FRIDAY, JULY 12, 1957 TIIE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGEa $ M A Y U Y 1 , 1 5 H 1 H E A A ra a.. *> UNITED NATIONS COMMAND: U.S. Jets Herald Korean Arms Step-up By HUGH A. MULLIGAN Associated Press Newsfeatures Writer Flights of supersonic F-100 jets have begun streaking over South Koreaas the opening step in the arms modernization program un- dertaken by the United Nations command to offset a four-year arms build-up by Communist forces in North Korea. The UN command informed the Communists June 21 that it no longer feels bound by the arms provisions of the Korean truce because of "flagrant, repeated and willful violations" north of the 38th parallel. The decision provoked predict- able outcries from the North Korean commander, Maj. Gen. Chung Kook Rook, and from Pei- ping and Moscow, but the UN brushed aside Red demands for an international conference to discuss s the situation. The 1953 armistice, which ended the three-year war in Korea, pro- vided that neither side could in- troduce new weapons, planes or munitions, and 'specified replace- ment of worn-out equipment was to be on a "piece by piece" basis. Fighters Moved The ink had hardly dried on the contract when UN radar screens began picking up flights of Red fighter planes into North Korea from Manchuria. The decision to abandon the Korean arms agreement, while abiding by the rest of the truce, comes at a time when the United States is attempting to negotiate a disarmament agreement with Russia at the London talks. Whether the timing of the Korean move was intentional or accidental, it served as a bitter reminder of how the Communists have kept faith on the arms agree-' - ment- in Korea. According to the best available information, the Republic of Korea has a well trained army of 700,000 men in 21 divisions, second largest in the free world. It is undoubtedly capable of giving a better account of itself than did the, poorly trained Korean army of 100,000 that was overrun so quickly in 1950. North Korean commander Chung challenges these figures and claims. that since the end of the war the ROKs have increased their army from 16 to 31 divisions." Troops Ready The United States has about 80,000 troops in' Korea, including the 7th,.and 24th divisions which man a sector of the truce line north and northeast of Seoul and the equivalent of two divisions of supply troops in the vicinity of Pusan. Associated Press foreign corres- pondent Dan Baldwin, who made a 10-day tour of the truce line last month, reported that the two in- fantry divisions were only at 60 to 80 per cent of normal strength. "All but one of the frontline regiments," le added, "are actu- ally miles fom the front, now weathered and overgrown with weeds in almost. four years of suspended combat. This regiment is located north of the Imjin River above Seoul and in event of attack would have to pull back. The others would take from one to three hours to reach battle posi- tions." Sixteen Signed Of the 16 nations who signed the Korean truce only eight be- sides the" United States have con- tributed troops to the UN com- mand. These total less than 5,000. Countries represented include the United Kingdom, New Zealand, Australia, Canada, Greece, Turkey, Thallandand the Philippines. Australia has served notice that she intends to remove her troops from truce line duty and the United Kingdom plans to cut the number of her troops in Korea. Only Turkey has kept a garrison of promised strength. In all, the United Nations com- mand has about 785,000 troops in South Korea. This compares with 800,000 at the end of the war, but the weapons are old and have not been replaced. The United NationsETAOIN The UN has 150 Sabrejets which will be replaced by supersonic F-100s, capable of carrying nuclear bombs, as step one in the arms build up. On the opposite side of the line, the North. Koreans have a re- organized and re-equipped 400,000 man army and the Chinese Com- munists have 350,000. Chung Challenges Chung also challenges this, claiming that since the war the Chinese Reds have withdrawn some 19 divisions from North Korea. The South Koreans, in rebuttal, claim that the discharged men have been enrolled in the armed coastal defense corps or forced to work in mines and factories in North Korea. In addition, there are an esti- mated one million Chinese troops across the border in Manchuria. Counting the garrison in Man- ._... _ Esiated One IMillion Red Troops Iii~i :InManchuria .r: :eii£:it £i£ ~ = ii ~:l? ~ 1ANcHURIA "t1'2.iii Di x'32£2: £i Hi ted 300 Prop P lanes It Garrison of 350,000 Red Chinese Troops 500 Jets of Which 250Oare new MIG-17s yiA or TI-28 Bombers 1,672 Artillery ieces Added Since War, May Have Atomic Cannon 450 Old and 340" New Tanks NO RRTH KOREA 3 Garrison of 400,000 North Korean Troops U.S..7th and 24th Inf. Divisions Man OK "Army of Part of Truce Line A 21 Divisions Seoul US. Moving in F-lOOs KO to Replace Sabrejets. One Wing at Osan. Troops of Eight tOther U.N. Nations R s. or in Total About 5,000 JSupply Units St s UU.N. Has Not F nModernized Guns 'c v orwTanks Since r N AP Nowsfeatures ....***... . x Research Progresses Ont Aphasia Research recently completed under the supervision of Prof. H. Harlan Bloomer of the Univer- sity's Speech Clinic has brought the mysteries of "childhood apha- sia" a little closer to being solved. Speech experts have teen stym- ied for years in their search for causes of 'childhood aphasia" or language delay. Prof. Louis Lerea of Northern Illinois State College tested up to 245 children during the past year with his own test, which is based on picturable items of the Charles Fries Scheme of Structural Lin- guistics. The test is aimed at classifying the various areas of speech fail- ure in an attempt at locating a method of determining the par- ticular causes. One important finding was the relationship Prof. Lerea found be- tween expression and comprehen- sion in the brain; injured group. In this group, he found both comprehension and expression on an equal scale, while in the other language delay groups such as mental retardation, emotional dis- turbances, and deafness. compre- hension always exceeds expres- sion. One of the tests used was a spe- cially devised hearing test based on familiar sounds. After diagnosis of the cause is completed, instruction and train- ing of the child will be needed. When patterns and relationships among language retarded are fi- nally found then researchers can attempt methods of treatment to fit the disability. The research was made pos- sible by $10,000 of the $300,000 legislative grant earmarked for re- search in human resources at Mi- chigan during 1956-57. Kauper Heads Commission The current exhibition at the University Historical Collections contain a wide display of student publications ranging back to the. mid-eighteenth century. Included are annuals; pictorial, humor, opinion and literary maga- zines; newspapers and profes- sional. school reviews.. Earliest of the publications were the first and only two numbers of the "Peninsular Quarterly," 1853, which was edited, by J. Sterling Morton. Morton was later to become Governor of the Territory of Ne- braska, Secretary of Agriculture and founder of Arbor Day. LINES. 2 3 4 I DAY .75 .90 1.04 3 DAYS 1.87 2.25 2.60 Figure 5 average words to a fine. Classified deadline, 3 P.M. daily. 11:00 A.M. Saturday Phone NO 2-3241 ALTERATIONS DRESSMAKER Alterations, Restyling 334 S. State St. NO 3-6612 )Pl MUSICAL MDSE., RADIOS, REPAIRS HI FI Speakers Bozak, AR-1, Electro-Voice, Lansing *EIhiEri Amplifiers & Fisher, Sherwood, Scott, MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES 6 DAYS 2.78 3.33 3.85 Tuners McIntosh, Rel Kits Dynakit, Eico, Arkay, Aqtdax Recorders Viking, Berlant, Belt Turntables Rek-O-Kut, Connoisseur, Garrard, Presto Visit our Hi Fi Showrooms for a stereo demonstration Audio Supply Laboratories 334 Nickels Arcade (Above Bay's Jewelry) NO 2-7767 NO 2-9425 )X4 RARE VIOLINS AND BOWS ALL ACCESSORIES, STRINGS, REPAIRS MADDY MUSIC 508 E. Williams NO 3-3223 )X5 HIF1 STUDIO An amazing inventory of I Pt components available to you at catalogue price. KITS We stock amplifier, AM-FM tuner, and speaker enclosure kits in sev- eral brands. HI FI SERVICE Our engineers and technicians are fully competant and equipped to service all equipment we sell, and to advise you on the selection of components. 1217 & 1317 So. University NO 2-9595 )X2 Read and Use Daily Classifieds ...FIRST... In Modern Comfort .,. .FIRST . In Air-Conditioning . FIRST,.. In New Hair Styling 4 X It &ber4 715 North University MUSICAL MDSE., RADIOS, REPAIRS Record Sale Overstock 12" L.P.'s $3.98 and $4.98 values, only $2.98. Major labels represented 205 E. Liberty Phone NO 2-0675 211 S. State Phone NO 8-9013 LIBERTY MUSIC SHOPS Closed Sat. at 1 P.M. during July-Aug. )X3 PERSONAL READING THE Sat. Eve. Post? We can get it for you wholesale. Student Periodical, NO 2-3061. )F6 PHOTO SUPPLIES Exposure Meter Value THE "METAR" ' with Booster Cell & Cases Reg. $14.95 NOW $9.9 THE QUARRY INC. 320 So. State St. NO 3-1991 )D3 NEW ARGUS C-3 Camera, with case and flash, Reg. $69.50 Now $49.95 Purchase from Purchase Camera Shop 1116 S. University Phone NO 8-6972 )D6 FOR SALE. SHORT SLEEVE sport shirts. $1.75, 2 for $3.00. Washable. Assorted colors. SAM'S STORE Phone NO 3-8611 122 East Washington )B2 ROOM AND BOARD SUMMER ACCOMMODATIONS avail- able at law fraternity for all stu- dents. T.V. and cool rooms. $1.00 per day. On Hill and Forest. Call Don Dodge at NO 2-5614. )E5 TWO MEALS, 12 per day, five days a week - Mon. - Fri. Call Bill Powell, at Phi Kappa Tau, corner Hill and Tappan. NO 3-8581. )E2 FOR RENT COMPLETELY FURNISHED. apartment for single woman near campus. Avail- able August for one year. Phone aft- ernoons or early evenings. NO 2-5779. )C20 YOUNG WOMAN to share three room apt., summer or permanent. Near campus. Automatic washer. Call NO 5- 5919 after five. )C19 COOL CAMPUS apartments, some rooms. 514 S. Forest. Call NO 2-1443. )C9 VACANCY FOR one girl to share with two girls five room apartment-(two bedrooms, living room, study room, kitchen, T V.). One, block from cam- pus. $40 for entire summer. If inter- ested,.contact Mrs. Domm, NO 2-1290 or Gerry Laube, NO 3-8843 or NO 3- 0975. )C13 PETS AND SUPPLIES TROPICAL FISH aquariums and sup- plies, Hamsters, Parakeets, etc. UNIVERSITY AQbARIUM 328 East Liberty N03-0224 (Open daily except Thursday) )T1 CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIES EUROPEAN CARS We service all foreign cars. 303 Ashley NO 5-5800 )S6 TIRE SALE Prices slashed Big trade-in for used tires Fully Guaranteed GOLDEN'S SERVICE featuring STANDARD Products 601 Packard -- NO 8-9429 C-TED STANDARD SERVtOE Friendly service is our business. At- las tires, batteries and accessories. Warranteed & guaranteed. See us for the best price on new & used tires. Road service - mechanics on duty. "You expect more from Standard and you get ita 1220 S. University at Forest NO 8-9168 }S} TRANSPORTATION SPECIAL WEEKEND RATE for Avis Rent a Car from Friday, 5 P.M. to Monday 9 A.M. $10 plus $.08 a mile gas, oil and insurance furnished. 12, nearly new. Reasonable. Rent ACar 514 E. Washington Phone NO 3-4156 St. )G2 The greatest imbalance, how- ever, is in combat quality. The Communists have ignored the ban on new weapons, shipping in 1,672 new artillery pieces, 340 tanks in addition to the 480 they already had, and 500 jet and 300 prop-driven planes. The jets in- clude 250 MIG17s, later model in- terceptors than the MIG15 which lost the battle of the skies to our Sabrejets during the war. Airfields Built The Reds also have built or re- built 38 airfields. There have been recurrent reports that they possess atomic cannons with a range of 15 to 20 miles, manned by Soviet technicians. Pentagon officials said the res- toration of the Korean arms bal- ance applies only to U.S. forces at present. But Assistant Secretary of Defense Murray Robinson said "some modernization" of ROK forces is contemplated. Robinson said the United States will begin moving in planes of atomic capability immediately but there are no present plans for supplying ground forces with atomic weapons or missile support, as. Defense Secretary' Wilson had hinted earlier. Wilson insists, how- ever, that no weapons have been banned." BUSINESS SERVICES TEACHER DESIRES baby-sitting ap- pointments on week nights. Refer- ences available if desired. Contact G. L., 4051 Stockwell Hall, NO 3-1561. )J8, TYPING - Reasonable rates. Thebes, term papers, etc. 830 S. Main. Call NO 8-7590, )J6 GOLF LESSONS. Private Instruction. $3.00 per lesson. All points of the game taught. Call NO 8-9052 between 5 and 6 P.M. daily. )J4 EXPERIENCED TYPIST with diserta- tions term papers, etc. All work done on electric typewriter. Call NO 2-7605. )J7 WASHINGS - Also ironing separately. Specialize in cotton blouses and washed skirts. Free pick up and de- livery. Phone NO 2-9020. )JI HELP WANTED FEMALE STUDENTS earn $10 partici- pating in psychological experiment. Nine hours required. Must have Thurs- day mornings free. Phone NO 3-1511. Ext. 2864. . )H14 ANN ARBOR EMPLOYERS PERSONNEL 504 First National Bldg. NO 5-6107 WANTED MEN AND WOMEN. Work ac- cording to own schedule. Good in- come potential, besides work you'll . be sure to enjoy if you like meeting people. Interview held Mon.-Fria from 4-6 at 1309 S. University, room 3. )Hl USED CARS- 1956 OLDSMOBILE Holiday Hardtop, 9 months old, 18,000 miles. In excellent condition. Call NO. 5-1723 between 5:30 and 8 p.m. LOST AND FOUND LOST-Much needed key case June 27. Identification perhaps illegible. Phone number changed. Please call NO 5- 3628. Thank /you. )A3 b A "..:::1' '} :I: JA.".:.:1': A : .::'... .': Si':': } x":1'.'11.91 ti". x":r .; y tel. xf +L K x1: r s:x :"n :v: Who Cares if It's Raining' r, r " a You're sn 4 shine in th ' of cotton ..lining . . beige and Dozer mart in rain is all campus c poplin with p white, ma checks. $10.9 Longer versio July sale price $14.95 ns of other Rair or oat laid ize, 5.. n d. or on- eds E *O 0 >35 0 MEN'S CLIP OUT AND MAIL HANDY CLASSIFIED FORM WASHABLE OXFORDS' Store Hours: 9:30 to 5:30 Monday thru Saturday f f {4 f x S i f ; .. 'y Shine coats of cott rayons - failles - twe Solids - checks. JULY CLEARANCE Priced $10.00, $14.95 and $18.0 Originally were to $ MICHIGAN DAILY 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. Please find enclosed $ for which you are to publish the following classified ad for three consecutive days. (Use pencil and print each word clearly.) (2 LINES MINIMUM) $1.87 $2.25 $2.60 $2.95 Dates the ad is to runl (no Monday paper) I I. , ,mm ric uppers, airy and coo! I I I 1