Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 July 1950 — Page 13
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Mass Rallies ~ Against U.S.
t Stages [Married 50 Years Gyarsmen Face [Take Price Tag Off Peace, - Red Cross Plans 22.5%: 1d =
Rallies
Factory Hands Demand End
gathered in mass meetings in Moscow factories, passed resolu- - tions of sympathy tonight for the! Korean people and demanded that the “American aggressors get out.” uy 7 | The meetings, held in automo
"bile, rubber and metal plants,
were the first of the Kind here! since Korean hostilities began. x " They were held as the Russians] charged that South Korea pre-| pared for a “hot war” six days| before fighting started and that the Americans and Chiang Kai-| shek have a secret military pact for -the invasion of the Chinese; mainland by U. 8. and Japanese] Speakers at
tonight's mass ax . meetings declared “the time nas Most of .Post Office come to curb the American ag-To Close Tuesday
- gressors” and expressed gratitude to Premier Josef Stalin for “waging the peace struggle.” “Hands Off” At the same time, Moscow ra-l
dio, citing American news dis-| delivery section will be open on. patches from Tokyo reported the weekday schedule “virtual disintegration and col-/ mailing. division willi work on a|cars, big enough to carry trucks, holiday schedule.
lapse” of South Korean forces. (A ‘Radio Moscow broadcast heard in London sald Moscow
machine tool workers adopted al
resolution . denouncing the “insolent armed intervention” by Americans in Korea. (“We demand the immediate withdrawal of American forces from Korea and cessation of arms|; deliveries to the (Syngman) Rhee puppet government,” the resolution added. “Hands off.”) { Charges of a U. 8S. secret pact] with Chiang were made in the, Literary Gazette. The. front pages of all Soviet newspapers were dominated by stories on the gathering of signatures on petitions banning the atomic bomb. Vsevolod Ivanoy, writing in the Gazette, sald the U. 8. and Nationalist China had a pact calling for intervention in the Chinese civil war and invasion of the mainland. Not There Any More
Mr. Ivanov cited the Chinese Newspaper “Sunsunmanbao,” which gave the terms of the alleged sewret accord as follows: Japanese troops are to invade northeast China while Americans _act in Northern and Central China, with Kuomintang forces operating in South China. The article sald that, mean-
‘while, U. 8. Adm. Charles Cook|"
Jr., has been inspecting the fleet at Formosa and trying to boost the fighting morale of Chiang's forces.
Reds Say 10,000 | Killed or Wounded
LONDON; “July 1 (UP)—Thé Soviét News Agency Tass reported tonight that nearly 10,000 South Koreans were killed or wounded and nearly 4000 captured by Korean Communists in battles Thursday and Friday. A Tass dispatch from Pyongyahg, the capital of North Korea, sald a South Korean division was
“smashed” in fighting. along.thel
Han River Thursday. In this battle, the agency said, the Communist army ‘killed or wounded more than 9000 (South! Koreans) and took prisoner more| than 3000 officers and men . . .| large quantities of war material “were captured, including 13 anti-|
i 1
tank guns, Seven armored cars,|
two whippet tanks and 48. lor-| ries (trucks).” { chok on Korea's east coast, “more| than 700 (South Koreans) were killed and more than 600 officers - and men . .. were taken prisoner, including two commanders of ar-| —4illery divisions, the chiefs of two! regional headquarters, the chief
eo Of the operational department ofl. co olen
a division headquarters, and others.” ie ‘Tass also repeated the claims
yo ....broadcast earlier by. the Korean,
Communist radio that four B-29| ‘bombers, seven fighter planes, and 11 “small enemy ships” had been destroyed by - the North Korean Air Force. : The U. 8. Air Force reported today that air loses in the fighting so far totalled 12 planes— fighters, light bombers and trans-
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Post: Office will be closed Tuesday. !
rier or rural delivery, holiday col- action for three days during the
Says JAW Chief, Reuther ivi Dafonse Role os sami Aas
! : engined C-54 transport - DETROIT, July 1 (UP)—Com- ideologies. They want food in! |U; 8. troops from Japan to Korea! . imunist-hating Walter P. Reuther stead of guns.” |
: oo : ‘ jcrashed into a 2000-foot . South * [proposed tonight that the United Asked where the $13 billion 2 1 Korean mountain, killing 23 servRealism to Keynote States spend $13 billion a year year would come from, Mr: Reu- |
Mayor Told Local inl ch Y Is P ed icemien, Far East Air Force headAtterbury Exercises {for the next 100 ygars to win the ther answered: apter repar \quarters announced’ today. Indiana National Guardsmen COld War and “take the price tag
| L ~ “Such’a world-wide aid pro-i With the orcas ar news i The plane carried 18 Passen-| the bie and white United eady for 15 days of Off peace.” (gram would solve the pressing;the headlines, the Indianapolis gers and a crew of. five. Names . ; A Setting rea - y The president of the CIO United problem of — unemployment, in! chapter of the Red Cross yester-rwere withheld pending notifica- ~ With" United States infantry
Serious Training
J
Auto Workers, in an exclusive| America. If we have and con-iday informed Mayor Feeney it is tion of next of'kin.
; {United Press interview, said “90 tinue to have full employment, (ready to play a big role in civill Air Force officials said the ‘20d farm to consider. Bahing i Roves, maneuvers Atl or cent” of Americans would be Wwe could afford it easily.” {defense in any emergency that crash occurred about 40 miles American. moves touching on the Som tlerbury, beginning JW glad to spend in a century what “We've Just got fo fake the may develop. |northwest of Pusan, -on the southe/ Kora a aT exorcise. they did in 44 months.of World price tag off peace,” he said. “If; Specifically, the Red Cross sald ern tip of Korea. "Lor 20s Said. the guestion be- + {Realism will be the keynote of War IL we could afford World War IL it was prepared in Indianapolis - Acheson and.
> x and representa 2a Ts A search party found the [tives other . the. 38th Division's summer train- Mr. Reuther, who drove the how can anybody say we can't ard Marion County to train civil of an: F-82, twin-en- wal United Nations
, \Communists out of his million- afford world peace?” defense workers and the general gine Mustang, with two bodies ned up “fore than 1500 division of- member union, warned that “we - “| 2 ailable food, clothing and tem. near ltazuke Air Base in Japan. Pent Da. a So a ficers and non-commissioned of-/must back up our military pre- War Correspondents rary shelt r 2? a ns . Earlier Jeports had indlested thely, |, t under a tighter United ficers, with World War II experi-|paredness with an aggressive, all- Agree on ‘Censoring’ basis during an immediate emer.| "Ct Dalled out over the ocean. |Nations control system, $y ence; and five regular Army out war against poverty and in- : 4 . ; y der 4 Ahi NTR demonstration eal lead security in the svorld.” : By United Press oeney pasted” conmitiee has) SCARE CUTS INTO SUGAR po Hla Mac oud Mr. and Mrs. Willian Ecker Sr. , land direct troops of the division. Blames the Commies Correspondents = covering the ; > A TIFFIN, O, July 1 : '
a { (UP)—!in co ur “Democracy is being challenged Korean war are bound by age x i AToSent i : hows | Emergency rationing and. “war military foo fat all thie Nations on the 38th Parallel in Korea,” he “gentlemen's. agreement” form of guar Dulin = » an x talk” were blamed today for a Korean fighting. Under the plan Ho house ee Hon 25 000 pe r.| Sudden sugar shortage here. Mer- Gen. MacArthur would be assisted SORE. Ji pe {chants said retail demand éxceed- by an ad group representing “We are planning to secure a a.18d supply and that they have fiugn United. Nations participating in =
—— i.
i Mr. and Mrs. William Ecker Sr, who were married June 6, 1960, in Indianapolis, celebrated their golden wedding anniversary recently ‘at Antigo, Wis., where they have lived for several years. Guests at the cele-
Many Saw Action a with ae Fon Rave Yug to said, “and we can’t have another censorship.
Africa. Far Eastern Munich. We regret. While Gen. Douglas MacArthur « Three infanty regiments, four|the use of military power, but we has the power to apply full censor]
fap ¥ didn't make the decision, the | i artillery batallions, one tank bat-| Ca a aid” : in [ostrictions any Hine he Nan to, ational agreements,” wrote Virgti| forced to ration sales.
tallion, engineers, and other sup-| “If we hadn't lost China, we Newsmen have {Sheppard, executive director ‘of ||
ting troops, will engage in 3 been asked, |), ter, “particularly for! : : bration included two daughters, |POF wouldn't be in trouble on Kofea,” however, not to disclose certain (0°, , Chapter, “particularly for! Mrs. ‘Harold Long and Mrs: juarivte) whrtare over the TWO oe declared. “Why it's like giving! information; particule tr00p|DUlldings in the county outside of! cain FOR IMPROVED ra
Clara Muller, both of Indiahap- |
olla Sleeping in pup tents, and eat-|th¢ Communists all of Michigan| designations by names or num. | DOianapolls, such as country
ling C rations will give green and then trying to hold out on|perg of units. Dispatches trom Tre And A vel he troops a real taste of what com-| Belle Isle (a Detroit park). | some fighting areas in Bouth ing worked out with Red Cross {bat conditions are like. | Mr. Reuther sald the Commu- Korea did not carry the names of chapters in neighboring counties. | Heaviest emphasis in the train. Mists “didn’t conquer China, they the towns from which they were Another committee has agree-| ing will be on small arms, rifles just filled in the vacuum of our sent. They were headed merely, ments with all department stores Most divisions of Indianapolis/to machine guns, and artillery,- OWn fallure. “Somewhere in. South Korea.” to supply clothing The four artillery battalions Made a Mistake a = Srp For medical purposes. the chapAlthough there will be no car- will swing their big guns into We made the mistake of fny- 7AP TEMPLE BURNS ter is prepared to turn over-the ing “to win the loyalty of 300 KYOTO, Japan, Sunday, July 2' names of 584 Red Cross nurses d million Chinese in the battlefield gUP)-—One of Japan's best and some 800 trained nurses’ aids. i Along with standard equipment when we could have done it in known national treasures, the Also available are scores of Clerks in theof the division, C-82 flying box- the rice field,” he charged. °’ three-storied- Kikakuji Temple, first-aid and water safety instruic“When people's bellies are was destroyed by fire early today. | tors who may be used on rescue lempty, they don't care about Police said they suspect arson. and demolition squads. |
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