Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 7, 1950)
jyj Set to Consider jCFuna Intervention Compiled by John Barton From the Wires of Associated Press ted Nations Security Council will meet today to con ■ tervention of Communist China. The meeting was re ^•'"mediately after General MacArthur reported to the JthaTChinese Reds are fighting against U. N. forces in " ntjl tociay for the meeting was asked so that delegates have time to consult, considering the seriousness of the ion. Arthur's Charges... Chinese Red intervention were presented to the council 8i>°d legate Warren Austin. The fact that Red China is in the S 6e than token force has been thoroughly confirmed, Mac m°(i He listed the individual Chinese units, both air and I which have been encountered by U. N. forces in Korea in the days and weeks. ident Truman Phoned. . . Secretary of State Dean Acheson yesterday and had a long dth the state department boss on the seriousness of the present \ situation. Truman, it is reliably said, is “very deeply con „ over the crisis in Asia. White House press agent Charles ays the President has been well briefed on what is going on China Will Be Told... 0 stop sending troops into Korea or it will face destruction of eat Suiho Dam, major source of power for China. That was the in Washington yesterday, not official, but again reliable. The aentioned is on the Yalu river on the Korea-Manchuria border. tinese Withdrawal Rumor... which circulated around the United States yesterday on some services is thought by now to be false. The rumor said that liina was pulling its forces out of the Korean conflict in a hurry, ighth army headquarters in Seoul says the Reds are still shoot-1 d there has been absolutely NO indication of ANY withdrawal. d Lines in Korea... ire still holding firm today. Chinese Commies made an attack Monday morning which grabbed small gains, but the ground taken by U. N. forces at all points during the day. A few Rus ade fighter planes are drifting around, but there is no indica e Reds are going to make any major advances southward in In the northeast sector, South Koreans are still creeping for or the only gains on the Allied side. } Reports of China's. . . warlike intentions are kicking around Hong Kong, and the market there is getting sensitive to the threat of a general war. Hong Kong, British outpost in China, would probably first to fall if such a conflict did spread from Korea. Value of lerican dollar in the colony jumped rapidly yesterday. n's Soviet Zone. . . ewspapers yester day did a great job in headlining the Chinese 1 situation. Such headlines as “China Decided on Self-Defense,” Threats Against China,” and so on blackened Eastern Berlin in Has Admitted... rat their atomic scientist, Bruno Pontecorvo, has gone to Rus t British spokesmen say, so far as they know, he took no docu with him. But a marv like Pontecorvo, outstanding authority hydrogen bomb, can carry a lot of information in his head, okesmen say they aren’t absolutely sure where he is, but all i°ns point toward his being in Russia. n s Labor Government. . . fathered an important storm yesterday by defeating an op motion of censure on its housing program by 12 votes. That’s ' vo*;e *n Commons since the general election last February. °r party won a narrow majority in Commons then. icKtor Would-Be Assassin. . . oiiazo, Puerto Rico nationalist held for murder in Wash Wl be appointed by the federal district court there. Collazo companion Griselio Torresola, charged on Blair house last J0 admitted attempt to kill President Truman. A White House ie<f in the gun battle which followed. Torresola was [he President... ibilitv”^ declared the u- S. will never again “run out on its •ion f or tne Preservation of world peace. Truman made the tion m an informal conversation preceeding a luncheon address w wjuvczaanuu preceeuing a luncneoii auuicaa to naT-’ ^° ’ home town. He referred to the 11. S. refusal 1 sairiF lci^ate tn the League of Nations. We can’t do it this • Said> and we aren’t going to. IS® Pac'f‘c Fleet. the nexiT1 ^orean war and will enter Pacific coast porl itine rec da^s’ according to the navy. The ships are bac ; Helena°n ition!ng- They include the aircraft carrier Boxe ter win fnd Toledo and destroyers and destroyer escort enter San Francisco’s Golden Gate Sunday. abor and estiil'negoy ^ Steel. . . 11 Section f°r new wa^e contracts in Pittsburgh. They eaders p0i|Vffation tomorrow and then resume talks for wh ail Wealthy” increases in pay. Blue,Raggozinno To Play Leads Lead roles In “Captain John and the Golden Locket,” a Radio Work shop presentation to be broadcast Thursday, will be played by Jim Blue, as Bigsby, and Ed Raggo zinno, as the "Captain.” Supporting parts as determined by tryouts Friday will be played by Janet Harris, Clifton Cole, Diane Dunn, Evelyn Hodnett, Pierre Rasquio, Bunnie Philbrick, and Lois Williams. More students are needed to work on music and sound for the show, according to Burton Filut, director. Anyone interested may inquire from 3 to 5 p.m. and from 7 to 9 a.m. today at the Univer sity studios, Villard. Scholarship Open To Women Grads Graduate women students or those who will graduate this year are eligible to apply for the Ame lia Earhart scholarship, accord ing to an announcement by the Office of Student Affairs. The scholarship, given to a woman for graduate study in en gineering with special interest in aeronautics, amounts to $100. Zonta International, an organi zation of executive and profession al women, is offering the award. Further information about appli cations may be obtained in the Office of the Director of Women's Affairs in Emerald Hall. Most girls seem to prefer learn ing popularity by male. HAND DIPPED Chocolates & Fudge Made in Eugene SUGAR PLUM 63 E. Broadway Tom Tom the farmer’s son, Thinks pigging’s lots of fun. He’ll buy his “Guide” and then decide That life has just begun. STUDENT DIRECTORY ON SALE SOON—40c Watch for date! m .. "■ Campus Interviews on Cigarette Tests Number 5...THE GNU “I gnu the answers.. .but I wasn’t talking!" J Tjie debating team couldn’t make much use of this non-talkative baby... but one look at his "literary leanings” tells you that tests don’t buffalo him. ’Specially those tricky cigarette tests! As a smoker, you probably know, too, that one puff or one sniff— or a mere one-inhale comparison can’t prove very much about a cigarette! Why not make the sensible test—the 30-Day Camel Mildness Test. You judge Camel mildness and flavor in your own "T-Zone” (T for Throat, T for Taste) ... for 30 days. Yes, test Camels as a steady smoke and you’ll see why... More People Smoke Camels than any other cigarette!