PAGE TWO
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
rtnmsnAV. AUGUST 6, 1953
" KFLW MS Kc. w PST
'"' . Thursday Evening, Auf. 6
y 00 Th. American War CBS
? 0:30 General Electric Theatr. CBS
' 7:00 Mr. Preildent ABC
? 9:30 Record Derby
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'. Lowell Thomas CBS
" .: Family Skeleton CBS
' 00 Meet Millie CBS
f:3ft Drama' of Medicine
- S:4S Desert Inn Orch, CBS
10:00 10 n rr' Headline
' 10:1.1 Starlight Roof ABC '
-10:30 Bill's Bandatand
11:00 Sign Off News Summary
h.d.1 sun on
; KFLW 145S Rc. PST
1 Friday, Au. 7
KM Earl; Bird News
5 Alarm Clock Club
6:43 Hymns
54 rive Minutes wtin an Open Blbll
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?:19 Charlie's Roundup
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7-45 Barry Babbitt CBS
00 Breakfnst Club ABC
0:00 Blue Skies
15 Ma Perkins
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10:00 Chet Huntley ABC
10:13 Perry Maton CBS
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10:45 Stop St Shop
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OPEN 6:30 P.M.
as as. mm ssai CART RIDES
FREE FOR THE
NOW SHOWING!
THE UNTOID
STORY Op f J
THI IICRIT NlfJ
outlaw iMPim V irt f
THAT RULID THEfWI
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7.
"MONirCENTLy r.iu,.
'"THt "l.INOOR OF THE
3 TfCHNicmW
II MA
L .BARBARA
1FALEX NICOL
CHARLES DRAKE JIMMY WOT
ilMARNESS
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BEAUTVHE I '; ,,,' t,f I
AND THE I J Av 1
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as
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Howard KEEL
in M O Mi
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TECHNICOLOR
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i SUNDAY!--1
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2 00 Wizard of Odds CBS
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00 llabriel H.etlsr MBS
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s 53 Bill Henry MBS .
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8 CO r'reedom U.S.A.
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MUUKtntAU
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A SLIGHT CASE OF
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ROONEY A
EODIt
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LMHE
STEWART
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- 1159 Ke. -
Friday, Aug, 7
6 00 Sunrise Serenade
fl;30 Farmer's Jamboree
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. f
Freed Prisoners Tell Of Red's
Beatings, Burnings, Marches
FREEDOM VTLLAOL, Korea
i Americans and South Koreans
freed by the Communis', today
told of beatings, burnings, death
marches and starvation at the
hands of their Red captors hor
rors which they said killed count,
less fellow prisoners.
Lt. Col. Thomas D. Harrison,
highest ranking American officer
yet returned In the two-day pris
oner exchange, arrived on crutches
with one leg missing. He said the
Communists starved him seven
days, then repeatedly .-mothered
him with a wet towel and revived
him with Jabs from' a lighted ciga
rette. It was a fruitiest attempt
to get military information, he
said.
He said he knew of "at least 60
officers who were so ill they should
have been returned" last April
during the exchange of disabled
prisoners. He said the Reds told
him he was held back "because 1
was a bad boy I used my rank
and eloquence to Influence other
prisoners."
Harrison, a 32-year-old fighter
bomber pilot from Clovis, N. M..
is the second cousin of Lt. Gen.
William K. Harrison, senior Allied
truce negotiator. He is one of 70
Americans freed today at Pan
munjom. Today's accounts, If not as sweep
lngly lurid as ordeals described by
sick and wounded POWs freed last
April, were all the more intense
and personal. A new Army censor
ship rule allows a liberotcd prig
oner to tell only of atrncities he
saw.
In April, the POWs lold and re
told horror stories which circulated
In the camps.
The accounts were grimly ac
cented by the sight of pitiful, brok
en wrecks of men who made up
part of today's 3D2 returnees. Some
could hardly walk. Others were ter
ribly emaciated. One, a South Ko
rean, was delivered dead.
Some of the returning Americans
were In excellent condition. But In
general, they were worse than the I
British, though not In as desperate
shape as the South Koreans.
U. S. and other airmen .ippoarcd
to be special targets of Red bru
tality, probably a reprisal for
deadly Allied bombings and straf
ings, Allied officers said.
A Negro B29 co-pilot, Lt, Samuel
E. Masslnberg of Detrott, said he
got four days of continuous torture
and starvation from the North Ko
reans, followed by a special effort
to woo him to commun:sm "be
cause of my race."
"I understand communism better
now. I hate lt more," he said.
"They butted me around, they
slugged me, they gave me no food
for four days. When thsy saw I
would not give them the Informa
tion they wanted, they turned me
over to the Chinese to fatten me
up."
Massinberg's hands wre frost
bitten after he bailed out over
Pyongyang when a Rod MIG Jet
shot down his B29 last Jun. 11. The
Reds bound them tightly, he said.
"They hurt terribly all the time
and I lost part of the left one."
The returning prisoners present
ed grim evidence that some of the
thousands of missing Americans
never will return.
Shung Keum Slioon, t. 23-year-old
emaciated South Korean, told
of seeing North Korean Ktds beat
seven Americans so severely with
rifle butts that five died within a
few hours.
Cpl. Russell P. James of Auburn,
Wash., told of grisly burial details
in the bitter winter of 1950-51 In
the notorious mining camp that
prisoners called "Death Valley."
"We buried 25 to 30 men prac
tically every ay. We had no med
ical treatment at all and all we
Rot to eat then was a little bit of
millet every day."
Later things Improved and James
added sarcastically, "Then we got
beans and rice on weekdays and
chicken and photographers on hol
idays. The photographers took pic
tures of us eating chicken."
With tears of emotion In his
eyes, S. Sgt. Robert M. Wilkins of
Detroit, an airman shot down in a
B26 lasi January, told of being
thrown into a "black hole" and
tortured after he and sevrel oth
ers escaped momentarily and were
recaptured.
He said a British and in Ameri
can officer died in the urrieal.
"We were tossed Into a dungeon,"
he said.. "I'm not kidd.ng you
we had to lie two deep it was so
crowded there. And there was an
inch or two of water on the floor."
Later, he said, guards "took us
Into a room and tied us so that we
couldn't move." He said ihey were
forced to kneel with a stick tied
behind their knees, their arms
drawn up behind them and tied to
the celling and a choke rope lied
around their throats.
"We were allowed to go to the
latrine about twice a day," Wilkins
said. "It got so bad one man final
ly untied another with his teeth.
The man was suffering from dysen
tery." ' '
Asked how it felt to be free,
Wilkins replied:
"I get goose pimples all over.
I'm Just now beginning to realize
it's true."
The worst horrors described
were in the earlier days of the
war, through the spring of 1951.
It appeared from the POWs'
stories that conditions improved in
some cases as the Chinese Com
munists took over from the North
Korean Reds, and improved still
more as the truce talks progressed.
Cpl. Charles F. Hearn of St.
Louis, Mo., Captured M""
told a story lhat seemed fairly
Epical of the irtantrymen-butnot
the airmen-captured er that
first terrible winter. m
He said treatment In prison camp
was "fairly nice" and the guards
generally left him and his fellow
prisoners to themselves although
food . was inadequate the enure
time and medical care subsland-
""in the iast two or three wci-ks
It seemed like they emp tied their
warehouses and did everything pos
sible to make us happy. 7aidJ
John C. Harlan of Institute. W. Va.
Aired how the .officers In h's
camMearneWdofthe armistice, the
lean, wind-burned major said.
"They had photographers and
newsreel men expecting us tc i cele
brate. But everyone turned around,
turned their backs to the camera
and walked olf." ' . k
Harlan said the Rods held bacK
at least a dozen sick and wounded
prisoners in "?PeruaUo?h .'"j!
Switch" last April, when Ihey had
promised to deliver all to .w
and wounded captives they held.
Medical officers said the threa
mon'hs- delay may be critical in
some cases.
Klamath Foils, Ort(M
AMERICAN CHINESE .
Foods at their batll
rk. e For Order To Tk Out
Ben 8. Lee. Mgr.
Children Invite Mother To
Play; She Razors All Three
ARAB. Ala. ln A distraught
mother answered her children's
Invitation to Join them In play yes
terday by cutting their throats and
slashing herself wildly.
From a hospital bed Mrs. Pearl
Griffin told Coroner Aubrey Carr
she felt her nerves "let go" about
lour months ago.
Carr said the :6-year-old mother
killed Rickey Giililn. 6. Ronnie.
4. and Rosalind, 3, while they were
alone in her parents' home in
Oleander, seven miles north of
here. Her father, W. F. Chancy,
said she had been suffering with
a nervous disorder.
Carr said the mother told him
she had repeatedly asked her fam
ily to send her to a nvental Insti
tution, and had told her husband
she was going to kill herself.
1 She said she had worried about
TONIGHT
DOORS OPEN :30 P I
II i S towns v I
iMMOME sHOWTS-CARTOON NEWs) J
leaving the children to be "pushed
around."
When the children called to her
to Join them ,in play, she picked
up her father s razor, went up-
stairs and killed them, Carr said
the mother related. I
Hosea Griffin, 16-year-old brother ;
of the woman, said he saw blood
dripping from the ceiling of the llvt ;
lng room when be returned to the I
house.
The youth ran to the upper floor I
and found the bodies of the chil-'
dren on the floor. The mother lay j
among them, still clutching the :
razor. i
Carr said Mrs. Grlflin told her
father, "I killed my children so !
they would go to heaven. I couldn't
leave them behind."
Mrs. Griffin came home about i
a month ago from Detroit where j
her husband Arnold, 28, works In
an auto plant. :
Carr said he asked the woman If
she realized after killing the first I
child that she was "doing some- i
thing terrible wrong."
He said she replied: "No, t was1
going to go through with It." ,
Mrs. Griffin was charged with I
three counts of murder and a guard j
placed at her bedside, the coroner i
saia.
Ike, Dulles Agree
On Korea Rebuild
WASHINGTON Wl The State
Department says President Elsen
hower and Secretary of State Dul
les are in accord about using
American Armv resources in re
building war-torn Korea.
A statement Issued vtslrrdav
said Dulles never meant troops
would b med as "labor battal
ions," but thu "technii al kn.w
how of specialized forces ' would
be employed.
The statement said Dulles' views,
reiXirted Rnturrlav ti. .
as Eisenhower s. It said tne White !
nuuse consulted the State Depart
ment before issuing a c.arlfylng
statement Monday.
TO BE CALLED HOME
SEOUL i.fi The Foreign Office
Said Wrrlnftriau I. ! -M..n..
South Korea's diplomats in the
' """i wates and Great Britain
lor new instruction.
NOW IN PROGRESS
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