Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 February 1946 — Page 5

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Charges Nazis

To Crawl,

By DOUGLAS WERNER United Press Staff Correspendent NUERNBERG, Feb. 27.—A refu-

m| gee from a Lithuanian ghetto told

the war crimes tribunal today that the Germans forced Jews to crawl on the ground and bark like dogs— then dance naked around bonfires until they fell unconscious, ; The witness, 32-year-old Abraham Suzkever, who was called to testify by Russian Prosecutor Smirnov, said he spent two years in the ghetto of Wilno but escaped with partisans, . Before testimony started, the court rejected the request of former German Foreign Minister Joachim Von Ribbentrop to call Winston Churchill as a defense witness and passed. on other defense requests. Suzkever, pale and bespectacled, told the tribunal 80,000 Jews lived in Wilno when the Germans seized the city. ‘Rivulets of Blood’

Jewish men were dragged out by the Germans, he said, while those who sought to hide were hunted

5 out by dogs.

“Bodies in groups of 100 and 150

were rivulets of blood as if it had

rained red drops.”

Suzkever said he and other Jews were stripped naked, taken to a synagogue and forced at bayonet

point to dance around a pyramid of burning logs. Most of them were

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nearly unconscious when their tor mentors left, he said. He sald he was awakened another might and marched with other Jews through the streets.to prison where they were lined up and beaten with sticks by German soldiers. Hides in Mother's House -He said he finally escaped and hid in ‘his mother’s house after swimming across a river. Suzkever testified that about half of Wilno's Jews were exterminated. Smirnov's second witness was a pretty Polish blonde, Severina

|Shmaglevski, who spent two years

in the Auschwitz camp. She charged that in 1944 an order was issued to camp executioners to throw children into the crematorium without gassing because the gas chambers were overworked. “The children's cries could be heard all over the camp,” she said. She said children at the camp also were forced to do heavy labor.

WILLIS ALL SET T0 VOTE DOWN PAULEY

Times Washington Bureau WASHINGTON, Feb. 27.-—Sena-tor Raymond E. Willis (R. Ind), member of the senate naval affairs committee hearing the Pauley case, is ready to vote against the oil man right now and “get on with important business” he declared today. “Our hearings on President Tru-

lll man's impossible appointment of

Edwin W, Pauley, treasurer and collector for the Democratic party, as undersecretary of navy should cease,” Senator Willis said, “The oil connection evidence and former Secretary of Interior Ickes’ condemnation of Pauley's political collection methods smell badly. They certainly preclude his ever being under-secretary of navy, as the President wants, Of course, he cannot reach the navy secretaryship, as was planned. “Mr. Pauley’ bas the moral obligation to withdraw his name now If he doesn’t, we have the moral obligation to turn him down and get on with far more important pending business,” Senator Willls said.

TRIBUTE IS PAID TO BUFFALO. BILL

WASHINGTON, Feb. 27 (U. PJ). —Senator E. V. Robertson (R. Wyo.) Tuesday paid tribute to William (Buffalo Bill) Cody on the 100th anniversary of his birth, Robertson, whose home town was named after the famed frontiersman, said Buffalo Bill represented “the great Roman of the West. ”

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

rot KRUG TO

REVERSE POLICY Br

Ickes Successor in Favor of Regional Control. © (Editorial, Page 14)

By FRANK ASTON Seripps-Howard Staff Writer WASHINGTON, Feb, 27.—Julius Albert (Cap) Krug, President Truman’s choice for secretary of the interior, is expected to reverse some of the policies of his predecessor, Harold L. Ickes. Mr. Ickes, while secretary, urged centralization of control under the interior department of the Tennessee Valley Authority and similar power distributing agencies. Mr. Krug has favored regional control. Disputes now are raging in the department about the degree of con. trol to be exercised over the Southwest Power association, the Columbia Valley authority at Bonneville and the Central Valley authority in California. . * Mr. Krug's intimates believe he will try to resolve these internal conflicts. They call him a middle-of+the-roader who fights for the public interest without closing his mind to private corporation arguments, Willkie Seemed Satisfied It is recalled that Mr, Krug settled the conflict between David Lilienthal of TVA and Wendell Willkie, president of the Commonwealth & Southern, This tussle ended in the purchase by TVA of the Tennessee Electric Co. controlled by the Commonwealth & Southern. Mr. Krug closed the deal at 80 million dollars, remarking later “I think we got the best of the bargain.” Mr, Willkie, however, | appeared satisfied, Cap Krug is 38 years old, 6 feet, 3 inches tall and weighs 235 pounds. He dislikes personal publicity, enjoys quiet evenings at home with Mrs, Krug and their two childfen. He likes golf and books, but has found little time for either in the past 10 years, He wears conservative brown suits and white shirts, enjoys a cocktail before dinner, and goes for thick steaks especially when he can prepare them himself over a charcoal fire, He still gets homesick for Norris, Tenn, “where the hill country slopes up to the Cumberlands and

day.” Mr. Krug was born in Madison,

you can see the Smokies on a clear hymns

Broak Up C cio

Mounted = brRe up mass picketing at a Philadelphia plant today in a brief flare of violence As the government spread its new wage-price: policy to packinghouse and shipbuilding workers, Philadelphia police, carrying out a court order prohibiting mass picketing outside the gates of the Eastwick General Electric Co, plant, charged and dispersed more than 1000 strikers, Six strikers were held for questioning ‘after scuffies, The strikers, members of the C. I: O, United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers union, have been idle since Jan. 15: They demanded $2 more a day. Expect Pay Boost Meantime a 16 cents an hour boost for A.F.of L. and C.I, 0. meat workers was expected to be put into) effect immediately on the basis of a) 1% per cent price advance allowed by the WSB to help cover higher labor costs to the packers. Officials in the shipbuilding industry showed no inclination to grant an 18-cent hourly raise for their workers, however, leaving the prolonged wage dispute still unsettled. ; In the major walkouts, idling an estimated 789,000 workers: ONE: Becretary of Labor Lewis B, Schwellenbach sought a meeting soon with officials of the Ameri

Mass hi Fei

spokesman was optimistic over possibility of averting the tieup.

of the Texas & New Orleans railroad, a branch of the Southern Pacific; were ordered to strike at 9:30 a.'m. Saturday. THREE: The Ford Motor Co. and C. I. O. Auto Workers union signed a contract, penalties for workers participating in unauthorized work stoppages. FOUR: Th. U. 8. conciliation service met with longshoremen union and waterfront employer officials in attempts to head off a strike of 22,000 Pacific “coast ah workers, FIVE: Government labor officials sought a formula under which striking Detroit milk workers could end their week-long walkout pending action by federal agencies on the | related price and wage questions,

BILL TO RELEASE FATHERS REJECTED

WASHINGTON, Feb. 27 (U. P.). ~The senate military affairs committee yesterday rejected a bill to force prompt release of .all drafted fathers. Chairman Elbert D. Thomas

TWO: Engineers and trainmen|

providing dismissal | DOU

(D. Utah) — the vote was 8-5,

can Telephone & Telegraph Co. to| discuss means of averting a nation- | wide. telephone strike, scheduled for | March 91. A labor | Gepartment |

'WANDERLUST BRINGS 4-YEAR-OLD TROUBLE

HOUSTON (U, P.) .—Four- -year- | old Ronnie Williams of Pelly, Tex.

{bors and police track him down! every time he wants to go some- | where. He wonders just how old a fellow has to be before he can get out on | his own and leave his mama's apron | { strings for a little while, { First, Ronnie started out to take a hike to Baytown to visit his father, but was caught and returned home before hp had gone half a mile, - Then, a few nights later, the wanderlust got the better of nim! again and once more police were | on the hunt and neighbors seargh- | ing the entire community. They found him in a church a mile from home, Thére he sat with | a flower in his lapel and nen

is getting tired of having nelgh- |

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like that ought to be called Cap- | tain Kidd.” him Julius and called him “Cap.”

He worked his way through Wis-

| consin university and took a mas-

ters degree in utilities manage- | | ment, He came to Washington in!

1935 as public u

the federal communications com-/ Long distance telephone! | tolls were reduced as a result of © nis investigation of the long lines

mission.

department of the American Tele- | phone and Telegraph Co.

But Mr, Krug found Washington

“more interested in social reform of than in doing a good job.” He Te- | turned to Madison.

| Mr, Lilienthal had met and liked him. Mr. Krug became chief power

| engineer for TVA in 1938. He di-

overnight — splendid or 8 are | rected the purchase of private

power firms and came out of that

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