Show Temperatures period ending at nven (Tor a m today) 24-ho- ur The Weather and UTAH— Clear this afternoon -- Butte cloudy Tuesday continued cold with no important change in temperature tonight ) Seventy-fift- h partly Year— No Chicago Denver The United Press The Associated Press 17 SV OGDEN CITY UTAH MONDAY EVENING DECEMBER rT Nippons Speculate Americans May Invade Luzon Isle : Japanese Will Be Permitted to i Return to Coast —1 7 Lingoycn New Landing I — wsw -- 1 i— Cgvitt VT Batonga) Colopa I MINDORO B-2- 9s South China A Sea Tokyo said today that an AmerPALAWAN ican fleet of "considerable the strength" had been sighted inMin-doro Sulu sea south of invaded and island in the Philippines speculated that another amphibiSulu Sea Buluqn ous landing was in prospect perLuzon on haps Mindanao! "The enemy is apparently planareas ning 4to move into other a as base" islands Mindoro Sulu Sea using °Q "the Domei agency said in a Tokyo Zomhonngo broadcast recorded by the FCC Kudat 1 "The apparent design of the enemy to advance his operational sphere Sandokan to the northwestern Philippines is fTT" hot to be taken lightly" NORTH Significantly the only sizeable Min-doro BORNEO Philippines island north of is Luzon site oft the capital and ultimate obcity of Manila JAPS SLIPPED HERE Tokyo said the U S forces in the PhilipGen Douglas Mac- - pines were jective ofinvasion planning to move into other areas' from "apparently of the archiArthur's Mindoro island (see map) where American bases on newly-invade- d pelago troops had driven 12 miles inland and were preparing to use capTokyo broadcast similar reports tured San Jose air field in the next phase of the Philippines camof the sighting of an American The drive through Mindoro continued rapidly against little fleet just prior to the American paign Jap resistance either on the ground or in the air landing on Mindoro Friday There was a possibility that the Nagoya raids reported by Washington and Tokyo were the same The war department said the raid it announced was made Sunday said the city was Jap broadcast? attacked "after one p m" Jap time which would be after midnight eastern war time or Monday But the uncertainties of the time PHILIPGEN MACARTHUR'S HEADQUARTERS element could not be clarified beyond question PINES Dec 18 (AP) — Airfields were being whipped into Second Nagoya Raid today on the southern end of Mindoro island now shape were the on The raids Nagoya hands Yank infantrymen were 11 second and if confirmed by Wash- securely in American miles from the beachhead they established at dawn Friday ington third in a week on Japan's third largest city 165 miles west Only scant resistance was en- of Tokyo and home of the import- countered a spokesman reported ant Mitsubishi aircraft works and The Americans had command of ther high priority war factories -and jset up ground high strategic from a wide defense six miles Approximately 100 to 'beyond hate par- the town of San Jose Saipan were believed attack ticipated in yesterday's Gen Douglas MacArthur said hurling hundreds of tons of de- "our hold on the southern part of Out-Re- port on bombs the fire molition and is now secure" island the metropolis teeming Honshu island On Leyte island to the southeast force from while an equally-larg- e STOCKHOLM Dec --18 (UP) — troops of the 77th American diChina hit Hankow The free German press bureau Tokyo failed to confirm either vision outflanked Japan's prize of yesterday's attacks but broad- - Yamashita line at the southern claimed today that the first authen section of the Ormoc corridor and tic report of the "bitter crisis" (Contlnued on Page Twoi drove seven miles north toward which forced the fuehrer from mili(Column Fve) an ultimate junction with Yank tary leadership had been obtained forces pressing southward through the indiscreet talk of his former adjutant SA Chief Group Captured Airfields"" Readied Leader Fritz Brueckner who drank American and Australian con- too much at a Berlin dinner party struction engineers on Mindoro The report said Heinrich Himm-le- r minister of interior and gestapo were busy readying captured airchief Propaganda Minister Dr for and day night fighter strips These airfields are only Josef Goebbels and Field Marshal X planes Gen' Karl von Rundstedt had 150 miles from Manila forced Hitler to abdicate as suTremendous carrier plane strikes war lord and "leave the war preme Manila area gave strong to against the A f ew months ago the people of support generals" to the Mindoro advance It claimed the abdication dated California were expressing surprise Airmen of Vice Admiral John S that Utah tolerated the Japanese McCain's carrier force off the Phil- back to the end of August or the of September when the ippines in three days of continual beginning of France Battle was lost Nowthe prospects are the their toll of and allied armies obviously were threatening will begin to see great strikes raised to 435 out of action planes put numbers of the Japs moving back enemy the 146 destroyed Germany to the cities and towns of the coast or These added tofliers damaged by covering the landings make a four-da- y Military authorities have an- Mindoro Co nounced that the mass exclusion total of 581 planes Major Richard I Bong of Poplar order is to be lifted to allow loyal his 39th Japanese to return to their homes Wis top ace shot down enemy plane Friday in a fighter V beginning midnight January 2 sweep over Negros island in supFear of deep resentment is creep- - port of the Mindoro operation WASHINGTON Dec 18 (AP) — ing in and rioting is being guarded 2012 More Nips Slain Both the government and Montagainst The flanking movement on Leyte gomery Ward appeared today to Those Japanese who have proved their loyalty should be recog- entailed some of the bloodiest fight- be preparing the country for a new and those not loyal should ing of the Philippine campaign and possibly more extensive presinized 'continue to be excluded MacArthur listed 2012 new Japs -dential seizure dead to add to 37154 already With a midnight deadline for Saturday evening in front of counted on Leyte In addition company compliance with war lathe Ben Lomond I saw a Japanese many- thousands are estimated bor board directives in seven cities soldier in American uniform He killed 'behind the enemy lines less than 12 hours away WLB' was on crutches and his right leg Chairman William IL Davis voiced 77th was The division two only He was down from miles from Valencia was missing a new appeal to the concern sayheadquarters Bushnell that continued "defiance of the Suzuki Gen ing of commander of the There are other comrades of his could prolong the (Continued on Page Two) government at Bushnell with legs shot away (Column One) war It would be an outrage to insist that Japanese of that type cannot go back to their homes in Calior elsewhere fornia " An officer at Hill field in the maintenance department declares synthetic tires are proving superior to the natural rubber type BATON ROUGE La Dec 18dent council president that he Tires in use on Hill field with (AP)— A student strike was threat- would meet with the council' to a service extending over tens of morrow to discuss the : 'situation" thousands of miles are showing no ened today at Louisiana State unThe council resolution described wear or defects iversity unless a pretty Miss Heller's case as "symbolic of co-e- d This is a testimonial to the men who wrote a leaflet on the crisis in who in answer to the strains of sex and campus kissing is" reinrelations" and denied that the war made the synthetic rubber stated American-bor- n girl had comely campaign a success The girl Gloria Jeanne Heller immoral" advocated anything President Wm Jeffers of the of a Havana Cuba hotel Hatcher said he had given Miss Union Pacific who was called to daughter a choice of resignation or last manager Heller week at resigned the the task of producing synthetic request she said of from the institution after W President expulsion rubber undoubtedly deserves much B Hatcher A co-e- d a telling her "we can't have promiscwithout praise This chemistry of rubber should college she continued to "stick uous1 kissing on the campus adcouldn't have people here who change our entire outlook on rub? around" The student council exhorted ber importations and eventually by vocated free love" Miss Heller said she had written campus leaders that a general strike give to the owners of cars a cheap is threatened adopted a resolution and: distributed the leaflets in an er oetter tire In the years to come the iuneles last night protesting the manner "attempt to show that I thought on the Malay peninsula where rub- in which Miss Heller was "ordered" the university dealt with sex problems in such a way as to overber tires are grown can remain to leave the university' The resolution termed the ac- emphasize them" in the keeping of the Japanese so far as we are concerned over the tion of Hatcher "a violation' of the Shel said she objected to uni— student council code and therefore versity action against some of her supply of rubber At present we are capable of invalid" and the council informed friends kissing their "dates" goodproducing over 800000 tons an- - Hatcher a strike was imminent un- night and quoted Hatcher as sayless "prompt action" is taken (Continued on Pap Two) ing "there will be no kissing of Hatcher told Lloyd Wheat stu- - students here" (Column Two) yy 3 HOsfoV y i 1 3 Yankees Secure Southern End of Mndoro Island Hitler Forced 9s ' Cali-fornia- ns Ward Seizure Appears Imminent J By Virgil Pinkley and SAN FRANCISCO Dec 18 Robert Mosel U S NINTH AIR FORCE removed (AP) — Japanese from the Pacific coast early FIGHTER STATION Westin the war will be permitted ern Front Dec 17 — (Delayed) to return to their former (UP) — The German army cohomes in California Oregon ordinated a heavy and Washington after Jan 1 attack with its ground and Major General Henry S Pratt aerial offensive today for the chief of the western defense command announced yesterday that first time in military history the war department had decided to only) to run into an unprecerevoke its security order under which the persons of Jap ancestry dented array of allied The move was were evacuated unleashed at the last made Pratt said because of "favorable progress in the war in the moment by a freak break in ' MILES ! - : -- Students Threaten to Strike In Campus Kissing Issue ' student-administrati- on j Pacific as well - as other develop- ments" j' Henceforth he paid they will be excluded only when the army considers them personally dangerous All persons not specifically excluded will be permitted to return Reception of tie announcement throughout the west was varied In Los Angeles butspoken Mayor Fletcher Bowron declared that if the government permits the Japs to return it should send troops to protect them j pro-Ni- coast states It was uncertain how many evacuees would be affected by the order More than 115000 persons of Jap ancestry were evacuated in 24 1942 and the order of Mardh it was estimated i that ' there are nbvF£¥dxImately 119000 Under jurisdiction of the(war relocation j authority s Spokesmen for the western defense command said that lifting of the ban will not mean a sudden return of population! adding further d strain to housing conditions The defense command said it expects the wat relocation authority to see thaji the process is gradual and added that those permitted to return Will be carefully war-taxe- investigated In Boise Idaho's jGovernor C A Bottolf sen voiced j hearty accord with the revocation1 order Idaho is the site of the Minidoka relocation center which at one time housed 10000 Japanese-American- s "Having proved themselves loyal American citizens! these peoplo (Continued on Pags Two) (Column One) Russians Pierce Budapest Lines LONDON Dec 18 (UP) —The battle for Budapest) flared up with renewed violence itoday as Red army troops rammed a narrow wedge through one of the enemy's northeast defense lines within five miles of the capital Far to the nbrtheast other soviet forces closed rapidly on the Hungarian-Slova- k frontier on a d drive that trapped thousands of Germans in the Bukka mountains arid posed a new threat to the Slovak railway center of Kassa CKosice) Word of the new soviet breakthrough in the Budapest area came as nazi military spbkesmen were boasting that their stiff defense had forced the Russians to "call off" the assaulton he city ' I multi-pronge- The Germans abandoned hundreds of their dead' on the highway and at nightfall yesterday were falling back slowly on Pest fighting hard for every yard of ground Other red army forces carved out impressive gainai on a front above Miskolc 80 miles northeast of Budapest capturing more than 40 towns and villages yesterday and pushing one column within a half mile of Slovakia's 60-mi- le l southern border i 'Janie' Star Will Marry Marine HOLLYWOOD Dec (UP)— Joyce Reynolds young star of "Janie" revealed today she plans to marry Marine Lieut Robert Lewis of Houston Texas in "about three weeks" The star made the announcement after her prospective bridegroom arrived in Hollywood after serving in the south Pacific She said they would be married before he returns overseas 18 1875 Pennies for Bond EAST LOS ANGELES Dec 18 (AP) — Elma Davine Blair plunked down her life savings to put this community over its 52000000 sixth war loan quota Elma who had saved 1875 pennies is just three years old " non-com- ay : them protection' California Governor Earl Warren appealed for "an Altitude that will discourage friction and prevent civil disorder" Pratt said that sill persons of Jap p ancestry wiyi the taint of will on : thisir records sympathies continue to be barred from the a I 41 46j 43 43 28 38 73 47 58 14 14 i 27 j 39 — 44 68 33 27 33 3 Pocatello -- 10 Yellpwstone FINAL EDITION PASES Sobbing GPs Describe Mass Slaughter of Helpless Disarmed Yanks by Germans By Hal Boyle AN AMERICAN FRONT LINE CLEARING STATION Belgium Dec 17 Delayed) (AP)— Weeping with rage a handful of doughboy survivors described today how a German tank force ruthlessly - fire into a poured machine-gu- n group of about 150 Americans who had been disarmed and herded into a field in the opening hours of the present nazi counter-offensiv- e "We had to lie there and listen air-pow-er s kill with pisto German tols every one of our wounded men who groaned or tried to move" said William B Summers of Glen-vill- e W Va who escaped by playthe weather ing dead The Wehrmacht had been takThe Americans were members of an artillery observation battalion ing advantage of the impossible ambushed and trapped at a road flying' weather to move their men fork by a powerful German arand equipment up to the fronts but mored column of Tiger tanks whose heavy guns quickly shot up PARIS Dec 18 (UP) — Brig the two dozen American trucks Gen Richard O Nugent comlightly-armore- d vehicles mander of the U S 29th tactical andThere no were heavy group said at a Ninth air force in the American column weapons and the fighter base that Sunday's tactical air battles in the First army entire observation unit had to sursector "exceeded anything on or render "We were just moving up to since and today's operatake over a position at the top of tions will be tremendous too a hill and as we got to the road weather permitting" intersection they opened up on their movement was uncovered by us" said Summers a sudden change that permitted al'They had at least 15 to 20 lied reconnaissance planes to take tanks They disarmed us and then off searched us for wrist watches and The Ninih air force and the anything else they wanted "I guess we were lined up along British Second tactical air force road for a full hour Then that immediately executed a lightninglike realignment of their forma- they stood us all together in an I thought something tions and threw hundreds of mac- open field were standing hine-gun rocket and bomb carry was wrong As we soldier one German moving there ing planes into close support of the American First army all along past in a tank column less than 50 D-d- Warning Given "If they come back and start moving war workers to get a place to live I don't know what the result will be" Bowron said adding that because of inadequate police facilities "we just can't guarantee eej seaiue 32 Washington 70 Phoenix 43 jf V-bo- mb 130 Mile From Manila day the war department announced and Tokyo said 70 returned for of the another attack on Nagoya today i Troop Protection Momle l- - Sphts Philippines Puts American —— !" - Break in Weather Enables Fliers To Blast Targets " Nips Will Need Aerial Blockade of Joes' Luzon Airfields Destroy 224 Planes in Two Days ' 28 31 — 52 — 24 9 22 Yanks Counterattack After Setfo acic Planes Blast German Reserves L A Mayor Says U 5 Carrier Planet Set Up 12 1944 18 " I Dec 18 WASHINGTON (UP)— Two fleets of Superfortresses hit Nagoya Japan's biggest aircraft manufacturing center and Hankow one of her main supply bases in China in twin raids yester- B-2- 55ProvO 16!Heno 32iRock Springs 31' Salt Lake 34San Antonio 361 San Fran 64iSt Louis 19 Tj Vptra Los Angeles Minni-- a noils New Orleans New York Okla City 9s Hit Nagoya Liaoiicow Fleet New Japs Sight 3 36 Omaha 18 27 38 12 Grand June" 20 M-- 2 - MinMax 8 31 50) Portland Or 33 4X MinMax Ogden Albuquerque Atlanta Bismarck 60-mi- le front Break in Weather It was the first favorable weather break the allied air forces have had in a long stretch and Maj Gens Hoyt S Vandenberg commander of the Ninth air forte and Elwood Quesada chief of the Ninth tactical air command were jubilant over the opportunity it presented From all sectors allied fighter craft were summoned — even the R A F Spitfires Tempests and Typhoons from The Netherlands — as a sudden break in the weather exposed long columns of German tanks trucks and troops moving slowly toward the battle raging in the American First army lines The break in the weather forced the German command to rush planes in the air in an attempt to provide cover for the attacking ground troops The daylight blows followed a night pummeling of Munich Ulm and Duisberg by British heavy bombers 17 of which were lost The big R A F planes dropped an estimated 7000 tons of bombs on the three German cities all key "points in the nazi railway network American fighters with belly tanks of extra fuel ranged ahead of the American heavy bombers to meet any challenge in the skies over western Europe's flaming ATHENS Dec 18 (AP)— British drive forces launched a full-scaAth in forces Elas against leftwing ens today and it appeared likely to be only a matter of hours before the siege of the capital is le lifted V 1 -- -! 00 ks bat-tlelin- es US Sink Jap Ships lew T Weapon WTTTT THF! U S NINTH ARMY IN GERMANY Dec 18 (AP)— The Germans have launched a new "V" ' weapon on the western front nrl are bombarding rear areas with it by night and day The dispatch gave no aeians concerning the weapon ThP Oprmans have used both their V-- l and V-- 2 weapons— the robot bomb and the 'teiegrapn pole"' rocket bomb— against troops and areas behind the front Supreme headquarters in Paris last week said pilots reported seeballs" over ing clusters of "silver infor-mHA- n no other but gave Germany Tt was speculated the sil ver balls mightbe a new anti-ai- r craft defense or designed to interfere with allied radio communication Orson Welles Father Dec 18 (UP) — HOLLYWOOD Screen Stars Rita Hayworth and Orson Welles today were the parents of 9 whom they will name daughter The girl was born last Rebecca John s nospnai to tne night at St actress who married glamorous Welles famed combination six-pou- nd six-oun- ce in October : PARIS Dec 18 (UP)— Lt Gen Courtney H Hodges unleashed his American First today army counter-measurGerman vagainst the biggest offensive of Gen Dwight D Eisenhower's western cam- paign tne nrst impaci which carried the Germans '"several miles across the Belg ian and Luxembourg frones -- tiers from the fluid : battle "front said Hodges' dough- flop and play dead" "I never saw such slaughter be- boys had sprung to the task of fore in this war" said Private Wil- sealing off the penetrations of the liam F Geem of Elizabethtown American positions by Marshal Pa "They were cutting us down Karl Gerd Von Rundstedt s coun like guinea pigs Then those Gerwhich plunged at man non-cothree least walking began spearheads into I Belaround knocking off our wounded gium and Luxembourg I kept my head down but after For the second straight day great they had emptied their pistolscar-I air battles swirled over the First could hear them click fresh army front British Spitfires and tridges in their hands while they Tempests streaked down from thee were reloading Then they went 21st army group region to join on looking for more of our fellows fight against the to shoot" nazi fighters and bombers showing The survivors lay in tense rigid up the hundreds in support of silence in the freezing mud for an the by offensive hour before cautious glances Supreme headquarters reported I showed all the Germans had moved that parachute troops were dropped away except one Tiger tank on xne lxiniu army uuui "It wasn't more than 100 yards the First army to the left Jast away but we decided we had to nightr v4 make a break for it then or never" said Harold W Billow of Mount News Blacked Out Joy Pa "We jumped up and A complete security blackout scattered for the woods The tank blanketed the First army - front opened up on us but I don't think after the daysA early reports were it got many that time" on in TJie move a Three hours after the slaughter in the ' first phase customary of new operaless than 20 survivors had made any appreciable involving their way back to the American tions of positions was taken to change lines the keep the nazis from knowing elewhereabouts of their forward ments whose communications might be cut off and to obscure from the enemy standpoint tne Ainexi-- co can couriier-iiiccaNazi Onslaught Mounts A headquarters communique said : the German onslaught was mounting in weight and fury as the nazi PASADENA Calif Dec 18 (UP) high command hurled into battle — California Institute of Technolo- crack infantry " and armored rebeen gy seismologists warned resident! serves that apparently had carewehrmacht's from the drawn of California and Nevada today hoarded strategic reserve that they may expect four earth- fully The communique reported one quakes as great as the one that German spearhead had i' plunged near rocked San Francisco in 1906 across the border into Belgium fron2 miles inside the Honsfled 100 next sometime within the - tier and about 2d miles south of years A second crossed into Monschu However ' Dr Beno Gutemberg Luxembourg some 12 miles farther chief seismologist said the next south below the border town or 14 miles south of the century might see double that Vianden border number or maybe not even one He looked fr the quakes only triangle A third was Inside Luxembourg south of Echternach 12 from the major active faults— the miles of Vianden Sari5 Andreas in southern Califorsaid the Unconfirmed reports nia the Owens valley trough the counter-offensiv- e was "spreading San Francisco and north-centrnorth to the U S Ninth army front Nevada Each of these areas he said On the edge of the Cologne plain could expect a shock stronger than and the communique acknowledged had the 1915 Nevada quake and maybe that some enemy paratroops Ninth the behind been rounded up as strong or stronger than the army lines yesterday catastrophic San Francisco jolt The conclusions were based on Move an Sips' fried Line an intensive study of world-wid- e As the Germans' made their big seismologic records: the American Third and puh Seventh armies to the south continued their grinding advance into the Siegfried - line fortifications guarding the Saar valley and the' Rhine palatinate Front dispatches reported both armies making steady progress against increasingly heavy opposi- tion and Ibrpadehing their wedges the 'wes wall A 18 (AP)— in At WlilNGTON Dec the southern end of the allied of State Stettinius an- line units pf the French First army Secretary nounced today the U S govern- gave ground under a blistering but the thrust ment would have no objection to nazi counter-attac- k efa was diversionary fronapparently an agreement "on the future with coordinated the big push tiers of Poland" if the United Na- fort on the First army front tions concerned agreed upon them While the First army front Stettinius read a three-poiback under the German swayed statement on the Polish question push other units at the northern to a news conference It followed flank of General Hodges' line Prime Minister Churchill's an- closed in steadily on the Roer river nouncement in the house of com- line and the fortress town of Duren mons Friday that Britain agreed to Cologne that i the eastern third of Poland gateway Units of the 83rd infantry dishould be turned over to Russia into the village of Stettinius' statement imDlied that vision smashed just westofof the Roer river the United States would approve Rolsdorf Duren and bethe changed Polish boundaries pro- on thea outskirts house-to-houmopup of vided the ' Polish government ac- gan eastCurzon as its the line cepted The Germans were reported putern border Inferentially ' it put the next step up to the Polish gov- ting up a stubborn but losing stari ernment in exile in London for their few remaining positions on the west bank of the Roer 70-ml- today The new tally brings the total of enemy ships of all types sunk by submarines since the start of the war to 907 with 94 of them war ships The 21 cargo shins reported in today's announcement ranged from a large tanker to medium and small cargo vessels The United States undersea boats now have sent down 13 enemy cruisers and 43 destroyers ter-offensi- ve in-th- long-hoard- ed -- " ui German-Belgi- an-Luxembourg south-southea- st al It S Bares Stand i On Pole Issue nt Fires Utah Machine-Gunne- r From Hip Halts Nazi Attack WASHINGTON Dec 18 AP) —4 "The platoon then fired rifles The war department reported to rocket launchers and rifle gren The tanks opened fire ades day that the silver star for "gal- knocking his machinegun several lant and decisive action" has been feet from its original position Unawarded to Pfc Kay H Fishburn der intense fire and at ' great risk infantry 2324 South Seventh East to his life he recovered the gun Salt Lake City only to find that the bipod had been damaged beyond further use The announcement said: "However he killed more of the "South of Monterois Italy on June 7 1944 a platoon of com- enemy when he picked up the gun pany L was in position defending and continued to fire it from the a road block at the Sette Vane hip standing up exposing himself Just sbefore dark again to enemy rife and tank fire road junction "As a result of this action 15 one Mark IV and four Mark VI the German tanks appeared on the of the enemy were killed Mark IV tank was destroyed the road "As the tanks approached the Mark VI tanks were damaged and road block with 25 enemy infan- all that remained were forced to The gallant and decisive trymen riding- on the tanks Fish-bur- n retreat a light machine gunner action reflects great credit on himwith- - the opened fire "on - the tanks killing self and is in keeping American several enemy infantrymen and high traditions of the soldier" causing the tanks to button up - la ms British Strongly 'Quakes Minted Attack Leftists In 109 Years Within a short time after jump ing off at dawn the British had captured an Elas stronghold on the highway leading from Athens oh Una siiwmpr rpsnrt of Pha- leron to the Kalamaki airport The estimated at aooui Elas forces 200 had barricaded themselves in a brewerv and were equipped with heavy machine guns The Kalamaki aireaay 9 ripnth of 300 ttat hson rleoTpd inairport armored vehicles yards and British the road from were traversing Athens to Piraeus made simul-attacStrong Elas forces unon RAF head quarters and Averoff prison which was held by a British detachment The prison and Greek police houses a number of political pris oners RAF headquarters was defended and British infantry War In Point by RAF forcesincreased Turning over the Fighting American officers indicated the wApirpnri a reiection by following change in the weather came at a British Commander Lieut Gen R critical moment in the German at- M Scobie of leftwing EAM peace ' tack which conceivably might de- proposals velop into a turning point of the war — provided the Wehrmacht committed fully the several divisions already reported involved in SuLs 33 this offensive At the same time reports pouring into this control point made More it clear that the Luftwaffe at the moment is out in force operating in groups of 20 to 50 planes in an WASHINGTON Dec 18 (AP) — effort to protect the German American submarines have sunk 33 more Jap ships including a light ground units cruiser three destroyers and six escort vessels in their latest forays in the Pacific the navy reported Nazis Use yards away pulled out a pistol and emptied it on our fellows" A grimy soldier sitting in the little room here with Summers ran his hands through mudcaked hair and broke into sobs There were tears in Summers' eyes as he went on: "Then they opened up on us from their armored cars with machine guns We hadn't tried to run away or anything We were just standing" there withour hands up and they tried to murder us all And they did murder a lot of us "There was nothing to do but Doughboys Seek to Trap Hitlerites Penetrating Lines i se Jiistic Eulogizes George Sutherland WASHINGTON Dec ia (AP) — Chief Justice Stone today recalled the late Justice George Sutherland as a jurist who saw danger in "ill-Conside- experimentation in government" Stone spoke- in a ceremony in the supreme court chamber in honor of Sutherland a former senator from Utah' who died July 18 1942 Stone's remarks replied to a eulogy of Sutherland delivered by Attorney General Biddle Biddle cited various '"I opinions written by Sutherland during his 16 years on the high tribunal among them one setting aside a state tax imposed on the owners of newspapers The decision held this tax was a violation of the first amendment to the constitution guaranteeding freedom of the - press |