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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 9, 1950)
CLASSIFIED personal—Ellsworth, please return my socks. 13 WANTED—Graduate student in speech desires room and board in private home, or will move in with another graduate, or faculty member, Burton Filut, 1208 Beech (Side) Phone 5-6369. 13 GERMAN LESSONS— Conversa tion. Very low rates. Fast pro gress. Room 72, Barrister Inn. 15 FOR SALE—Smith-Corona silent portable typewriter. Phone 5-7800. . 12 WANTED—Model “A” in good condition. Call Ext. 388 McChes ney Hall. Ask for Phil Block. 12 nOR SALE—Dietzen slide rule leather case. Used one term. H. : J. Kaiser 4-2269 $15.00. 13 'OST—Glasses in tan case in vi cinity of campus in front of Johnson Hall. Dr. Ruhndorf in scribed on case. Phone Barbara Bennett Ext. 462. 12 >frash to Instruct Russian Literature Night classes in translated Rus an literature are being offered om 7 to 10 p. m. Tuesday nights . 203 Chapman under the instruc on of Victor C. Strash, assist •it professor of Slavic languages. Three credit hours are granted ' University students taking ie course. Sponsored by the Gene il Extension Division of the State aard of Higher Education, the ass is also open to Eugene towns ;ople. )R DEPENDABLE TRANSPORTATION— lSfUei£iC...4<Uf UNION PACIFIC 3 Trams to serve you fIREAMLINER "CITY OF PORTLAND" PORTLAND ROSE” "IDAHOAN” Choice of Pullman accommo dations; club and lounge cars; wonderful dining car meals; declining coach seats. Enjoy the beautiful autumn breather : s: vacation enroute at Sun Valley, owned and oper ated by Union Pacific. LOW FARES Let us help with your travel arrangemetits. GENERAL, AGENT 201 Ardel Offices 33 East 10th Ave. Phone 4-9353 union pacific railroad of thf daily streamliners Yanks Over 38th As Wohsan Close Compiled by John Barton (From the Wires of Associated Press) American tioops are pouring into Communist North Korea to day after General MacArthur's “final” order to the Korean Reds to surrender. South Korean Republic forces are already deep in side Red territory in heavy strength. United States forces crossed the 38th parallel late Saturday on the west side of the Korean peninsula. The first troops were members of the First Cavalry division. Twelve Infantry Divisions. . . . . . and overwhelming air and sea forces are at the command of Mac Arthur o help him back up his surrender demands. More than 40,000 men fighting under the United Nations flag have now crossed the 38th_ and more are on the way. The South Korean third division is within 10 miles of the east coast port of Wonsan. Surrounded Red Troops... . . . aie continuing to surrender in batches sou h of the parallel. The ,°tal of prisoners now exceeds 50,000—and more than 10,000 of these have come in with their hands up in the last two days. Reports from the northern front near Wonsan indicate the Reds are running shor of man power. More Billions For Europe... . . . ma ybe asked by the administration when Congress meets again eariy next year. Reports to this effect are becoming more numerous in Washington as Britain’s economic minister, Hugh Gaitskell, already in the capi al, and France’s Maurice Petsche, on his way, get ready to meet next week with U. S. Secretary of the Treasury Snyder. The money reportedly is being asked to set up a defense force against possible Russian aggression in Western Europe. State and defense de partment officials are rushing preparations for a series of high level meetings with European leaders on set ing up and equipping an inter national army powerful enough to stop the Reds. French Reds Are Changing... Y ’ their tactics for disrupting rearmament of France. The shift of policy is being called radical by some authorities. Up to now, the French Communists have been using any me hod—including sabotage—to slow shipments of American arms to France, as well as foul France’s own arms manufacture. The new policy has apparently been ordered by the Cominform because many previously pro-Red groups in France were becoming shocked at the methods employed by Communists there. The new plans must please t e freshmen, says the Cominform, so that they will toss in heir lot with Communism in France. Relief For War-Torn Korea..... ... is being planned by the United Nations this week. All organs of the U- N —the new Korean commission, the economic and social council, the agencies for health, feeding and technical assistance, and the U. N. s aff —are working on plans to coordinate help for Korea. This program was authorized by the U. N. assembly in its 47 to 5 vote Saturday. Right now, the primary cost of rehabilitating Korea is figured to be 34 million dollars—and hat figure is rising fast. What it will cost even tually is anyone’s guess. Overriding A U. N. Veto... . . . may become possible in the near future if a U. S. sponsored plan for emergency meetings of the general assembly is accepted by the political committee of the U. N. As things stand now, no action can be made by the U. N. if the se curity council is deadlocked by a veto. John Foster Dulles will open debate today before the political committee on the Acheson program. This plan calls for emergency sessions of the assembly if the security council is paralyzed. Wage Increasing Demands... . . . will be made soon when the powerful CIO United Steelworkers union meets with employers. Philip Murray, president of the union, says he wants a wage boost for his men. They are now averaging $1.70 an hour. He isn’t saying how much—just that raise* must be “very healthy and substantial.’’ The steelworkers’ contract says that new talks for wages start Nov. , but Murray asked that the date be advanced. Any change of wages m the steel industry is generally the go-ahead signal for changes in the rest of our national economy. Green may want to open new con tract talks before the scheduled date because: Wage And Price Stabilization... . . machinery is nearly set up in Washington—or so all signs indi cate today. But it may be weeks or months before the final gears for stopping the spiral of wage and price increases start to roll Dr. Alan Valentine, 49-year-old educator and business man has been appointed top man in the controls program by President Truman. He will go to work this week to start setting up the remainder of the Economic Stabilization Agency (ESA). The final action on building ceilings over prices and wages probably will be after the November 7 elections—or so say politically-minded Washingtonians. Canadian Army Officers And Men.. . ' ' ; WlU arnve at Fort Lewis, Wash., today as the advance party ox a large number of Canadian troops which will serve as a U K force The force is believed to be the first foreign military group ever to set up on a reservation operated by U. S. military personnel The exact strength of the Canadian force isn’t being disclosed, but it’s estimated to be about brigade strength. i' Oregana Photos. . . Oregana picture schedule: Monday: Delta Tan Delta. French Hall. Tuesday: Gamma Hall, Kap pa Sigma. Hometown News (Compiled from Oregon newspapers by Anne Goodman) Bend. . . Minor automobile accidents re sulted in busy garages in this area, due to heavy traffic by hunters. Clatskanie. . . More than 1000 fans, the most yet, watched Clatskanie Union high take a 12 to 0 beating from Rainier Union high in football Sept. 29. The game was also the occasion of a new football field dedication. “Cookie”, dog of Jewett A. Bush, placed best in all breeds at a recent dog show in Victoria, B. C. Grants Pass. . . “Effie”, seeing-eye dog of “Blind George” Spencer, newsstand oper ator, was shot through the neck by an unidentified hunter who thought the dog was a wolf. “Effie” is fight ing for life in a local animal his pital. La Grande. .. A second draft call summoned five more men from this city. They are Dale H. Courtney, Fred Wil liams, Max Moffitt, Velmer Dough erty, and Elizie Thompson. Lebanon. . . Arthur Turner will replace R. V. Cundiff as manager of three down town theatres. A 21-year-old father became the 15th case of poliomyelitis within the immediate city trading area. Kick Dewis and Lovern Root, high school seniors, won first and second place respectively in a news paper essav contest. Pendleton. . . A building plan which includes a a hope of getting a national guard armory for the city was revealed by Jack Duff, vice president of the an nual Happy Canyon pageant. Home and residential building is continuing at a high pace. A Sher wood Heights addition of 100 homes is now under construction. Seaside. .. Fifty deer were brought to local meat markets by last Thursday in one of the city’s most successful seasons. Most were killed in the Nnion park area, opened for the first time this year. First steps on a proposed river boulevard from First to Twelfth avenues will be taken soon when property owners will be asked to sign petitions. The Dalles... Dr. Gordon A. Sabine, dean of the Oregon school of journalism, spoke to Kiwanians Thursday on “Do Newspapers Tell the Truth?” Continental Grain Company re ported storage of more than one million bushels of wheat from this area last week. 'P/ggerV Guide Being Compiled The Pigger’s Guide, directory containing the names, phone numbers, and addresses of all students and faculty members, is now being compiled from re gistration cards, Editor Virginia Wright has reported. Address changes should be made today. REMEMBER WE STII.L SERVE FINE FOODS US AND FOUNTAIN SPECIALTIES RUSH INN ON THE CAMPUS llpffiERALD NIGHT STAFF Night Editor—Dick Thompson. Night Staff—A] Carr, Sella Wine berg, John Welser, Kathleen Stryk er, Margie Elliott. TODAY'S STAFF Desk Editor: Jim Knight Desk Staff: A1 Karr, Joan Miller Co-ed Housing Re-check Set All women students living off campus are asked to re-checlc their housing in the Director of Women’s Affairs Office immedi ately, according to Mrs. Edith Jacobs, women’s counselor. Reason for the re-check is that temporary permits were granted previously until Mrs. Golda P. Wickham, director of women’s affairs, could check them. The girls are being asked to come to' the office to get their permanent permits. Foreign Student Luncheons Begin The first of a series of foreign student luncheons sponsored by the campus YMCA will be held at noon Tuesday in the Student Union. Foreign students speaking at the luncheon will be Johannes Hock, from Austria, and Hiroyn Katayama, from Japan. Any interested students or facul ty members may make reserva tions at the YMCA office, 318 Student Union. Now Showing HE 1116 4 October 9-10 “CONVICTED” Glen Ford, Broderic Crawford “ROGUES OF SHERWOOD FOREST” liii> 8c.ALDER WAt 51022 October 9-10 “LOUISA” Ronald Reagan, Edmund Gwenn I AN E October 9 “TALL IN THE SADDLE” John Wayne “BRIGHT LEAF” Gary Cooper, Lauren Bacall M£ KINZIL SPRINGFIELD 7-2201 I__ Octooer 9-10 “WINCHESTER 73” James Stewart Shelley Winters October 9-10 WALT DISNEY’S ‘TREASURE ISLAND” with Bobby Driscoll CASCADE Drive In Theatre Springfield, Oregon October 9 ‘THE YOUNGER BROS,” Wayne Morris ■‘MOTHER WAS A FRESHMAN” Loretta Young