six THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, DEC. 15, 1944 i . ..._ Grand Rapids School Pickets Appeal for Aid I. PHILIPPINE REPORT: Ward Dispute Jap Losses Heavily Outnumber Is Only Strike Yanks in Leyte, Samar Battles in Detroit Area i I i GRAND RAPIDS, Mich., Dec. 14.- /P)-Striking public school mainte- nance workers tonight received full support of all Grand Rapids Ameri- can Federation of Labor unions, Al Groenink, manager of the Interna- tional Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Ware- housemen and Helpers (AFL), an- nounced. The strikers, members of the Build- ing Employes Union (AFL), had ap- pealed for help to both AFL and CIO locals. Both labor groups planned to vote on the issue Thursday night. With outside help in picketing, the custod- ian group outlined a plan to stop deliver of coal at schools Friday. Meantime the Board of Education retaliated by asserting there is en- ough coal on hand to last through the holidays. The union called a strike last Monday in an effort to gain wage increases and for the past three days paramount question in Grand Rap- ids has been whether or not there is a strike. Board of Education offices are besieged with calls from parents asking should they send children to school. John M. Brower, President of the Board, today offered through State Labor Mediator Walter Patterson to take back 29 workers, whom he said automatically quit when they failed to show up for work, if they would ask for reinstatement individually. The offer was rejected by 45 union members late Thursday. GENERAL MACARTHUR'S HEAD- QUARTERS, Philippines, Dec. 15-- (-)-The Japanese have lost 82,554 men in the campaigns on Leyte and Samar Islands, headquarters an- nounced today. American casualties were 2,176 killed, 7,976 wounded and 257 miss- ing, for a total of 10,409, Gen. Doug- las MacArthur said. It was estimated that at least 30,- 000 Japanese were killed or drowned from ten convoys attempting to re- inforce the enemy garrison on Leyz. Japs Abandon Dead The Japanese abandoned 33,801 of their dead on the battlegrounds and 253 of their men were taken prison- er by U. S. forces. MacArthur estimated Japanese cas- ualties not yet accounted for in headquarters reports and casualties to Nipponese within their own lines numbered 18,500. Headquarters also reported that the Throop Gives First Lecture E s7 to t s+ ,c , # e -i i f t i e' A- C I U. S. 77th Division had advanced one '00 )1I IrIi cUU nt uix i mile north of Ormoc, main port of Settled; Work Resumed western Leyte Island which was tak- en from the Japanese last Sunday By The Associated Press as a consequence of the December 7 DETROIT, Dec. 14.- With the landings by American forces in the Fruehauf Trailer Co. strike ending rear of the enemy's Yamashita line. Thursday and the Bohn Aluminum Japs Hold Out I & Bras Corp. walkout ending Friday, The 77th is driving up the Ormoc I the only major labor dispute remain- corridor, in the rear of the main body ing in the Detroit area was the Mont- of Japanese still holding out on the gomery Ward & Co. strike. island. At Saginaw, however, some 3,000 The 32nd U. S. Infantry Division employes of the Schust Baking Divi- is exerting pressure on the enemy sion. Loose-Wiles Biscuit Co., struck from the upper or northern end. in protest against what unionists The Japanese casualties for the described as refusal of the company Philippine invasion are by far the to grant a $25 Christmas bonus. greatest of any thus far in the three Two Stores Picket years of islan dwarfare in the Paci- Employes of four Montgomery fic. Ward stores, two in Detroit, one in ,.ar-orn-and-,he -other in _oya By KENNETH L. DIXON Associated Press War Correspondent IN GERMANY, Dec. 6-As seen. from a ditch, the two tall trees made a perfect picture frame through which the column slowly advanced. The men walked upward along a gradually rising ridge, entering the picture one by one. Each drab, mud- dy outline held the scene a moment as it topped the crest.. It seemed sus- pended there against the gray, smoky sky just before it stumbled on. Sharp through the rumbling un- dertones of the frontline fighting came the whispering, warning siz- zle of mortar after mortar, each seeming to shriek "ssshhh! ssshhh! --bidding the war be still until it spoke. And as each whooshing whistle died, somehow a split sec- ond's synthetic silence was wrought as each ear and eye and nerve awaited the coming blast. Through it all the doughboys walk- ed slowly grim, strained-ten paces apart. Sometimes when a shell landed too close they hit the dirt, but mostly they just kept moving. Twice men were hit. The column paused briefly. Then it flowed forward again with sticky reluctance, like heavy motor oil on a cold morning. The dead of the company up ahead still lay where they had fal- len. The pathway was narrow and mines were thick on both sides. Heavy-footed doughboys stepped carefully over the -bodies of men they'd swapped cigarettes with just a few hours before. Some turned their eyes aside. Some stared, fearful and with magnetized fascination, at the torn bodies. Strangely there seemed to be no wounded on the slope. Only the walking and the dead. There was a complete absence of human sound. No one shouted orders, cried out or talked. They just pushed on toward an invisible enemy. Their job was to concen- trate powerfully on putting one foot ahead of the other regardless of what happened. Watching them do it made you begin to tremble and you weren't sure why. These men displayed no hero- ics, no hate, no enthusiasms, no cru- sading zeal. There seemed to be nothing what- soever to help spur them on. But they marched. Their steps seemed to drum into your brain. These men didn't want to go forward. That was heartbreakingly clear in every line of their flinching forms. It was even more clear that they would not stop short of that inferno beyond them. With the resignation of the damned, their forward motion had become grimly irresistible. And you knew that if they fell others would follow and they too would keep on going. Reluctant heroes-Len paces apart. SEES MOVING 'PICKET FENCE: _ Reporter Describes Front Line Battle i Next highest on the list is Saipan, where 26,277 Japanese were killed and 2,068 taken prisoner. The U. S. casualties there were 3,049 dead, 13,054 woundedand 368 missing, the highest of any island invasion. The U. S. advance north of Ormoc reported today further closes the jaws of a vise on enemy force trapped in the corridor. May Polly Move! From Kitchen? Dearborn and the other in Royal Oak, continued to maintain picket lines in front of the buildings while leaders of their union were in Wash- ington attending a War Labor Board hearing into the dispute. The Fruehauf strike, which affec- ted 1,300 workers, had held up pro- duction of truck trailers used to transport war materials. The work- crs, members of Local 99, United Automobile Workers (CIO), had re- jected three previous appeals to end their week-end walkout before they voted to return to their jobs. Bohn's Employes Return The 500 employes in Bohn's No. 3 plant will return to work Friday, officials of the company and union V 4 MONTH INTENSIVE Course for COLLEGE STUDENTS and GRADUAi A thorough, intensive course-start- ing February, ,July, October. Registration now open. Regular day and evening school throughout the year. Catalog, A SCHOOL OF BUSINESS PREFERRED BY COLLEGE MEN AND WOMEN THE GREGG COLLEGE President, John Robert Gregg, S.C.D. Director. Paul M. Pair. M.A, Deft 8 N. Mlkgau Ave Tet STAt 18,81 Chcago 2, Prof. Palmer A. Throop, in deliver- 'ing the opening French lecture of the series yesterday, discussed the tech- nique used by the Papacy to popu- larize the Crusades in the 13th cen- tury. Enthusiasm was waning, Prof. Throop said, due to failure of prev- ious expeditions, and the public was unwilling to throw itself into a simi- lar venture. People , did not care to give ip the comforts of their life at home, he stated, undergoing the difficulties and dangers of a long journey. To combat the excuses they offered, the Papacy was forced to use its most persuasive methods. The Crusades were preached not only in the chur- ches, but in public squares, and even at the_ tournaments. Each Crusader was given a cross which he wore on the right shoulder, and absolution for sins was offered in advance to anyone who would join the move- ment. I WASITNGTON.flDec.14-(11")- Al Vermont lady whose house stands announced. The workers, who staged 'right smack on an international a one-day walkout, voted Wednes- day to return but a company inven- boundary-half in Canada and half tory held up resumption of produc- in this country-has a problem overj her pet parrot. Is it okay, she asked the U.S. Public Health Service today, to move Polly from the kitchen, which is in Canada, into the living room, which is in the United States- without violating quarantine regulations. (Before a parrot can be brought into this country, it must be exam- ined to see if it is free of psittacosis, a bird disease which is communicable to man.) I -- tion. Emil A. Willman, president of Local 87, United Dairy & Bakery Workers (CIO), said at Saginaw that the Loose-Wiles Company agreed tentatively, a year ago, to pay a Christmas bonus if it were financially able. BUY WAR BONDS t f T i i I i f °9 k/ant a INCOAT (op Ch ri tmaSPl - " i i I i 'i Editor's Note: Contributions to this col- commissioned a second lieutenant in unin should be addressed to the Military the R.O.T.C. upon his graduation editor, The 'Michigan Daily, Student in June, 1942 with a B. A. degree. Publications Building. A geograpl y major, Capt. Easlick Staff Sergeant ROBERT E. WEN- was a member of Phi Kappa Psi as a DUNG, who left for the armed for-- student here. ces after completing two years at the According to the citation accom- University is now stationed in Eng- panying the award, Capt. Easlick land, his sister reports. showed courage and professional skill A student in the School of Busi- in reorganizing his troops while under ness Administration and a member of attack by the enemy, his bravery Beta Theta Pi while at the Univer- serving as an example of great in- sity, Sgt. Wendling entered the in- spiration to his men. fantry, was trained at Camp Bland-*' *. ing, Fla., entered the A.S.T.P. engi- A graduate of the University with a neering program at Pratt Institute, B. A. degree in 1939, Capt. AL FINK- Brooklyn, N. Y. and received final ELSTEIN is now serving as a Y- training at Camp Breckenridge, Ky., Force liason officer training an ar- before being shipped overseas in 1 tillery unit of the Chinese Expedi- Ificiqtan }en at k/ar i ' II .7eaturin.J JIMMY STRAUSS ani ih3 Orcte-ilra TICKETS . . . 2.00 per Tickets On Sole at the Main Desk . . EAR'S CELEBRATED...- Couplet December 19, 1944 11:00 PM, DEC 30th NEW Y geep 141We fo 45 a LR'S DANCE NEW YEA - r-a rn orir s ewr wrrs rn sMnwe arwewn wio awir \~ c I N F O R M A L r ;<< '?' ,.+ F Q r ,. . 50 ." ..; Y" .. a i. a'a .. , ,.. i, '. e..; ,;;a. r? P i.. 5°,. ' .;?: 'h}, :} F:; ;, ;::;:;: T n. 11 i0: J ' .'. . ., '. " . : fir''':; ;.': " ., h } .. f: ::'f 4 1. ' " Vr}KH .. !, f f., % '. 5 a f} .{ MICHIGAN UNION . . in the RAINBOW ROOM N ovember. A Silver Star for gallantry has been awarded to Capt. DAVID K.' EASLICK, a University grad now fighting with the 30th Infantry Di- vision in Europe. Son of Dr. K. A. Easlick of the School of Dentistry, the captain was tionary Force in Western Yunnan Province. When the Chinese launche dtheir attack against the Japanese across the Salween River last May, Capt. Finkelstein supervised the firing of Chinese artillerymen as they blasted the enemy on the other side of the river. t i c z :;.,.. : i N ' } a . , ? e ! e ,., t -m- "' .s^- ^. o.." [ [ f -. r F a 1 New Guinea, Oct. 24, 1944 "Dear Aunt Ruth: Have been moving about now for months and weeks and days - and by chance - part by accident - in all this tine - some mail caught up with me, and it was your "Michigan Daily." Quite a surprise and pleasant no end - then I moved to a new address and hope other copies come. While a transient and reading the Dailys - met up with some other Michigan men (before my time) and even tho it was years since heard or saw A.A. they ate up the papers with a passion. More valuable than money out here. Common interest and memories. Just getting settled now (I hope) and hope I can stay at the present position. Nice location and fine weather (in co parison) and well- o.k. in general. Time to {punch the clock' now. Will let you know- how things are. I really appreciate your sending "The Daily" way out here in New Guinea and will never be able to thank you enough. Hope you have a desirable winter (as for weather). Most grateful, John D. Woolever (Ensign)" -from letter of John D. Woolever to Mrs. Ruth iuchinan In the Casual Shop And this is the kind she wants . . . a shimmering Elkskin All-Weather Coat. Give her the unusual gift-practical as well as beautiful! See our tail- ored, belted and cape models in tan, navy, black, natural and lavender. 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