Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 25, 1951)
"World News Capsules—-— Reds Bargaining for Halt at M Parallel as Truce Talks Commence Compiled by Theda Jack From Associated Press and United Press Hire T..S. troops built a tent city yesterday fur today's reopening of truce talks with a speed that left Communist onlookers agape. Resumption of the talks at 11 a.in. today (6 p.m. PST) was announced following Communist ratification of the conference “ground rules." Less than an hour later, U.S. troop* arrived in a 22-vehicle convoy. Pirst business on the conference agenda will be the location of a cease fire line and buffer zone across Korea—the same Problem that deadlocked 22 consecutive meetings before the truce talks were suspended Alt. 23, two months and three days ago. The Communists want the line to be along the 38th parallel, pre-war frontier between North and South Korea. The U.N. command .says the line must be along the present battlcfront, at some place 45 miles north of the parallel. 'The A.E.C. held a dress rehearsal... .. . yesterday of an atornic-bomb drop from the air. A half dozen military aircraft, believed to be from the air force's special weapons command ut Kirtland Field, New Mexico, flew high over Las Vegas, and hovered briefly over the A.E.C.'s Frenchman Flat testing area. Their appearance was followed by a funnel-shaped blue cloud in the direction of the test site. The cloud rose rapidly and dissipated quickly. Observers could see no flash and feel no rumble such as usually has been associated with atomic tests. The Commission would give no further information on what took place In the “dress rehearsal". Should Winnie come back again? .. . Thin in the real inaue in today’s British elections, whether the average BritUahcr realizes it or not. The political orations are over and the voters have been harangued and instructed on such matters as the Iranian crisis, low-cost housing, trouble ui Suez, the cost of living and how much candy ought to be included bv.iach person’s ration. But the real issue is to vote for or against the man with the big cigar. Happy Birthday!,.. ... The United Nations started its seventh year yesterday with world-wide celebrations of its birth, while its secretariat and delega tions converged on Paris in preparation for what could be its most mo mentoos general asaembly session. Secretary-General Trygve Lie declared in a U N. Bay message that although the ’’fear of a world war worse than any other in history’’ dominates the world scene, the U.N. still can be proud of its work dur ing the last six years. Conference scheduled between ... ...Secretary of State Dean Acheson and Iranian Premier Moham med Mossadegh. Acheson and Mossadegh met yesterday as American officials saw grounds for new hope that the United States, acting as middleman could get the stalled British-Iranian oil negotiations go fhg again. I .S. officials are gambling that British and Iranian tempers have cooled enough to make possible “reasonable" oil negotiations for the first time since direct talks were broken off last month in Tehran. ♦ ♦ ♦ Egyptian coastal batteries opened fire ... ... yesterday on an Israeli patrol vessel near Egyptian-occupied Gaza in southern Palestine and forced it to withdraw. The shooting erupted about 125 miles northeast of the tense Suez. Canal zone and brought new anxiety to the troubled Middle East. In Cairo, the Egyptian government banned all anti-British demon strations throughout the land and threatened drastic penalties for any recurrence of the bloody battles yesterday between demonstrators and police. Soviet announces it is ready . . . ... to re-examine with the United States all important unsettled in ternational questions. Russia at the same time announced it will send a full delegation of top experts to the United Nations General Assembly in Paris. All per sonnel of the delegation were not named, but eleven advisors of diplo matic rank and 21 secretarial staffers applied for visas at the French Embassy. Izve.stia, the. Soviet government newspaper, reviewed the U.N.’s record on its sixth anniversary today with an accusation that the United States has transformed the “universal organization of equal nations from an instrument of peace into an instrument of aggressive war.” Your paycheck is going to be ... ... smaller next month unless you can wangle a raise in the mean time. First effects of the increase in income taxes under the new law will felt then by all wage and salary earners whose pay is subject to Cl federal withholding levy. jOstrom Talks on Program Kellogg Foundation Gives Oregon Educational Grant By Leonard Calvert The University of Oregon has been granted $265,000 by the Kel logg Foundation to improve the caliber of persons who are em ployed as school administrators, according to Lyle Nelson, director of public services. This is the larg est single educational giant ever received by Oregon. The University was selected for the grant by the foundation «om inittce because they felt that Ore gon had the strongest program in the area of education and because they felt that Oregon had closer relations between the school of education and the social sciences than any other west coast school. Nelson said. There arc only six such centers in the United States, among them Harvard, Columbia, Texas, and Ohio State. Oregon is the only; school on the west coast to receive a grant, Nelson stated. Five-Year Program The aim of the program la to improve the training of the school administrators and to give the i school administrators a better un derstanding of problems within the community. The program, which will last five years, covers Oregon, Washington, Idaho, and Montana. The departments of anthropol-! ' ogy, political scicne, sociology, and j economics arc cooperating with ’ the school of education in putting the program to work. Dean P. B. Johnson, of the school of education was respon sible for developing the program, and the grant was made possible I by him. Nelson stated. The Kellogg grant and the pro gram it is sponsoring was the subject of a talk given by Vincent I Ostrom, assistant professor of po | litical science, to the Faculty So I cial Science club meeting Tuesday night. His topic was "A Regional Study Program at the University of Oregon". At the University of Oregon, Os trom stated, the potentialities for 1 a new program in the social sci i ences exist in the problems of the : region in which we live and work. : Here in the Pacific Northwest we I have a superb social laboratory in which to study human society as it unfolds in the development of the vast resources and the unique physiographic provinces of this re gion, Ostrom stated. Kcgion Setup Explained Within the regional setting it is possible to see human life in all its interrelations as man comes to grasp with the task of building the necessary social agencies to sus tain his needs and aspirations from the materials at hand. .The region provides a kind of social micro J 4-9311 Now I’lnying “Texas Carnival’’ Esther Williams & Howard Keel also “Bannerline” Sally Forrest & Lionel Barrymore Note: Heilig Theatre will be closed afternoons only, Monday thru Friday, for an indefinite period for repairs. Box office will be open at 0:00 for evening showings only. Sat. ll:45-Sun day 12:45. LAN E1 0431 Now Playing “Smugglers Island” Jeff Chandler & Evelyn Keyes also “Half Angel” Loretta Young & Joseph Cotten MAYFLOWER ITI ll.k SM.MR DIAl 5-1022 Now Playing "Great Caruso” Mario Lanza & Ann Blyth count where the dynamics of the physical environment, the flora, fauna and human life, can be seen in all their interrelations and inter actions, Ostrom said. As a microcosm, the region can also serve as a referent in which specialized scientific investigators can make new increments to our scientific knowledge while at the same time relating each further! achievement in specialized know]- I edge and experience shared by ! each other, Ostrom stated. For the people of the Pacific Northwest and for the large ma jority of our students, this region is more than a midrocosm; it is the focus from which they look out to !-ee the wide world. The region is their starting point, Ostrom added. Link Between I'O, Citizens One of the important aspects of a regional studies program is the link that it would forge between the university and the citizens and public agencies in our state and in the region. The future of Ore gon and the Paific Northwest de pends very immediately upon the effects of policies pursued by fed eral, state, and local agencies in the resolution of public problems. A few years ago, the University of Oregon, sponsored a common wealth service council which spon sored commonwealth conferences which considered state problems and published a paper called the | '‘Commonwealth Review,” which has since ceased to exist. Under the commonwealth service council, a Bureau of Municipal Research and Service, a Bureau of Business Research and Service, and a Bu reau of Education Research and Service were created. These Bu reaus still exist, but more or le .a independently, Ostrom said. More recent developments in the field of regional studies include the Kellogg foundation program, which is considered with the prob lems of school administration as they grow out of the problems of the community-region. Regional Studies Center Asked Ostrom finished his speech by saying. “For the present it seems to me that the Rgional Studies committee and social science fac ulty members must consider: 1) The development of a broadly in terrelated program which recog nizes in a regional studies program important new potentialities for the social sciences in the univer sity and-the community; <2) The development of some organization al arrangements such as a regional studies center which will stimu late greater cooperation in the University and facilitate easier communication with people be yond the campus; i3i how. to se cure a few hundred thousand dol lars for use to translate some of our potential to action.” Sugar Plum (New Location) Open 9 a.m. - 11 p.m. Mon. - Sat. Homemade Candy — frc-sh daily, Magazines and sandwiehe* 13th & Hilyard Ph. 5-8356 A TROY ROBE MAKES FOOTBALL GAMES TWICE TBS JFVNt 4 9 $6.95 to $12.00 Troy Robes are treated with duPont '• Aridex, renewable { . water-repellent. fto shivering allowed, when you tuck a warm lroyKooe around you. Sporty^plaids^generous size—fringedends —10C% wool—deep-napped fabric! What morejcould a robe have? Let'predominating colors of Troy Plaids proclaim your team loyalty. Take a Troy Robe'with you in the car and on all kinds! ’ of trips; it’s “so.nice to have around you”