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November 25, 1950 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1950-11-25

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1950

'1

Red Troops
Free More
Americans
NORTHWEST FRONT, Korea--
(P-Chinese Communist troops
carrying out an apparent "peace'
offensive yesterday freed 30 more
wounded Americans in front o
United States battle lines.
It was the second incident of
its kind in as many days. It
brought to 57 the number of Am-
erican prisoners of war liberated
since Tuesday. So far only the
names of 15 have been released
THE NEW GROUP of 30; shed-
ding tears of joy, included on
captain and three lieutenants. Al:
but three were wounded so badl
they had to be carried on litters,
The men were members of
the Eighth Cavalry Regiment.
They had been ambushed when
Chinese Communist t r o o p s
snapped an American drive for
the Manchurian border with a
surprise offensive in late Oc-
tober.
The captives were collected
Thursday night andrtaken to a
village near the American lines
There the 27 wounded were plac-
ed in a Korean house by thei
guard. Two of the able-bodied
Americans were instructed to de-
liver a letter to the American lines,
* * *
THE LETTER told the Ameri-.
can commander to send one am-
bulance jeep with no arms and
no escort to the village. The jeep
was to fly a large flag on its right
fender.
The letter said the ambulance
jeep would be permitted to shut-
tle the freed prisoners back to
American lines, a few at a time.
The two Americans bearing the
letter met the 25th Division Task
Force as they walked toward the
lines. The Task Force swept oh
ahead and found the remaining
prisoners.
The liberated men were taken to
a clearing station where reporters
were forbidden to see them.
M' Fans Join
Pre-Game Fun
(Continued from Page 1)
at OSU's annual Homecoming
Dance.
AUTOMOBILE traffic moved at
a turtle's pace through 15th Ave-
nue's fraternity row to look at
brightly lighted homecoming dis-
plays which urged the Buckeyes to
"scare the pants off Michigan."
Backers of both teams gather-
ed at the plusher night clubs
and hotels to meet old friends
and sing college songs. But ho-
telkeepers expected little dam-
age from such celebrations.
Commending the conduct of
Michigan fans, one hotel man said
"We'd like to see State play Mich-
igan twice a year, if only we could
be sure of winning twice."
Finnish Chorus'
To Sing at Hill
Under the direction of Ossi
Elokas, the Polytech Chorus of
Finland will make its first appear-
ance in Ann Arbor at 8:30 p.m.,
Nov. 28 in Hill Auditorium.
Acclaimed by music reviewers as
the best amateur chorus in the
world, the group from the Finland
Institute of Technology will sing

works of Sibelius, Palmgren and
other Finnish composers in the
fifth Choral Union Concert.

Junior Size

UN Troops
Move On In
Korean Push
(Continued from Page 1)
moving south toward the ad-
vancing Allies on the north-
west front.
The Americans entered Sinjiju
on the main west coastal road
without opposition.
* * *
SINJIJU, 51 miles northwest of
Chongju, is on the Yalu River
powersite boundary between Korea
and Chinese Comwunist Man-
churia.
MacArthur himself has warn-
ed, however, that "new Red
armies" are in th epath of the
advancing UN forces. Apparent-
ly the UN commander referred
to recent reinforcements for the
Communists in the northwest.
So far the UN drive had not
run up against any of the new
defense lines believed to have been
prepared by 100,000 Chinese and
Korean Reds in the snow covered
mountains.
Meanwhile, in an unarmed and
comparatively slow transport
plane General MacArthur made
an unprecedented 70-minute in-
spection flight yesterday behind
Communist lines and over north-
west Korea's jet-menaced "coffin
corner."
U. S. jets and Mustang fighters
provided unchallenged escort as
the United Nations commander
boldly followed the icy Yalu river
on a dramatic return to Tokyo
from his sixth tour of the front
lines.
The General apparently was
unimpressed by reports that
only one hour before his takeoff
swift Russian-built MIG-15 jet
fighters had been over U.S. 25th
Division artillery positions.
Accompanying tfh e Supreme

PERSONAL

BUSINESS SERVICES )
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to do in home. Phone 2-4942. )29B
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TYPEWRITERS AND FOUNTAIN PENS
Sales, Rentals, and Service
Morrill's - 314 S. State St. )4B
TYPING done in my home. Call 2-3357.
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Willard Gets Post-
Professor Hobart H. Willard of
the chemistry department has
been elected chairman of the Am-
erican Chemical Society's Divislon
of Analytical Chemistry.
He will take office Jan. 1, 1951.

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PERSONAL
WILL GIVE piano lessons. School of
Music senior. Phone 2-8242. )2

STILL THE BEST BUY IN TOWNI
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LEARN TO DANCE
Jimmie Hunt Dance Studio
122 E Liberty Phone 8161 )1P
10 ENSIANS for $1.00. Those are your
earnings every time you sell 10 Michi-
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interested call at the Ensian offices of
the Publications Building.
WANT ROMANCE?
Learn to Dance.
RAY HATCH DANCE STUDIOS
209 S. State, Ph. 5083 )4P
LOST AND FOUND

YOU'LL LOSE YOUR CHANCE
to buy an Ensian
for $5.00
if you don't act soon.
Why not make today
Ensian Day?
MICHIGANENSIAN

)1L

orP2
Ending
Sunday

An Intimate Theatre
Bringing Cinema Triumphs
From All Nations

TOM THUMB'S BIKE-Minute Molly O'Neill, three and one half
years old, of 608 Robin Road, ponders over the size of Tom
Thumb's bicycle. The two-wheeler which belonged to the midget
of Barnum's circus is a part of the Sports and Circus art exhibit
at the Museum of Art. Molly is 36 inches tall, four inches
shorter than Tom Thumb.
JUST FOR CLASSES:
Tardy Coeds Tell Tales
Of Snlow-Covered Roads

9--m ., M

Woeful tales of ice and storm
* and tardy buses greeted night cha-
perones and house mothers early
yesterday as coeds returned from
their one-day vacations hours late
for Thursday's closing time.
The snow-packed, ice-covered
roads reported in all parts of the
state affected women in all the
residence houses and many of the
sororities.
HELEN DAVIS, night chaperone
of Alice Lloyd house, reported that
the majority of students signed out
from that dormitory for Thursday
only arrived from 10 minutes to
a half hour late, and the latest
arrival appeared an hour and 20
minutes after closing time.
In Stockwell about five tardi-
nesses were estimated by night
chaperone Doris Sirabian, while
Eleanor Gillespie reported a sim-
ilar figure for Helen Newberry.
Late arrivals in both dorms sign-
ed in at 12:30 a.m.
Six women returned late to Jor-
U.S. Proposes
JaanTreaty
(Continued from Page 1)
curity, until such time as the UN
could guarantee it, would be as-
sumed by American and "perhaps
other forces." This is a way of
saying that U.S. forces now in Ja-
pan would continue there-a plan
which the Russians have question-'
ed.
3. Japan would recognize the in-
dependence of Korea, agree to a
UN trusteeship over the Ryukyu
and Bonin Islands, with the U.S
acting as administering authority.
and would accept a future deci-
sion by the United Kingdom, Rus-
sia, China and the U.S. "With re-
ference to the status of Formosa,
South Sakhalin and the Kuriles."

dan, out of some 30 who had sign-
ed out for Thanksgiving day alone,
according to Mrs. Elenore Fraser,
house director. Mosher's house di-'
rector Mrs Frederick C .Klein

'C.t
0

Enjoy
Our
Pleasant
Atmosphere

MINIATURES
"PLUTO AND THE GOPHER" "BARNYARD

Whimsy by Disney
Larry P
"EMER

SKIT-ING"

As You Remember Him!
W"ILL ROGERS
DAVID HARUM
A 20 . Louise Dresser EvelynVenable
Century. FoxKent Taylor Stepin Fetchit
Encore Triumph Dieted by James Crass. Fromthbe
novel by Edward Nove: Westcott.

--Nw

S KVv , i " a'. u iItr . 1,
however, reported only a couple of Commander were Lt. Gen. George
latenesses in her dorm, one of them E. Stratemeyer, Commander of the
only 10 minutes and the other Far East Air Forces; Maj. Gen.
more than a half hour. Courtney Whitney, Chief of the
Civil Government section of Gen-
A duo lateness brought two coeds era) Headquarters; six other aides
to Betsy Barbour at 1:45 a.m., and advisers and a small group of
while five women kept the night news correspondents. No press

1 LAST DAY o
arks - Barbara Hale
RGENCY WEDDING"

STARTING SUNDAY

chaperone in suspense at Martha
Cook, the latest one arriving at al-I
most 2 am

MOST OF THE latenesses were
made by students arriving from
Detroit in cars. It took one late'
coed almost six hours to drive from
Grand Rapids to Ann Arbor. Some
of the students, however, were de-
layed by buses, which ran from
an hour to an hour and a half
late, according to the estimations
of the Ann Arbor bus terminal.
The only lateness as a result
of accident was reported by a
Martha Cook resident, who nev-
ertheless arrived uninjured.
With few exception: those stu-
dents who foresaw their tardiness
called their dormitories beforeJ
closing hours or delegated the job
to their anxious parents. Many of
them telephoned to say that they
weren't coming back to Ann Arbor
at all that night because of the
dangerous driving conditions.
Some latenesses were reported by
the sorority houses, but they were:
not as extensive as those of the
dormitories. In both sororities and
dorms the large majority of the
coeds had signed out for the en-
tire weekend.
According to the regulations of
Women's Judiciary Council and the
Dean of Women's Office, these
Thanksgiving tardinesses are con-
sidered "unavoidable and justifi-
able emergencies."

i

photographers were present.
At the battle front area Mac-
Arthur conferred with top field
commanders. He drove about 40
miles over ice-coated roads to visit
the U.S. First and Ninth corps,
the U.S. 24th Division and other
front line units.
Disputed SL
Position Goes
To Bob Perry
(Continued from Page 1)
said. "We found votes for both
Perry and Steinberg that had been
made in pencil though the rest of
the ballot was marked entirely in
ink."
Smith said that it would be al-
most impossible to discover who
was responsible for the fraud. He
explained that as the last count
was being made Wednesday morn-
ing, a large group of students broke
through the ropes surrounding the
counting area and entirely encir-
cled the ballot piles of ooth candi-
dates.
Storrie reported that the investi-
gt ted fraud was the only irregu-
eri jty uncovered in the election.
T7e victory for Perry, an inde-
pendent, gave the indepe -dent
candidates a 12 to 13 edge over
the affiliates in the SL election.
Last semester only nine of the
26 SL members elected were in-
dependents.

Turkey and Chicken Dinners
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PREI(ETE.S
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"Serving Ann Arbor Half a Century"
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109-111 S. Main St. Phone 2-1414

I
tion

with SPRING BYINGTON " PAUL STEWART " A DORE SCHARY Prodi
EXTRA! NEWS - CARTOON - "THIS IS AMERICA"

IC41 HEAT Epn

LATE SHOW TONGHTCome as Late as 11 P.M. and See
Complete Show! Box Office Closes 11:15

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doesn't It
That's the advantage of classified
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NOW SHOWING
~ ~ DAY
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.A WARNR U R05 PCIURE
Dinner Dates bhmy
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