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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (May 21, 1960)
(Continued from paf/e II climber* stranded at the 18,000 f<<ot level on McKinley Mountain. A six-man Japanese team has reached the 13,000 foot mark but a spokesman says the Injured would not be reached Friday. Eleanor echoes Adlai NEW YORK (TTY (UP!) Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt haw en dorsed former presidential candi date Adlai Stevenson's criticism of administration foreign policy. Mrs. Roosevelt said in New York City the administration is responsible lor what she terms "stupid mistakes and a lack of coordination" in the spy plane incident. Chiang elected again TAIPEI, Formosa (UPIi Gen eralissimo Chiang Kai Shek has been inaugurated for his third term as president of Nationalist China. In his inaugural address at Taipei, Formosa, he vowed to re turn to the Chinese mainland and destroy the Red Chinese regime. Students storm home TOK YO (CPI i Left-wing stu dents in Tokyo have tried to storm the home of the Japanese prime minister. Some 40,000 persons demon strated in the streets against a new Japanese-U.R. aecurlty pact recently ratified by the diet. Small plane crashes TALKEETNA, Alasko (UPli A small plane reportedly has Crashed at the 17,000-foot, level on Mt. McKinley where four in jured mountain climbers are stranded. Officials say the plane, a small Cessna, is not the one carrying an injured woman off the moun tain. Army chief resigns SEOUL, Korea (UPI i South ! Korea's army chief of staff has j offered his resignation. Lieutenant General S. Y. Chan commanded the troops which kept martial law during the rioting which ousted the Rhee govern ment. School children saved CHICAGO (Uni Coast Guardsmen have rescued 47 Iowa ■ school children from an excur sion boat which ran aground in Lake Michigan off downtown Chicago. Small boats took the Schles wig, Iowa, children ashore after the Coast Guard failed to free an j excursion boat. No marriage seen RITWE, Northern Rhodesia <UP!t Britain's Queen Mother Elizabeth says reports that she ! plans to re-marry are “complete and absolute nonsense." The Queen Mother, the widow of King George VI, is on a tour of British Africa. Harr, PE instructor has article published Frank B. Haar, professor of physical education at the Univer sity, is the author of an article published in the May issue of “The Physical Educator," a pro fessional magazine published by Phi Epsilon Kappa. HAAR'S ARTICLE discusses "Trends in Health Education." In it he pointed out that more em phasis should he p laced upon geriatrics, the study of old age. Campus Briefs • The Bahai Fellowship will sponsor a | l»t«#gr*m ndiiiiiniioiaiitig the Declaration ! '<f thr Ra'h Sunday evening at 8 |>.m, in . the Si* \H are urged to attciKl; refresh i meitt* will be served. • Oregon Rowing Club will meet Tuea I day ai : j m I’lace will I* anrwunrrd. Dr. Karchmer talks on Broadway Sylvan N. Karchmer, associate professor In the writing depart | ment, gave a talk on "Broad* | way", New York’s theatrical district, Thursday evening at the monthly meeting of Chi Delta 1 Phi, Dr. Karchmer said that al though Broadway is the “Mecca of playwriting,” the theater, as such, represents a highly com mercial market that is not in I terested in great art but in a i commodity that will make money for those involved in a play's pro duction. For a play to be considered a “hit,” it must run long enough to repay the original investment 1 which might be anywhere from $150,000 to $600,000. Out of the 70 or 60 plays that are success ful enough to merit a Broadway production, only six to ten of these will be hits. In closing Dr. Karchmer ex pressed that we need not toe pes simistic toward the theater of Broadway, for out of America’s 26,500,000 playgoers, 25,000.000 of them attend our college and small community theaters. Heads of Houses set tea at Gerlinger Hall University coeds will honor Mrs. O. Meredith Wilson, Mrs. Golda P. Wickham, and house mothers who will not return to their houses next year at a fare well tea in Gerlinger Hall on Monday afternoon. May 23. The tea, at 4 o’clock, is sponsored by | the Heads of Houses. Housemothers who do not plan j to return to the University next year include Mrs. Fred McKin ney. Alpha Chi Omega; Mrs. Rstelle Cheseldine, Delta Delta Delta; Mrs. Herman Welker, Delta Zeta; Mrs. Ruth Colette, Pi Beta Phi; Mrs. Gladys W, Raton, Sigma Kappa; and Mrs. Dorothy F o r n e y, Hawthorne, Schaffer, and McAllister dormi tories. Married students plan picnic on Sunday i ne annual mamea Hiuuenur picnic will he this Sunday come ' i rain or come shine. This will be j the last event of the year under ; Health Service grant goes to P. L. Risley Paul L. Risley of the biology department was granted reserach funds of $11,854 by the United States Public Health Service, Na- j tional Institutes of Health for 1960-61. The research will attempt to demonstrate some relationships between the nerve supply of the male accessory sex organs and the male sex hormones by histo chemical methods for the study of the enzyme cholinesterase and its distribution in the tissues. Studies of the tissues and the ! enzyme will be made under nor mal and experimental conditions in rats. The grant will enable the continuation and extension of work that has been in progress j for several years on male sex organ function. Use Emerald Classified Ads— tne sponsorship of the married students' committee. The picnic will be held at Ar mitage State Park with festiv ities starting at 1 p.m. Pood will be served at 2 p.m. The commit tee will furnish pickles, spud chips, ice cream, punch, plates and utensils. The participants are requested to bring a main dish and salad as well as any addi tional beverage they wish. A short committee meeting will be held during the picnic for the purpose of electing officers for the coming year. Nominations will be from the floor. Door prizes and organized games will be featured during the event. COO-COO There once was a young man named DooHng Who ran around campus cooing, He wasn’t a bird Or even a nurd Because every day he had a Dairy Qning (?) (Join the Coo-Coo bird at the (D.Q.) WASH YOUR CLOTHES FOR ONLY 20c A LOAD FLUFF-DRY FOR ONLY 15c A LOAD j Open 24 hours a day—wash _ a* your convenience! /rWi/ZrC' fCONG-WASH on the campus at UNIVERSITY CLEANERS, 853 E. 13th Hew cigarette paper "air-softens" every puff! Now even the paper adds to Salem's springtime freshness! _ _ _ An important break-through in Salem's research laboratories brings you this special new High Porosity paper which breathes new freshness into the flavor. Each puff on a Salem draws just enough Invisible porous openings' blend just the right amount of air with each puff to give you a softer, fresher, even more flavorful smoke. NOW MORE THAN EVER Created by R. J. Reynold* Tobacco Company fresh air in through the paper to make the smoke taste even softer, fresher, more flavorful. If you’ve enjoyed Salem’s spring time freshness before, you’ll be even more pleased now. Smoke refreshed, smoke Salem! • menthol fresh • rich tobacco taste • modern filter, too ii - - - - - - i . Salem refreshes your taste