Chiang Kai-Shek Seems Confident of US Help By KKKI) HAMPSON Of the Associated Prc*» TAIPEI, Formosa (APi Pres ident Chlang Kai-Shek Tui-day appeared confident of US help in any new Far Kant crisis involv ing his offshore iaianda of Que Itioy and the Matsus. In an exctuaive Interview, the 68-year-old Natlonaliat leader gave the impression that he felt the United States in the Tachen withdrawal got more solidly be hind him in hia battle with the Reds than ever before. Joint Defense Aaked about any agreement with the United Staten for Joint defense of Quemoy, across the Formoat Strait, and the Matsus. Neuberger Says 'Oreg.' Preferred WASHINGTON (AP)—Sen. Kiehnrd Neubrrgcr (D-Ore) proponed Monday that date agencies and newspaper* Join f'drral agencies In abbreviat ing the state's name as “Oreg.” He said that since the stale was V6 year* old. It was time that every body got together on the matter. "Oreg.” is preferred by Dr. Meredith F. Burrlll, director of the I'S Division of Geog raphy, as well as by the Koard of Geographic Names and the Government Printing Office, Neuberger said. Professor Leaves To Serve on Panel R. T. Elllckson, head of the physics department, will leave for Washington. D.C.. Friday to serve on a screening panel for the National Science foundation Grate fellowships. The screening will last three days, Feb. 22, 23 and 24, after which the panels will make rec ommendations to the Foundation. On his trip home Ellickaon plans to 'lop off at the West inghouse research laboratory in Pittsburgh. Tenn. He expects to ar rive hack in Eugene on Feb. 27. 100 miles northwest of Formosa, Chiang replied: “The matter is very clear to us and to the Communists." This was much the same reply he gave at a news conference Sunday. But he went a little further and swept aside objec tions that a firm commitment would tie down in Formosa’s waters Important elements of the US 7th Fleet. They’ll Hold Off As to that, Chiang said the Nationalist garrison on Qnemoy and his air force could hold off the first onslaught until refh forcements arrived. Chlang also said the United States would help defend Nan ehishan, 120 miles north of For mosa, if it decided the island was vital. It is believed US military quar ters consider Nanchisan, like the Tachens, too exposed to Red air power, NaneliWan Vital Chiang considers Nanchisan vital to the defense of Formosa. There have been reports part of the trained guerrillas brought out of the Tachens last week were sent to reinforce the is land. Chiang replied with “bo" when asked if he the show of power by Fleet last week would hold back the Communists. Chiang said in reply to another attention he was certain a na tionalist invasion of the main land was coming but is depended on conditions Inside China and the international situation. 1. a firm thought the 7th 6:00 Sign On 6:03 Dinner Hour Serenade 6:45 News Till Now 7:00 Chicago Roundtable 7:30 Radio Nederland 7:45 UN Story 8:00 Campus Review 8:30 Radio Workshop Players 9:00 Kwaxworks 11:00 Sign Off Airman Survives! Crash and Cold WINNIPEG (AP)—An airman testing survival equipment in a B47 Stratojet bomber that craahed last Saturday was found Tuesday after surviving four days in the sub-zero cold and anew of the Saskatchewan bush country. Capt. Thomas L. Pittman, 34. waa spotted by rescuers and picked up by helicopter. A Royal Canadian Air Force spokesman here said Pittman i suffered a broken leg and frost bite. He parachuted from the1 plane which crashed after a high altitude explosion. Earlier Tuesday a reporter at the crash scene said the body of i an Air Force officer had been i found in the wreckage of the j J bomber. The fourth man aboard i the plane was Maj. Robert Dow I dy, 31-year-old navigator. Two other men, Lt. Col. Ken- ; noth McGrow, 33. the pilot, and Capt. Lester E. Epton, 33. co-: pilot, were rescued over the ; weekend. They said they were1 hurled from the plane unconse- i ioue and came to while falling. { All four men were based at Riv erside, Calif. A US Air Force official at The Pass. Mann., said a helicopter previously had searched the area without sighting Pittman. In the interval, Pittman man ! aged to drape his orange and white striped parachute over 1 some brush. The parachute was spotted Tuesday and the helicop , ter made the rescue. Pittman had been marooned in the wilderness in weather that in cluded 20 degrees below zero temperatures, freezing winds and a snow’ storm. SocialCalendar Wednesday Desserts Sigma Nu-Delta Delta Delta Sigma Chi-Kappa Alpha Theta Delta Tau Delta-Alpha Delta Pi Friday Firesides Tau Kappa Fpsilon United Independent Students Democrats Patch Up Differences; Plan 7956 Campaign Strategy WASHINGTON (AIM Feud ing Democrats buried the hatchet Tuesday in an unusual party har mony move. Frank E. McKinney, former Democratic national chairman under President Truman, accept ed an invitation along with other ex-chiefs of the party to serve on a 1950 campaign strategy com mittee set up by national chair man Paul M. Butler. McKinney’s statement that he would "gladly" join this group apparently marked the end of an Indiana Democratic feud in which Butler defeated McKinney's forces to become that state's na tional committeeman and won election as national chairman over the opposition of McKinney and some other close friends of Truman. In an unusual harmony at tempt, Butler wrote all the liv The U.S. Olympic Teams need your support i VTwemostbe there to ml Send a contribution to U.S. OLYMPIC TEAM FUND 540 North Michigan Ave., Chicago 11, Illinois ing former Democratic chairmen on Feb 8 inviting them to serve as advisers to him for a "mutual exchange of ideas ... in laying the groundwork for the national convention and the campaign of 1956.” Democratic National Commit tee headquarters reported that all the former chairmen except former Secretary of State Cor dell Hull, who is ill, former Atty. Gen. J. Howard McGrath, and McKinney, Indianapolis banker, had accepted officially. McGrath told a reporter he would be “happy to serve” but just had neglected notifying the committee. Others who accepted designs-1 lion to the strategy group in- ' eluded Homer Cummings, former attorney general; James A. Far ley, former postmaster general; Frank O. Walker, New York banker; William M. Boyle Jr., who served under Truman, and Stephen A. Mitchell, who was succeeded as chairman by But ler. WANTED! lost? found? selling? in the EMERALD BOB'S SUPERETTE Corner 13th and Patterson Sts. NOW OPEN *Jj Days a Week! 9:00 A.M. — 10 P.M. Come In and See Us Today! U. S. Appeals Court Rules Against NLRB WASHINGTON (API The US Court of Appeals ruled Tuesday the National Labor Relations Board cannot take away a un ion’s privileges to use. the board’s services on grounds a union of ficial has filed a false non-com munist oath and its falsity is known to the union's members. Such action, the court held, is outside the powers granted to the board by Congress. Immediately after Gold was re elected by the union in May, a month after his conviction, he submitted a non-communist oath to the NLRB in accordance with the annual filing requirement under the Taft-Hartley Act. The NLRB rejected Gold’s 1954 affidavit because of his convic tion, and held the union was not in compliance with the T-H law. The court. said the board drew a conclusion from the fact of Gold’s conviction that the union was aware of the falsity of his 1954 affidavit. The court said the "absence of authority in the board to deprive the union of its compliance stat us .. . cannot be supplied by membership awareness of the falsity of the affidavit,” and added: "Congress explicitly provided a criminal penalty for false non I communist affidavits. It is as sumed that this threat of crim inal sanctions would be a suf ficient deterrent to false swear I ing by union officials. If these j sanctions have proved insuffi cient, it is for Congress, not the board, to provide new ones.” Oi i/cr uone A BENEFITING • Mr. Merchansider benefits with faster moving goods .... • Mr. U of O student benefits by learning of new goods to buy and places to go ... . • Mr. and Mrs. Eugene benefit because as goods move, more and new merchandise is brought in ... . • YOU benefit because you are one of these per sons .... • The OREGON DAK.Y EMERALD benefits because it can do all this for you! Ext. 218 Oregon EMERALD YOUR ALL-AMERICAN DAILY