Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 July 1950 — Page 3

eneral during rom the. eity. it off in Taes surrounded k last Thursng then with (a team and

st one enemy

ntioned orean radio t Red forces 00 American ed 400 to 500 ing” the remin around at of it. But erated broadition of Gen, g taken as a

24th Division ejon reported alive south of iid that Gen, ‘toon back to ay fire In an er American

eutenant who day said the n a jeep, three nm, two miles

in Hills machine gun treating 34th units, the lieuean dived into ater made his

n intelligence Gen, Dean in

AZO. said he heard i the enemy

Dean, I need officers said

yen. Dean had yet. :

ridge, Ky., Training July 24 (UP) punced today

ridge, Ky. is a replacement

a capacity of The first reriving in midrman said that uld be reached

nd volunteers the center. ge is in west. Henderson.

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AEE ERIE RARER CERTIEEEE ARRIETA REU EL EETORREOIT EONS RINE LF ATOR IO EITRA SEO HHT HE ERR I SERN RIA HN HR In ania

“the Kum River valley and in two| P18 after giving up Taejon.

‘the southeast. The vehicle came|to hold their positions as long as| The key sector was southeast °f

v

: r Assaults by Tanks

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|

U. S. units which|where slong the line meanderhunted by American super-ba. | Bad been fighting since Sunday |ing from Yongdok on the east Speeches Soft-Pedal gooka teams. were still in their main coast down through the south-| pglitical Issues : but were hard pressed west to Kwangju, 80 miles nounced that its headquarters| OD the north and south flanks. lsouthwest of Taejon. {| (Continued From Page One) Rae Siviien - ‘so of North Stopped Cold who reported them back to the Korea “to speed up the war Koreans c own the Kum! ooo of Taejon, the 1. §,/5ession this afternoon. against the North Koreans.” | valey and undertook to throw ® 25th Division stopped cold & Com-| , Today's meeting, designed 10 The North Koreans in about di-| cordon of steel around the Ameri nist-led infantry assault Mon- Sive all candidates for state vision strength lashed out down|C3DS Who had braced in the foot-\4,, Tne GI's destroyed six out Office an idea of basic campaign lot eight enemy tanks hurled at/Strategy, and to “educate and encircling drives northeast and! The guerrilla threat intensified one sector of the American posi- train” them-in the intricacies of southwest of Yongdong, 23 miles suddenly. About 120 guerrillas! tions on the central front. {running for office, was the opensoutheast of Taejon. were spotted six miles due south! mye pattie there still was rag- poo 13 the 1950 election came Guerrilla units infiltrated the|®f YOngdong. attacking Amerl-'ig garter dark when United Press mocauce of the current warl ‘American rear, and during the|°3R Tear elements in sniper Correspondent Gene Symonds filed . isc the Democratic Congress. day hurled high explosive shells ™ "og {a dispatch reporting the success-| ron indicated they will have to into Yongdong itself. The rail oy astiliery 1oared all day. ful stand by the men of the 25th. ca mnaien by = proxy—-through and highway city was under BE he re gets of Still farther east, South Ko- newspaper ads and radio talks, heavy pressure. hicles and tanks. ' irean officials reported, American; They have réquested the state Just Moved Up land South Korean units battling committee to provide them with "ha: tufiltration and sheipcle- Swift Dilemma {together on the east coast recap-ithe facilities—meaning money—

: itured Yongdok, the scene of See-'t, do this. ment drives threatened to trap, Roving parties.of Communists, = fighting for some time. —

the troops of the U. §, First|armed with mortars and ma-| Ibs. k a Cavalry Division, who had just/chine guns and small arms, On the opposite flank, Commu-| Thief Gets ‘Heavy’ moved up to relieve the mauled foamed in the area stretching nist forces wheeling wide around) 24th Division. southward from Yongdong. |the western end of the American Haul at Company

o ; ighFor a time at least it appeared| Camouflaged with leaves and| way vate the ll al hen Police today settled down for that the trap was about to be bushes, North Korean troopsimjjes from the south coast. some heavy thinking about a sprung. {stole up on an American outpost| put headquarters sources sald week-end theft at Matthews GenLate in the day United Press .D Some force even while the GI'Sithe enemy force there was small. lo. Manufacturing Corp., 1104 Correspondent. Robert Bennyhoff subjected them to artillery, auto- and for the time being at least Q ; ? . tried to reach Yongdong by vehi.| atic weapon and rifle fire. posed no serious threat to the Patterson St.

The Americans were det ined! American left flank. Reported missing from the side cle along the road to the city from! ermined the building were: :

The Far Eastern Air Force an-| Positions,

| t {

|

under severe mortar and small Possible, a front dispatch said. [of Taejon, where the ‘Americans arms fire, and turned back a lit-| The U. 8. dilemma developed Pad dug in among the broke tle short of Yongdong. But just before midnight Mr./around noon, field reports said.|

Yeste lrail and highway line down to the; THREE: Two doughnut-shaped| . . : iy Yoo Hoo Ried Srom a post and sor. Ph pears entry port of Pusan. least iron weights, each of which| (Continued From Page One) been

n conveyor.

First Cavalry: [North Koreans in their tracks on ’ Throw Everything weighed 408 pounds. mines. - Often they dian‘ Row Trapped American forces in jozen 155mm. guns in Taejon, not| VOICE STUDENTS IN RECITAL PEL CATAEY ory, mo Bo eb i anos wore SSE PE [tng fo ul te po. Thi Tuco asked the reiment nthe "Tin nr an Sn 05 Tw ls pip of Jug Je mechanized) sti 2 , ; ney had mpg, ca ets EM 4 ‘Ipear to cover their retreat. The plus 10 carldads of ammunition. [son ug! n e ) still are holding firm| As late as Monday morning of- that sector at the U. S. lines, rty They were never shown how to : Maj. Gen.-Bill Dean, command- recital at 8:15 p. m. tomorrow in

after a day of hard fighting in|ficers were saying that maybe piadi aboot it the Yongdong area during whichithe battle would wind up soon, Mading oro Tck Victory a Law School Award orn, they battled with everything they|and would mark the turning point in there to relieve the battered, Mr Virginia Dill McCarty, 715 had to escape encirclement.” of the war. 24th Division, which had fought E. 21st St, has been granted space their vehicles in convoy On. Gen. Gay said he did not intend] Then, using the tactics which|the holding action all the way the Law Award by the faculty of more than one occasion I've! to withdraw his units, which were|carried them from Seoul to the down from Suwon. \driven at least three-quarters of out well supported by artillery, for|Yongdong area, the North Ko-| Again the Communists were the time being. But he termed the/reans sneaked well-armed guer- using their now classic maneuver situation “very serious.” Some time after reporting that|through the American positions. the flanks. A late front dispatch Year subscription to Law Weekiyjown the whole convoy to Communist troops had wedged|/They played hob around and indicated that it was working Magazine for being chosen as the pieces. into the American positions ini{behind the battle lines.

Indiana University School of Law,

- 3 Indianapolis Division. strung bumper to bumper.

east of Taejon, front correspon-|ing joined in force nearly every- forces attacked frontally. the final year of studies. communications in Korea have)

Take a Tip from the. Crond... } G-PPSL!

des of Rec .. State Democrats Attach Corsair Rocket for Sti Against Enemy

Unidentified ordnance men aboard the carrier USS Valley Forge attach a fuse to a rocket | r on the wing of a Corsair fighter plane before it takes off on a sortie against the North Koreans. asked for Sheldon St. from 16th

we -falled to get out our heavy stallation of drainage facilities} ONE: A 12 to 15-foot metal Combat Found Some Gls {equipment, guns and ammunition. | Adams St. from 30th St. to Sedges | | i a ; r TWO: A quantity of building k |with totally unexpected swiftness foothills before Yongdok, 23 Sh 4 A i C ! y ba 5 hess miles from Taejon on the trunk PiPe. or on - - S Oo ar

regiment never received that They won't know how to park message. ‘ their vehicles properly, or how to; I watched a battalion, with two ing and may be dead or captured.

a mile past American trucks everything depended upon €om- ¢ kx one correspondent aside and rant, store or small business? If rillas around the flanks and of infiltration and slashing at| MTS. McCarty was given a one) (pp enemy plane could Navel caucus With his regimental said worriedly Bit thats elerabutnry Speaking of Taejon nobody has the odds are against us and all fied columns of today’s Times, now, with units infiltrated to the senior showing the most satis- The American Army prides if vious. the at fal, Hn I a Ene TE a Ee pata the foothills some 20 miles south-{| The battle for Korea was be- American rear while the main factory academic progress duringiself on communications. Yet our) —— : . - v cere mir

A i ‘

sachusetts Ave. to 10th St. Total cost of the job was estle mated at $13,504. It will be com» pleted in two sections, the first

Ave to E. St. Clair St. This pore tion will cost about $7052. The second section, from St i Clair St. to 10th St., will cost ap 4 proximately $6452. Specifications for the project, to be financed by the city, call for resurfacing with asphaltic concrete. ' Petitions Approved The Board also approved props erty owners’ petitions for side walks and street improvements ab four other locations. » They include: Sidewalks from 51st to 52d St in Kingsley Drive; sidewalks for east side of Holmes Ave. from 16th St. to 18th St. Street improvements were

U8 ; Navy Pho o from Acme Telephoto. St. to the Belt Railroad plus ine

0 y » wick St. : Back at 24th Division head-| Plans and specifications must jquarters I asked a colonel why. [pa prepared for all the jobs expeph | “I cann answer that,” he said.|the East St. project.

fantastically inadequate. We left more than a half-a-|

ing general of the 24th Division, {the DAR Chapter House. They was a brave man. Now he’s miss- are Mrs. June Knoy Bloomer, con= {tralto, and Mrs. Mary Alice companies at stake, sweat If I know anything about Gen, Akers, soprano. * a two-hour period when Dean he'd prefer being dead. | p 3 The day before Taejon fell, he] Want ..to ..sell «your restaue

> | so, list it with one of the Business “My men won't fight. T know Brokers advertising in the.classi-

{to Invest in sound, going business.

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