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Show Tuesday, November 28, 1950 The Dragerton Tribune, Dragerton, Utah x kV4vK-xw4e- ct." Page : sn y?. wie.agv-va- 1 jjftseo 1 y J If 'J K r ' ' l ' T 4 ; V I f if sssSa ,5S J & 'x Zttil vwWrtiMBjgwwi.Vnii iViyi ;a' ,fc v m Iw j GREETED IN TOKYO . . . Baseballs Joe D1 Maggio, tour on in Japan, waves to the crowd following his arrival currently in Tokyo, where he was accorded a tumultuous welcome. Joe waves to the sports-minde- d Japanese and the baseball lovers of Nippon from the automobile that was on hand to meet him at the Tokyo station. Japanese have taken to the American sport almost as avidly as the Americans and are flocking to the exhibition games In which Joe appears. D1 MAGGIO w 3 V yMWwWiWi'rtitflii CLOSEUP OF ONE ASPECT OF WAR . . .The grim reality of modern warfare Is very much in evidence as the camera moves in to record the price paid by wounded American G.I.s and South Korean soldiers who await removal to the rear and care in army hospitals from a United Nations forward clearing station on the Anju front In North Korea. When this was taken, 0,000 additional Chinese Communist troops were moving through Manchuria toward Korea and hundreds of allied planes were trying to prevent their march by lash ing bridges and convoys on the Korean side of the Talu river border area. CHINESE COMMUNIST OFFICER CAPTURED . . , Here, in Ham-hunKorea, is the first Chinese Communist officer to be captured by United Nations troops. Guarding the officer are P.F.C. Howard Fricd-lan- d of Baltimore, Md. (left) and Cpl. Arthur Williams of New York City (right). The officers name and rank were not identified. g, . ' v y, - . v.'.ww.y.-'.vy- y.v.y.v.-- , ?.' yryy 'WWWwwywff iptHW83WjHpji 'ijwi '''V-X- v. AT GUN POINT . . . P.F.C. Joe Tisone, Youngstown, Ohio, stands guard over a dis- gruntled North Korean Communist, one of the many guerrilla fighters who have infiltrated into cities taken by United Nations troops. RETIRING U. S. AMBASSADOR . . . Englands Pilgrims gave a farewell dinner to retiring U.S. ambassador, Lewis Douglas, at Londons Savoy hotel recently. Ilere, the Pilgrims president, Lord to U.S. the Halifax, former British ambassador (right), chats with Mr. Douglas at the festivities. The black band about the Americans head holds an eye patch, necessitated because of jin eye injury suffered from a fish hook. COUSINS. . . President Auriol France embraces Noelle their first meeting since war. She saw him and ex Cousin Andrei, name claimed she knew him by when he hid in her fathers house during resistance. HELICOPTER EVACUATES WOUNDED . .' . Cpl. Billy C. Hilborn, eighth cavalry regiment, first cavalry division (left), watches as a wounded friend is readied for loading on a helicopter for evacuation to the rear. Notice expression of concern on face of man who is taking down information on the wounded man. The incident took place on the Anju front in North Korea. Army medical authorities say a bigger percentage of the wounded Is being saved in this war. GOOD , ;,"T. H . . . William A. Wor-to- n, Los Angeles, retired marine major general, who recently ended ft temporary appointment as Los Angeles police chief, was being considered in Washington as agent general in Koreas economic rebuilding program. Now serving as Los Angeles police commissioner, Wor-to- n said he had received inquiries from the capital, but had no other information to offer. Supervising the economic rebuilding of Korea will be a mansized job. MAY BECOME AGENT GENERAL IN KOREA of on ROSE BOWL QUEEN . , . These girls were candidates for queen of the 1851 Tournament of Roses to be held in Pasadena on New Years Day. 150 entrants vied for the honor. |