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PAGE TEN
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JUST SO ME OF HER EQUIPMENT — Lieut. Charlene Bordner, of Kansas City,
Mo., U. S. Air Force nurse, shows her medical {raining paraphernalia at Gunter Air Force Base, Ala,
’
UNHOLY TRADE
GARY, Ind. — (AP) — The first
Baptist Church here found itself
equipped with a full set of safe
cracking tools ,but minus $525 in
collection plate money. Deacon
Edward Cunningham decided the
yurglars had been scared away
osefore they could pick up their
tools.
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The Piedmont Mkt.
Phone 1616 240 No. Lumpkin St. We Deliver
Sales Ladies Wanted
—For Athens and surrounding territory | will give free merchan
dise to first 25 ladies calling for appointment. Merchandise to be
used to make big sales and profits. No canvassing, no delivery, no
age limit. For complete facts call Mrs. Kathryn Fisher, Georgian
I Hotel.
b Slen i .
Veteran Officer Says U. §. Should
Avoid Ground War In Far East
By HAL BOYLE
NEW YORK — (AP) — Will
America be forced to fight a great
land war in Asia—in the near or
far future?
It is the belief of many army
ground commanders in Korea that
the American Army should avoid
an all-out war in that area if it is
at all possible to do so.
“The big lesson we have learned
here,” one veicran officer told me,
“is not to get too deeply involved
in this part of the world in ground
warfare, It isn’t for us.”
His argument was that the con
tinent of Asia favored the enemy
method of infantry battle and hin
dered ours. It gives the other side
every advantage. It holds none
for us.
This officer—he had held a high
staff rank in the European war—
felt that to win an Asiatic victory
through land battles would cost
more blood than the American na
tion would spend.
Too Much Potential
“It would bleed us dry,” he said.
“The enemy has too much poten
tial manpower and too much land
scape. Taking landscape doesn’t
win a war—as Napoleon and Hit
ler found out in their marches on
Moscow. You have to destroy the
enemy, his industry-——and his abil
ity to resist.”
He pointed out that Europe’s
fine road network had enabled the
American army in the last war to
utilize its superior mobility and
mechanized firepower. Once our
tanks and mobile guns had broken
through the enemy’s forward crust
they could race at will through his
rear lines and chop them up.
“Asia doesn’t have those roads,”
he said. “And our mobility is re
duced to the minimum. That
means our infantry and their in
fantry would have to slug it out
too much on a rifle to rifle bhasis.”
He felt that even tactical con
trol of the air would be insuffi
cient to overcome this handicap.
“It is too expensive for us even
if we killed five men to every one
we lost,” he said. “The Oriental
people simply don’t regard human
life the way we do.”
Recently I received a letter
from another veteran commander
of the Korean campaign.
An Enigma
“The Korean War continues to
be an enigma to me,” he said. “It
has become inexplicable to me not
because of its see-saw character
or its political implications—l have
neither the responsibility for nor
interest in the diplomatic signifi
cance of Korea.
“What I would like to under
tsand is why we have suffered so
many casualties against an enemy
who is not, and never has been, as
formidable as the Jap or the Ger
man of World War 11. lam not at
all satisfied that the so-called Chi
nese ‘human sea’ mass attacks can
destroy a well-supplied, adequate
ly mechanized defender. Nor do I
believe that Napoleonic ‘mass at
tacks’ have replaced again the
flexible, thin-line attack of small,
co-ordinated units.
“In other words, one machine
gunner (even if his morale is not
of the best) can raise havoc with
an attacker who is advancing in
mass without adequate artillery
and air support.”
Banzai Recollections
This officer recalled how Ameri
can infantry used to beat back
Japanese night banzai attacks in
the last war and added:
“But then we had the troops to
do_the job. Units advanced shoul
der-to-shoulder all across the en
emy island. But in Korea short
age of troops and the terrain make
flank security exceedingly diffi
cult, if not impossible. Conse
quently, an enemy night attack
can (and does) penetrate our lines
and puts the moral courage of
men to a severe test.”
This inability to make a shoul
der-to-shoulder defense or attack
in Korea would be multiplied -if
American infantry had to fight on
continental Asia. That's why
many experienced ground com
manders believe that if a third
world war breaks out the United
States should mass its land troops
in an arena where they are more
likely to win at least cost.
. WINNERS LOSE IN MALAYA
KUALA LAMPUR. — (AP) —
Way down here a few degrees
from the equator, there's some
thing new in horse racing. You
can now get back less than you
played if your horse is a hot fav
orite and “places” — finishes sec
ond,
The racetracks in Malaya have
| adopted what they call a new sys
tem of ‘“place” betting. They say
it’s designed to assure bigger div
idends for “place” bettors.
| Maybe so, if the “place” horse
|isn't a top favorite. For example,
! a horse called “Jaunty” was rated
| a sure thing to win but he came
in second. The minimum cost to
{ bet on Jaunty to win or place was
a $5 ticket. Jaunty paid his place
backers only $4!
Previous to this rather unusual
ruling, horse race bettors fre
quently got back $5 for a $5 bet—
because the racetracks refuse to
take a loss on an over-played fav
orite.
Four-H club members this year
for the first time will study farm
cooperatives through a new pro
ject sponsored by the Cotton Pro
ducers Association and the Ameri
can Institute of Cooperation.
The star of Alpha Orionis sends
{ more heat to the earth than any
other star.
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
ODDS AGAINST WAR
SEATTLE, May 17 — (AP) =
Lloyds of London has set 19 to 1
adds against big enough war de
velopments to stop a June conven
tion. Last December Lloyds quoted
50-1 against world war before
September, 1951.
Dr. Frank Wood of Seattle, pres~
ident of the Pacific Coast Dental
Conference, said the policy was
taken out to cover advance costs
and commitments for the June 25«
.
R AsP’s Dairy Center Has Dozens of Dollar-Strefchers, Including
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A & . g AN q~ e, S3Y VO out monotony because A&P’s Dairy Center carries such
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AL i 7 T s ‘e;}‘v‘.‘:’o - rand Dairy Values there, too. Enjoy these healthful,
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f-.a-}§ ustomers’ |\ SSpENEy b Wisconsin Cheese - 49¢
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What don't you like about your / s el KRAFT'S PHILADELPHIA ; i CHED-0-BIT AMERICAN
A&P? ‘ i 4 il - Cream Cheese...so. 16¢c Cheese Food . ... .:.iv. 26¢
Many customers have written S /’ BORDEN'S WEJ-CUT A&P—OLD FASHIONED
their approval of the quality foods, i N ”fl/ Pimient0.........c0. 32e Tub 8utter........i» 75«
good values and fine service they Qs i g DUTCH MAID—MIDGET
get at A&P, 3'. 's 2% :5 4
But if we're to keep your A&P LI b c h L 5
the st pice wshop, 1 wil hep 1y o H FRy,,, / Limburger cese ¢
us if we know the things you EGE' rs
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CUSTOMER RELATIONS DEPT. YA i R \'b g | ON A«P COFFEE
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} BOB'S—PEANUT | Pineapples...... .z 25¢ !
l Butt er Brittl e FLORIDA LARGE SIZE VALENCIA 39 l g
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CAESAR RODNEY ¥ ’ : : ] 2 e
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S oaf DA A Sandwich Rolls siuris. 17 White Bread. .160. 1o 154
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Orange Base....co.cm 17¢ Aggorted Puddings......rc. 6e P A SRS AN i S e D S
; CHICKEN OF THE SEA 44 OUR OWN &
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Beef Ha5h...... .110. con 396 '»"&,, e S 0 . . . . :
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registereslip, / rarks the price ’
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just on the shelves. What a help! WSSO CORN KING ‘// L / { )
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Sliced Bacon w© 49/ /s Al DGO i
All prices shown here (ineluding those of items not subject to ceilings) guaranteed —
. Thursday, May 17th through Wednesday, May 23rd 126 Oconee St.
SANSIG FOVIUL SRS SRR VAR VAW R MR R A AWAWAASA AAAA T T AT AT T Bitee ee e a
—2—B conference here,
WORLD HEALTH MEMBERS
GENEVA, Switzerland, May 17
(AP)—Spain, Japan and Western
Germany were formally admitted
yesterday to membership in the U.
N. World Health Organization
(WHO), Only Israel opposed ad
mission of Germany and Mexico
admission of Spain. None voted
against Japan.
| MARRIAGE ANNULLED
AMSTERDAM, The Nether
lands, May 17—(AP)—The Dis
trict Court at Breda Tuesday an
nulled the marriage of 18-year-old
Bertha Hertogh and Al Mansur
Adabi, 22, who were married at
Singapore Aug. 1, 1950,
The marriage let to bloody Mos~
lem rioting in Singapore last De
cember after a Singapore court
awarded custody of the girl to her
£N T S
1 Roman Catholic parents. She had
| been reared for eight years by a
| Moslem nurse. The girl was
brought bac kto Holland later.
L
PUSAN MILITARY TRIAL
| PUSAN, Korea, May 17—(AP)—
More than 10 South Korean offi
| cers are on trial for withdrawing
their troops without orders under
| Chinese Red attacks last month,
| the South Korean commander in
e miuihooinistentia b
THURSDAY, MAY 17, 1951
chief said Wednesday.
The military trial starte: |..
week.
The Sixth Division’s collap-- ~ .
dangered other Allied uri::
their flanks and caused their ~
withdrawal. .
Philadelphia, in 1874, est; i ;.
ed the first public zoo in .
United States, according 11 tie
Encyclopedia Britannica.
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