, then the spaces between the cells which, now being dehydrated. were merely compressed and were able to expand and begin functioning again once they were | returned, by stages, to temperature. Minor League Playoffs American Association Charleston 8, Denver 6 (Charleston leads series 3-2). Minneapolis at Wichita, rain (Minneapolis leads series, 3-2). International League Toronto 6, Rochester 2 (Toronto wins series, 4-1) Columbus 9, Montreal 3 (Columbus leads series, 3-2) Major League Leaders National League Player & Club G. AB R. H. Pct. Ashburn, Phil. 141 570 87 195 .342 Musial, St. L. 128 444 62 150 .338 Mays, S. F. 143 562 111 188 .335 Aaron. Mil. 142 564 102 187 .332 Skinner, Pitts. 136 493 88 158 .320 American League Runnels, Bos. 135 517 90 165 .319 Cerv, K. C. 130 475 89 150 . 316 Williams, Bos. 118 377 72 119 .316 Power, Clev. 135 550 93 173 .315 Kuenn, Det. 129 521 68 164 .315 Home Runs National League— Banks, Cubs 46; Thomas, Pirates 35; Robinson. Redlegs 30; Mathews, Braves 30; Aaron, Braves 29. American League— Mantle, Yankees 40; Sievers, Senators 38; Colavito, Indians 37; Cerv, Athletics 36; Jensen, Red Sox 34. Runs Batted In National League— Banks, Cubs 123; Thomas, Pirates 108; H. Anderson, Phils 93; Cepeda, Giants 92; Mays, Giants 91. American League— Jensen, Red Sox 115; Colavito, Indians 105: Sievers, Senators 104; Cerv, Athletics 100; Berra, Yankees 89. Pitching National League— Spahn, Braves 20-10; Raydon, Pirates 8-4; Willey, Braves 9-5; Burdette, Braves 1710; Purkey, Redlegs 17-10. American League— Turley, Yankees 21-6; Hyde, Senators 10-3; McLish, Indians 15-7; Ford, 'Yankees 14-7; Delock, Red Sox 12-7. ' ' ■ ■- ■ " ■ 1 ' J , The National Cotton Council says more than 400 end uses for cotton have been developed in the last 10 years. Lit Leaguer 1 “We won't have this trouble much longer. I’d like to see him set his jaws around a football!”

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One of the new lockers installed this year at the Zion Lutheran school is shown here, being inspected by Miss Evelyn Nussbaum and Miss Norma Lee Von Stroh, teachers in the school, and the Rev. Edgar P. Schmidt, pastor of Zion Lutheran church and superintendent of the school.

Colts Score First Exhibition Victory By TIM MORIARTY United Press International Ray Brown, the hero of the 1958 Sugar Bowl game, hasn’t lost i his flare for the dramatic since l joining the pro football ranks. The rookie halfback from Mississippi intercepted a Charley Con-' erly pass in the fourth period and | dashed 66 yards for a touchdown that earned the Baltimore Colts a j 27-21 victory over the New York I Giants Sunday in a nationally televised exhibition game. It was the Colts’ first victory in five National Football League' tuneups and the Giants’ fourth | straight setback after an opening triumph. Brown joined the ~Colts last | month with excellent credentials, having figured in four touchdowns in quarterbacking Ole Miss to a I 39-7 victory over Texas in the Sugar Bowl game last New Year’s! Day. Because of his speed, the Greenville, Miss., youth was trans- i formed into a defensive halfback:

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MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1958

by Baltimore head coach Weeb Ewbank. In Sunday’s contest. Conerly and Don Heinrich each tossed scoring half but the Colts matched those half, bu the Colts matched those scores on a 63-yard run by Lenny Moore and a two- yard aerial from Unitas to end Ray Berry. The score was still tied, 14-14, in the fourth period when Baltimore struck for two touchdowns in less than two minutes. Halfback L. G. Dupre somersaulted over from the four-yard line at 0:38, then Brown tallied the clincher at 2:27. The Giants added their final T.D. minutes later on a pass from Conerly to Ken MacAfee. In other weekend games, the Chicago Bears ripped Cleveland, 42 - 31; Los Angeles edged San Francisco, 40-38; the Chicago Cardinals rolled to a 21-7 victory over Pittsburgh; Philadelphia turned back Detroit. 31-24, and Washington downed Green Bay, 23-14. Six of the nine football teams * that Dartmouth faces this fall were on the Big Green grid schedule' prior to 1960.