Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1951-02-14

Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1951-02-14

On the Inside , Tli. Weather RobInSon Favored over laMotta M.&b elotub wlUl 'bOW · , , Page 4 &otla,. 81owl, rislq tem­ Paper Hearts Speak Romance pen.tures tobl,bt aJUl • .• Page 5 Thv.rsds,.. Blrb today, Mlnnesota Gambling Law Proposed 1t-15; low, •. Blrb Tues- • •. Page 6 at ·owan da,., 15; low, t, Eat. 18B8 .- AP Leased Wire, AP Wirephoto. UP LeCHd Wire - Five CAnts Iowa City. Iowa. Wednesday. February 14, 1951 - Vol. 8S. No. III ----------.------------------------------------------------~--~--------~---------- ~--------------~----------~ Taft Asks for Strengthened Wav~s Of ,Reds Beat Again$t Airforce, Navy Cf·,.. Ih "'In .. YI ..,) DES MOINES - U.S. Senator UN Forces',' In Central Kore,a Robert A. Tatt (R-Ohio) Tuesday night reaffirmed his contention thpt the United States must limit Treasurer's Office Breakthrough its pledges to send IlInd troops to other nations and strengthen, in­ stead, our navy and airforce. To Pay Students Threatened by Speaking lit an Iowa Republican "Lincoln day" dinner, the senator For Book Exchange declared the U.s. "must be strong Banzai Attacks in order to halt Russian aggres­ Money for books sold ~ t the c,-,•• Ule WI .. 8 .......,.) sion, because strength Is the only Student Council's book exchange TOKYO (WEDNESDAY) - An language Russia understands." may be received at t.he unlver­ all-out Communist attack to drive Maln&aln Libert, back United Nations forces in rug­ sHy treasurer's ofllee starting ged central Korea broke with great ba~~c He dednred the prlnclpel next Monday. fury today on II 20-mile tront. of American foreign policy is "to Feb. 12 lind 13 were originally UN forces strongly entrenched at maintain the liberty" of the U.S." d ignated for this, but only 400 Chlpyong battled furiously to beat All the aid the U.S. has given .back Chinese Reds from three dir­ other countries, he said, Is to of 600 students who placed ections. "further that principle nnd to books for sale have picked up Hum&ll Wan, strengthen the United state so :he money or unsold books. Red hordes pounded In human that our Uberty may be main­ It w. also annolUlCecJ TuC!l­ waves IIgalnst the UN !ront in tained." da, that IIlllPOld book. may STRIVING HARD TO PREVENT A BREAKTHROUGH, UN force. the snow-mantled mountains of Pre,ldenS Truman, Taft laid, central Korea - striving for a now be ret>lal_d the eoun­ (open arrowl) foUCM determinedly apinat Communist drives (sol­ "llIUrped po.era" when. be a' breakthrough. ell', orr," I. 0141 Dental build· lel arroWl) In central Korea. One Red drive Is headed down from lent ttooPi to Korea ",Itho.t They poured Banzai attacks at I." au &II&t tbese boob wtJl HoellPon .. area (1) while another 18 aimed at and around Chlpyon .. flrsi eoftlaJU~ cODl'reu. beee.. lobe propert, of the an Allied force surrounded In The President, Taft continued, (2). AJlleel ',rcM In Seoul leCtor (3) would be In dancer of Isola­ Chlpyong, 35 miles enst ot Seoul. tuden. Council II UJlCla1JM4 tion If ComlmUlllts .uClceeded III their drives. then Interpreted the Atlantic byl\lal'()l.\ 1. Their tanks and selt-propelled Pact \0 mean that the United Jim Fohmer, C4, Davenport, guns menaced Wonju, the key to States pledged "an unspecl!led said, "It's urgent that these all highways in South Korea - number of troops" to help fight books be picked up as soon ns includlng those behind 100,000 the Atlantic Pact naUOM. Thc possible. The council has planned SUI .- Enrollment Lowest AJl!ed troops aroWld Seoul. pact actually pledged JnIlitary operations that require all the They ,wumetl over hUll 10 aid, but not troops, Taft stated. space we con let." Ule 20 mllell between CbJp­ boulel Cr_ Uti! He added that the next Stu­ Since 'World War II End ,ooc and Wonju, rolllbf druJD5 Taft laid earlier In an Inter­ dent Council wl\J have to decide and blowtn.&' bur Ie. a. they view that UN torces should cross when and If the next exchange About 8,000 students h.we registered at sur for the second altaeked. the 38tt\ parallel In Korea ··it It will be held, but that his com­ semester dropping enrollment to the lowest level since the end of They infiltrated 800 North Ko­ can be done without sendin, reans out of Seoul across the Han mittee feels that results definite World War II. additional American forces to ly warrant such a continuance. In the western sector and caused Korea." The total was a drop of n arly 1,000 from last semester's surprised stat! officers, clerks and Taft said he thought UN units even cooks to grab rifles. should disre,ard the parallel be­ World Situation 9,125 and 'far below the peak of l Swarml of rlaDei -:--------------;---------------------------:, cause "the whole basia ot o\lr 10 886 reached in the fall of During the last seme.ster ap- Swarms ot Allied planes were bein, in Korea is to pu ag- at a Glance 19~. Prior to World War U en- proximately 345 men dropped out out over the arell despite cloud:; ,resson." rollmen!s averaged about 7,000. of school to join the services. and snow flurries. They were S9me National Guard Soviet Moves Calling aut he ulll Uaat wblle he FIGHTING FllONT-UN &rooPi Fewer Men About 45 ot these returned after making the blillest air eCtort ot favored tile cllma' pelley of In central Korean mountains battle The number of men on the flnding the !'ecrultlng statiollll the war to blunt the Red assault. leudh,.. !bell ie replace 1IA4I­ to stem Red counteroffensive aim­ campus fell trom 6,124 to 5.844, closed to enlistments. Despite the stepped up enemy Units Now in Far East u.s. Aggressor in \lam" and .,uild jJvlatol\l ed. at swam?!n, "U.S. El,hth army according to the official flgure~ attacks, Maj. Gen. Edward M. Al­ there ".., &e lwl &&reNa. torces and c"ttlng off .!Lilies ligQt­ By colleges, the second semes­ mond, commander of (he lOth rei d T\lesdaI. ter preliminary enrollment was: WASHINGTON 1m- The army . gUlird unUs in the Fllr Ellst are cUd no~ " ..., '- ~ ~t.nill log around Seoul. ~ wr 1IIJD hall 'his deerea e corps, told a press conference lie China Killed by UN liberal arts, 3,767; graduate, 2,- dl~C1osed Tuesday that some na­ smaller than division size, All Ameriua 'unit. co~~ted. In TOKYO - Gene,.1 MseArUl.r CSb. '"' UeGP&e4 for bee_lIM did not consider the situation along­ 122; commerce, 583; medicine, tional guard units of smaller than six of the guard divisions called (F,oln Ibe Wire 80 ..1 •• 11 Korea. • returns tp headquarters 'after in­ ""'7 ·... ra .. have lett. Their his central front serious and that 385 ; engineering, 320; nursin" division ~ize are in the Far East. to federal service since the out­ Taft also vald he thought . It sPecting Korean battlefrOJlt. and nua-MI'I' IlI. from %,5M durlnr the filhtin, ot the past two days LAKE SUCCESS, N.Y. - The was 0. "mistake:' when. UN torces c1Jsmlsses talk 01 erossin, 38th 298 ; law, 286 : dentistry, 213, and A spokesman said he was not break of the Korean war now "'4 "~r &0 l,tU. A lear showed "that two de!lnite forces United Nations general assembly went "lnlO the mountains near p,!Irallel except by patrols; em­ pharmacy, 183 . ~nnitted to say whether the arc In training In continental .,0 &her. :wen _ ... than twice have met and clashed in a defi­ U.S. Tuesday killed twin Soviet reso- Manchuri"," last tall. pi"\a.sltes UN forces will pull back u ..n, ve&era_ nite conflict." unlts 'are in combat in Korea nor or advance as situation demands. tit idenllfy the individual 'jni ts. No national guardsmen have lutions seeking to condemn the The Ohio Republican alBo told . Many, of these were reservists * * * 01 &he Chip,onr rarrilOn - been called to service individual­ Unitcd States as an aggressor n Drake unlverally audience that LAKE SUCCESS - Ualiell Na­ who were ordered back to active since reponeiJ lurroun"etl He sard information on the un its the chief "Ru'sian menace" does tions assembly rejects by huae vote Expect LiHle Drop ly as have many reserves. against China. ' ,ervice. the reneral added: ',. Is a d.mn and the number of guardsmen SQvj~t SOvlClt dem.nds that U.S. be lerm­ not lie in the Union's land % &0 1 .. ooct terce aDel cab clve • llama' InvoLved is classified for security Guardsmen train in organized It rejected, 48 to 5, Soviet de- strength but in the possibility of ed aggressor against FOrmosa a.let units and are called into service The ratlo between men and Finance Needs rood aecount 01 I&leU. The)' are reasons. mands lor condemnation of the an increased Russian alrforce. Gnd condemned for bombing Chi­ In perfeetl, able to take e.re of Army Policy on that basis. women has dtopped to about two U.S. as an aggressor a,alnst For~ He' said that while sea and air tlese territory along North Korean to one. SUI President Virgil M. Han­ themselves." It was pointed out that army Six Divisions power could not stop a Russlan borde.r. mosa. It refused, 51 to 5, to slap In the apri"" semester, 1950, cher said Tuesday decreased ' ell­ Red strategy was to cut oU UN policy is not to ship national In addition to the six divisions, the U.S. for American bombings march Into Westerll Europe, TOKYO - U. Col. 'M.P.T. Dea rollments at state colleges will forces massed against the bridge­ ,uatd divisions or uni ts overseas neither could land (orCes that Ouden, commander of Dutch forces better than 7,000 men and 2,500 two n<ltional guard combat teams of Chinese territory along the women .re,istered, maklnt the not cut financial needs "as much less Han river just across from "exccpt to meet combat require­ and some guard ai r units have could be built up In the next two In Korea Is kiJied in night street North Korean border.

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