Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, November 12, 1951, Page Three, Image 3

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    World News Capsules-—
Faee-fo-face Talks Planned
jBy Truman, Churchill Soon
Compiled by Donna Lindbeck
(I'roni tin? Wire* of AKxoolati'U I'n-Mn unit fnltoil Pr?Nti)
President Truman lias agreed to the face-to-face talks rc
ted l>y Britain's Prime Minister Winston Churchill.
Word that Mr. 'I'ruman had agreed on a Washington meet
ing, probably sometime in January, came from Joseph Short,
I 'residcntial secretary.
I here’s no indicttlion that the Washington meeting will in
i hide any other leader, such a* 1‘rance’ Premier Pleven. Asked
if Uussia's Stalin might join, the talks, Short said: I’ve heard
nothing along that line.”
It is reported that Churchill will ask Mr. Truman for a
do er relationship between the I S. and Britain and more fre
<|itent meetings between Mr. Truman and Churchill. Churchill
is said to be prepared to demand a greater voice for Britain in
developing foreign policy involving the C.S. and Britain.
Churchill already has indicated that ids country will have to try to
get more financial aid from the United States.
Churchill Is expected to stress that some way must be found to
improve relations between Russia an dthe Western democracies. In the
past. Churchill ha: advocated a top level meeting of world leaders but
/president Truman has consistently opposed the idea of meeting Stalin
unle. i Stalin visits Washington.
Signs that the Allies had reached a point . . .
. . . where they can compromise no further marked the resumption of
the deadlocked Korean truce negotiations at Panmunjom Sunday by
the United Nations subcommittee.
An official spokesman hinted that allied negotiators may have made
their last concession toward a compromise on the unresolved problem
of where and when the Korean shooting shall stop, further compromise
might endanger the United Nations military advantage.
Allied troops beat off attacks . . .
... by five Communist companied in eastern Korea Sunday, while the
V.S. battleship New Jersey and the heavy cruiser Toledo shelled
enemy rallyurds near the east coast.
The Kth army said the heaviest action came northwest of the Punch
howl where three separate Red assaults of two-company strength
were thrown back by Allied defenders.
Another company-sized attack beginning an hour before midnight
kept up throughout the night with the Communists trying four times
to dent the U.N. lines. After a night of fighting the enemy withdrew to
the north.
An overwhelming victory for Pres. Peron . . .
...of Argentina in his bid for re-election was claimed by final edi
tion: of Buenos Aires' three afternoon newspapers Sunday. The first
5.075 of the country's 36,225 precincts gave Peron 918.103 votes to
421,697 for radical party candidate Ricardo Balbin, the President's
chief opponent.
The highest religious authority . . .
... of the Moslem world proclaimed a "Holy War" against the British
Sunday, as it did against the Jews in the Palestine fighting in 1948.
The council of Ulemas of A1 Azhar university called on Moslems
throughout the world "not to spare life or property" in support of
Kgypt’s attempts to drive out the British. The appeal for the "Holy
War" came as western powers announced pluns to proceed with a pact
to defend the Middle East with or without Hgyption aid. British troops
v^cre standing firm in the troubled Suez area.
♦ ♦ ♦
A party-splitting free-for-all . . .
... could develop if Gov. Earl Warren of California jumps into the
Republican presidential race.
Warren was Gov. Thomas E. Dewey's vice presidential running mate
in 1918 when President Truman scored his surprise victory. Warren’s
candidacy, therefore, would raise immediately the question whether
he would still support the policies of Dewey, follow an independent
course, or possibly support the program of Sen. Robert A. Taft of Ohio.
Warren, California's most popular vote-getter, said that he may an
nounce his decision this week. He had intended withholding it until
early 1952 but said that top-ranking republicans, whom he did not
name, are pressing him to act now.
Princess Elizabeth has broadcast a farewell . ..
.. . to Canada, after taging part in Armistice Day ceremonies, at St.
John’s New Foundland. Today she and the Duke of Edinburgh sail home
on the liner Empress of Scotland.
In her broadcast, Princess Elizabeth said it was not easy to leave a
country which, she said, had become a second home to her in the five
week royal tour. She paid special tribute to all Canadian children. She
said: "For as long as I live, I shall remember and cherish the greetings
which came to us from these young people.”
Math Seminar Set By Oregon, OSC
Mathematics students and fac
ulty members of the University of
Oregon and Oregon State college
will hold a joint seminar Tuesday
on the campus.
Paul Civin, associate professor
of mathematics, will talk to the
group on “Heal Orthogonal Sys
4ems which are Multiplicatively
Closed.”
The meeting, which will begin at
■1 p.m. in Room 256, Emerald hall,
wiill be open to the public.
A person cannot live on a diet
of milk alone. Although milk
comes nearer than any other single
food to affording all the essentials
of a complete diet, it is defiicent in
iron, copper and mangafiese,' as
well as in Vitamin A and D.
Jluie*U*Uf. On
...On KWAX
MONDAY
5:00 Plano Moods
5:15 Guest Star
5:30 News
5:15 Sports Sews
0:00 Tallin Hopping
6:15 Music in the Air
6:30 Lecture Series
6:45 Kandy Brooks Shot*
7:00 Jazz Internationale
7:30 Music from Villard
7:45 Four for a Quarter
8:00 World In Review
8:15 Campus Recital
8:45 University News
9:00 Serenade to the Student
10:00 Anything (joes
10:50 News
10:55 Tune to Say Goodnight
11:00 Sign Off
Theatre Selects
Fourth Play
At the University theater ex
ecutive board meeting this week,
“Second Man" by S. N. Berman
v/as chosen to be the fouth produc
tion this year.
Karl Harshbarger was elected to
replace Sue Madsen as treshman
representative on the board. Miss
Madsen was elected to that office
last year, but recently resigned.
Co-rec Night Attended
By Approximately 100
Approximately 100 persons at
tended the Co-rec night Friday in
Gerlinger hall, according to Belle
Doris Russell, co-chairman.
Students attending participated
in volleyball, shuffleboard, swim
ming, square dancing, badminton j
; and pingpong. The is no admission ;
I charge for Co-rec nights. i
CAMPUS CALENDAR
MONDAY
Noon HC Publicity Comm
110 SIT
4:00 Heads of Houses 315 SC
Hemg Dance Tickets
110 Ml
7:00 Co-op Council 111 SC
7:15 Sigma XI Dads Rm SC
7:30 IV'CF 112 SC
8:30 Phi Mu Alpha 334 SC
University Theater
To Hold Open House
Sunday, Nov. 18 at 6 p.m., the
University theater will hold open
house in 102 Villard. The open
house will be especially for new
students interested in the theater.
Refreshments and entertainment
will be provided. The program will
be over in time for freshman to
return to their dormitories for
closing hours. The party will con
tinue for those able to remain.
Campus Interviews on Cigarette Tests
No. 28...
THE OVENBIRD
Xast Grand Master of the Royal Order of
Gourmets and Raconteurs—our outspoken
friend knows how to find the proof of the
pudding. Especially such a thing as cigarette
mildness! A “quick puff” and a “single sniff”
left him hungry for facts. Smokers everywhere
have tried the same tests and discovered the one
true test of cigarette mildness!
It's the sensible test. . . the 30-Day Camel
Mildness Test, which simply asks you to try
Camels as your steady smoke, on a day-after-day,
pack-after-pack basis. No snap judgments. Once
you’ve tried Camels for 30 days in your “T-Zone”
(T for Throat, T for Taste), you’ll see why ...
CAVOWE. Cji\i KVXTX
After all the Mildness Tests
Camel leads all other brands bybi/Zions