Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, December 1, 1976 Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, December 1, 1976 I 11 DECIDING ON A LAW CAREER? 0 L INFORMATION NIGHT THURSDAY, DEC. 2-7:30 P.M. AUDITORIUM B, ANGELL HALL i i By LIZ SLOWIK When James Veneris dies, send him no flow- ers. All he asks is that you take his ashes, throw him to the Yellow River in China and call it quits. Veneris, who spoke at the Union last night, has spent the last 23 years in a town 800 miles south of Peking. He was captured by the Chinese in the Korean War. "REALLY I WAS LIBERATED," said Veneris in a raspy voice, the product of 120 lectures and 44 television appearances in the last four months. "I came here to visit my mother and classmates, and here I am. The reception of the American people has been very good." Back in China, Veneris is a factory worker, supervising the recycling of used paper shoes into toilet paper to be exported to Hong Kong. He works an eight-hour day, followed by a rap session with other workers on problems and how to improve working conditions. "When I worked in the steel mills, in Penn- sylvania," he said, "the first thing I saw was a guard with a black suit, a gun, and a club. At our factory, we have no guards like this." VENERIS DESCRIBED his stints in the U.S. Army during World War II and the Korean War. He told about the lands of Korea flattened by bombs and the stench of dead bodies piled between moun- tains. Ex-U.S. POW tells of life in China "It looked like a wax museum, that's how- many bodies there were," he said. He was captured with two other soldiers by the Chinese. "They treated us well," he said. "The winter was 42 degrees below zero and they gave us cot- ton-padded clothes and we were warm. We had Recreation committees, sports committees. We had lots of 'holidays - Christmas, -Thanksgiving, Chi- nese National Holiday. We had good food." The conditions of the treaty that ended the Korean War gave the prisoners of war a.chance to return to America or to stay in China. "THE AMERICAN PEOPLE gave me the chance to go to China," he explained. "When I saw the flat land in Korea - not a house, not a hospital, not a school was standing - I began to wonder. We were supposed to liberate the Korean people. I saw American soldiers driving trucks purposely run into old Koreans and break their legs. I gave a roll call one day in the POW camp. Rockefeller, DuPont - they weren't there. And then I began to see." Veneris said that changes have probably come to China since the death of Mao Tse-tung. "The society will move forward," he continued. "The Chinese people struggled for 6,000 years. Now they're eating sweets and if you give them a bit- ter pill, what will they do? They'll reject it. The struggle is good because the society is moving forward." Often Veneris gathers with fellow workers to discuss political theory. "The whole country is electrified. I want to live to 120 to see every- thing that happens," he said. Veneris lives with his second wife and six chil- dren. His oldest daughter is 25, engaged to be married, next year, and wants to become a bus driver. "In China, a woman can do anything a man does for equal wages and she is respected," he said proudly. Dressed in a conservative blue suit over a royal blue Chinese vest, Veneris pulled out the red cov- er from one of Chairman Mao's books. Veneris uses the cover as a wallet. "I wasn't supposed to take this out of the coun- try," he confided. Then he fondled a Chinese ten dollar bill, worth about seven American dollars. "This will feed ny family for a week. I don't want to -lose it." Veneris is on a six-month paid leave of absence from his job. He plans to return to China in Janu- ary, after more appearances in the U.S. He will spend a few days in Peking upon his return to rest after his eventful return to his homeland. 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If it fails, (PO devender, also a member of is a "very, very good possibili- Teamsters Union steward for AM Director) Carl Parsell is the POAM Executive Board dis-, ty" that many of these depart- Sheriff's patrol officers, charged out of a job," Zakrzewski said, agreed. He said he expects the ments will decide to switch to that the move to make POAM and attributed Parsell's 'efforts Association to gain bargaining POAM representation. a full - service union is an ef- to move POAM toward full un- rights in many police depart- "I SEE A FIGHT - a fight fort by Association leadership ion, status as attempts as "self- ments which are "trying to stay to represent police officers," to keep a foundering organiza- survival." away from the Teamster's said POAM Executive Director tion afloat. "At present, it has not been gangsterist image," Carl Parsell. "THE POAM has nothing shown that full service is in "I don't like the big brother "We're not going to go out really to offer" most police of- demand" by POAM member concept," Vandevender stated and convince people to quit the ficers, Zakrzewski said. .Zakr- organizations; Zakrzewski said. which he said the Teamster's Teamsters Union. We're going zewski served as a member of He stated that he expects the Union represents. to notify those units that we're the POAM Executive Board un- full union service scheme to be "Most small police depart- in business. We're hanging out til the Teamsters expulsion rejected by POAM's January ments went with the Teamsters the shingle. The Teamsters are Monday. delegate convention, because there was nowhere going to have to do even more -_ else to go," he said. With PO to stay in business," he said. MERRY XMAS WOODY! HATE STATE? i pG THEN GIVE WOODY 'I'THE BIRD! " 'They WO ODY 15A PCKE " h irt A three c( lo t * sc 'I1 1T,nt an(,,ahigh quahty 1 )% cotton) T Shirt Send $ 5 sage nd ii (Ohio Residents Add 5.5% Sales Tax.) SALE! NOW $ 2.00 JIMA 4IL C4, 7 SALE1 bedahw4 . tsi sie .zX Name Address Korean may defect (Continued from Page 1) able to the South Korean gov- The source explained that ernment. Kim was allowed to change Reports have indickted that his visa ' status here in return as many as 90 lawmakers could for cooperation with the Jus- be involved. The State Depart- tice Department investigation ment declined comment on the into allegations of influence report of Kim's request for buying on Capitol Hill. asylum. THE PROBE involves alle- One source said he believed gations that congressmen were Kim was the second ranking slipped money or provided with member of the Korean. Central favors in an effort to sway Con- Intelligence Agency mission in gress to adopt policies favor- ! Washington. 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