Page 3 Land, Air Forces Unite To Plaster T-Bone Hill Seoul—(U.P.)—Allied infantrymen killed or wounded an estimated 230 Chinese Communists near T-Bone hill today and American fighter-bombers followed through with a heavy raid on a troop and supply center. $ \textcircled{1} $ Three hundred Chinese charge the Allied-held outpost in the Chorowon area on the western front after smashing through barbed-wire entanglements and minefields. They swept into Allied trenches and engaged UN infantrymen in a short-but-savage hand - to - hand battle. The Reds retreated but started regrouping in the darkness for another assault with reinforcements, but an Allied patrol spotted them and called in artillery. Allied guns boxed in the Chinese on four sides while other shells smashed into the center of the envelope. Early reports said 100 Chinese were killed and 130 wounded in close fighting and by artillery fire. Superforts took off from Okinawa to rain 500-pound bombs on a 195-acre supply and troop center nine miles west of Sinanju deep in North Korea. Red interceptors made three firing passes on the superfortals and anti-aircraft batteries threw up a moderate amount of flag but the B-29's got through and dumped 140 tons of bombs on the area. Light Bombers escorted by F-84 Thunderjets pounded targets in the Haeju peninsula along Red supply routes while invader planes blasted a rallyd three miles west of Chinampo with 24,000 pounds of bombs. American and Australian warships operating along the east coast of North Korea scored numerous hits on supply and troop buildings and chopped up rail lines. The force of two cruisers and three destroyers raked Red coastal gun positions, bunkers and trainers. No Bia 3 Meeting in Sight London—(U.P.)—The foreign office said today "no approaches to Russia with the view of a big three meeting have been or are being made." Service Fraternity Initiates Seven Seven members recently were initiated into Alpha Phi Omega, national service fraternity. The initiation ritual was performed by Gamma Xi chapter of Alpha Phi Omega from Rockhurst college, Kansas City. Initiated were Lawrence Klempnauer, college sophomore; James B. Miller and Eugene Schmitz, both college freshmen; Terry Strong, Edward Cresswell, and Lawrence Taylor, all engineering sophomores, and Kim Giffin, assistant professor of speech. The group elected Klempnauer president; Creswell, vice president; Taylor, secretary; Strong, treasurer; Miller, pledge chairman, and Robert Rannie, engineering sophomore, serveant-at-arms. Frank Wilson, engineering sophmore, was elected historian at a reorganization meeting Tuesday. KU Places Seventh In Foreign Students The University has tied for seventh place in the number of foreign students attending the 469 U.S. colleges and universities, according to the annual report of the Institute of International Education. This year 52 foreign students are in residence at KU. Highest ratings were given to the University of Michigan with 79; Cornell university, 75; Columbia, Minnesota, and Chicago universities, 71; Wisconsin and Illinois universities, 68; Yale university, 60; University of California, 58, and Ohio State and the University of Kansas, 52. Personalize Your Graduation & Father's Day Gifts- Our Gift to You... WHEN YOU BUY ANY SHIRT-SPORT OR DRESS, ANY ROBE OR PAJAMAS WE WILL MONOGRAM IT FOR YOU WITHOUT CHARGE. Brand Names to Choose from Arrow Weldon Jayson Wilson Bros. Albuquerque (U.P.)—A 14-year-old girl armed with a pair of pistols and dressed in masculine clothes admitted late yesterday that she dropped a match into a box of tissue paper and cardboard and started one of the biggest fires in Albuquerque's history. Style-Rite The fire gutted the downtown Sears-Roebuck store, causing an estimated $1 million in damages. Police Chief Paul Shaver said the girl told him she set the blaze Monday night because she "had a feeling to do it." Girl Admits Starting Fire The girl said she hid in the store while employees prepared to lock up for the night, intending to steal goods and set fire to the store when she was alone, the sheriff said. Phone 915 Confronted by her mother at police headquarters yesterday, the girl at first refused to say a word. Police, who noticed her cut hand and the fact that she was inside the fire lines, arrested her. She was still carrying the guns and wearing the clothes she had taken from the store. 43 Mass. No charges have been filed against the girl. She will go before a juvenile judge, and the district attorney may then prefer charges. Hays, Turner in TV Bout St. Louis —(U.P.)— Norman Hayes, ranked 10th in the middleweight division, gives Jesse Turner his first shot at bigger money when they meet in a 10-round nationally televised (NBC) bout at the arena tonight. Wednesday, May 20,1953 University Daily Kansan Red Pilot Crash Lands MIG on Danish Island Roenne, Bornholm Island—(U.P.)—A Polish air force lieutenant crash-landed his Russian-made MIG-15 jet plane today in a clump of trees on this Danish island in the Baltic Sea. The pilot pulled himself uninjured from the cockpit and immediately asked troops from Almegaard who ringed the area to grant him political asylum. He spoke in Polish, the only language he knew. Military authorities took the 22-year-old flier into custody and awaited the arrival of Danish Air Force Col. Erk Rasmussen and interpreters from Copenhagen. Troops guarded the valuable jet and refused to permit it to be photographed as the pilot was taken to Almgeard headquarters. Eyewitnesses said the plane roared over Bohnholm with its wheels down. It swung out to sea then returned as the pilot inspected the terrain. An eyewitness said the pilot's landing was "even more fantastic and lucky" than that of Lt. Jarecki who brought down his craft safely on a tiny strip made to accommodate small planes. The roar of his jet engines alerted Ammegaard troops. His flight was expected to bring new protests from Communist Poland. The Polish foreign office sent three angry protest notes to Denmark within a three-day period after Lt. Jarecki fleed to Bornholm. The lieutenant, second Polish airman to land a MIG on Bornholm in two months, broke away from a formation of jet planes over the Baltic Sea in making his dramatic escape. He circled the island for 75 minutes before picking out what he thought was a safe place to land. Three Art Teachers Enter Work in Contest Robert Green, assistant professor, and Robert N. Sudlow and John Armstrong, instructors in drawing and painting, have had oil paintings accepted for the annual Kansas Painters exhibition sponsored by Kansas State Teachers college at Pittsburg. The June show is open to all artists either working in Kansas or born in Kansas. Mail Subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 n year (add $1 a semester if in Lawrence). Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays and examination periods. Entered at Lawrence, Kan., Office 1910 at Lawrence, Kan., Post Office under act of March 3, 1879. Gets You Home Quicker! Kansas City to Be There... Instead of En Route PORTLAND SAN FRANCISCO DODGE CITY 9 Hrs. $ 8^{1/2} $ Hrs. $ 3^{3/4} $ Hrs. - Via connecting airline - Via connecting airline Call your Travel agent or NOrclay 3700. Ticket office, Phillips Hotel, Kansas City. 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