Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 April 1952 — Page 2

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sere Was A Lot Of Brass To The Way, But Cpl. Clark Is

By ED KENNEDY easy chair in the living room »f jes of gala his parents’ home, kicked off his After : Wisiriwind se¥iey A combat boots and said, “Gosh, the ceremonies -

| house looks good, Mom.” dianapolis, the 200,000th G1 to be With his parents, Mr. and Mrs.

rotated from Korea relaxed with-p. 4 p (lark, his flancee, Miss out reveille today. Barbara Kent, of 515 8. Rybolt © Cpl. Fredie Leon Clark had re- Ave, and a few friends, Fredie turned from nine months of com telaxed at last, bat to. his home at 1430 Kiel Ave. He doffed his tunic, decorated

a

On

him No. 200,000 on the rotationigeventh Division patch, as he roster, he was accompanied bY ruefully rubbed his saluting arm. fanfare all the way home-and| “The only corporal I've seen he was glad to get away from. ... trip was a WAC chaufpublic acclaim for a well-earned .. .. \ Washington,” he grinned. rest. A long-time buddy stopped by More than 500 persons walted to say hello. in the stiff, chilling win ast | “He' " e's an Army man, too, Right n Nels Loo, Buulipal Fredie said. “But another corpor 0 4 | ; 8" stand each othhome, Many were curious citizens, PTA we'll understan former schoolmates-or wellwish-| ° ers, Civilian greeters were headed Cpl. William XE, Miller Pi

by Mayor Cath. ang military long chat. They talked about

honors were accorded by high{things from the corporal point of ranking officers, a squad of mill-| Clark laid it on the

| view, Cpl tary police and a color guard. [,.", on) “Miller like a couple

A military band from Ft. Hare major generals talking things rison and the band from Cpligyer But if anything, Clark’s alma mater, Ben Davis was a little more blunt, i High School, played martial music g . as civic dignitaries gave the GI A Bunch of Stuff the traditional key to the city of | Indianapolis. Generals and colo- gi." gaid Fredie. “Why up In

snappy salutes,

heaped on him at Inchon, TokY". pottle of whisky.’ San Francisco, Washington and here, But he commented that he understands the acclaim is not for him alone, but for all the men than & mite? We in Korea who are fighting and anywhere that way.

Home, and His Boots Off

i ; Times phote by John R, Solaklamize HOME—Cpl. Fredie Clark, No, 200,000 in rotation, is No. | in the heart of with him at Weir Cook Municipal Airport.

took place away from the airport Tokyo. and after the sirens of his police| “Here's Hokkaido,” he

EM LAE es em, | pied

1872

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Because of ‘ne chance that made with the Bronze Star and the

Fredie signment will be with the 31st

Indi-

bara Kent, his 20.year-old fiancee, who arrived escort were silenced. It came the cated, holding up his hand. “Onjand to Fredie was home—and he h moment he sank down into anithese islands to the north of Ja-|{was there.

WEDNESDAY, APR. 16,1052

Salute Home

pan, the Russians are loaded. If {they get control of South Korea,

{Japan is surrounded.” We have a

{deal with Japan. We can’t lose it. {We've got to stay in Korea,” he

Dies When Car Rams Parked Truck

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explained,

| “The Army didn’t tell me what {to say. They told me what the {situation was and told me to tell what I ‘thought in my own iwords,” he explained. He and the other corporal talked about the real deal he fell) into with the lucky number, Fredie explained to his buddy that it was trying at times. “1 was saluting every time I turned around,” he said. “But look, I got home two {weeks sooner, the folks got a nice trip to Washington and the whole check was picked up by

I'm sure glad it's over.” Assigned to Atterbury

Unless his tour of duty is extended, which seems unlikely now, Fredie is due out of the Army in six months. His new as-

Infantry Division now maqving into Camp Atterbury. His new

the Army. It was worth it, but|-

; Times Photo by Tom Ogden. ' SHEARED—With top torn off, car carsened into front yard after crash that killed Mrs. Claude

Cline, injured two others, Times State Service the sedan and sent it plunging|/McClaine’s 5-year-old daughter,

boss, Maj. Gen. A. J, Paxton, was

“The peace talks—a bunch of in the greeting party last night.

When he gets out of the Army

nels gave the young corporal gp. Company of the 3d Infantry he'll go back to his pre-draft job when we heard they were goinglat Kingan & Co. as a meat cutter, The modest soldier accepted to have another peace talk meet-

with precise military correctriess ing the guys would say, ‘Well household till long after midnight, the honors which have been they're going in to open another

Lights burned in the Clark

They were proud of their son's selection to be the symbol of ro-

t t h 5 Cpl. Clark could give a brief-|tation—that publicity about him Roping to get home ing on the big picture, too. 1t|would help the morale of 200,000 had been explained to him by other mothers and close ones who Cpl. Clark's real homecoming Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway injare waiting for servicemen to

come home, But the important thing to them

-1932

Mr, and Mrs, Clark, tired ‘rom the Washington whirl, were still “Who are they trying to kid looking at each other a dozen with these meetings that last less times an hour and smiling. We'll never get

LEBANON, Apr. 16 — A 54-100 tne front yard of a W, South|Glenda Kay, were in fair condi

| year-old woman was killed, and her daughter and granddaughter|St. home. tion in Witham Hospital here. injured, when their car crashed| Killed was Mrs. Claude Cline,| Police said Mrs. McClaine was driving the car when it rammed

‘into a parked truck here last Whitestown. night. Her daughter, Mrs. Mary/into an empty livestock truck

The impact ripped the top offiFrances McClaine, 32, and Mrs. parked at W. South and C Sts.

Says Indidna Leads Fight Against Secret Spending | Times State Service | Department records to public in- he loses that right, as Americans

had lost the right until Indiana leading the nation in rebellion of the restored it, he is the captive of

The Senator was one ; Sfsinst secret Jchaung Pig 2 gor leaders in the legislature dictatorship.” reaucrats, dec State - last fall when the Assembly deJohn Van Ness, candidate for thei ederal government's cut- 1 | Republican nomination - for gow ka ih $ Jeden funds and on by Report Lama in Tibet # Stns, iol pet h here today. its law to open welfare records. HONG KONG, Apr. 18 (UP)— , Van Ness, president pro' “The question is whether a tem of the Indiana Senate, said taxpayer has the right to know|1P® -1#-yearold Panchen Lama “Indiana saved approixmately where his money goes,” he told ‘has crossed into Tibet from China, $300,000 a month as a result of the Kiwanis Club. “So long as he the Communist New China News

‘the state's fight to open Weltare has that right he is free. When| Agency reported today.

A —

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