PAGE TWO Returning Steelmen Seek Peak Output PITTSBURGH (/P) Major steel firms counted between 50 and 75 per cent of the normal work force on the job yes terday in a race to hit peak production. By the end of the week virtually all of the 500,000 steel workers will he back on the job. More than 20,000 of 335,000 Hagerty Blasts Labor Leader WASHINGTON UPI White. House oress secretary James C.l Ilagerty called labor union leader Emil Matey a demagogue yester day for saying President Eisen bower naid off a political debt by getting a court order that halted the Steel strike, Mazev, secretary-treasurer of the United Auto Workers Union, shot back that Hagerty is ''a stooge of the steel companies, a lackey of big business" David J. McDonald, whose United Stelworker Union k at the role of the dispute, kept well clear of the row. "I've never had a fight with a president in my life and I'm little too old to begin to fight presidents now," McDonald told newsmen The Mazey-Hagertv exchange— at long distance—grew out of Ma7ev'k: speech Monday to the AFL-CIO Industrial Union De partment The UAW leader said hen "I charee President Eisenhower with a political payoff to steel com panies" in invoking the Taft-Hart ley law to end the 116-day steel shutdown at least for 80 days Mazey said the alleged payoff was in return for $214.500 he said was contributed by steel company of ficials to Eisenhower's 1956 re election campaign. French Santa Claus PARIS (/P) The first Santa Claus of the year has appeared in Paris. lie stands outside a big downtown department store re minchnil people it's 39 French shopping days to Christmas. If You Wish To Know What PROJECT JOEY IS COME TO NITTANY COUNCIL 8:30 WEDNESDAY NIGHT IN NITTANY 20 featuring the Trombone Sound of Monardo - Vivona with the Jay & Kai Jammin' With The J. W. Quartet 0 7:00 La Galleria workers idled in allied industries also have been called back, Railroads, hardest hit, expect to recall additional help dependent on the needs of the mills. Steel owned coal mines ako showed a pickup in production. Some steel firms already have found output exceeding expectations, three days after the Supreme Court ruling to up hold the Taft-Hartley injunc tion in the 116-day strike, Quick-heating electric furnaces yielded the first new steel. But de,pite industry's fast recovery, not mai production is expected to take from four to six weeks. An auto industry spokesman re ported that steel production re sumed in time to prevent any se rious disruption of car output by three automakers—Ford, Ameri can Motors and Studebaker-Pack ard However, the pinch of steel shortages may continue to af fect General Motors and Chry sler. GM will halt the last of its assembly lines today for lack of steel. Steel shortages have idled more than 210,000 auto workers most of them at GM. Soo Canal Locks SAULT STE. MARIE, Ont. (in —The IT S. Coast Guard says there ig a good possibility the U.S. locks of the 'co Canal will remain open past the Dec. 15 winter deadline to allow iron ore boats from Lake Superior to restock supplies at U.S. steel plants Unloading has been idled by the steel strike. • • I AIHIIJON STATE COktEDI : I DAYStFSE STO:A P. ' • • Aer' 01011 Perin State Jazz Club JAZZ WEEKEND" Friday, Nov. 13, 8:30.12:30 Saturday, Nov. 14, 9:00.1:00 Sunday, Nov, 15, 2:00.5:00 La Galleria 31.00--Non•Members *• • • JAZZ CLUB MEETING FRIDAY NIGHT THE OAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA presents 75c—Jan Club Members Riled Cranberry Growers Fear Loss WASHINGTON M—C ran berry producers, angry and dismayed, demanded yester day that the government move quickly to locate and get off the market the cranberries it says are risky to eat. The producers want to make sure housewives have no qualms about buying cranberries, tradi tional fare for Thanksgiving and Christmas. Otherwise, the grow ers and processors face heavy fi nancial losses at the peak of their Atomic Sub 'Triton' Joins Naval Fleet GROTON, Conn. (tP) The atomic-powered Triton, the might iest submarine known, joined Uncle Sam's Navy yesterday. She will operate as the eyes and ears of the fleet. The giant sub was commis sioned with an expression of "con gratulations and good luck" from President Eisenhower. Ss..e is the latest addition to the Navy's ever increasing nuclear underseas force. The Triton was an imposing sight as she sat in i,he sunlit Thames River, the crew of 173 officers and men on the aft deck during the 45-minute exercisees. The superlatives spoken at the noonday ceremonies only matched those of the 100-million-dollar 5900-ton ship, itself. The Triton is 447 feet long, the length of n early one and onehalf football fields, and 58 feet from the bot tom o fher keel to the top of her superstructure—about the height of a five-story building. CATIIAIJM NOW 2:06, 3:58, 5:50, 7:42, 9:34 JACKVIEBB IN • . • t Imo • A „ With DAVID NELSON NITTANY NOW—Doors Open 6:45 p.m. OfFT MW EINNIFIri. KIM= 4414,,r. -- ALEC amass THE 'DETECIRVE , Brod i* Wan 102111 Skein by IL IL 1311312M14 misim CCUMMAMCIVe Arsartftwola Fabulous Quintet Sound season, with the holidays just around the corner. There were sharp words for Secretary of Welfare Arthur S. Flemming, including a demand that he be fired. Flemming told about the offending berries at a news conference Monday. Flemming said parts of the 1959 cranberry crop from Oregon and Washington were found to be con taminated by a weed-killer— aminotriazole—that can produce cancer in rats. He did not say how much of the crop might be affected, or where it may be on sale. Flem ming added that there was no rea son to suspect the current crops Campus Restaurant 142 EAST COLLEGE AVE So Close ... So Convenient , ..... 1 . r T i, NOW - d M 1 PLAYING tAT t_t It i I f-ic-- .f -' Feat: 1:30, 3:30, 5:30, 7:30, 9:30 Archer Winston, Posh ~ :IA • " • o . one of ... joua Zinser, fewor AT "Surely ill one of the 1 motion pictures of our INGMAR time" BERGMAN'S ell _,/-- We hope this is an improvement over yesterday's reproduction of bill coleman's portrait of Janet Walsh • WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1959 from Wisconsin, New Jersey and Massachusetts. Then Flemming went on to advise that housewives be on the safe side by not buying cranberries unless they can de termine that the berries are not contaminated. That especially made the cranberry producers angry. Flemming mentioned one 1959 lot from the Oregon-Washington area as having been distributed before it was identified. Another lot, he said, was caught before it was distributed. He added that the 1958 crop from the same area also is being tested. -a- . DORMS -FRATERNITIES Save 25% on orders of ten or more hoagies delivered to you AD 8.8381 (delivery 9 to midnight) MORRELL'S 112 S. Frazier Si. -,rzq - 04-,4:144
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers