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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (May 11, 1951)
o CDET7W SERVICE! We pride ourselves in being oble to offer you quick, courteous service . olong with high quolity, scientific loundering methods. You'll save lots of time, too, by letting us do your washdoy chores! Coll now and our friendly driver will pick up your wosh-day load . . . de liver it fresh and clean . . . let you have Monday free to do those little things you never seem to have time for. Complete Laundry and Cleaning Service NEW SERVICE LAUNDRY : 324 W. Lone. Dial 3-8362 Many Aged, Young Koreans, Shuttling With War Tides, Find Rest In Merciful Death . Bv JOHN RANDOLPH SOMEWHKRK IN' KOREA (AP) The little old Korean man sat on the ground in his dirty white cottons. His back was against it rice paddy hank. His bandy Ires and straw-slippered feet extended straight out before him. He was clenching and unclpnching his hands. His si-raggly gray beard wiggled as he poured out his unhappy story in the gutteral, explosive language of his country. But no translation way neeHed to catch the desperation in the Tl,. .m;. , , ' v. w . old man s voice. , .I t- "',1 n0t-8 b?k ,0 , . . . , Ket the sick mother, me Amen. The words gushed out in panicky cans couidn't let the old man go ha;t to persuarle the Americans back alone He 00 0d , before they could send him south wea( in ine waning irucKs aueauy filled with about 40 refugees. Friday, May 11, lf51 The Newt-Review, Roieburg, Or. 11 He had been behind the United Vitinni lln.. K-.fl nan "My daughter . . . house in vil- posit,ons and' ,rencP. A11 ,nis a, Use. . . baby last nisht. . now informalion ,h, chines, would MIC HI. . . UAH . . IIC IllrtV ..., f Ujm lla n..Jn, mm JkjAlif..-.. '.I'm Rollins College Students Acting To Avert Crash WINTER PARK, Kla. -JTI A stjdent committee called a walk out of Rollins college students for today. The committee. lerd bv student body in March, said it wants to bring to a neau tiie mrt.r over plans to dismiss a third of the faculty and resulting demands for the resignation of Dr. Paul A. Wagner as president. Another student group opposed the walkout, but the committee said it represented almost the en tire student. body of 630. Dr. Wagner has been under fire from faculty, student and alumni groups since the announcement that 23 of the 7S faculty members would be dismissed and intercol lepiate athletics dropped this fall. Trustees have held two meetings without announcing I decision. An other has been called for May IS here. The student committee which called the walkout and a mass meeting in place of attendance in classrooms said the decision was baeri on these reasons: 1. A majority of students will transfer (to other colleges) if Dr. Wanger remains. 2. Tre students must have de cision in the immediate future in order to formulate and carry out their plans for further education. 3. If the present situation at Rollins is prolonged into the sum mer months, the student body will have no voice in the final decision. baby die. I must go sibly go back. Forced Into Truck AZALEAS For Borders io i. S2S0 30c each ROSEBURG GARDEN SHOP 510 West Oak Street YOUR CAR WILL SPARKLE! GLISTEN! SHINE! . . . LIKE NEW ASK ABOUT PORCELAINIZING Renews the Shine It your car has the dull effects Ot tht weather on it finish . . , moke it bright like pnng by hav ing it porcelamized. Bnng your car (n todoy to our porcelamizing ex perts.' HANSEN MOTOR CO. Oak & Stephens Dial 3-4444 (BS&fitESI die back. . . give medicine Bovd W. Mavo. of Jacksonville, Ma ,he interpreters Ha., civil affairs officer for the !e nodl"du loV1(J lhe uc Seventh cavalry regiment. he ld man shrank away, hands Alayo's lips twisted in sympathy. ""Hering and voice nsinit in hy- But there was nothing to be done, s,er"' he told an interpreter, adding: It was a pitiful sight, but nothing The Chinese were h iek in the new in 10 months of Korean war. village. One American soldier al- The interpreter shouted to an- ready had been killed on patrol, other korean soldier. Between them they naif-helped, hall-pushed the old man to the truck. "You get them like that every day," Mayo explained. "His daughter probably has a fever and needs sulia or penicil lin. If she's still alive tomorrow and our patrols can get back there, maybe we can save her. It's just a chance." "These people waited too lonj to go." he said. The Chinese caught up with them when e pulied back. Now wele pushed forward again and they're right on the Iront line. "We can't leave them here. They're right in line ol lire trom both sides. We simply can't let prople pass from one side to the other at will. The Chinese can get too much information about us that way. Some refugees are Com munist agents. " Korea's worst refugee crisis came last winter when more than 2,000,000 fled south in the bitter cold. Thousands died on the road. Shuttlt With War Tidtl Most of the refugees are out of the front areas now. But there is still no lack of tragedy. Almost all of Korea's refugees are rice-growing peasants, i.ike peasants of all lands, they have a olind attachment lo their hltle fields. They follow the contending armies like seagulls follow a ship often moving back to their farms while a light slill rages on the hill beyond. But let the bi guns growl at the sign ot a new Cmnee nliensive and they start south again thin column? of old men. old women end - llttl children. i Never do you see $oung men or young women. The young men are either in the army or dead. The girls are either dead or in Chi nese hands. Each new move windows out the NAMED PULITZER WINNERS Don Whitehead (left!, Max Desfor (center) and Relman Morin (right), all of The Anociated Press, have been awarded Pulititr prizes in the field of international reporting and news photography. Whitehead was honored for his story, written with the U.S. Marinas outside Seoul, describing the Han river action. Morin was cited for his story, "Death of An Airbese," and for another story, "hatred to stay long after the last shot is fired in the Korean war." Desfor was named in news photography (or his picture of refugees fleeing across I a wrecked bridge in Korea. I ( AP Wirephoto I t . t weak from the strong. Someone lies down lo die un-nmpi ehend- for the molher he will never find always is left behind. ing, in oriental fatalism. again. Every day somi" bent old pirent Kvery night some little tot stum-. It has been going on for 10 ! comes1 to the end of the road and blcs through the darkness, crying months. It goes on and on and on. 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