Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 295, Decatur, Adams County, 15 December 1952 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

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DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

Monday. December 1L 1»52

Chinese Reds Reject U. N. Truce Plans . tofariiuhist Chiho Dashes Hopes FdV Korean ArihisHce TOKYO UP — Communist China dashed hopes today for an immediate armistice in Korea by rejecting a United Nations plan aimed f. at solving the deadlock on exchanging prisoners of war. Peiping Radio sail Chinese foreign mibteteV Chou En-Lal had cabfcpd formal rejection of the plan to U. N. general asemlMy president Lester B. Pearson of Canada. Chou demanded that the assembly cancel this illegal resolution” and that the assembly urge the Uhited States “immediately resume the Panmunjom truce talks.” The U. N declared an indefinite recess in the truce talks oh Oct R whieh t£e Reds refused th budge from their insistence on the renatriatioh of all Communist prisoners held by the U. N. Thb united Nations would return ottlf those who wUhed tn return to the Communist side. The U.K. holds 11S.0W prisoners. Including ZO.tWto Chinese, bf the total, 83,000, Including 6,400 Chinese. want to return to the Communists. The other 33,000 said they Would rather die than return. Chou’s long cable to Pearson, dated Dec. 14. demanded that a truce be carried out“ on the basis of tha draft of the Korean truce, agreement.” Then the whole prisoner issue would be referred to a “Korean problem commission” for peaceful solution. ~ He said the Reds already had made the necessary preparations to receive joint Red Cross teams to help in the speedy repatriation of prisoners in case agreement was reached on the Reds* terms. The U. N. resolution was first brought Up by Indian delegate V. K. Krishna Menon. It was a complicated formula that was revised three times, largely to meet strong American* objections. At one time, the U. S. and Britain were split on the plan. Soviet foreign minister Andres Y. Visbinsky then said the plan wAs unacceptable. This helped end the western split and led to. a revised Indian version that won support front 54 of 60 U. N. members. Pearson then cabled Chou an outline of the plan Dec. 5. Chou s cable today was in reply. Chou sai<j the U. N- resolution of January. 1951. branding China an aggressor in Korea, and the passage of the Indian plan were debated and acted upon without the participation of either Red China or North Korea. “These actions obviously are illegal, null and void.” Chou said, “and the Chinese people resolutely express opposition. Gunman Slayer Is Sought At Capital Station Attendant Is Slain By Gunman INDIANAToLrs. (UP) — More than 40 policemen Surrounded a cornfield oh the city's northeast [Side today tn a search for a gunman who killed a service station attendant , The manhunt, described as bne of the biggest in local polwe his•tory, was for the slayer of Harold Oakley Carl, 29, who was robbed and shot in the ba<k about 2 n. m. A state police airplane and 23 city police cars were used in the search. About five hours after tire shooting, police said they had cornered ; a suspect in an open field in the suburbs. He .fled there on foot after an 80-m 11 e-an-hour chase. Patrolmen Richard A. Jones and Norman Burkhaixlt found '*• Carl dead beside the station.— .They arrived at the scene as a mtn fled in a black car driven by an accomplice. * 7 v Jones chased the fleeing car about 3'.-2 miles on city and county roads. “1 got close enough 0o take one shot." he said. “1 missed as the car turned right and slowed down. One of the men jumped out and roiled over ahd over.” Jotjes said the bandits eluded - him because “my overheated car conked out on me." Jones chased the man on' foot, tired another shot, and then radioed l>ack for help. Roadblocks were set up and police on the ground kept in contact with the airplane by radio. Girls v wording in a nearby drug store brought hot coffee to police searching in 23-degree temperature. , Detectives said the holdup men took about $75 from a cash register amd their victim. _4 Trade in a Good Town —Decatur. *