Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 September 1950 — Page 1
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X, FORECAST: Partly cloudy tonight and tomorrow. Continued warm.
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1950
61st YEAR—NUMBER 202 li
Low tongs, 62. High tomorrow, 83. -
Entered as Second-Class Matter at Paostoffice Indiafapolis. Indiana. Issued Daily
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PRICE FIVE CENTS
Surrender Or Face Fre aion: ious ‘38th,’
MacArthur To Demand Of Reds Tonight
Grid Fans Get Marines Wing Snipers, Nab a Duck Russ Break UN Units Head jor Godl General Hints
* First Benefit Of Live TV Net
WFBM-TV Links City With Notre Dame § Action Today | Live TV came to Indianapolis today. Football fans were the first to benefit. With the Notre] Dame-North Carolina game) ° sold out, television set owners were watching the game on the screen, Indianapolis’ first television station, WFBM-TV, was joined to the Bell's System as the Dayton-Indi-| anapolis radio relay system and| the Indianapolis-Louisville coaxial cable was placed in service. Today was also a significant “= date in 13 other cities im the Mid-| | west and Southeast parts of the United States which will be added; to the present 28-city network for the first time. Live network tele-| vision will then extend as far south as Jacksonville, Fla. and as far west as Omaha, Neb. Adds 12 Million The present Bell System network serves 54 broadcasting sta- i tions in areas populated by about % “7 60 million people. Today’s extensions will provide network servfce to 19 more stations covering areas populated by about 12 million. Latest estimates indicate that today more than 80 per cent
oan st i en rane of NI Wage Board Sudo Leader Halts Mob | Storming Michigan Jail
Five of the new network cities East Lansing Collegians, Angry Over
are located in the Southeast — Greensboro, Charlotte, Jackson- Headed b Chin ville, Atlanta and Birmingham. Arrest of 9, Bruise Police Force
Besides Indianapolis and Louisville in the Midwest are Rock Is- U.S. to Speed Up Lid EAST LANSING, Mich, Sept. 30 (UP)—A shouting, an mob Janpowss Needs 8, Angry
land, Xl; Davenport and Ames, Jowa; Omaha, Kansas City, Mingi 3 ang a aio prod ASHINGTON, Sept. #0 (UP) on tHe City Jail last njght to free nine Sliegians locked .up for sentences of 18 Greeks, allegedly ' vide Jaaalvicle Thich chaLnols. Toc) | Federal Conciliation Chief Cy- rowdyism, but changed juings at the a minute. {sentenced for political reasons. diana Bell provides local facilities TU3 S: Ching has been selected by The cfowd, out of vii ster Sn buurlobg iat in whith . Argue Greek Issue | President Truman to become chief | they injured two Ce {heeatened to smash into the jail. | mn Jogi napoli to connect WFBM- .%, “wage Stabiligation Board, Bloodshed was almost certain : oy in hed A = py ki it was learned today. . until 2 pedent leader suddenly portable remote pickups to vari- It is another move by the Pres- np t th t : ri t withi ai or ers u ous points, such as the Indianap- ident. to speed up the wage-price- 100 To ha ne Jail. tai 3 economic program and get it into eet of the jail this fellow,
On Korea
At Yielding Floor
| In Heated Debate | By BRUCE W. MUNN
| | United Press Staff Correspondent | LAKE SUCCESS, N. Y, |Sept. 30—The Soviet bloc to|day broke up a meeting of the {United Nations General As|sembly’s political committee, slated to discuss the future of | Korea, when a Czech delegate refused to yield the floor on the order of the chairman. Roberto Urdaneta Arbalaez of {Colombia, suspended the meeting {for 10 minutes after he was unlable to stop a speech against |death sentences in Greece made |by the Czech Ambassador to Polland, Frantisek Pisek. Pandemonium broke loose as |Urdaneta suspended the meeting. {The Soviet bloc representatives
|
ing that they be given the floor. { Screams for Attention
lof Poland screamed for attention
Sor
|drei- V. Vishinsky, red-faced, $ut! calm, stood in his place and sought to gain the attention of ‘the chair.
Exclusive Photo by Acme Staff Photographer Stanley Fretick, By Acme Telephoto. Three U. S. Marines fire at retreating North Korean Reds and snipers at a barricade beneath the portraits of Joseph Stalin and Kim Il Sung, head of the North Korean government. One Marine plans a duck dinner later. He has the duck hanging on his pack.
| the history of the United Nations, |was precipitated by an attempt | by the Soviet bloc to sidetrack im-| | mediate consideration of an eight-| {nation blueprint for the future of | Korea. Mr. Vishinsky, as soon as the {committee had completed the routine of its organization, gained
bloc ‘was attempting a filibuster jon the Korean question when Katz- Suchy and other representa-
olis Motor Speedway, Butler Field-| Bigh Gear. changed his mind,” Police Chief tives from the Cominform coun-| do uss ana Victory = eld in In-| Mr. Ching, who is 74, has not Charles Pegg. said. age ner ease tries anapolis and to Notre ‘Dame ‘Cut It Out, Leader Orders Greek issue.
{definitely decided to take the post,; US {it was learned. His decision ‘Let's cut it out,” witnesses said
od, PTODADIY will be made early next the youth shouted. “This isn't go-
Stadium at South Bend. Linked to Dayton Indianapolis is being connect
Mr. Pisek was in the midst of a i 7000 Yard Masters |,,.c diatribe against the Greek ing to get us anywhere. |sentences—an issue that has been
to the network by a radio relay =~, °° , ir- Then with hands on his hips, Included in List raised by the Soviet bloc in the system to Dayton, O., built by the MM ChE a Haden Ate a Con. WASHINGTON, Sept. 30 (UP)| [ied by the Soviet bioe in the Long Lines Department of the p =..." 4 (oof the three public the sudden crowd and disappeared The White House announced to- peatedly in other organs, includAmerican Telephone and Tele- =o 0" ¢ the nine-man board, 0Wn a side street of this college, gottlement of a wage and ing the Security Council—when graph Co. In the beginning, this : town of 10,000 population. Witheat Labor Members Named hour dispute between 7000 rail- Bolivian delegtte Adolfo Costa link will be’ equipped to provide shor in a few minutes. the crowd be- P " ®™ Du Rels of Bolivia shouted for a two westbound television chan- Under President Truman's exe- gan drifting away and embattled road yard masters and most of Dy ¥ of order. — utive order of Sept. 9, the board police began counting bruises. the nation's railroads. RB (Continued on Page 2—Col. 2) will make recommendations to “I want to thank -that fellow,” Dr. John R. Steelman, assistant|Rels, but Mr, Pisek continued to the Economic Stabilization Ad- Mr. Pegg said. “He. may have to President Truman, announced speak. jministrator on wage stabilization saved some lives. these settlement terms: Urdaneta rapped his gavel, but | policies. An administrator has East Lansing police, backed up, ONE: A 23 cent an hour in-| {the Czech delegate proceeded as Inot been named yet. by state troopers, were waiting crease. An emergency board had if he had not heard it. Costa Du | The nine-man wage stabilization to drive the students away. But recommended 18 cents. |Rels again shouted for a point of
Times Index Amusements ........... «9 Births, Deaths, Events, Ship Movements:....... 12
BOOKS ....c.esuveeesisss 8 |board is to include three public the students were so angry “any-| TWO: A three year moratorium order and this brought renewed Bridge ........ cerepeess 3 /members, three representative of thing might have happened,” Mr. on changes in wages and rules. In|gavel rapping from the’ ‘Colombian! nist tr hill astride it. Church News ........... 4, 5 [labor and three of industry. Pegg said. exchange for this the union willlchairman who broke into Mr. Pi i! '00ps on a hill as el Comics ....covvnveedencas 16 The oe ethers also Yiave po al Sevsioped at a giant receive wage adjustments based! sek’ s spegeh to declare him out of Crossword .....coco00000 8 \been chosen, it was learne ey receding ay's game on changes in living costs. Editorials ............... 10 |are Emil Rieve, president of the between the traditional rivals, THREE: A five oy week which!*" i Pisek raised his voice and reans would not cross the border until and unless ordered) FOrum ~........ooovvvn.. 10 |Textile Workers Union (CIO); State and University of Michigan, will not go into effect, however, |continued to speak. Urdaneta ito do so by Gen. MacArthur's headquarters. Hoosier Profile ......... . 6 [Harry C. Bates, president of the at Ann Arbor. |for one year and thereafter any raised his voice, as delegates on| Erskine Johnson ........ 9 |Bricklayers Union (AFL), and El- Outmatch Police changes will be subject “to the all sides of the huge oval table
{mer Walker, vice president of the Ag the rally ended, the crowd desires of the employes and the clamored for order and some took, Machinists Union (Ind.). swarmed o,f the campus into the manpower situation.” - the woden nameplates before their| | It was also speculated that Da- streets, where the football fever | $54 Monthly ‘Mike places and pounded them on the) vid L. Cole, Paterson, N. J. lawyer got the upper hand and made, The White House estimated that, table. {who has served on many presi- them more than a match for the the over-all settlement will moan | “This meeting is suspended,” |dential arbitration boards, may city's 11-man police forcey la total monthly increasé of $54 MT. Urdaneta shouted. |take over Mr. Ching’s job in the (Ope policeman was thrown in| 'for th 4 t Conciliation Service. | or the yaldingaters. front of a truck and run over. The terms follow the settlement Costs Him $105 | Another suffered a broken finger. pattern established in the long (Several others lost caps and dispute between the Switchmen's|J © ‘Buy* 5¢ Paper | (badges in the milling crowd. Then!Unjon of North America (AFL) | Mr. Pegg radioed state policeland 10 midwestern railroads. From ‘Fire Box {for aid. {That dispute was settied Sept. 1 [ Nine students were arrested, on virtually the same terms. t
’ \ Top Noor Features UP FROM Comptonsviile, K In The Su nday Times quusing the march lo the Jl The yurdma ster Settement oy eee came Willie Jamey
It won't be any surprise to regular readers of THE turned over to college officials fom tween the Brotherhood of “Rail- Denton, who never before in his “TIMES when they find tomorrow's SUNDAY TIMES CHOCK disciplinary action. road Trainmen and the Order of life had seen a fire alarm box. | 0 To M \Y RBS IT FIRST IN THE SUNDAY Ratlway Conductors whose strike jie was staying with his sister YOU, TOO, MA AD IT Truman Cruises threat prompted government Seiz- .. a10 E. 12th St. and some of
TIMES: ‘ure of the railroads late in ® WHO MAKE THE BEST WIVES? . « +» Nurses make the 4 {the boys thought it would be fine
. | August. — best wives says thé family doctor. who knows most about Cn the Potomac to pull a little joke on the new-| the family home. ; WASHINGTON, Sept. 30 (UP) | ” ® MORE WEDDING RINGS . . . How. today's war brides plo iqan+ i Big kg Start Now } fo fo Shey ska, tag” their men as they go to battle. weathered many a 15-hour work 1 "12th St. and Park Ave. ® PEOPLE NAMED SMITH . . . Smith family behavior and 4, gince the Korean fighting Improve Your |B 2 nd Park Ave. misbehavior by the Smith who makes you laugh . . . H. Allen started, takes off today for a | a nickel in the box, pu
Smith. : eek’s cruise aboard the presi- Family Housing .
Mrs. Manners ........e0s 12 MOVIES v.oevvscnecnnsnnns Obituaries ....coeviveeees Pattern ..ceeevvceevanans Society .ecceccccsccceen Sports wermnrnnrnsonnse dl, 12 Women's resvreriv 3
Woe:
sssese
® MISS STENOGRAPHER CONTEST . . . Vote tabulations oats paper.” , yacht Williamsburg. ! . 8 and pictures of entrants in The Times search for “Miss Ty. President planned to cruise ® Ho¥ much longer will your| ED, Willd Eat comdn's Btenagaphes ABLED-. . . How the hand! 3 help the the Potomac River and Chesa-| Bre hme “estas tind a slot "tor the nickel so he © THE ABLE DIS ow the handicapped heip them- n.,10 Bay to get the first reall Perhaps you should start did the next best thing.
selves and others. rest he has had since he visited Minutes later up- “roared Inds:
® MEN IN SERVICE . . . Reports and pictures about men—and 4, , women—in military service. House just before Easter. He - - ® DR. WILLIAM LOWE BRYAN'S 90 YEARS . . . The stoty ; oi... Jt members of the of the president emeritus of Indiana University as he ap- ,mcial family to go along. proaches his 90th birthday. | Even on the Williamsburg, Mr.| @ SHULL'S HOLLYWOOD STORY . . Times amusement staff mruman did not plan to get-| writer, R. K. Shull, reports on his interview with Comedian | |away- -from-it-ail entirely. TeleEddie Foy Jr. on a recent trip to Hollywood. | phone and radio teletype in-| ® “INSIDF. INDIANAPOLIS” , . . Another surprise by Ed | gtallations tied him to his White! Sovola, the unpredictable Times columnist. | House desk. A ‘Navy seaplane! © COLOR COMICS wh . 12 FULL pages of those favorites | ‘was to drop his mail every few talks about. | hours; @ SPORTS ACTION / PICTURES .'. . Those easy-to-follow ! ET re ipl
Key West winter White taking steps RIGHT NOW|
housing situation, to give| ‘But where's the paper?” Willie | them more of the modern James asked firemen. They held improvements and newest him until police arrived and put conveniences. Ja charge of turning in a false fire You will find OVER 1000 3am on him. . advertised For Sale| In Municipal Court this mornin the classified real estate| nS: Judge Alex Clark fined him section of tomorrow's Tiines,| $105. Unable to pay, Willie ‘Such a wide variety! There are singles, doubles, du./®nd he d and apartments in &
of Com
action photos of weekend football james. MEN'S} BING'S N NIECE WEDS - oF all price ranges and located ™° no practical jokers, . THE SPORTS RESULTS . .. ALL ‘HE WO VEPORT, “a. Sept. 30 A Srp ip . THE SOCIAL CALENDAR FOR OCTOBER (UP)Toni Crosby, Bing Cros- -Suburbé™ and be city, | OCAL TEMPERATURES . POLITICS . . . HAROLD HARTLEY'S "THE IN by’s’ niece, and Air Force Lt. . The Sunday Times fs the 6a m..64 10am... 17 ' PARADE MAGAZINE . WHA R James C. McManaway of Barks- Home ay Guide of ism... 8 1a m.. 76 8 a nm... 3 .n (Noon) 78
IT OUT SBAD IT FIRSY IN 7HE TIMES... THE dus Fick Wil be war here to- Indianapolis, BD os : I Ine 82
| Czech Delegate Balks ¢ communist North Korea today in a three-pronged drive |above Seoul.
Airborne Regiment. sula and were the nearest Americans to the 38th Parallel. (UP)—An authoritative
coast yesterday,
Thousi nds of Reds Giving Up
An official spokesman for Gen. Douglas MacArthur said | shouted over the hubbub, demand- 4190 gave up Wednesday, boosting the war-long total of qemand will lay down “lenient prisoners to 15,517. Another 575 enemy troops were killed terms — everything considered,”
\and Soviet Foreign Minister An-| Seoul soon after dawn today.
{the floor and demanded that the)
lof 1500 football-crazed Michigan State College students marched S0.18400 EToup Somme Gen.
|
It was patent that the Soviet!
insisted on arguing the attack of the war.
Urdaneta recognized Costa Du artillery in the enemy column. {
the lever and out comes a news: | ay
James was taken to County Jaillcourageous actions inspired his necessity hurled them. a less ‘complicated civilization and against overwhemling odds.
Up UN Meeting Along 120-Mile Front | enignt Terms
Enemy Forces Giving Up by Thousands; Fliers Reduce Uijongbu to Mass of Ruins
By EARNEST HOBERECHT, United Press Staff Correspondent TOKYO, Sept. 30—U. 8. forces smashed within 15 miles
In Ultimatum
Korean Announcers To Repeat Text Around-the-Clock WASHINGTON, Sept. 30
The furthermost group was paratroopers of the 187th, They rolled overland on Kimpo Penin-|
Meantime, United Nations forces were on the march source said today that Gen.
toward the 38th Parallel frontier on a 120-mile front across Douglas MacArthur will dethe entire waist of Korea.
mand in a radio broadcast at South Korean vanguards reached the border on the east 9 p.m. (Indianapolis time) but halted there to regroup and await that the North Koreans surrender
further orders. LC {promeng, e id Gen. Mac . re sa * . - Staggered by the loss of nearly 100,000 men inthe |, ,.mur's demands will ‘be cone three-month war, the North Koreans virtually had tained in a brief message about ceased opposition throughout South Korea. The end 0 Topas to be broadcast from
» war south of the 38th Parallel seemed a matter ays, ip not-hours.
oe He said Gen. MacArthur is exe {pected to broadcast personally in English, and that Korean an{nouncers then will repeat the dee. imand on ‘round-the-clock broadCommunist troops were surrendering by the thousands. casts beamed to North Korea. ‘Lenient’ Not Explained This source said the surrender
{but declined to say whether or
| Siren-viced Juliusz Katz-Suchy yesterday, more than half of them in the mop-up of Seoul.| bo ct unconditional sur
U. S. forces launched their three-pronged attack above render. There was speculation : |that the “lenient terms” meant The 187th Regiment of the 11th Air-Borne Division es, Would be no demand for
jumped off from Yanggong-Ni, 20 miles northwest of Seoul, |on a large scale. ‘and pushed six miles north along the Kimpo peninsula to The disorder, unpre. dented in within three miles of its northern tip.
The source said only that the (surrender message will be in {broad and simple language and
The remnants of two Communist battalions were fall. will Concentrate on She milftaly aspects \ing back without seriously challenging the paratroopers. Be- Ione . political on 3 Setafle
tween the Americans and the Communist border, however, asd That would be up to the lay the broad mouth of the Han River. The peninsula is United Nations. bounded on the north and east by the Han and on the west oe White House ue By Jad ‘by the Yellow Sea. (Gen. Macarius will make a sur"U.S. Marines of the 7th Regiment simultaneously "hdc" broadcast tonight. 8 Rh pushed up the main highway north out of Seoul toward Silent Syagman. Rhee of the
Korean Republic has said his Uijongbu agaite the only reported stubborn enemy resistance.
terms are “unconditional sure
render,” i It seemed probible that Oem By 4 a. m. (Indianapolis time), the Marines had ad MicAThor 1 also will
(vanced two miles against small arms and mortar fire. | So ri ix ited adh
Striking out ahead of the ground forces, a Marine air troope into North Korea to die
squadron reduced Uijongbu, 12 miles north of Seoul, to a /®™™ the Communist forces. “=
An Orderly Entry The entry would be an |peacetul Invasion similar to
The bulk of the fleeing Seoul garrison was believed va a h siiach
mass of blazing rubble in the heaviest sustained Marine air|
ncn there. | continue in that manner unless re- | caleitrant Communists natgated
Marines Advance Eight Miles ~~ |wrisinas
A South Korean army spokess 8
Northeast of Seoul, the 1st Marine Regiment advanced man sald Korean troops will
eight miles up the Seoul-Chungchon highway to the vicinity cross the frontier urless they a tt R ) ordered to do so by the Uni of Inchang-Ni and Susong-Ni. There it ran into Communist Nations or Gen. MacArthurl troops falling back toward Chunchon. Patrols reported some headquarters. No Instructions Received : Eighth Army Headquarters in Tokyo ' sald no instructions had been received about the 38th
Four South Korean divisions were rolling north toward the 38th Parallel along a 65-mile front across the been, Ie mountainous eastern half of Korea. {Paralie In the absence of- de Advance elements of the 3d Division on the east coast it seemed unlikely ‘hat either the
reached the frontier yesterday and began {Americans or South Koreans y y. B shelling Commu- |wotld push into North Korea. | Informed sources in. Tokyo bee A South Korean Army spokesman said the South Ko- lleved Gen. MacArthur already’ would have issued ‘his ordefs had he intended to take advantage of {the momentum genérated In the
The South Korean Capitol Division, just inland from|{*-moving offensive he launched
the 3d, reached Wolcohong-8a, 15 miles south of the 38th| The South k ernm y t { Parallel, and the 8th and 6th Divisions farther west were | radio at Pusan said the Korean
[rapidly pulling up abreast. Assembly voted today to ask the |United Nations for permission Southeast of Seoul, U. 8. 7th Division units threw an- laend South Korean forces across
other barrier across the enemy’s road of retreat from the the border.
southwest Korea trap sealed by the junction of the Pusan and Seoul Beachaads, Urge UN ‘Forces Truman Awards Gen. Dean To Cross Border
Congressional Honor Medal Officials Favor Uniting
Missing 24th Leader Gave Inspiration | Korea by Armed Force To Gis Who Halted Reds, President Says omy kris BEECH WASHINGTON, Sept. 30 (UP) —- President Truman today| TOKYO, Sept. So Fesling
awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor to Maj. Gen. William | here F. Dean, missing commander of the 24th Infantry Division in Korea. [that ious in offcia circles Bere It was the first award of the medal—-most coveted American! cross the 38th Parallel and hi { military decoration—in the Korean War. It is awarded for gal- Korea by force of arms.. lantry above and beyond the call of duty. Gen, MacArthur has strongly Gen. Dean has been listed offi-| recommended such action. So has.
|clally as missing in action since through the ranks of the embat-the United Nations mission to
|the battle for Taejon in July. Heitled infantrymer of those earl Tat seen .knocking out a days in Korea and enabled them Ropes, phils mghean mbagy [North Korean tank before the {to make their magnificent stand, President Rhee of South Korea: Reds sealed off Taejon in their against the overwhelming forces ig passionate on the subject. He southward drive. opposing them.” ‘has insisted that the 38th Parallel Reported To Be Alive Men Won't Give Up |no longer exists. There have been recent reports | The President said. the Korean ° And among the fighting men
to improve your family anapolis Fire Department trucks. | —unconfirmed -— that Gen. Dean victory was gained because the (who have to’ do the dying ‘but
still may be alive and a prisoner! have no voice in the decisions, the _ in North Korea. men on the ground facing a ruth- game gentiment . prevails. They - In the citation accompanying less foe “would not give up.” |don’t want to have to come back the award, Mr. Truman said Gen. “In the beginning,” Mr. Truman later to do the job all over again, | Dean distingiiished himself by | said, “many. of these soldiers! Fears that invasion of North “conspicuous gallantry ‘and intre-|ghting on the ground were little Korea will provoke anothe pidity” at the repeated risk of his nore that Soya bewliaered by the war are minimized. Most of even o whic own life. He said the General's nist China intended to in ,\men to a “magnificent response” | “But these boys became men, they wo 8 has cone 20 ong my {stogd their ground and fought in/pPA STRIKE UNLIKELY - Mr, Truman &iso paid tribute a tradition of stubborn determl-. . CHICAGO, Sept. 30 (UP) = to the valor and heroism of em- nation for which every’ American, Hopes for avoiding a strike -in battled Infantrymen in the early can Teel a deep and abiding pride. the pac days. of the Korean War. -
ie men." a Jie
lieve that if Russia or Commu~
Ene. roe poopie OF the work al aT visor) pry ho. 4 He said Gen. Dean’s own hero- and those enslaved peoples who uled new . : with the ism “contributed to the surge of of fesgom, give BONE WICI0 Sakina otra RB dé at hich : : i 5 a AF
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