PACE SIM THE MCHGA-DIL ....................................... . . . ........ . . . . . ..... ....... ...... Sororities Will Cheer hiavorite Fraternities at IFC Song Fest S-ororitiesch;(eringt their particu-; ta, singing "'T'here Is A Girl So Fair;" lar Ira ternities will be a feature of' Kappa Alpha Theta, Alpha Sigma the I-nte-Fraternity sing which will1 Phi, ;pinging "Mika-Mika:" and Alpha be held at 7:30 p.m. tom2orrow on the; Chi Omcga. Beta Theta Pi who will steps of the General Library. sing "The Loving Cup.' Collegiate Sorosis will back Chi Phi Delta Theta, singing their Phi Psi, who will sing "In Chi Psi Days;" Dltat Serenade, will be backed by Alpha Phi will chieer Delta Tau Del- Chli ineza; Sigima Phi Epsilon wil be chered'c by Delta Delta Delta when they ping "Kentucky Babe;" Sigma FoQur 1.iiteriqi Alpha Mu, singing "Coney Island Delta:, and Allpha Tau Omega by GI'sl~es'rib Zhwtei ali uAlpha when they render "Goddess-, of the Island Sea." ]\~1 i ~I(Il ~Iie rThe~ta Delta Chi will sing "Mac- Ay(iI~~(~I~j~it bna'as Band" and will be backed byAlpha Omicron Pi; Phi Kappa 1,4cilljs,(' Tesify Psi, "Hi, Ili, Hi," backed by Alpha SEpsilon Phi;Sigm Alpha Epsilon, (h .11a dIuy i uIII(U s "This Is My Country," cheered by Al Va 'rtii,, Ti '- nid Phi Gama, i By 'TheiAsoc)iaei Pres DACLIATI.May 21- -Four' American soldiers. givin t graphic eye-witness accounts o the masacre o' 71 Amer- ican prisoners at Mahnedy said to- dlay that miiethiodical S.S. t'oos i- ectd by atioling offices mowed down thec unarmed men wit h mach in guns and then used pistols on survi- vor's, &SS Guard Identified One of the witnesses, Lt. Virgil P. Lary, Jr.. of Winchester, Ky., cli- maxed hji story of butchery by step- ping from the witness stand, scanning the fraces of t he 74 Nazi defendants facing theinm iliary tribunal, and dramati'lly identifying Geor()1'geC Fleps, 23, mnember of the first waffen S.5. panz~er regiment, as th le man who,_rO two jt rt ol sots touched oil the slaughter I c. 17, 1944. ThIe pro:wcution clharges the Nazis murdered nearly 800 American war prisoners d(Wring the 1944-45 Nazi winter offensive into the Ardennes. The four American survivors tes- tified that about 150 .S. troops were caught in a severe German crossfire and surren de(red. Tihiy were marched, hands clasped behind their heads, into at snow-covred field, and were mowed down by machine gun fire, they decl ared. Survivors 'Testify All four stared fixedly at te court of six colonels and a general as they testified. None glanced at Gen. Sepp Dietrich and his 73 S.S. troops charg- ed with the deliberate killing of war prisoners. All four wore uniforms with discharge insignia and each had rows of ribbons clustred about Purple Hearts. To their g;rim report the prosecu- tion added the statistics of death at Malmnedy, listing 120 victims. Only 71 bodies were recovered, the prosecu- tion said. Besides Lary, the witnesses were Kenneth F. Ahrens, Erie, Pa., a for- mer sergeant; Kenneh E. King- ston, Allentown, Pa., and Carl R. Daub, Colebrook, Pa,~ both former corporals.. Lary, coldly and~ meticulously, told the court low his 285th Field Artil- lery Obseiva tion Battalion mhen were herded into the field with the other prisoners. Poland ALuacks Credit S IAppa ge At 'IPif ical Pies*tie' WARSAW. l1ly 21---Vf/t -Poland's gove~nltntcojtri ileed press today generally attac'ked the American gov- . ' P I PE M A N..Franco Aif- tori, conductor who formerly led the Buffalo philharmonic, sur- - veys part of his (collection of thousands of pipes gathered from all parts of the world., CR A I NA F 0 R E U R 0 P E-ha and corn from the Mlains of the Argentine are streaming into the port of Buenos Aires to be loaded on ships bound for famine-stricken Europe.,, NEM ' h L .H