.. . t o } i e. 10 . 10. 0 0 M04 I No* . i4v qanA 1 W eater C lar: cold-er VOL. LIV No. 65 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, JAN. 28, 1944 fficers Reveal ap Atrocities onBa PRICE FIVE CENTS taan Norton Exposes Cab Fraud City Taxicabs a i.. Overcharge For Bundles Extra Rates Are Not Within City Ordinance; Driver Receives Fine The story behind the story. Yesterday in Circuit Court Ray- mond Jones 29, a cab driver for the Campus Cab Co., was fined $14.35 for overcharging Hugh Norton of 500 E. William on a cab ride Thursday. Norton rode the cab from his home to a downtown laundry and was charged 60 cents for what normally would be a 35 cent run. The driver explained the extra charge on the basis of a laundry bag carried by Norton. "I believe," he said last night, "that this is an example of flagrant, unethical overcharging." Ordinance Is Clear The case was brought into court when Norton preferred charges and swore out a warrant for Jones' arrest. Under the city ordinance govern- ing taxi rates, it is definitely stated that no extra charge can be made when passengers carry articles with them. "I went back to the office," Norton stated, "and demanded 'to see the ruling that permitted them to exact such rates." "I was told," he continued, "that it was a ruling of the management and if I wanted to do anything about it, I could go to the police." The suggestion was made by a per- son who represented himself as a son of Carl Brening, proprietor of the company. The driver admitted to Norton in the presence o city policeman Alfred Toney that he had made the charge and that-he- ho been.rdered to o4- low this general practice by the com- pany. Example Cited "I had not read the city ordi- nance," Jones said, "but I was work- ing under the instructions of the company." When questioned about the over charge, the company spokesman cit- ed as an example the fact that "we always make such a charge when carrying sailors with duffle bags." "I believe it is about time such ir- responsible charging should be stop- ped in the interests of servicemen, the student body on campus, and the general public," Mr. Norton said. Mr. Norton indicated last night that his phone was busy all day yes- terday with congratulatory messages from people on campus for pressing the case. Many complaints of this kind have been heard on campus, but this case points to action. If you are illegally overcharged, REPORT THE MATTER TO THE POLICE DEPARTMENT. The police want to wipe out such illegal practices, but they can do nothing if they have nothing to go on. Allies Down 16 Jap Planes PEARL HARBOR, Jan. 27.-(A')- Seventh Army Airforce Mitchell Me- dium bombers and fighters downed 16 and probably 22 planes Wednes- day in the biggest aerial battle over the Marshall Islands since the navy carrier-based raid of Dec. 4,Adm. Chester W. Nimitz announced to- night. The air action over those invasion menaced mid-Pacific bases, carrying an air offensive there through the 21st day, occurred during an assault on Taroa airfield on Maloelap atoll. All the American raiders returned. Union Group To0 Meet Here More than .25 selected delegates from local 50 UAW-CIO at the Ford Willow Run Bomber Plant will con- vene here today in a three-day ed- ucational training institute. All meetings will be held in the r.... , .- "41. . : +1a f rm o Elections for Seniors, V-Ball Will Be Today An all campus election to be held from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. today will elect eight members to the V-Ball commit- tee and senior class officers in both the literary and engineering colleges. Literary college students will vote in the corridor of University Hall, while all engineers will cast their bal- lots under the engine arch. + All students on campus are eligible to vote except servicemen, and iden- tification cards must be presented at the polling places. The following candidates will be on the literary college ballot for V- Ball: Allen H. Anderson, Stan Wallace, Marjorie Rosmarin, Patricia Coulter, Bette Willemin, Hariette Wiltsee, Doris Coleman. Three will be elected in this group and voters are permitted three votes. Fred Beltz, Rupert Straub, and Henry Schmidt were declared elected by the Men's Judiciary Council last night by virtue of no challenging pe- titions. The candidate in this group who receives the highest number of votes will be declared chairman of the dance. The literary college held the chairmanship last year. Harriet Boyer and Betsy Post were declared elected to the committee representing the combined schools and colleges. Their petitions went unchallenged. Because theirs were the only petit- tions submitted for senior class office in the literary college, Burnette Crawford was declared elected presi- dent and Jean Whittemore named secretary by the Judiciary Council. Howard Snyder and Charles Dot- terrer will contest the presidency of the- senior 'cass'In"' the engineering school. The man with the highest number of votes will be made presi- dent and the other will receive the office of secretary. All election results will be carried in Saturday's Daily. Prof. Tillich To Speak T odayv Religion, History To Be Analyzed in Lecture Prof. Paul Tillich, who is consider- ed one of the greatest of modern Pro- testant theologians, will speak on "Protestantism and Moral Anarchy" at 8:15 p.m. today in the Rackham Ampitheatre. His lecture, sponsored by the Stu- dent Religious Association, will pre- sent to the campus an analysis of the relation of religious philosophy to current history. Professor of philosophical theology at Union Theological Seminary, Dr. Tillich has come to play a leading role in the revival of theology in Eur- ope and America today. His sense of the disaster toward which the twentieth century moral anarchy was leading mankind was heightened by the recent tragic his- tory of Germany, his own nation, E. William Muehl, acting director of SRA, said. A discussion of Dr. Tillich's talk will be held at noon tomorrow in Lane Hall. Anyone interested in attend- ing may do so provided he makes a reservation during the reception fol- lowing the lecture or by telephone be- fore 10 a.m. tomorrow, extension 2148, Lane Hall. Counterattacks Increased Nazis in Italy Allied Troops Repulse Tank-Led Smash by Crack Goering Division By The Associated Press ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, AL- GIERS, Jan. 27.-German counter- attacks to check the expanding Al- lied bridgehead south of Rome in- creased in fury today after Allied troops repulsed a tank-led smash by elements of the crack Hermann Goering Division below Littoria in the Pontine Marshes, some 13 miles east of the invasion beaches at Net- tuno. (A Swedish correspondent in Rome wrote that the roar of Allied artillery now was heard plainly in all parts of Rome and that Allied aircraft swarmed the skies about the Italian capital.) Nazi Counter-thrusts Field Marshal Albert Kesselring appeared to be hurling all his avail- able reserve battle strength against the Allied attempt to get a strangle- hold on his communications with the Italian capital. Nazi counter-thrusts against the main Fifth Army front around Cassino virtually had ceased as a result. Heavy enemy traffic was observed between the Cassino front and the area just south of ,Rome, . and Allied warplanes were taking a heavy toll. The Hermann Goering Division, recently refitted into a full armored outfit, came up through the Pontine Marshes and attempted to break into the Allied bridgehead at a point east of the Mussolini Canal, but was thrown back after a violent engage- ment. This first important test of arms, since the Allied landing last Saturday was fought in a torrential rain and hail storm. At one time hail stones covered the ground almost like snow, a front dispatch said. Yesterday's Encounter Yesterday's encounter below Lit- toria, the main town of the Pontine Marsh agricultural development, was the only fight specifically located by the Allied command, and the Ger- mans were equally vague as they told of repelling Allied efforts to widen the bridgehead. The outcome of the impending battle almost within sight of Rome may depend on whether Allied ships can pour in reinforcements faster than the Germans can swing their nine divisions on the main Fifth Ar- my front up to face the new threat. Harmon 7To Talk Army, Navy Documents Relate Horror Starvation, Torture of U.S. Men Described By Escaped Prisoners By WILLIAM FRYE Associated Press Correspondent WASHINGTON, Jan. 27.-A hor- ror story scarcely parallelled in the annals of modern war-how the Japanese starved, tortured and in some cases wantonly murdered the gallant defenders of Bataan-was told by the Army and Navy tonight. Documented by sworn statements of officers who escaped from prison camps, the joint announcement described a cold-blooded campaign of savagery carried out after the 36,000 Americans and Filipinos on Bataan and Corregidor were over- whelmed by superior numbers. The 4,000-word account began by telling of thousands of deaths in Japanese camps, and then recited that: When the Americans and Fili- pinos first were taken prisoner, those found with Japanese money or tokens were beheaded. Surviv- ors were beaten along a "march of death" from the scene. 12,000 men were kept penned in a 100-yard square area without food for a week. There was a" 12-hour wait to fill canteens at the one water spigot. A widely used torture was the "sun treatment." Captives were made to sit in the boiling sun all day without cover and with little water. Six men-three Americans and three Filipinos-ill from mis-treat- ment were buried while still alive. Men "literally were worked to death." It was not unusual for 20 Per cent of a work detail to die Marines Receive Treatmn's~t at Modern First Aid Station A far cry from the crude first aid station in the early days on Bougainville is this December scene at a Marine aid station behind the lines. (Seated, left): Phm. 2/c R. B. Stubbs, Massena, N.Y., prepares a bandage for Marine T/Sgt. D. M. Black, San Diego, Calif., as Lt. (JG) L. L. Hamilton, Springfield, Colo., gives instructions. Seated in dentist chair at right is Marine Pfc. H. L. Andrews, Jr., of New Jersey, as Phm. 2/c P. L. Maier (left), Champaign, Ill., assists Sgt. D. P. Dobson, dentist, of Iowa City, Ia. and "in one instance, 75 per cent were killed that way."' Three officers who attempted to escape had their hand tied behind them, then'their hands were pulled upward by ropes attached to an overhead purchase so they had to remain standing and bent forward to ease the pressure on their arms. They were left thus for two days and periodically beaten with a two- by-four. One officer was then be- headed- and the other two were shot. Lesser brutalities, indignities and humiliations were innumerable . the Japs gave three chickens and 50 eggs to 500 men, then broadcast to the world that their prisoners were fed on chickens and eggs .. . American flags were habitually and designedly used as rags in kitchens. From reports made by a Naval officer and two Army officers who escaped from the Philippines.after almost a year as prisoners, the two departments assembled the story, including the report that several times as many American prisoners in the hands of the Japanese died -mostly of starvation, forced hard labor and general brutality-as the Japanese have ever reported. "At one prison camp, Camp O'Donnell, about 2,200 American prisoners died in April and May, 1942," said the. report. "In the camp at Cabanatuan, about 3,000 Americans had died up to the end of October, 1942. Still heavier mortality occurred among the Fili- pino prisoners of war at Camp O'Donnell." The calculated campaign of bru- tality began against the battle- spent, hungry American and Fili- pino soldiers on Bataan as soon as they surrendered with what the survivors called "the march of death," said the report. The report was assembled from statements made by Commander Melvyn H. McCoy, U.S.N., Indian- apolis; Lt. Col. S. M. Mellnik, Coast Artillery, of Dunmore, Pa., and Lt... Col. William E. Dyess, Air Corps, or Albany, Tex. Russians Are Now 39 Miles From Estonia' LONDON, Friday, Jan. 28.-The Red Army smashed to within 39 miles of the Estonian border yesterday, capturing the important rail junc- tions of Volosovo and Tosno, and 50 other towns, and killing thousands of Axis troops, including Spanish Le- gionnaires, Moscow announced early today. Leningrad, former Czarist capital and Russia's second largest city, last night celebrated its complete libera- tion from two and a half years of enemy siege as Red Army command- ers ordered a record salute of 24 sal- voes from 324 guns for the historic event. As their troops steadily hammered back the Germans and Spaniards into the noose of a large trap, the Russian commanders in an order of the day proclaimed the complete lib- eration of Leningrad "from enemy blockade and from barbaric enemy shelling." More than 700 northern commun- ities have been re-won in the two- weeks-old offensive, and the Germans have been hurled back 40 to 60 miles from Leningrad, the order of the day said. A total of 8,300 Germans and Spaniards were killed yesterday on the entire Russian front, a Moscow broadcast said at midnight. These included 1,500 Germans cut down in a violent all-day action in the Novo- sokolniki sector 230 miles below Len- ingrad, and 3,000 slain east of Vin- nitsa in tge Ukraine. Lt. Tom Harmon Reaches Home With his face still red and bear- ing scars on his legs following his' recent experiences in China, Lt. Tom Harmon arrived home yes- terday for the first time since Christmas 1942. In a room filled with battle tro- phies and souvenirs gathered in China, India and North Africa, Tom recounted for his family how he was shot down by a Jap Zero and later rescued by Chinese guerillas. Harmon has been granted a 20 day furlough which begins today and he said last night that "he plans to rest and spend his time with the folks." Boy Drowned In Mill Pond 'Mr. 00oley, Jr.' To Open Today Baskerville To Star in Children's Theatre Play Fletcher Baskerville I will star in the role of Mr. Dooley, Jr. in the first nerformance of the play by the same name to be given by the Children's Theatre of the speech department at 2:30 p.m. today in the Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre. ."Mr. Dooley, Jr.," written by Jane Lewin and Rose Franken, is a com- edy built around the ownership of a dog and the scenes are laid in the home of Janie and Tommy and in a pet shop. Tommy and Janie are determined to buy the pet and, in fact, it is a case of love at first sight. In overcoming the parental objec- tion and financial difficulties, the children come out with some tremen- dously unique ideas for raising money which practically set the community into an uproar. The cast is composed of Maida Stienberg, Marjorie Leete, Thelma Davis, Catherine Bronson, Carol Cothran,, Jean Christian, Jean Loree, Doris Coleman and Barbara White. Reserved seats for today's and to- morrow's performances may be ob- tained at the box office of the Lydia Mendelssohn. Box office hours are from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily. - BULLETIN -= LONDON, Friday, Jan. 28.-()- RAF Bombers battered Berlin again last night, the British announced to- day, in a smashing renewal of the ob- literation campaign against the Ger- man capital. National New I In Brief. I *0 By The Associated Press No-Strike Pledge Upheld MIAMI, Fla., Jan. 27.-The Ameri- can Federation of Labor Executive Council called upon a membership of six and a half million workers today for strict adherence to the no-strike pledge, cautioning them that tre- mendous military developments are impending and there must not be needless loss of a single life. * * * Soldiers To Return MILWAUKEE, Jan. 27.-The first group of 32nd Division soldiers, con- sisting mainly of Michigan and Wis- consin soldiers, will return to the United States after an 18-month ov- erseas order beginning early in March, Robert J. Doyle, the Milwau- kee Journal's staff war correspond- ent, said in a radio dispatch from Saidor, New Guinea. * * * Oil Shipments Suspended WASHINGTON, Jan. 27.-The Un- ited States has suspended oil ship- ments from the Caribbean area to Spain for the month of February. Bowles Asks Support WASHINGTON, Jan. 27.-Price Administrator Chester Bowles, in a new appeal for continuance of food subsidies, told Congress today he must have its "vigorous support," if low-income groups are to be protect- ed against further increases in living costs. PINKNEY, Jan. 28.-Three and Here Feb. 2 Lt. Tom Harmon will speak at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday on "The War Front Reports to the Home Front" under the auspices of the Post-War Coun- cil, Elizabeth Hawley '44 announced yesterday. Harmon will discuss what the men at the front think about the war- what they are fighting for. War bonds and stamps will be sold at the door before and after Har- men's talk. SON OF COSSACK: Sergeant Recalls Russian Revolution one-half year old Billy Johnson, missing since Wednesday afternoon, was found dead last night in a mill pond less than 100 feet away from his back door. More than 125 searchers, including Livingston County sheriff's deputies, state police, and 75 children, had been combing the nearby countryside for 24 hours. Sheriff's deputies said last night that he had drowned and dragging operations were hampered by ice and debris in the pond. He was found in 12 feet of water. He was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Grant Johnson, and his father is a Packard Motor Car Co. worker. Technic Will Appear Today So here it comes . . . the Michigan Technic will be on the stands today. Beginning with a flat tire it works up to full speed ahead through three sections. McHigan, A.; fifty-seventh cousin of dear O'Mally, is still with us. Due, perhaps, to the current shortages in anyone of McHigan's rare talents, he has assumed the role of censor as well as protector of the freedom of the press. In his off-duty moments, this month. he has found time to Editor's note: This is the first in a series of five articles on the experiences of Sgt. Boris Yankoff of Co. A. By DORIS PETERSON "Life was greatly changed in Rus- sia after the Revolution," Sgt. Boris Yankoff, who is studying here with Co. A, said yesterday. Sgt. Yankoff, the son of a Russian 0n-cr 1rxr hpnnamra +o +he imnpr.. Army had machine - gunned our house. We all crouched on the floor, and several persons were killed. "After the Red Army was vic- torious though, we were not harmed. Though I was quite young at the time, I can remember talk- ing to high ranking officers in the Red Army at the time they marched into our city. "Af-th. 4, ' Ava,. mp, i n Pv- in Russia among whom is an uncle who is a major-general in the Rus- sian Army. In 1931 he toured Japan, perform- ing in athletic events. After that he went to China to study at Harbin, where he made a distinguished rec- ord as an athlete. He was middle- weight champion of China from 1931 to 1932. When he was in China he en- r w M TO SING WAGNER: Marjorie Lawrence, Soprano Met Star, To Appear Sunday Marjorie Lawrence, Australian so- prano of the Metropolitan Opera As- sociation, will present the eighth Choral Union concert at 3 p.m. Sun- day in Hill Auditorium. Recovered from infantile paral- ysis, with which she was stricken in T,," n 1 gi .in-a-nrns.nsir cert, gave to her the nickname of "Melba," after another great Austra- lian singer. Trained by Ivor Bovstead in Mel- bourne, Marjorie Lawrence made her operatic debut with the Paris Opera Company in the role of Ortrud in "Lohengrin." Her first season at the