Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 62, No. 6, Ed. 4 Tuesday, February 13, 1951 Page: 1 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Oklahoma City Times and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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I
Oklahoma City Times
Allies Fall Back
To New Central
PRICE FIVE CEN’S
LATE STREET EDITION
26 PAGES—500 N BROADWAY, OKLAHOMA CITY, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1951
VOL. LXII, NO. 6.
Snow, Icy Mist Pounding
Sector Defenses
co
g •'
State, Traffic Snarled;
More Cold Is Forecast
«3
I *
Being Prepared
Parallel Issue
Checked to UN
1
said that talk of a drive north
of the thirty-eighth parallel in
farther west, toward the Wonju-Yoju
way.
Research Chief Saya Mysterious Objects
Picket School Grounds
were
at but
$*
d
Er et
ly opposed to serapping raw cotton
United Nations forces "are
Early Tuesday Rufus Putnam, school superintendent, said
an
who started the strike later to be Joined by the teachers, were not
be-
Navy Gons Pound Reds
Before the Tenth corps broke con-
Seoul, to Pyongchang, 40 miles to
children and some 5,000 adults attend-
wounded in both wars.
to his uncle, Mose Poolaw, Walters.
at
wildcat
stevedores who went on a
Drya
strikes in the three ports. The London
Storm
pital with serious head injuries and
Gravel
rWffiKMF.
*
2
X
Cotton Ceiling Bus Skids
Near 45 Cents AtViaduct,
State Indian Wins
Korea Decorations
DrysSpurFight
OnHonkytonks
PLEASE TURN TO
PAOE 1, COLUMN 5
he received a cluster to the Purple
Heart, a second Oak Leaf cluster to
the Bronze Star and an Oak Leaf
the war began last June. Poolaw also
fought in World war II. He has been
Air Reservists
Called to Duty
PLKASE
PAOS >.
On Ums
except for
850 Tinker Area Men
To See Active Service
Highest Bids
Get Countys
Gravel Order?
Western UN Lines Threatened as Enemy
Drives Wedge Deeper in Mid-Korea; Foes
Move Toward Vital Wonju-Yoju Highway
i
H
A
yance in that offer
The Chinese, he
Ing night schools.
British Dock Hands
Start Work Return
By Commander
Fourth Bid for War
Instructions Cornea
From MacArthur
TOKYO, Feb. 13—(—General
MacArthur returned from a visit
' 8,27
pltal with a back injury. Hos-
pital authorities said an X-ray
will be taken to determine the
extent of her injuries.
Mrs. Adeline McKnight of 209 4 8W
29 suffered a possible fractured wrist
when passengers were knocked around
in the bus from the impact. She was
token to University hospital.
Others receiving cuts and bruises
Crossword Puzzle
in Oklahoma ...
OU Reports .....
Radio Leg ......
Society .........
Sports ..........
TV Toptees .....
Women .........
tio.
"The United Dry association de-
mands that the United States Brew-
ers foundation and the beer distribu-
tors and brewers m this state admit
publicly that the beer joints and tav-
thirty-elghth parallel frontier
tween North and South Korea. An
strike five days ago. The men de-
mended increased pay.
A back-to-work drift also developed
at the ports of Liverpool, and Man-
chester. both crippled by a similar
walkout.
Manchester dockers voted in a mass
meeting to go back on their jobs
Wednesday. but plan a one day strike
next Tuesday, when seven men ap-
law honkytonks.
The development came from David
despite an "astronomical increr
the destructiveness at allied air
a group of children waiting at the
next bus stop.
Harry kept pumping the brakes.
He leaned on the horn button. The
horrified youngsters scampered to
safety. But one child. 7-year-old
Esther Flinchbaugh, frowe with fear.
ing prices within bounds.
DiSalle reportedly was con-
vinced that a ceiling close to 45
cents a pound would be liberal
enough to induce heavy cotton
plantings even though far from
the complete decontrol which
cotton interests seek.
Exchanges Resume Activity
Sixteen cotton-state senators last
Tuesday carried to President Truman
the decontrol proposal, arguing that
the removal of ceilings would stim-
ulate production and thus stabilize the
market. The government has asked for
a 60 percent increase in cotton output
this year, to relieve the present short-
Brewers Urged to Aid
Padlock Legislation
Seizing on an army order put-
ting several Oklahoma county
taverns off limits. United Drys
Tuesday demanded brewers ad-
mit their self-regulation pro-
gram is a failure and Join them
in asking the legislature to out-
PLEASE TURN TO
PACK 1. COLUMN S
LONDON, Feb. IS—(P—Work
the Thames docks returned to normal
Then Harry made his split-second
decision.
"I closed my eyes and kept pump-
ing the brake pedal," he said. "Then
I heard the bump The bus lurched
a little and I said to myself 'Oh,
God."
Esther was token to Franklin hos-
it off the highway and keep roads clear.”
The OG&E dispatcher here said there is two inches of snow
FRANKLIN, Pa., Feb. IS—(U.P—
The helpless took on the face of a
7-year-old girl he ran down always
will live in the mind of veteran
school bus driver Francis Harry?
"I didn’t have much of a choice,"
he said. “It was 40 lives against
one."
The 40-year-old driver's most ago-
Minneapolis System Paralysed by Dispute
Over Salaries; Governor’s Plea Spurned
MINNEAPOLIS, Feb. 13—()—1 Picketing of Minneapolis public
schools was started Tuesday by striking teachers who spumed a
plea by Gov. Luther W. Youngdahl to open the city’s 94 school
buildings closed by strike since January 23.
First pickets appeared at several highschools shortly before
8 a. m. One highschool reported a few teachers had reported for
duty and that some pupils were in the building. Classes normally
start at 8:30 a. m.
“to preserve a more favorable defense
line." But he acknowledged that the
used in atomic research. ___
“Accounts of flying saucers," Dr Liddel said, “were either
pear in a London police court on »
of conspiring to incite illegal
here.
Ice seemed to be centered here, at Miami, in the northeast
corner, around Durant, and in the Ada district.
The state highway department reported heavy snow in the
northwest and north “but winds that are strong enough to blow
will be at least some moisture for wheat farmers, although weather
observers here said it would be light.
can seriously consider conducting a
major operations north of that goo-
gaged in a war of maneuver" designed
to inflict maximum casualties on the
expected to cross picket lines
other than to maintain fires at
degrees to prevent freezing.
Janitors Launch Walkout
Th* governor called for reopening
the schools early Tuesday after Jan-
itors and other employes had accepted
a wage proposal. The janitors walked
out January 23 and the teachers later
announced joining the strike.
At a union meeting lasting until
after midnight, teachers turned down
a proposed 1100 across-the-board pay
boost for 1951. Both settlement offers
were drawn up after a 12-hour ses-
sion in the governor's state capital
offices in St. Paul Monday.
"I am keenly and sadly surprised
and disappointed that the teachers
union saw fit to reject the offer and
my sincere and urgent appeal to open
the schools," the governor said.
63,000 Children Affected
does not agree to purchase at any
time any given or stated amount, but
reserves the right to purchase in such
amounts and at such times as they
may deem necessary.”
County Net Bound
That clause in the contract specific-
ally keeps the county from being
bound to buy any material at any
price at any time, and under contract
law. if the county is not bound by it,
it is not enforceable by the county
BULLETIN
HONG KONG, Feb. 13—U.P)
— Chinese communists shelled
the tanker "Caltex H," owned
by the Texas Co. and flying
the British flag. as the ship
passed Lintin island in the
Pearl river estuary Tuesday en-
route to Hong Kong.
Teachers Go on Strike,
Approximately 850 additional air-
force reservists under the command of
the Oklahoma City air materials area.
Tinker airforce base, Tuesday were on
their way back to active military ser-
vice.
Although almost all of the men are
from Oklahoma, a few live elsewhere
in the 10-state territory of OCAMA.
Induction of the 850 will exhaust the
pool of reserves under command of
Maj. Oen. F. 8. Borum, head of the
materials area. They are men who do
not belong to training units.
According to orders in the mail
Tuesday, the men will start reporting
to Tinker February 23 for short pro-
on a 40-mile front.
New Une is Secret
Only about one-third of the forces
are believed to have been committed
to battle so far, and they already
Minutes later, George Beacom, pres-
ident of local 238, Minneapolis Fed-
eration of Teachers, said: "We have
turned down the offer. We are still
on strike and we’re going to stay on
strike."
The 2,200 teachers are now paid on
an annual range of 12,800 to 84,800.
About half the system's 450 janitors
draw 83.210 with the others receiving
from 82,370 to 84.140 annually. The
offer the latter accepted grants month-
By Horace Thompson
If you pay taxes, you bought
90 railroad freight carloads of
gravel delivered at Edmond, and
28 freight carloads delivered at
Britton during the month of
January.
You bought it from John Garner
and C. B. Mosier, doing business as
the OK Materials Co.
It was shipped from their gravel
pit at Maud, near Seminole
It cost $16,238.93, and was listed for
use in building county roads in the
Edmond and Britton areas.
Dolese Offer Smaller
Material meeting the same specifi-
cations was offered you by Dolese Ma-
terials Co., for $13,709.
Dolese figured the cost of delivering
at Britton was only 13 cents a ton
more than delivering it at Oklahoma
P
“I kept leaning on. the horn,
eaatreaztrmpsag
■ •— live.
"I knew it was either that little
ot up to 1,000 Chinese Reds
tad on ths move south.
4 itaeir stil was i allled
—) Wirephete
Ties, Not Tickets for Traffic Violators
Police at Asbury Park, N. J., are conducting a new kind of
safe driving campaign. For minor traffic violations they hand
out neckties instead of tickets. The ties are emblazoned with
stop signs, red and green traffic lights and other highway
markers. Shown here is Hyman Sachs getting a tie from traf-
fic officer George Dabney.
or all the kids in my bus." h*
strikers also plan to quit work again
then.
Manila Fears New
Volcano to Erupt
MANILA. Feb. 13—IP— Fire and
lava were reported bubbling out of a
mountain top 125 miles north of Ma-
nila Tuesday.
It's quite possible s new volcano is
being born, said Arturo Alcaraz, Phil-
ippine weather bureau geophysicist.
The Philippine news service carried
a report that smoke. flames, ashes
and metallic matter were coming out
of a crater in the Nueva Vizncaya
mountama. The report was attributed
to Mayor Gulllermo Ahan of Bagabag-
Operator of Wild Bug Makes Agonizing Split-Second Decision
To Save 40, Driver Hits Child
Low of 8 Seen Here
The official forecast calls for tem-
perature* to fall to around 5 in the
northwest—and to 1 degrees in Okla-
homa City—by morning. and observers
added that “the only way we’ll get
the ice off the highways is to beat tt
off—it won’t melt.”
The storm was moving slowly across
the state at mid-morning, with snow
Americans lost artillery and vehicles
in their retreat.
United Nations warships and plane*
continued to support the ground
forces.
Red Cross Leader Dies
TORONTO, Feb. 13—(P—Dr. Fred-
erick Willam Routley. who directed
activitles of the Canadian Red Cross
during World war II, died in a hos-
pital here Monday. He was 71. He
was national commissloner of the Ca-
nadtan Red Cross society from 1937
to 1948.
the Eighth army’s rear.
Allies Selze Vital Hill
Farther west, however, UN troops
hit back against the communist
pocket south of the Han river and
captured a commanding hill in a
one-mile advance some 25 miles
southeast of Seoul.
The fight for the 1,700-foot hill
seven miles northeast of Inchon had
seesawed back and forth three days.
When the aUled troops reached the
crest, they counted 831 enemy bodies.
In the same area, 26 of 34 allied
troops trapped Monday night in a
Chinese attack on their outpost 15
miles northeast of Inchon made their
way back to the allied lines.
Reports from the central front in-
dicated the communists have thrown
4
i
3
wu ,
1321
ceilings entirely.
Meantime the country’s commodity
exchanges, many of which closed
down after the big price freeze, showed
signs of coming to life as a result of
new orders made effective by OPS
Tuesday.
One of them, announced late Mon-
day. may set the pattern for the pend-
ing cotton order. It provides specific
dollars-and-cents ceilings on cotton-
seed oil, soybean oil and corn oil.
attorney. It followed by a few hours
army and airforce orders putting sev-
eral places here off limits to their
military personnel.
only tactical success. He warned
against evaluating these as "decisively
leading to the enemy's defeat"
MacArthur stood near the thawing
age.
Trade sources report that OPS’ Jan-
uary 28 price order froze some sellers
as low as 42 cents and others
have forced a general allied with-
drawal of 10 to 15 miles in 35 hours.
u noun -
North Korea.
- g PaidLClrculation GreataroThan »Newspaper in khahoma . -
dugouts indicated the Reds intended
to put up a fight for the city.
Along ths Han east of Beoul, two
enemy companies counterattacked an
allied battalion Tuesday afternoon
and the battle still was going on at
6 p. m. (3 a. m. C8T>.
On the east coast, other South Ko-
rean forces still were south of the
Gasued after his retum !
considerable manpower and
in the west, light snow to thta arsa,
a fiuntil rain at Ada kM Muskogee
that was sticking to windshields, but
not yet to pavements—and only mist
with temperatures still above freezing
at Fort Smith, Ark., and at Antlers.
American and Braniff airline* had
planes go over here during the early
hours while ice was forming, but
shortly after daylight regular service
was renewed in spite of icy runways.
Reversible propellors saved the day
for the heavy ships apparently.
Sapulpa had about 1 T6-inch of ice
on power lines there, but power com-
panies still had no real trouble in
spite of ice and high winds which
usually cause lines to whip and break.
Bus Schedule* Are Late
Bus lines were all moving, although
most of them were running about an
hour late because of slippery condi-
tions, and because other traffic had
slowed down in front of the heavy
vehicles.
Official forecasts called for clearing
skies here by Wednesday, and the
long-range forecast promised warmer
weather will edge into the extrema
western part of the state late Wednes-
day. It will be cooler again over the
weekend, however, to give this area
about average temperature* for Feb-
ruary—while eastern Oklahoma will
be much colder than normal.
Highway department, state patrol
authorities, and weather observers
all joined in warning of extremely
hazardous driving conditions over the
entire state, at least through the
night.
Heavy snow fell in the Panhandle,
at Alva, Enid, and Woodward in mid-
morning, but weather observers here
said that "it doesn't look too promis-
ing as yet from the moisture stand-
point."
Korea “is purely academic.”
Patrols may cross the parallel, he
said, but “we must materially reduce
the existing superiority of the Chinese
communist enemy . . . Before we
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Before marriage, a wit once said,
a man yearns for the woman But
after marriage the “y" is silent.
But if you yearn for substantial
earning, Oklahoman and Times
Want Ads are what you're after:
The Want Ads make you a profit
through selling, buying. renting,
hiring help, finding a good busl-
ness and landing a well-paying
Job
Phone 3-1211 for an Ad Taker
who helps to funl your yearning
for eaminga.
ret. However, the Chinese were re-
ported moving relentlessly south
Across the rugged hills between
- — ■ 20 miles
enemy and keep him off balance, Mae- '
Arthur said
Definite Line Not Wanted
An effort to establish a line acre**
Korea and “enter into posltional war-
fare is wholly unrealistic and illusory
... would insure destruction of
our forces piecemeal." he said.
MacArthur said the future of the
Korea campaign is "largely dependent
upon international consideration* and
decisions not yet known here.”
From a military standpoint," the
United Nation* commander said, “we
must materlally reduce the existing
superiority of our Chinese communist
enemy engaging with impunity in un-
declared war against us, with the un-
precedented military advantage of
sanctuary protection for his military
potential against our counterattack
upon Chinese soil, before we can seri-
ously consider conducting major oper-
ations north of the thirty-eighth
parallel."
This was MacArthur's first public
cessing tours not to exceed five. First
groups to arrive will probably include
only about 35 men. The size of the w.0 ____________. .
groups will be increased to a maximum Tuesday with the return of 7.190
of about 50 before th* processing tours ------
end March 18.
After th* men are examined and
their records brought up to date, they
will be sent home to await further or-
ders. All will be allowed at least 30
days from the end of their processing
tours to get their business affairs in
order.
The Weather
From th* U s Weather Bureau
Airport Station
LOCAL—Cold wave today and to-
night, with occasional light freezing
drizzle this forenoon and light snow
this afternoon and tonight Wednes-
day partly cloudy and continued
cold. Strong northerly winds today
and tonight High today near N, low
tonight near 8.
STATE—Cold wave today and
tonight with temperatures 15 to 28
northwest 35 southeast falling to 5
above northwest, 15 southeast by
Wednesday morning. Intermittent
light snow today, clearing tonight
Wednesday generally fair and eon-
tinned cold.
EXTENDED— Temperatures next
five days, Wednesday through Sun-
day, wiil average 4 to 5 degrees below
normal in extreme eastern Okla-
homa to near normal elsewhere
Slowly rising temperatures xtreme
western section Wednesday and en-
tire state Thursday and Friday with
a change to colder again toward end
of period. (Normal maximums in
M’s normal minimums near 38). Ne
precipitation of consequence likely
during the period.
• ----- , ___ L--
Hourly Temperature
unuru in u002 wao. — ------ . Shepard said United Drys will have
He told of his decorations in a letter Hoensong was given HP to thesenemy introduced in the legislature this week
..... -— -*— "* • more favorahia defenue bilis allowing county option on beer
and outlawing taverns by permitting
only non-iced sale of beer for con-
sumption off the premises.
Shapard was quick to seize on the
off-limits order, as well as a state-
ment by L. J. Hilbert, Oklahoma City,
to the effect there is little officers can
do to clean up the honkytonk situa-
Price Boss Believes
Liberal Allowance
Will Spur Planting
WASHINGTON, Feb. 13—
(P)—Under hurry-up orders
from Director Michael V. Di-
Salle, the office of price sta-
bilization (OPS) Tuesday
prepared to put a ceiling on
raw cotton high enough to
appease southern senators
but low enough to keep cloth-
amumsmmmnudevdada
What’s inside •
tact in its latest retreat, fighting c. Shapard, Oklahoma United Drys
clusterstogthe Kora - xsv x
M M of Profit Allowed ---- - • - _ _ • -- ---- -
The atm 1* to prevent further price attempt would be made to operate the schools. School Janitors,
boost* in margarine, salad oil and 1_________________________
learn about conditious at such ,
heights. ।
Mild Form of Hysteria
He deplored as "most unfortu-
nate" the secrecy surrounding th* ,
balloon project. He said the project
was "completley unclassified" in
1947.
Since 1947 reports have cropped
up throughout the country of fly-
ing saucers being seen in the heav-
ens. The airforce has repeatedly
said that the report* are the re-
sult of misinterpretation of various
conventional objects, a mild form
of mass hysteria or hoaxes.
Dr. Liddel offered this explanation
of Ute sighting by what he called
even "trained observers":
"They were seeing mirages which
could be seen to travel at any speed
because they were not real. The
saucers are reflections on the bot-
toms of the balloons caused by
temperature differences in various
layers of the atmosphere.
Pilots are Confused
“There is not a single reliable
report of an observance which is
not attributable to the cosmic bal-
loon."
Liddel compared the balloons to
the moon. The balloons turn some-
what, he said, and reflect the
light of the sun in a flashing sort
of way so it becomes more spec-
tacular."
"Pilots, even though accustomed
to judging size and distance of
thing* in the air, haven’t had ex-
perience with things of this kind
and their judgment can't be ac-
curate.
"They see one of them on th*
horizon and start chasing it. They
can't get close to them because the
balloons are too high, and then
they make all sort* of wild estimates
of the balloons' speed."
The balloons now are being flown
in New Mexico, Liddel said, as part
of a program "to get the true pic-
ture of cosmic rays for application
to uses of atomic energy and part
of our general understanding of
atomic energy,” rather than as part
of the atomic bomb program.
looking at the balloons or misinterpreting what they saw.'
Dr. Liddel said the balloons are bags 100 feet in diameter
which travel at windswept speeds up to 200 miles an hour and
soar as high as 19 miles. The balloons, known as “skyhooks.”
—-----carry delicate Instruments to
The county commissioners have
what they call a "contract" to buy
gravel from Garner and Mosier. It was
based on bids filed by bidders who
were not informed how much gravel
the county plans to use, and without
binding the county to buy any gravel
at all.
One former member of the state
supreme court said the thing that
prevents it from being a contract is
a clause in each of the county com-
missioner’s contracts which reads:
"It being understood, however, that
the board of county commissioners
Red Manpower Noted
The United Nations commander said _ . -fninvone
the recent allied offensive had scored
APACHE, Feb 13—(P— M/Sgt. covered the hills and valleys of the
Pascal C. Poolaw, 25, a Kiowa Indian central Korean front with dead Chi-
whose wife .nd four children IM neA comimunkttlons forces re-
Miami, Durant, Ada Hard Hit
By Storm; Mercury Tumbles ]
On Heels of Mild Weather '
were the driver, Bill Modisette, 43, of The OG&E dispatcher here said there is two inches or snow
205 ne 15; Lewis Morris, 45, of 827 at Woodward and a heavy snow fell at Enid to raise hopes there
TOKYO, Feb. 13—(U.P)—Spearheads of up to 170,000
counter-attacking Reds drove a menacing wedge between the
western and central Korean fronts Tuesday.
The new threat arose as battered United Nations forces
broke contact with the enemy south of fallen Hoengsong
and retreated to a new defense line protecting Wonju, 10
miles to the south.
Red patrols already have penetrated to within 2% miles west
of the key road junction of Wonju in the central Korean moun-
tains, nearly 20 miles south of their jump-off positions two days
ago.
With the fall of Hoengsong, however, the communists shifted
the main weight of their assault southwest and struck across
rugged hills toward the vital Wonju-Yoju lateral highway.
Once the Reds reach the highway, they could swing west
against the flank of victorious UN forces besieging Seoul, east
[against Wonju or south toward
Navy Reveals ‘Saucers ‛
Are Plastic Balloons
here, has been decorated three times
in Korean fighting. Poolaw wrote that ported in the clear Tuesday.
_ — IT--- A.me Dns nd Bai
Roads Are Slippery
Temperatures dropped to 19 at
Guthrie and a light snow was fall-
ing there. Norman and Shawnee had
snow with roads as slippery as they
are In Oklahoma City, highway main-
tenance men said. There was a light
freezing drizzle early at Stillwater.
Woodward reported 13 degrees and
snow falling there. In the southwest
there were heavy clouds, but only
light snow where moisture is urgently
needed.
The quick change was felt even
more strongly because of the falmy
summer-time temperatures which
preceded it The mercury reached 83
at Ardmore Monday afternoon, and
73 at the Classen station here.
Here's the Road Picture
Temperatures here have climbed M
high as 78 in 1907 on this date, and
dipped as low as 11 below zero in
1905.
State safety commissioner Coble
Gambill warned motorists that roads
are extremely hazardous throughout
the state. Here are road conditions
as reported by the highway patrol
Tuesday morning:
Lawton—20 degrees, roads open but
icing in spots.
Duncan—Very little ice.
Altus—Snow flurries.
, Clinton—17 degrees, snowing hear-
, lly, ground covered, traffie slow.
Enid —18 degrees, strong north wind.
--------------- elements of six Chinese and two
to the edge of Seoul Tuesday and North Korean army corps—a potential
" force of 34 divisions totalling 140,000
to 170,000 troops—against the allles
1 /1 J fl 111 VO fl Snow, freezing mist, high winds, and temperatures as
J- • low as h at Guymon, lashed the entire state Tuesday, and
all Mr. Maughan could promise was more rough weather
Two persons were treated until clear, cold air arrives Wednesday. -
at hospitals and eight others Oklahoma City was typical. From a balmy 72 at th*
received minor cuts and Classen station Monday afternoon, the mercury tumbled to
bruises about 7:30 a. m. Tues- 18 by Tuesday. A mist turned to an icy glaze just as thou-
day when a city bus skidded sands started to work to produce “the worst traffic condi-
down hill on icy pavement in tions of the winter," according to Lieut. Bob Grimes of the
the 900 block S Robinson and city scout car division.
rammed into the west side of There were more then 20 minor accidents in two hours. The
an underpass. ! city Bus Co. schedule w_ shot, although every bus was moving-
Mabel Randleman. 39. of 23041 at least slowly. Doug Bowers, company executive, estimated “we
NE 21, was taken to Mercy hos- i have about half service because of the low speed we can maintain."
Official forecasts called for the glaze to end with only light
snow promised, although all traffic authorities are hoping for
more snow because that would help to end extremely icy conditions
1:
Lt, Col. Hardin Masters, chief of the
military training section at Tinker,
said each group to report will be
placed in charge of the senior officer char.e
reporting during the processing tour*.
Are Used in Atom Study
WASHINGTON, Feb. 1um-Dr umd uadetelet ofthe shighqzunadnsalsigurai“ aa’tog
nizing decision In his life came
Monday. His huge bus, loaded with ---------
40 pupil* enroute to the Cranberry on her face as the buz bore down
township school, skidded going down on her. . :
a hill at Man Mills. Then hi* "I could have ditched the bus but girl ----— .
MM failed •» might have plowed into a four- said. "We surely, would have turned
The vehicle gathered apeed aa it foot, gully at the side of the road- over in th* gully what els* oou d
rolled down the hill, beaded toward it might have killed us all. Ido?
Han river in Koren ‘Tuesday while ar-,
tillery and air power emashed nt Seoul
-the high point of the wester adt
the cut.
A Tenth corp* spokesman said
5 t S:::::
i0Pm
w • m.
tE
? entrenched inside the city on the “Accounts of flying saucers,” Dr Liddel said, “were either
stMuen: north bank of the Han and allied tales or reports from reliable observers who were either
dendenad torANoname pattois“"which probed Ioobine at the hallonns nr misinterpreting what they saw."
across the Han into the city reported
the Chinese had pulled out of the Ko-
rean capital and left ita defense to
North Koreans. They said strong
column0! Bus Crash
Warkbut M dX* 6050606 city. ThesoKcompany.ttuured.the
"ildren and some 5.000 adults attend- cost of delivering at Britton was 33
Eighth army spokesman said his pre-
vtous announcement that the republi-
can force* had crossed the old border
was erroneous
Isolated Force* Escape
The picture on the embattled cen-
tral Korean front began to look a
little brighter Tuesday as the ollie*
fell back to an apparently solid new
mountain defense line.
Two cut-off allied regimental groups
—an American .two-battalion team
northwest of Hoensong and a South
Korean regiment north of that city—
fought their way out of communist
encirclement late Monday.
A combined American-South Ko-
rean armored task force smashed
enemy road blocks south of the
trapped units to help the escape. A
front dispatch said the rescue team
.M
• 'l tbsgki
cents a ton more than delivering st
Oklahoma City.
It cost no more per ton to deliver
to Edmond than it cost to deliver at
Britton, which is inside the city limits.
Your purchasing agent in the trans-
action was Grover Pendleton, county
commissioner in whose district Ed-
mond and Britton Ue.
‘Contract’ Phase Aired
Was he gypped on the deal—with
your tax money?
Considerable confusion must be
cleared up before you can tell.
rta, but was coming
r heavy enemy pres-
is qulet
front. Seoul is quiet
e artilery dueb and
between communists
S #
H iS :m#
AL
>..W MW • Meermveverev
PLKASE TURN TO Parallel
PAOE :. COLUMN 1 ‘ aamE
dressings and vegetable shortenings,
for which the cite are the major raw
materials.
The ceilings fixed— 23% cents a
pound for cottonseed oil. 30*4 cents
for crude soybean oil and 24% cents
for crude com oil—are a cent or two
below the highest "freeze" price, and
a cent or two above the lowest.
"For the consumer, the net result
will be the same prices." an OP8
PLEASK TURN TO CottOIl
PAOZ 1 COLUMN I —owI
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 62, No. 6, Ed. 4 Tuesday, February 13, 1951, newspaper, February 13, 1951; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1994632/m1/1/?q=food+rule+for+unt+students: accessed June 30, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.