Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 June 1950 — Page 2
tart By PETER KALISCHER | United Press Staff
hh : ; a — De ie : =
Plane "cz of Front in Korea ne % al
x ~
Appears Over PEERS | Base in Japan
» + . Craft ‘Vanishes * After U. S. Fliers » Start to Give Chase == * (Continued From Page One) | - 3 prowler from Korea, if such it was, had disappeared. - | - The pilots of four American x : a P-80 Shooting Star jet fighter Rd nes shot up by the Communist 0 Koreans rode home safely | | ” i ; lnff from Suwon just 30 minutes dozen times yesterday and today, Cy 8 “wing and a prayer today. ro g % {ahead of the Bataan when Gen. strafing and bombing. 2.One jet didn't make it. It SSTIIPRG : X — thr left for Tokyo was In the latest raid at 1.50 a. m., 20 miles at sea but the S=—= Ii a Yak fighter, but was not Indianapolis time, four Yaks ridpilot was rescued after he batled : (hit by § dled a four-engined C-54 cargo : Hai | ‘downed, i - out. | Koreans Cheer plane and seriously wounded an Three B-26 medium attack y ? Y merican anti-aircraft gunner. bombers also have been lost in fing dhe South lojeay The Yaks dove out of the sun the past two days. But an Air ed on how well the troops looked, And sprayed the airfield before Force spokesman sald the cas 3 {observing they were not fat protecting jets could pounce on tialties were “surprisingly small” 33 ‘and were smiling as they were'them. The speedier Shooting Considering the danger. EES being regrouped and heading back Stars caught the Yaka before they « This base now has been alerted Sees to the front. ! ' _. against possible retaliatory night Gen. MacArthur. declined to ®ver, and shot one down. + bombings. make any official statement re- others fled. : Liew Antiaireraft batteries and. ‘garding his views of plans, But The wounded soldier was flown night fighter patrols have been! get up. But no blackout has been ordered yet, f . To stregmline operations at the! ; the Jumbering twin-engined|
‘him. We will get him cold.” | TERS, Suwon, Kbrea, Juns: 28
‘known. {spattered concrete has {| While Gen. MacArthur was in christened “Yak Avenue.”
visors group thtets in Koren, an|United States has set up its ad- | American fighter engaged a Yak vance headquarters for Korea is and downed it while the supreme now the main target for Com{commander watched from a win-imunist sneak air attacks. dow, . Single-engined Russian-built
The
"
: h IM. Almond, who went on the trip, Japan. 5 ‘5 sald: a A r a can to help Bouth Korea." y t afire. ¥ ; | He indicated that no appreci-crewmen were injured slightly. kota transports were sent to! Gen. Douglas MacArthur today conferred with Korean Pres. | oF = North Roreans! The Communists are fighting
jeighboring Heide, Tnate last mis-| ident Rhee one mile outside Seoul (I) where Red invaders 1.4 crossed the Han River, where the air war here with the referee gla from Trib Pim? Jo ay | had set up a bridgehead south of the Han River. Free Korean [the South Koreans now were in their corner. It is a one-sided quippe “ot| froops were reported, meanwhile, as withdrawing at Cupyong (2). [holding firm. affair to the extent that the U. 8.
; th d at Signa) C ions! However, Free Koreans routed the Reds who had captured Kimpo Airfield (3). . n”
system along the Korean war] THO | . Tr. ressful. The people cheered as fields, but the Communists are Meanwhile, the jets and me K R 5 . } successful. The che: $ : n am : i > A ® he drove along, his party's auto- free to shoot up Americans anybers continued te shuttle fo oreans ecap ure irpor § mobiles weaving in and out of where, e
the mainland on bombing and troop traffic, Wait to Break
sion 18 to save Buwon, 20 miles ! : ; south of fallen Seoul and next! (Continued From Page One) Fifth Air Force strafed tanks, major Communist objective. eral straffing missions Thuras- troop columns and other targets y o » 4 The skies were wet and visi-/day by United States F-82 and just behind the front. Phi hee gna Ms. osie Sew Spy 3 In ig 8 ne plies bility. was poor as theplanes F-80 fighters in which a number! One jet fighter pilot shot-dewn proc rmr suwen They made ighters "18% protect he arin pt into the air. of North Korean trucks and a a North Korean fighter while on |g “0 - little L.8's with “all Lninating here, i « Throughout the night the air-|locomative were destroyed, {an escort mission near Suwon, {t : = D y K asin or all the} hen the fighters eventually EL Base hummed with Activity as! The Ongjin Peninsula north-| Tie Soviet-built North Korean oor. Or Fo Ce se said the Are forced to scurry 200_ miles “mechanics and other ground west of Seoul was reported to be Yak fighters zipped in a half-doz- rong “drove ul thro h the back tg Japan to refuel, the Yaks «crewmen worked under lights, completely in the hands of the en times for sneak attacks at 1-5 plots a a. roug th take off and spray the Suwon airgassing ‘overhauling and rearm- North Koreans, "| Suwon yesterday and today They mountains, a ost ue ng Le ig the jets and bombers, The North Koreans were re- caused no damage today, but set 'OP% 10 Set us here safely. {the Americans. ——————— Mig ported forming their lines along fire to a four-engined fréighter on | Almost Desperate Occassionally, however, an Tn FE ; J the North Bank of the Han River the runway yesterday. Two, We [eel encouraged now, but over-brave Yak will tarry too ong Th ~ jito the northwest of Seoul, while American crew members were in- some time ago we were almost and his war career ends abruptly. IH e {South Korean forces were digging jured slightly. |desaperate,” Rhee said. “We knew| The Americans are trying to £ Ei 5k iin along the south bank. el ———bi sets. (the attack was coming sooner or work a plan to fly in fuel suplies t TV C AB Eastward from Seoul, the com- Gets Chair for Slayin later, We told the American mili- so that the fighters can land here \munique sald, the line extended YING (ary advisory group that the|to refuel. Ss em enerally to the northeast to Pregnant Wife, 16 2 Communists had tanks and| = === Is Coming Kapyong. 40 miles from Seoul, 6 (yperpp gC. June 20 (UP) PIAN®" About 200 or 300 of each. Works Board OK's Than You Think Inspects Lines {electric chalr on Aug. 18 for the prepared, and were ‘helpless. {Ave, from Lowell Ave. to the “From this point to Samchok, murder of his 16-year-olf preg-| “1 called the ambassador in|South Drive of Pleasant Run ithe North Koreans have consoli- nant wife. A statement read dur- Washington and asked him to/Pkwy., was adopted by the Works dated two beach landings to hold Ing his trial quoted Gardner as tell Mr. Truman about the attack, Board today. : The turn of the fighting in argument with his wife instead. for ald. I told him to ask Mr. 815036 if the street is surfaced Korea was reported soon after She was slain with a butcher Truman what happened to the with asphaltic concrete composiGen. MacArthur returned to To- knife last March 6. $10 million aid for us.” tion.
'Chunchon, a few miles farther | BUY NOW! | kyo from a front line inspection;
Force, prompted Mr, Rhee 10 ex- miles to the north patiently waitpress ‘optimism. : . ing for a break in the American
t
| “But we were told not to worry! upriver, and then generally east.| Oscar Gardner Jr, 25, was 8en-/,,,ut those reports. When the Kitley Ave. Surfacin ward to the coast. {tenced last night to die In the fighting started our boys were not. A resolution to surface Kitley 7 ‘A narrow strip a few miles deep,” saying he intended to kill his and warned that the fall of Béoul] An engineer's estimate set costs . AVOID HURRY-SCURRY ithe communique said. {father-in-law but got into an was a matter of hours. I asked at $11504 if concrete is used and and Final Disappointment
of the Korean lines and talks with
§
0 ANRTRYE
3 {5
i | there. ; : | | U. 8. Ambassador John J. Mue:| {elo sald at Taejon, provisional capital of South Korea, that Mr. MacArthur's conferences with himself and President Syngman ‘Rhee at an advanced U. 8. base | were “carried out very satisfactorily.”
dA W123
derson. and Harold Achor, An. Colin \ t Fore
ADVANCE U, 8. HEADQUAR- |
| The result of the clash was not, This strip of bomb and bullet-,
An American transport taking Yak fighters zipped in a haif-|
port GOP leader and attorney, Senate Faces Fight en
could make a second run, how.
Soom Lis chief of staff, Maj Gen. E. to Itazyke air base in southern! i Lr
| Yesterday, other Yaks enught 1 of Korea “We are going to do all we another four-engined freighter on
ithe runway and set it afire. Two
Superintendent of Public nstruction -— Dave T. Hartley, Muncie; Wilbur Young, Versailles, and Harry Yoder, Columbia City.
| For Clerk of the Indiana Swe
Nn preme and Appellate Courts — to elect convention members and oo !indorse their favorite son candi-
I Thomas C. Willlams, Jefferson-
{onference with Mr. Rhee, Mr. The small airport at which the Ville, incumbent; Michael J. Han-
, Indianapolis, and Mrs. Ida Wilson, Boonville, Unopposed Candidates Unopposed candidates besides Sen. Capehart were: Leland Smith, longtime Logans-
for Secretary of State, Frank C. Gilkison, Was
Judge, First District. Arch N. Bobbitt, Indianapolis, former Indiana GOP. chairman, for Supreme Court Judge, Third District. Wilbur A. Roy incumbent, and nald Bowen, Bloomington, incumbent, for the
Capehart Urges
| Tells GOP ‘War Not Party Affair’
| (Continued From Fage One)
ten. MacArthur's visit, which Air Force has been forbidden to State Department seminars at his he said was for the purpose of cross the 38th Parallel border into alma mater, Indiana University | raising morale, appeared to be North Korea to bomb the Red last week as an example of the fallure of U, 8, foreign policy!
onder Secretary of State Dean | Acheson,
“I wasn't there, but I under-| strafing rajds—An— -copmt]--Q — N ei Ha Se Ri ds A ORONE nab oa VAT bg 1 "I wasn’t there, but I un i . , together with the! yaks sit fields less than 60 Stand that the big shots from the spokesman said their main miis- . . ay Y mmers e S effective action by the U, 8. Air SI. On elds ies han ’0iState Department . told. the
Hoosiers attending those seminars that everything was peaceful and serene,” Sen. Jenner said. [They hardly got back to Was ‘ington before Korea blew right up in their fac.”
Longtime Critic Sen. Jenker expects to deal
(field, then thumb their nose at with the matter in some detail
tomorrow. He long has been a {leading Senate critic of 1... foreign policy, not only In the Far East, but in Europe as well. He .is a bitter foe of bipartisanship as developed by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Both Indiana Senators voted
against foreign arms ald. The only for eign aid they have supported was
the first loan to Greece and Tur‘key. This has caused them to be
‘labeled as ‘“isolationists” al-
/though neither will admit that
this is desérved. ¢
| The GOP platform builders will
{take note of the Senators’ views, as well as those of the four In{diana Congressmen, when they {draft a new “war plank" for to{morrow's meeting. :
incumbent for Supreme rt)
y Indianapolis, { Commissioner.
District. {for these races before the conven-| ition deadline, the unopposed can!didates will be nominated tomor[row..by acclamation. dots | © The 1905 delegates will convene] iin district caucus sessions tonight
{dates in the contests, The convention wil open at 11 a. m tomorrow with Congressman Ralph Harvey as temporary! and Rep. Charles Hal leck as permanent chairman.
WASHINGTON, June 28 (UP) | ~Senate members of the Joint
i
Congressional Atomic Committee |
| tion of Sumner T, Pike for a four'year term as Atomic Energy
Chairman Brien McMahon, (D. Conn.) said he will fight for approval of Mr. Pike on the Senate floor despite the adverse commit-|
|tee vote, | The unfavorable vote came de- |
spite a warning by another com- | missioner -— Henry D. Smyth —|
i difficult to carry out the atomic
{and Hydrogen bomb projects.
i
|
Pepsi-Cola Bottling Co.
no additional candidates file’
together before the compulsory provisions of the law were em»
voted today to reject the nomina- ployed, State Labor Commission=
er Tom Hutson called a meeting
this morning for 11 a. m. the contros
One hour fater, versy was Sy
enti. SHIPS COLLIDE IN CHANNEL
AMSTERDAM, The Netherlands, June 20 (UP)—The 5058 ton British ship Ufington Court radioed today that it had collided in a fog in the English Channel
of ‘Indianapolis, Ind.
Under Appointment from Pepsi-Cola Co, New York “Listen to 'Counter:Spy. Teesdey and Thursday Evenings, WISH"
He said it was hefirtening to | see “thousands of trucks heading | yan hn rd loaded with reformed | he | and regrouped South Korean sold[Jers going to the front.” i Holding Fast A Taejon dispatch from United | :] 'orrespondent Jack James, i giving Mr. Muccio’s report on the conference, said the South Ko- | reans were holding fast on the ‘south bank of the Han River, [except for a small Communist bridgehead, The Northerners stabbed across ithe broad stream flowing just aautn of Boul early this morning. iThey seized a toehold on the south bank, but were unable to lexpand it, | “The South Koreans have not driven the Reds back yet, but are preparing an offensive to > eliminate the bridgehead tomorrow,” the Taejon dispatch said. | - The optimistic picture of a tirning ‘tide of war in Korea marked a complete ‘reversal within 24 hours. Only yesterday, Comimunist forces were reported pushing southward virtually without opposition aftér the fall of Seoul. The later dispatches Indicated the Northerners sent exploratory spearheads across the Han to-j. ward the U, 8. headquarters at | Suwon, only to have them turned back by stiffening South Korean resistance and the onslaught by American air forces. Signal Corps on Hand B-29 Buperfortresses joined the American air armada attacking the. North Koreans today. They plastered the Communist-captured airfield at Kimpo, 17 miles north{east of Seoul, with 500-pound high" explosive bombs. | Gen. MacArthur's headquarters in Tokyo announced that the first American casualties of the Korean war were two crewmen of a B-26 attack bomber killed yésterday when their plane banked too steeply over the water as it came ini for a landing in Southern Japan. The wingtip hit the water and the plane crashed. U.- 8. Signal Corps troéps with full war-time packs set up headquarters’ In Suwon to" maintain ‘Tommunications with- Japan. A spokesman -at-Gen: MacArthur's headquartérs here denied
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that rejection of the experienced with a vessel believed to be the Mr. Pike would make it “more 3256-ton Spanish vessel Conde de iZubiria. The Uffington Court said lit had suffered extensive damage.
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