Women's Elections (( onltnue<{ from ptn/c one) rill in' in ru n \ Hwlnmilnx; art major KOHKItTA Ml I.KKV I'laj'H MinmnT Mtfiliall In addition to having a common interest in WRA, the two candi date*: for WRA president are both from Astoria Roberta Mulkey, a junior in PE. la back at the University after a seven year lapse. After graduation, siie plans to leach PE. Right now Roberta is busily preparing the trampoline team for a halt time exhibition at this weeks basketball game with OSC. Interested in sports, she is a member of the bowling team and president ol the field hockey club. Playing softball with the Erv Und florists in Portland has been tlu summer aetlvity for this candidate. Besides sports, she likes all typef of craft work and enjoys sewing. Tin second prospective president of WRA is Prudy Ducich, a Junior in art. Interior design is her specialty, and she hopes to have up independent interior decorating shop. Active in WRA. she is currently vice-president. She is fond of bowling, basketball and tennis. Swimming is her most prominent sport and-she teaches it weekly tc a troop of Girl Scouts. She also spends her summers as a water front director at a Girl Scout camp in Washington. JEAN SAND1NE I’luns to touch history OKUMAINK Lii.MAKnit; I'lil Theta l*n*\y Vying for YWCA president is Germaine LaMarche, a junior in Far Eastern studies. Germaine, who is originally from Hurley, Wis., but now makes her home in Springfield, plans to do advanced studies in her field after graduation. If possible, she would like to go to Japan and then perhaps work for the government. Her campus activities this year include ASUO senator-at-large, presidency ot Phi Theta Upsilon, and AWS executive council. She lu also a counsellor at Susan Campbell hall. In the area of Y work, this Ondes member has solved as Inter national. Affairs chairman, conference chairman, senior cabinet member, regional finance and resources chairman, and National Student Assembly and Seabeck delegate. Besides her heavy campus schedule, Germaine lists ceramics and painting a? two of her favorite interests. She is also fond of all sports, including swimming, golf, and ping pong. Th< other candidate for YWCA president is Jean Sandine. a junior in history. Jean w&s business manager of the Emerald and has also served as office manager. For the Y, she attended the National Student Assembly conference in Kansas this year and was work group chairman. She is also International. Affairs chairman, and she has been entertainment and registration chan-man for the International Fun Feat. Other activities that this Alpha Delta Pi has engaged in arc Kwama, WUS, the Oregana, KWAX. and RE week. She is now a member of Phi Theta Upsilon and Gamma Alpha Chi, a women's advertising honorary. A native of North Bend, she enjoys swimming and playing the piano. Her future plans include being a history teacher. Bon Marche Picks Board of 8 Women Eight University women have been chosen to make up the Bon Marche college board, according to Mrs. Bessie Campbell, public relations manager for the down town store. Barbara Wilcox, junior in speech, is chairman of the board. Other board members include Donna Lory, junior in business; Jane Bergstrom, junior in art: Betti Fackler, junior in' history; Jackie Robertson, junior in edu cation; Joyce Meppen, junior in education; Margaret Tyler, soph omore in business, and Cathy Newman, sophomore in liberal arts. Board members will help buy ers in choosing store fashions. Winnie Warns AgainstPressurina LONDON fAPi Prime Min iflter Winston Churchill In an apparent softening of his own government's policy warned! Wednesday night against, press ing the United Slates too far in insisting on surrender of China’s offshore islands to the Beds. He said there was no question of Britain being involved mill tarily in defense of the offshore islands and that “We should be careful of what advice we should offer to our friends and allies." In a move apparently directed at smoothing British-American differences on the issue, Church ill spoke sharply to Laborites clamoring for surrender of the. islands to Red China. Churchill gave a written state ment to the House after he ver bally described as "scornful" Red China's refusal to attend a Security Council meeting on For I mosa. He turned down a La hor de suggestion that he personally I intervene with Red China s Pre ; mier Chou Kn-Lai. At the same time the Labor Party's national executive com | mittee kept the controversy in the foreground by urging that Red China be given membership . | in the United Nations as a way | of settling the explosive Far Eastern situation. In his written report on the | Formosan situation, Churchill I said: “There is a great difference I between the coastal islands of China, and Formosa island. “As there is no quesiton of our being involved militarily or i indeed of our being needed in the defense of the coastal islands, we should be careful of what ad- I vice we should offer to. our ! friends and allies upon it. The [ decision on whether or when : these particular islands should be i evacuated is not a burden which falls upon Her Majesty's gov | ernment. And we must recognize j the natural preoccupations of other governments who are im mediately affected by the threat ened attack from Communist China." Churchill's remarks tended to 1 back off somewhat from an ear-; her stand taken by his govern ment. Foreign Secretary An thony Kden has said publicly Britain regards the offshore is lands as belonging to Red China j and has privately urged United j States Secretary of State Dulles |to engineer an evacuation m the islands by Chinese Nationalists troops to help bring about a [quick unwritten cease-fire. The British had been advocat Traffic Court Fines Two UO Students The student traffic court Wed nesday night upheld two tickets, excused seven and held one ap peal over until the next meeting. Those fined were Rick Hayden, senior in general science, and Janies Goode, law student. Hayden was also excused from one ticket as was Thomas Gar rison, law student. Sunny Lundberg, freshman in liberal arts, was excused from five tickets incurred because of a misunderstanding of parking regulations as explained to her by her housemother. An. appeal by James Givan, law student, was held over until the court's next meeting. Woody's round the clock DRIVE-IN THE BEST CHICKEN IN-A-BASKET IN TOWN! 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