Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, May 08, 1952, Page Six, Image 6

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    Campus Clean-up Map
Gus Sea Food
■ * -
Florence Oregon
1 Located on Highway 101 just in town
2 another across from the postoffice
Fresh crabs
Fresh fish
A good place to stop on those
weekends at the coast
♦ ♦ ♦
WALT PO0RMAN, Manager
Box 1045
Phone 287W
All-campus Cleanup
Scheduled for Today
(Continued from page one)
Ross hall, section 13; Pi Beta Phi,
Phi Delta Theta, and Minturti hall,
section 14; Carson 5, and Phi Gam
ma Delta, sections 15 and 21; Gam
ma Phi Beta and French hall, sec
tion 16; Zeta Tau Alpha, Sigma
Chi, and Omega hall, section 17;
Highland House, Gamma hall, and
Stitzer hall section 18; University
House, Zeta hall, and Alpha hall,
section 19.
Carson 3, Chi Psi, and Cherney
hall, section 20; Alpha Phi, and
Phi Kappa Psi, section 22; Sigma
Kappa, Sederstrom hall, and Kap
pa Sigma, section 23; Ann Judson
House, and Pi Kappa Phi, section
24; Alpha Delta Pi, and Beta Theta
Pi, section 25; Hendricks 3 and
Sigma Phi Epsilon, section 26;
Hendricks 3 and Sigma Phi Epsilon,
section 26; Hendricks 1 and 2, Hun
ter hall, and Lambda Chi Alpha,
section 27; and Carson 1 and
Campbell Club section 28.
Section 29 on the map will not
be used this year.
Float Representatives
There will be a meeting of house
float parade representatives at 4
o.m. (DST) today in the Student
Union, Norma Hultgren, co-chair
man of the Junior Weekend float
parade, has announced.
School of Dance
July 14 - August 24, 1952
Study with: Doris Humphrey,
Louis Horst, Martha Graham,
Jose Limon, William Bales,
Sophie Maslow, Jane Dudley,
and other noted dancers...
Certificate and academic credit
available. Co-directors: Ruth
Bloomer, Martha Hill
For details wrrite: Box 28
School of the Dance,
Connecticut College
New London, Connecticut
World News Capsules ——— *
Red 'Forced Repatriation' Terms
Rejected by Truman; Lists 3 Points
Compiled by Mary Ann Mov/ery
(From the wires of the United Press)
President Truman Wednesday flatly rejected a Communist
demand for “forced repatriation” of Allied-held prisoners of
war in Korea. He said this country unqualifiedly supports the
armistice proposal submitted by (ien. Matthew B. Ividpway.
“We will not buy an armistice by turning- over human beings
for slaughter or slavery,” Mr. Truman said.
The president listed the three points proposed by Ridgway:
1. “That there shall not be a forced repatriation of prisoners
of war—as the Communists have insisted.”
2. “That the United Nations command will not insjst on pro
hibiting reconstruction or rehabiliation of airfields.”
3. “That the neutral nations supervisory commission should
comprise representatives of four countries; Poland and C zcclio
slovakia, chosen by the Communists, Sweden and Switzerland
chosen by the United Nations command.”
The president said these three points had to be accepted as a whole
if the Communists expect to reach an armistice agreement with this
country.
Atomic scientists set off ...
...history’s 31st nuclear explosion at 5:15 a.m. (PDTJ Wednesday
with the most brilliant flash seen at the Nevada proving ground.
The blast as seen from Las Vegas was 12 times as wide at the base
as any previous flash witnessed by unofficial roof top watchers. It
was three times as wide as the final flash in the January-! ebruaiy,
1951, series of tests at the proving grounds.
Senator Estes Kefauver suffered ...
his first defeat in a presidential primary Tuesday, losing to
Senator Richard B. Russell in the Florida primary, as Senator Robert
A. Taft claimed all of Ohio’s 56 Republican delegates in a “tremendous
landslide victory.”
Returns from 345 of Florida’s 683 precincts gave Russell 261,880
votes to 242, 574 for Kefauver. However, the stringbean Tennesseean
apparently prevented Russell from winning the decisive victory which
the Georgian's supporters said was needed to win non-Southern sup
port at the Democratic national convention.
The civil aeronautics ...
administration charged that North Continents airlines required
pilot Lewis R. Powell to fly 16 hours out of 24 just prior to the crash
of the non-scheduled C-46 airliner that killed 29 persons near Los
Angeles April 18.
The charge was among a stack of complaints against Robin Airlines,
Inc., flying as North Continent airlines. The complaints alleged nine
violations of CAA regulations.
The American Air Force command ...
.. .in Europe has ordered drastic slashes in flying time for planes
of all types as the result of the oil strike in the United States, it was
disclosed Wednesday. Gasoline-consuming formation exercises have
been eliminated. All non-essential transport and courier flights have
been suspended. Flying time and combat training generally have been
cut. lx ■
Communications over the Santa Fe railway ...
system were disrupted Wednesday when two main Western Union
cables were cut. The severed cables also affected fire and burglar
alarms in the Kansas capital city. The cables were cut just two days
after supervisory employees opened the strikebound Western Union
office in Topeka and in five other Kansas cities.
Government officials and mediators ...
worked Wednesday to bring about settlements in oil and tele
graph strikes and in a long-standing rail labor dispute.
The striking oil workers announced agreement with the defense de
partment on ways of getting oil products to the armed forces.
G. A. Knight, president of the oil workers international union (CIO)
announced agreement had been reached with the defense department
on “procedures to keep oil products going to the armed services.
Some 1000 Greyhound busline drivers ...
and other employees in Seattle were set to strike at midnight
Wednesday unless bargaining sessions during the day were successful.
The strike would be called as scheduled unless the company agreed
to union demands for a five-day week, president R. E. Jensen of motor
coach employees union 1384, said.
♦
A senate elections subcommittee ...
... voted Wednesday to begin public hearings Monday on the resolu
tions of Senator William Benton (D-Conn.) calling for the ouster of
Senator Joseph R. McCarthy (R. Wis.).
Chairman Guy M. Gillette (D-Ia.) said the first specific Benton
charge against McCarthy to be heard “will involve the Lustrom case.’'
McCarthy received a fee of $10,000 in 1948 for writing a housing article
for a pamphlet published by Lustron Corp., now-defunct.
♦ ♦ ♦
General Dwight Eisenhower will answer...
... questions on “all essential issues” of the presidential campaign
at a press conference in Abilene, Kansas, July 5, Senator Henry Cabot
Lodge, Jr., said in Seattle Tuesday. The Massachusetts Republican,
chairman of the national Eisenhower-for-president committee, spoke
at a special dinner for Eisenhower supporters. “Eisenhower should’be
out of uniform June 3 and in July he will answer all questions except
the trick one,” Lodge said.