Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, October 21, 1959, Page Six, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    State News
IN BRIEF
Gang: stopped
v PORTLAND UFi—Police head
ed off a gang fight in Portland
streets Monday night, seizing a
shotgun, hatchet and a long iron
bar.
Patrolman Douglas Hickman
said he and his partner found 35
youths clustered at the intersec
tion of North Killingsworth and
Williams Avenue late at night.
Hickman said that when he
tried to break up the group, one
<boy seized a shotgun from an
other and pointed it at Hickman.
The policeman managed to wrest
it away from the youth.
Sawyer: praised
BEND (jTt — A memorial pro
gram for the late Robert W. Saw
yer was held here Monday at the
Deschutes County courthouse.
Sawyer, a nationally known
conservationist and former pub
lisher of the Bend Bulletin, was
praised as a man who helped Ore
gon preserve its natural resources
for both recreation and use.
Former Oregon Gov. Charles A.
Sprague, publisher of the Salem
Statesman, was the main speaker.
Morse: attacks
PORTLAND 'iPl — Sen. Wayne
Morse (D-Ore), who earlier at
tacked Sen. John Kennedy (D
Mass), turned today on another
Democratic presidential hopeful
—Sen. Hubert Humphrey (D
Minn).
All three senators are possible
entrants in Oregon’s presidential
preference primary election next
May.
Project: views aired
KLAMATH FALLS ijv—Ore
gon should have no right to veto
a federal hydroelectric project on
any stream in or bordering the
state, the Oregon Reclamation
Congress was told here Monday.
State engineer Lewis Stanley
said, however, that he drew a dis
tinction between dams built by
federal agencies and those au
thorized by the Federal Power
Commission.
Campus Calendar
Wednesday
Noon Fr 71,1 Cof Shp
IVCF 101 A SL'
Fest of Art 110 SI'
Rog Wins Fellowship 111 SU
Deseret Clb 112 SU
Yeomen 113 SU
12:15 SU Cof Hr 302 SU
2 :30 Charter Day Convocation
Ballroom SU
4:00 HGGen Ch 110 SU
ASl'O Senate Interv 302 SU
SU Publcty 313 SU
6:00 HC Queen Interv 315 SU
6:30 Yeomen Orides Interv
Gerl 3rd Fir
Pershing Rifles 101 SU
8 :00 Boas Uect-^Charter Day
Ballroom SU
Arthur Murray
Dance Studios
Are -Starting
Their Fall Classes
Enroll Now to Learn
The Latest LATIN
And AMERICAN dances
S3 W. 8th DI 5-2311
World News
(Continued from (nr/e 1)
Ike: otters to meet
WASHINGTON , (UPI >—Presi
dent Eisenhower reportedly has
offered to fly to Paris for a
meeting with French President
Charles De Gaulle in an effort
to remove De Gaulle's objections
to an early summit meeting.
The President's offer was re
ported by diplomatic sources af
ter Paris dispatches said the Pre
sident had proposed to De Gaulle
an allied meeting next month in
preparation for summit talks.
President: travels
WASHINGTON (UPI(—Presi
dent Eisenhower, still suffering
from slight traces of a lingering
cold, plans to leave for a vaca
tion in Augusta. Georgia today.
However, the White House says
“ no major health reasons” are
responsible for the President’s de
cision.
Hearing: recessed
PITTSBURG (UPII—A Fed
eral judge in Pittsburgh has re
cessed a hearing on a petition
i for a Taft-Hartley Injunction to
| temporarily halt the steel strike.
Federal Judge Herbert Sorg
did not rule on the petition, nor
did he indicate whether a deci
sion would come today. The jus
tice department, under orders
from President Eisenhower, asked
for the injunction, but the steel
union is opposing the request.
Officials: indicted
WASHINGTON (UPT)—A fed
eral grand jury has indicted two
officials of the carpenters and the
teamsters union.
Carpenters’ President Maurice
Hutcheson is charged with not
| telling senators if he used union
funds to fix an alleged conspir
acy case involving property scan
dals in Indiana. The Indictment
also accuses Ohio teamster Wil
liam Presser of not producing
certain union records.
TODAY’S STAFF
Desk editor: Alan Bach
Staff: Dnlcy Moran, Chloe
Haynes, Jeanie Compagnon, Mo
zelle, Bullen, Becky Brant, Judy
Babich, Ken Friesen
Proofreader: Howard Waki
Professors awarded research grants
University science professors
Howard S. Mason, Edward No
vitski, Donald E. Pickering, and
F. J. Reithel have been awarded
Public Health Service grants for
research training in basic medical
sciences.
The grants, made through the
Division of General Medical Sci
ences, are part of a total of $16,
578,474 expended by the division
since the program was organized
In July, 1958.
Mason's grant is for a $29,106
training program in biochemis
try; Novitski will direct a $36,312
training program in genetics:
Pickering's $25,000 grant is for
a training program in pediatric
biochemistry; a $17,880 training
program in biochemistry will be
directed by Reithel.
Training grant applications are
reviewed by committees made up
of non-federal experts from the
various fields involved. Grants
are approved by the Surgeon Gen
eral on the basis of recommenda
tions made by the National Ad
visory Health Council.
The awards were made to 53
institutions and universities In
29 states to provide support for
the training of graduate student*
and postdoctoral trainees In
eleven basic medical und health
related sciences.
r-——
TALL TALE?
"Then thia brawd aaya . . .
Your lime will he lined well
If you Npend It at
WOODS SHELL
SERVICE
Dl 3-3212
498 E. Broadway or
Just past tha Alpha Phi's
tn |
mm
Hi
Never
too strong.
SjKMgMgik
' •: . '*
too weak.
You can light cither end I
Get satisfying flavor...so friendly to your taste!
f NO DRY
[ "SMOKED-OUT" )
V TASTE! J
See hew Pall Mall’s famous length of fine, rich
tasting tobacco travels and gentles the smoke
makes it mild—but does not filter out
that satisfying flavor!
Outstanding..,
and they are Mild!
I
i
ft
HERE’S WHY SMOKE 'TRAVELED* THROUGH FINE TOBACCO TASTES BEST
IYou get Pall Mali’s
famous length of the
finest tobaccos
money can buy.
2 Pall Mall’s famous
length travels and
gentles the smoke
naturally...
3 Travels it over, under,
around and through
Pall Mall's fine tobaccos
... and makes it mildl
e A r. Co.
Product of Jrmjvu&wi i/cr&uz&r&rnyiaTip/ — Ju&uzeo- is our middle name