Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 September 1952 — Page 5
17, 1952
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WEDNESDAY, SEPT.
‘I'D RATHER SEE MEN WOUNDED IN ACTION'—"
17, 1952
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
17 Korea Children Die in Crash |
By United Press ORYU, Korea, Sept. 17— Seventeen Korean children were killed and at least 200 others injured today when a locomotive blew up and derailed three coaches on a railway trestle, The train was carrying 400 to 500 passengers, most of them children going from the west coast port of Inchon to schools in Seoul.
the scene in 25 ambulances and performed 10 emergency amputations to free passengers trapped in the twisted wood and steel. The screams of an 18-year-old girl silenced the crowd as a blood-spattered American doctor worked for 20 minutes to amputate her right arm. She was the last living passenger removed from the wreckage. Still inside the twisted mass hanging over the trestle were five bodies. Army engineers began removing them with blow torches and hacksaws,
Only two bodies were visible. Directly underneath the bridge were the head and legs of a schoolboy dangling over the water and rescue workers could’ see the bloody arms of a little girl pinned in the wreckage.
Mothers who hurried to the scene from nearby Inchon went from stretcher to stretcher in search of their children. Schoolbooks and jackets were piled up neatly beside the tracks, British troops from a nearby warehouse were first “at the scene. “Pieces of jet black stuff flew
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U. 8. Army doctors sped to
through the air into our compound,” said Sgt. T. S. Nixon of Midlands, Eng. “I'd rather see men wounded in action than kids hurt this way. You can get at them on the battlefield.” * American doctors from the 121st Evacuation Hospital said they had to mek several “dissections” to separate injured children from the dead. One little boy was pinned on top of the body of another. Un-
able to cut the steel around |!
(them, the doctors dissected the
dead boy's body to extricate |
the injured child.
Victim
PHILIPPINE 1S
& >
Pope Pius
To MARSHALL IS.
HAWALIAN IS,
3 P | | By United Press TT, n ne HONOLULU, Sept. 17—Rescue ; 25. 0 Ig y planes flew out the first survivors \ % of Wake Island's disastrous 138By United Press ile-an-CASTELGANDOLFO. Ital y Jie an-hour typhoon today. They ; said the battered island looked Bept. 17—His Holiness, Pope Pius : ; : like a “lost continent.” XII, 76, developed an intestinal D . t $10 il disturbance and a slight cold to-| amaLe, esiimate Bt > . day. His doctor ordered him to lo, was TCR yorse than cancel all audiences until further Pombs could inflict,” one survivor notice, said. Eyery building was leveled. Prof, Riccardo The first persons evacuated Galeazzi-Lisi, the from the island landed at KwajaPontiff’s private lein Atoll in a U. 8S. Navy PBM physician, re- patrol bomber. They described ported the Pope their ordeal as a nine-hour Is ranning al’ “Nightmare of howling winds and slight fever, but flogging tropical rains.” said there is no Among them were three men cause for concern. te his 4 Monday. Despite his in- % : disposition, the Suffers Head Injury | Pope recited his Blair Johnson, an employee of glass. regular morning _ {the Flying Tiger Airline, suffered| mass in his private chapel at his/3 head injury when nearly summer residence here in the Al-| trapped in a collapsing Quonset! ban Hills some 15 miles southeast yt 1a gaid he scrambled under! of Rome. He Is not confined t0 {yo genris and clung to a tree bed. {for four hours during the height | The Pope's illness became gf the typhoon. { known when the Papal residence He said he “didn’t remember | notified the Vatican garage in| anything” until after he had Rome to cancel cars scheduled to reached the dispensary. He said bring prelates and pilgrims to, apparently was only semi-con-Castelgandolfo. scious throughout the storm Informed sources said the Pope ? Robert Moore, also of the Flyshowed no signs of discomfort i Tiger Ii of last night, when he received 1000| "8 Tiger line, suffered bad bruises. The third injured man, persons in a mass audience in the main cpurtyard. They noticed, Coast Guard Chief Petty Officer however, he did not make his| Maynard Joseph Fontaine, Wil- Sh x usual short discourse. ic : ASPIRIN AT ITS BEST 1 3 41 Mi For less than Ys¢ a tablet r. mn. St.Joseph ASPIRIN
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BATTERED BY TYPHOON—Winds which reached speeds of | : 138 miles an hour hit tiny Wake Island, shown in The Times map and injured when.the typhoon struck destroyed more than 90 per cent of the island's facilifies.
| mington, Cal., was cut by flying estimated at 750. The Navy sail the remainder of the men would Wake's total population was!stay on the island to clean it up.
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