submarine: is s. s. batfish stalks held viet minh are off

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SUBMARINE: By Comdr. Edward L. Beach, U. S. N. CHAPTER XVI. Bathfish. U. S. S. Batflsh got under way rrrn; Pearl Harbor on December 30. 1944, on what was to be her sixth war patrol. On February 9, while she was patrolling in Babuyan Channel, south of Gamiguin Island, the ra- dar operator sounds a warning. Something in his radar arouses his attention—he looks closely—- there it is again—and again. It Is not a pip which he sees; if it were, he would not wait to sing out, “Radar contact,” and thereby immediately mobilize the ship for action. This is something more difficult to evaluate. A faint shimmering of the scopes—a momentary un- steadiness in the green and amber cathode ray tubes—which comes and goes. Almost unconsciously he times them and notices the bearing upon which the radar head is trained each time the faint wobble in the normal “grass” presentation is noticed. A few moments of this, and “Captain to the conn!” No time to wait on ceremony. This par- ticular lad wants his skipper and he wants him badly. The radar operator points to his scope. “There it is, sir! There it is again! I just noticed it a min- ute ago!” Danger and Glory. The captain stares at the instru- ment, weighing the significance of what he sees. This is something new, something portentous—there is a small stirring in the back of his mind—there seems to be a half-remembered idea there, if he can only dig it up—then, like a flash, he has it. If he is right, it means they are in grave danger, with a chance to come out of it and maybe add another scalp to their belts; if he is wrong, what he is about to do may make a bad situation infi- nitely worse. But Jake Fyfe knows what he is doing. He is not playing some far-fetched hunch. “Secure the radar!” he orders. “What do you think it is?” Fyfe asks the lad. “It looked like another tadar to me. captain.” The reply is given w ithout hesitation. “What else?” . The boy is at a loss for an an- swer, and Jake Fyfe answers his own question: “Japanese submarine!” Submarine vs. submarine! The hunter hunted! The biggest fear of our submarine sailors during World War II was that an enemy submarine might get the drop on them while they were making a passage on the surface. It would be quite simple, really. All you have to do is to detect the ! other fellow first, either by sight: or by radar; submerge on his 1 track and let go the fish as he passes. All you have to do is to detect him first! The most outstanding record of enemy subs sunk was the one hung up by Batfish, beginning that fateful February 9. The process of deduction by which Fyfe arrived at the con-j elusion that the source of the; radar peculiarities was an enemy submarine was not at all illogical. The wavering of his radarscope was probably due to the presence of another radar. It was known; that the Japs had radar, though of an inferior'type to ours. If this radar came from aves-; sel as large as a destroyer he! should have been detected on; Batfish’s radar before the emana-j tions from his low-powered radar! had been noticed. Since the radar! waves had been the first to be picked up. it followed that the ship producing them must be small and low on the water. Yet it must be a valuable ship, suffi- ciently important to rate one of the relatively few radar sets the Nips possessed. Hence, a subma- rine. tack, crediting to his superior radar the fact he had been alerted before the Jap, and trust- ing to his belief that he could , keep the enemy from detecting ] [ him. His plan is to get up ahead ;of the other submarine and to [ head in toward him while the un- ( suspecting Nip is pounding along in nearly th* opposite direction. All the while, Batfish is racing I through the black night at full ¦ speed. She has pulled off abeam ;| of her quarry, just within maxi- ; mum radar range in order to be . outside range of the less-efficient , radar carried by the enemy, and she is rapidly overhauling him. Several more minutes pass. Fyfe .is on the point of asking for more I information, when again the! 1 bridge speaker blares its muffled! ;version of Sprinkle’s voice (C. K. Sprinkle, executive officer): “Cap- tain, we’ve got him on zero two zero, making 14 knots. Range is seven oh double oh, and distance j, to the track is two five double oh.! This looks pretty good to me.! l Recommend we come left and let 1 ] him have it!” “Okay, Sprink. Give me a course to come to.” The captain’s . voice has assumed a grim finality, ';a flat quality of emotionless de- cision. .! A few more tense moments pass.! .[Again the speaker near the ,! skipper’s left elbow reproduces ;i Sprinkle’s familiar voice. “He’s [ crossing our bow now. Range, ! four oh double oh.” 'j At 1,500 yards the keen eyes on ¦. Batfish’s bridge distinguish a blur ,in the gray murk, and at 1,000 [ yards the sinister outline of a Japanese I class submarine is firing at deep submergence, but this is an emergency. “No. 1 tube fired by hand. Tube is clear!” The very welcome re- port is received after a few anxious seconds with a profound sense of relief. “Resume fire.” But the exec has not needed that command. No. 2 torpedo is already on its way, followed a few seconds later by No. 3. The watchers on Batflsh’s bridge had hardly, expected anything quite so dramatic as what they saw. One torpedo must have hit into a magazine or possibly into a tank carrying gasoline. The Nip The Chase Begins. The reason why Fyfe ordered his own radar temporarily se- cured was simply to deny the Jap the same information which he himself had just received. “All ahead full! Right full rudder!” Batfish leaps ahead and steadies on a course calculated to get to the north of the ap- proaching enemy vessel. She runs for a short time, every now and then checking the situation with her radar. Finally, Jake Fyfe figures his; position is about right. Batfish turns toward the enemy and ghosts in. Closer and closer comes the un- suspecting enemy sub. It is so dark that as yet he cannot be seen by the tense bridge party. As the situation develops, it is apparent that he w-ill pass through the firing position at just under 2.000 yards’ range. This is a lit- tle long for optimum torpedo fire, but Fyfe wants to take no chances of being detected. On he comes—- only a little more now—then from the conning tower, “On the firing bearing, captain!” This from the exec. “Let them go when ready. Shoot on radar bearings. I still can’t see him from up here.” From the skipper. Silently, four torpedoes are loosed into the water. Four new wakeless electric fish start their run toward the target. They have 1,800 yards to go; it will take a while. But they miss, all four torpe- does. The whole careful and well- executed approach—wasted! What can have gone wrong? The question is answered by Plot, dramatically. "Target has speeded up! Speed now 14 knots!” But the target continues serene- ly on his way. giving no sign of being aware of having been fired on. Maybe Batfish will be able to try again. No sooner thought than tried. Tb« four murmuring diesels of cne hunter lift their voices, and the submarine slips away through the water, seeking another posi- tion from which to launch her deadly missiles. But by this time, of course, the target has passed beyond Batfish, and in order to regain firing position it will be necessary to execute an end around. On the Surface. Jake Fyfe has elected to remain or the surface for the whole at- made out—the first time during the whole evening that the enemy has actually been sighted. He wallows heavily in the slight chop of the sea—low, dark, and un- gainly. At 1,000 yaids the Jap is broad- side to Batfish: Fyfe’s plaji has borne fruit, for his own bow is exactly toward the enemy, and he has all the advantage of sight- ing. Sudden Danger. Almost immediately the tele- phone talker standing under the conning tower hatch shouts loudly, so that his message is heard in the conning tower as well as on the bridge: “Number one did not eject! Running hot in the tube!” Something has gone wrong. The torpedo should have been pushed out of the torpedo tube by the high-pressure air ejection system. Instead, it has stuck in the tube, and the torpedomen forward can' hear it running in the tube. This is critical, for it will be armed within a matter of sec- onds, and then almost anything could set it off. Besides, the motor is overspeeding in the tube and it could conceivably break up under the strain and vibration—which might itself produce sufficient shock to cause an explosion. The skipper's reaction is instant. “Tubes forward, try again, by hand. Use full ejection pressure!” Full pressure is used only when The Hunter Is Hunted as the U. S. S. Batfish Stalks And Kills Off a Class 1 Japanese U-Boat HUNTRESS OF THE SEA—It was this submarine, Batfish, commanded by John Fyfe, which taught the Navy how a submarine can hunt an enemy submarine in the most thrilling and chiling of all sea actions. _U. s. Navy Photo. DINNER FOR A SUBMARINER—Comdr. John K. Fyfe, skipper of Batflsh, smiles as a steward’s mate serves juicy steak in the submarine’s wardroom. The officer on Comdr. Fyfe’s left is Lt. Comdr. Walter Small, who later took command of the vessel. —U. S. Navy Photo. sub had simply exploded, with a brilliant red-and-yellow flame which shot ‘high into the night sky, furiously outlined against the somber, sober grayness. And as quickly as the flame reached its zenith, it disappeared, as 2,500 tons of broken, twisted Japanese steel plunged like a rock to the bottom of the ocean. And before Batfish returned to base, two more Jap submarines were sent to the bottom by her torpedoes. i (Copyright, 1953. by Edward L. Beach, i Published by Henry Holt & Co.. Inc. distributed by the Register and Tribune i Syndicate.) (To Be Continued Tomorrow.) 2 Teen-Age Boys Held In Automobile Theft And Break-In Spree Two teen-age boys today were ! being held for Juvenile Court ac- tion after a car theft and spree, of break-ins last night, Park Police reported. One of the youths is a 16-year- 1 old now on court probation for! robbery, police quoted him as' saying. The other is 13 years old and also admits a Juvenile Court record. Both live in the North- east Washington. Their activities last night oc- curred mostly along Pennsylvania avenue S.E.. police said. A cruise in a stolen tagless automobile took them around Hains Point; where a sl7l bpldup occurred. Park Police said they_are all but certain, however, that the youths are not involved in that case. Man Holds Up Couple. The robbery report was made by Thomas J. Dalton, 35, of 3807 Florence drive, Alexandria, who said a man held him up with a' revolver as he was parked with a woman companion on Ohio drive. Mr. Dalton said the holdup man jumped from another car. According to Park Police Sergt. C. P. Apfelbeck, the boys ad- mitted these escapades last night: Entering a loan company in the 600 block of Pennsylvania avenue S.E., but taking nothing but coin wrappers; breaking into a nearby new-car dealer’s build- ing and stealing a revolver after bumping a show-room automobile into a wall; breaking into another car dealer’s place, but doing noth- ing more than tossing a rack of car keys into an alley, and stealing a used car from Potomac Motor Sales, 1473 Pennsylvania avenue S.E. Unloaded Pistol Recovered. The 16-year-old youth was spotted by Police Pvt. A. V. Con- over on South Capitol street near Bolling Air Force Base, behind the wheel of the stolen car. The youth admitted breaking into a nearby car, owned by an Air Force special investigator, strewing its contents around but taking nothing. He said he had been trying to remove the license plates of another parked car just before Pvt. Con- over arrived. The policeman, who was looking, for leads to the Hains Point hold- up, said he recovered an unloaded revolver from the glove compart-; ment of the stolen car, and one cartridge in the youth’s pocket. The 13-year-old was picked up after police interviewed the 16- year-old. Both deny the robbery ;of Mr. Daltno. 7 Russians Ordered Out Os Japan Leave by Ship By the Associated Press TOKYO, Nov. 27.—Seven Rus- sian citizens left Japan today at the order of the Japanese govern- ment. Among them were the Tass News Agency correspondent, Evgenii Seminovich Egorov, and the ! Pravda correspondents, Alexi Ivan- ovich Kozhin and Igor Dmitrivich Ryzhov. Others who boarded the Dutch jship Tjipanas for the first leg of 'the journey to Moscow were Vic- tor P. Timofeef, Soviet film export association representative, and Egorov’s wife and two children. The Japanese Justice Ministry ordered them to leave because Russia has not taken steps to end the technical state of war with Japan which has existed since World War 11. , About 50 members of the Soviet mission m Japan are still In this country. The government has taken no steps to force them to 'leave. \ \ McKeldin Expects Republicans To Cut Arms Aid to Europe By the Associated Preit , NEW YORK, Nov. 27.—G0v.! Theodore R. McKeldin of Mary- land predicted yesterday that the; Eisenhower administration would ¦ reopen closed tax cases in its i search for corruption in Govern- ment and would cut European arms aid to help Korea. Gov. McKeldin was one of Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower’s early supporters and nominated him at the Republican convention in Chicago. The Governor said in a Town Hall address not to expect miracles from the new administration. He said the Republican program would develop slowly. Gov. McKeldin said the follow- ing assumptions could safely be made of Gen. Eisenhower's policies as President: 1. A search for corruption ; “some of which has not even been suspected. . . . Many who think they have fixed things with the office of the Attorney General and escaped their just penalties may, find their cases reopened.” 2. The Korean war “no longer; will be secondary to the defense: plans for Europe. It will become! the Nation’s most Important prob- lem.” 3. Incitement of rebellion will be encouraged in Communist dominated countries and Nation- alist Chinese troops used perhaps for hit and run strikes against Chinese Communists. 4. Cuts in the budget and taxes and the consolidation of Govern- ment departments, including the firing of personnel in the “higher salaried brackets” who got their jobs for political reasons. 5. Plans will be paid against a , recession that “might be normally Lightning Hits Umbrella HALIFAX, Canada VP).— Two ; Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, women had a narrow escape when a bolt i of lightning struck the umbrella ; carried by Mrs. E. Purchase. Ac- companied by another woman, . she was walking along the street r when the lightning “made a siz- zling sound” and blue flame shot i from the steel tip. in the offing in the event that all! war threats came to an end.” Gov. McKeldin said that Gen. Eisenhower was not going to seek; out corruption in government in! “a spirit of vindictiveness or parti-i san advantage.” He said “there! will be exposures of rottenness, some of which has only been hinted up to now, some of which has not even been suspected.” Gov. McKeldin said that Her- bert Brownell, jr., new Attorney General designate, will conduct a clean-up job that will warn “all those in the new administration that the selling of privilege, the improper forgiveness of taxes, the waste and misuse of public funds and the other abuses of public 'trust are not to be tolerated.” Shower Doors TUB ENCLOSURES Custom Built By Miles Glass Co. LI. 6-1234 JA. 2-1234 You Have a Full Orchestra at Your Piano . .. with the [Glauioline] Reproduces with amazing fidelity the tonal quality °* morc thirty different musical instruments VIOLIN viola Hm CELLO ¦Pm TRUMPET ¦Pm'-' TENOR SAX mm alto sax oboe ¦ m ENGLISH HORN bassoon FLUTE FRENCH HORN ’' HUNTING HORN Now with on easy-to-ploy single keyboard instrument you have a HAWAIIAN GUITAR full orchestra . . . perfect instru- MANDOLIN mental reproduction with just a HARPSICHORD flick of the finger. This amazing ZITHER MUSICAL SAW electronic musical instrument is a MUTED GYPSY French invention —by Constant VIOLIN, ORGAN Martin of Versailles—just now ond mar, y others available in America. It will enchant the amateur musician, furnish wonderful new home entertain- ment, thrill audiences in concert, radio, supper clubs, restaurants, or wherever music is played or heard. $395 The CLAVIOLINE Reproduces the tonal qualities of mora than 30 different musical instruments. Has 36-note keyboard with five octave range. Can be tuned one-half tone up or dawn. Weighs 47 pounds cempleta in a single compact, portable unit. Come in and let us demonstrate the Clavioline . . . play it yourself ... the performance will truly amaze you. Our Organ Department, Bth Floor, Downtown Store. Minmm Corner 13th and G Streets STerling 9400 OPEN 9:15 to 6, Monday fr Friday 12:30 to 9 ij» HUMDINGER COATSAII jPNMk $ 50.. .*55.. .*6O COATS Jpßk O 090 f all going at Rk Special Purchase! Drastic reduction!! Poodledoths, m t broadcloths, cash mere .and. wools, suedes! Right W jfmk now at the height of the season, get in on Bond's spec- ffr tacular coat sale! You’ll find coats magnificently tailored Hr mF by the country’s top makers! You’llfind boxy, fitted, flared A long and leisurely J J and styles ... a brilliant color display! But be early 6 mOllthS to Pdy Mr "" they’ll go fast at this wonder-low price! Sizes 8 to 18. JjP , —E. Open Friday and Monday, 9:30 Until 9 f \ Bond's 1335 F STREET N.W. Regularly $5.95 I UKUIII.ES |/A f **.«* jin \ | | Xmos packaged and mm'y An '| complete with plastic / //ff'M Ideal || bag, instruction book I qtf// j Gift and pick, V I for the Downtown Store Only youngster who ,• likes music i Mmmm 1 I Corner 13th and G Streets N.W. ST. 9400 §| OPEN 9:15 to 6 Mon. ond Fri.. 12:30 to 9 Viet Minh Are Cautious | In Indo-Chinese Attacks By th* Associated Press WITH FRENCH UNION FORCES AT NA SAN. Indo-, China, Nov. 27.—Cautious Com- 1 munist-led Viet Minh forces threw ; light probing attacks at this sur-j rounded fortress last night. A brisk skirmish on the defense 1 perimeter lasted about 15 minutes. |Casualties on both sides were' j light. The French command has been expecting an all-out assault by at least 18,000 enemy encircling the key stronghold. It believes the Viet Minh suffered extreme casualties in the air attacks which may have forced a change in plans. | A spokesman said N French fighter planes, attacking targets on the basis of information sup- plied by a prisoner yesterday,; destroyed a Viet Minh regimental command post less than 2 miles from Na San. Senior officers stress however, that a major as- sault can come at “any moment.” Sister Kenny's Condition Still Listed as Critical By th* Associated Prtss BRISBANE, Australia, Nov. 27. —Sister Elizabeth Kenny’s doctor says he expects the famed polio- myelitis specialist, suffering from a blood clot on the brain, to reach a crisis in four or five days but he said her chances of recovery were “very slender.” He gave this information in a medical bulletin from her home at Toowoomba, 60 miles west of here. The physician, Dr. John Ogden, made an urgent appeal for a sup- ply of eight vials of a new drug, trypsin, which he believes is in Australia. A shipment of the drug is expected to arrive from New York on Saturday but Dr. Ogden said it might come too late. The 66-year-old nurse suffered the attack of cerebral thrombosis last Friday. OPS Information Office Headed by McClanahan By th* Associated Press W. W. McClanahan, jr., has been named director of the Office of Price Stabilization public in- | formation division, OPS Chief Tighe Woods said yesterday. Mr. Woods named Mr. McClan- ahan to succeed Max R. Hjall, who resigned early this month to join the Mutual Security Agency. Mr. McClanahan, 38. is a native of Springfield, Tenn., and a former managing editor of the Nashville Tennessean and the To- ledo Times. Delivery Man Reports He Was Robbed of SSB A drugstore deliveryman told police last night he had been robbed of SSB after making his deliveries in an apartment house at 3020 Tilden street N.W. Nathaniel Cunningham, 30, em- ployed by the Woodley Pharmacy, 3527 Connecticut avenue N.W., r said he was stopped at the back door of the apartment by a light- skinned colored man, about 28 years old. The man pointed a nickel-plated revolver at him, took his money and sls in checks, and ran. THE EVENING STAR, Washington, D. G. THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 37, 1953 D.C. Co-ed Finds Skull 01 Fish Believed to Be 250 Million Years Old By th* Associated Press DELAWARE. Ohio. Nov. 27. An Ohio Wesleyan University co-ed has found part of the skull ’of a fish that scientists believe may be 250 million years old. Thelma Cook of Washington, D. C., a -senior majoring in zoology and botany, found the skull plate imbedded in a 60- pound boulder while on a geology field trip in a nearby gravel pit. The fish, macropelalichthys, ! sometimes grew to lengths of 30 feet. It was heavily armored on the outside and had no bones on the inside. | Miss Cook’s discovery is con- sidered particularly important be- 1 cause it is a complete skull plate, j Few of these have been found, although other Ohio Wesleyan students have found pieces of other ancient fish in the area. Dr. G. Winston Sinclair, chair- man of the university’s depart- ment of earth sciences, said the discovery, if confirmed, will be named after Miss Cook. Miss Cook is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. Williamson Cook of 4915 Forty-fourth street N.W., Washington, D. C. German Police Smash Big Black Market Ring By th* Associated Press 27.—Frankfurt customs police said yesterday they had smashed one of West Germany’s biggest postwar black market rings in a raid which yielded six and a half tons of green coffee beans and 18,000 pairs of nylon stockings. At least 11 persons were re- jported arrested in the' raid yes- terday at Frankfurt’s big market hall. ** A-5

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Page 1: SUBMARINE: Is S. S. Batfish Stalks Held Viet Minh Are Off

SUBMARINE:By Comdr. Edward L. Beach, U. S. N.

CHAPTER XVI.Bathfish.

U. S. S. Batflsh got under wayrrrn; Pearl Harbor on December30. 1944, on what was to be hersixth war patrol.

On February 9, while she waspatrolling in Babuyan Channel,south of Gamiguin Island, the ra-dar operator sounds a warning.

Something in his radar arouseshis attention—he looks closely—-there it is again—and again. ItIs not a pip which he sees; if itwere, he would not wait to singout, “Radar contact,” and therebyimmediately mobilize the ship foraction.

This is something more difficultto evaluate. A faint shimmeringof the scopes—a momentary un-steadiness in the green and ambercathode ray tubes—which comesand goes. Almost unconsciouslyhe times them and notices thebearing upon which the radarhead is trained each time the faintwobble in the normal “grass”presentation is noticed.

A few moments of this, and“Captain to the conn!” No timeto wait on ceremony. This par-ticular lad wants his skipper andhe wants him badly.

The radar operator points to hisscope. “There it is, sir! There itis again! I just noticed it a min-ute ago!”

Danger and Glory.The captain stares at the instru-

ment, weighing the significance ofwhat he sees. This is somethingnew, something portentous—thereis a small stirring in the back ofhis mind—there seems to be ahalf-remembered idea there, if hecan only dig it up—then, like aflash, he has it.

If he is right, it means theyare in grave danger, with a chanceto come out of it and maybe addanother scalp to their belts; if heis wrong, what he is about to domay make a bad situation infi-nitely worse. But Jake Fyfe

knows what he is doing. He isnot playing some far-fetchedhunch.

“Secure the radar!” he orders.“What do you think it is?” Fyfe

asks the lad.“It looked like another tadar to

me. captain.” The reply is given

w ithout hesitation.“What else?” .The boy is at a loss for an an-

swer, and Jake Fyfe answers hisown question:

“Japanese submarine!”Submarine vs. submarine! The

hunter hunted! The biggest fearof our submarine sailors duringWorld War IIwas that an enemysubmarine might get the drop

on them while they were makinga passage on the surface.

It would be quite simple, really.All you have to do is to detect the !other fellow first, either by sight:or by radar; submerge on his 1track and let go the fish as hepasses. All you have to do is todetect him first!

The most outstanding record ofenemy subs sunk was the onehung up by Batfish, beginningthat fateful February 9.

The process of deduction bywhich Fyfe arrived at the con-jelusion that the source of the;radar peculiarities was an enemysubmarine was not at all illogical.

The wavering of his radarscopewas probably due to the presenceof another radar. It was known;that the Japs had radar, thoughof an inferior'type to ours.

If this radar came from aves-;sel as large as a destroyer he!should have been detected on;Batfish’s radar before the emana-jtions from his low-powered radar!had been noticed. Since the radar!waves had been the first to bepicked up. it followed that theship producing them must besmall and low on the water. Yetit must be a valuable ship, suffi-ciently important to rate one ofthe relatively few radar sets theNips possessed. Hence, a subma-rine.

tack, crediting to his superior’ radar the fact he had been

’ alerted before the Jap, and trust-ing to his belief that he could

, keep the enemy from detecting ][ him. His plan is to get up ahead;of the other submarine and to

[ head in toward him while the un-( suspecting Nip is pounding alongin nearly th* opposite direction.

All the while, Batfish is racing

I through the black night at full¦ speed. She has pulled off abeam;| of her quarry, just within maxi-

; mum radar range in order to be. outside range of the less-efficient, radar carried by the enemy, andshe is rapidly overhauling him.

Several more minutes pass. Fyfe.is on the point of asking for more Iinformation, when again the! 1bridge speaker blares its muffled!;version of Sprinkle’s voice (C. K.Sprinkle, executive officer): “Cap-tain, we’ve got him on zero twozero, making 14 knots. Range isseven oh double oh, and distance j,to the track is two five double oh.!This looks pretty good to me.! lRecommend we come left and let 1]him have it!”

“Okay, Sprink. Give me acourse to come to.” The captain’s

. voice has assumed a grim finality,';a flat quality of emotionless de-cision..! A few more tense moments pass.!.[Again the speaker near the,! skipper’s left elbow reproduces;iSprinkle’s familiar voice. “He’s

[ crossing our bow now. Range,! four oh double oh.”'j At 1,500 yards the keen eyes on¦. Batfish’s bridge distinguish a blur,in the gray murk, and at 1,000

[ yards the sinister outline of aJapanese I class submarine is

firing at deep submergence, butthis is an emergency.

“No. 1 tube fired by hand. Tubeis clear!” The very welcome re-port is received after a few anxiousseconds with a profound sense ofrelief.

“Resume fire.” But the exechas not needed that command.No. 2 torpedo is already on itsway, followed a few seconds laterby No. 3.

The watchers on Batflsh’s bridgehad hardly, expected anythingquite so dramatic as what theysaw. One torpedo must have hitinto a magazine or possibly intoa tank carrying gasoline. The Nip

The Chase Begins.

The reason why Fyfe orderedhis own radar temporarily se-cured was simply to deny the Japthe same information which hehimself had just received.

“All ahead full! Right fullrudder!” Batfish leaps ahead andsteadies on a course calculatedto get to the north of the ap-proaching enemy vessel. She runsfor a short time, every now andthen checking the situation withher radar.

Finally, Jake Fyfe figures his;position is about right. Batfishturns toward the enemy andghosts in.

Closer and closer comes the un-suspecting enemy sub. It is sodark that as yet he cannot beseen by the tense bridge party.As the situation develops, it isapparent that he w-ill pass through

the firing position at just under2.000 yards’ range. This is a lit-tle long for optimum torpedo fire,but Fyfe wants to take no chancesof being detected. On he comes—-only a little more now—then fromthe conning tower, “On the firingbearing, captain!” This from theexec.

“Let them go when ready. Shooton radar bearings. I still can’t seehim from up here.” From theskipper.

Silently, four torpedoes areloosed into the water. Four newwakeless electric fish start theirrun toward the target. They have1,800 yards to go; it will take awhile.

But they miss, all four torpe-does. The whole careful and well-executed approach—wasted! Whatcan have gone wrong?

The question is answered byPlot, dramatically. "Target hasspeeded up! Speed now 14 knots!”

But the target continues serene-ly on his way. giving no sign ofbeing aware of having been firedon. Maybe Batfish will be ableto try again.

No sooner thought than tried.Tb« four murmuring diesels ofcne hunter lift their voices, andthe submarine slips away throughthe water, seeking another posi-tion from which to launch herdeadly missiles. But by this time,of course, the target has passedbeyond Batfish, and in order toregain firing position it will benecessary to execute an endaround.

On the Surface.Jake Fyfe has elected to remain

or the surface for the whole at-

made out—the first time duringthe whole evening that the enemyhas actually been sighted. Hewallows heavily in the slight chopof the sea—low, dark, and un-gainly.

At 1,000 yaids the Jap is broad-side to Batfish: Fyfe’s plaji hasborne fruit, for his own bow isexactly toward the enemy, andhe has all the advantage of sight-ing.

Sudden Danger.

Almost immediately the tele-phone talker standing under theconning tower hatch shouts loudly,so that his message is heard inthe conning tower as well as onthe bridge:

“Number one did not eject!Running hot in the tube!”

Something has gone wrong. Thetorpedo should have been pushedout of the torpedo tube by thehigh-pressure air ejection system.Instead, it has stuck in the tube,and the torpedomen forward can'hear it running in the tube.

This is critical, for it will bearmed within a matter of sec-onds, and then almost anythingcould set it off. Besides, the motoris overspeeding in the tube and itcould conceivably break up underthe strain and vibration—whichmight itself produce sufficientshock to cause an explosion.

The skipper's reaction is instant.“Tubes forward, try again, byhand. Use full ejection pressure!”Full pressure is used only when

The Hunter Is Hunted as the U. S. S. Batfish StalksAnd Kills Off a Class 1 Japanese U-Boat

HUNTRESS OF THE SEA—It was this submarine, Batfish, commanded by John Fyfe, whichtaught the Navy how a submarine can hunt an enemy submarine in the most thrilling andchiling of all sea actions. _U. s. Navy Photo.

DINNER FOR A SUBMARINER—Comdr. John K. Fyfe, skipper of Batflsh, smiles as a steward’smate serves juicy steak in the submarine’s wardroom. The officer on Comdr. Fyfe’s left is Lt.Comdr. Walter Small, who later took command of the vessel. —U. S. Navy Photo.

sub had simply exploded, with abrilliant red-and-yellow flamewhich shot ‘high into the nightsky, furiously outlined against thesomber, sober grayness.

And as quickly as the flamereached its zenith, it disappeared,as 2,500 tons of broken, twistedJapanese steel plunged like a rockto the bottom of the ocean.

And before Batfish returned tobase, two more Jap submarineswere sent to the bottom by hertorpedoes.

i (Copyright, 1953. by Edward L. Beach,i Published by Henry Holt & Co.. Inc.distributed by the Register and Tribunei Syndicate.)

(To Be Continued Tomorrow.)

2 Teen-Age Boys HeldIn Automobile TheftAnd Break-In Spree

Two teen-age boys today were!being held for Juvenile Court ac-tion after a car theft and spree,

of break-ins last night, ParkPolice reported.

One of the youths is a 16-year- 1old now on court probation for!robbery, police quoted him as'saying. The other is 13 years oldand also admits a Juvenile Courtrecord. Both live in the North-east Washington.

Their activities last night oc-curred mostly along Pennsylvaniaavenue S.E.. police said. A cruisein a stolen tagless automobiletook them around Hains Point;where a sl7l bpldup occurred.Park Police said they_are all butcertain, however, that the youthsare not involved in that case.

Man Holds Up Couple.The robbery report was made

by Thomas J. Dalton, 35, of 3807Florence drive, Alexandria, whosaid a man held him up with a'revolver as he was parked with awoman companion on Ohio drive.Mr. Dalton said the holdup manjumped from another car.

According to Park Police Sergt.C. P. Apfelbeck, the boys ad-mitted these escapades last night:

Entering a loan company inthe 600 block of Pennsylvaniaavenue S.E., but taking nothingbut coin wrappers; breaking intoa nearby new-car dealer’s build-ing and stealing a revolver afterbumping a show-room automobileinto a wall; breaking into anothercar dealer’s place, but doing noth-ing more than tossing a rack ofcar keys into an alley, and stealinga used car from Potomac MotorSales, 1473 Pennsylvania avenueS.E.

Unloaded Pistol Recovered.The 16-year-old youth was

spotted by Police Pvt. A. V. Con-over on South Capitol street nearBolling AirForce Base, behind thewheel of the stolen car. The youthadmitted breaking into a nearbycar, owned by an Air Force specialinvestigator, strewing its contentsaround but taking nothing. Hesaid he had been trying to removethe license plates of anotherparked car just before Pvt. Con-over arrived.

The policeman, who was looking,for leads to the Hains Point hold-up, said he recovered an unloadedrevolver from the glove compart-;ment of the stolen car, and onecartridge in the youth’s pocket.

The 13-year-old was picked upafter police interviewed the 16-year-old. Both deny the robbery;of Mr. Daltno.

7 Russians Ordered OutOs Japan Leave by Ship

By the Associated Press

TOKYO, Nov. 27.—Seven Rus-sian citizens left Japan today atthe order of the Japanese govern-ment.

Among them were the Tass NewsAgency correspondent, EvgeniiSeminovich Egorov, and the

! Pravda correspondents, AlexiIvan-ovich Kozhin and Igor DmitrivichRyzhov.

Others who boarded the Dutchjship Tjipanas for the first leg of'the journey to Moscow were Vic-tor P. Timofeef, Soviet film exportassociation representative, andEgorov’s wife and two children.

The Japanese Justice Ministry

ordered them to leave becauseRussia has not taken steps to endthe technical state of war withJapan which has existed sinceWorld War 11.

,

About 50 members of the Sovietmission m Japan are still In thiscountry. The government hastaken no steps to force them to'leave.

\ \

McKeldin Expects RepublicansTo Cut Arms Aid to Europe

By the Associated Preit ,

NEW YORK, Nov. 27.—G0v.!Theodore R. McKeldin of Mary-

land predicted yesterday that the;Eisenhower administration would ¦reopen closed tax cases in its

isearch for corruption in Govern-ment and would cut European

arms aid to help Korea.

Gov. McKeldin was one of Gen.Dwight D. Eisenhower’s earlysupporters and nominated him atthe Republican convention inChicago.

The Governor said in a TownHall address not to expect miraclesfrom the new administration. Hesaid the Republican programwould develop slowly.

Gov. McKeldin said the follow-ing assumptions could safely bemade of Gen. Eisenhower's policiesas President:

1. A search for corruption; “some of which has not even beensuspected. . . . Many who thinkthey have fixed things with theoffice of the Attorney General andescaped their just penalties may,find their cases reopened.”

2. The Korean war “no longer;will be secondary to the defense:plans for Europe. It will become!the Nation’s most Important prob-lem.”

3. Incitement of rebellion willbe encouraged in Communistdominated countries and Nation-alist Chinese troops used perhapsfor hit and run strikes againstChinese Communists.

4. Cuts in the budget and taxesand the consolidation of Govern-ment departments, including thefiring of personnel in the “higher

salaried brackets” who got theirjobs for political reasons.

5. Plans will be paid against a, recession that “might be normally

Lightning Hits UmbrellaHALIFAX, Canada VP).— Two

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in the offing in the event that all!war threats came to an end.”

Gov. McKeldin said that Gen.Eisenhower was not going to seek;out corruption in government in!“a spirit of vindictiveness or parti-isan advantage.” He said “there!will be exposures of rottenness,some of which has only beenhinted up to now, some of whichhas not even been suspected.”

Gov. McKeldin said that Her-bert Brownell, jr., new AttorneyGeneral designate, will conduct aclean-up job that will warn “allthose in the new administrationthat the selling of privilege, theimproper forgiveness of taxes, thewaste and misuse of public fundsand the other abuses of public

'trust are not to be tolerated.”

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Viet Minh Are Cautious |In Indo-Chinese Attacks

By th* Associated PressWITH FRENCH UNION

FORCES AT NA SAN. Indo-,

China, Nov. 27.—Cautious Com- 1munist-led Viet Minh forces threw

; light probing attacks at this sur-jrounded fortress last night.

A brisk skirmish on the defense

1perimeter lasted about 15 minutes.

|Casualties on both sides were'

jlight.

The French command has beenexpecting an all-out assault byat least 18,000 enemy encirclingthe key stronghold. It believesthe Viet Minh suffered extremecasualties in the air attacks whichmay have forced a change inplans. |

A spokesman saidN

Frenchfighter planes, attacking targetson the basis of information sup-plied by a prisoner yesterday,;destroyed a Viet Minh regimental

command post less than 2 milesfrom Na San. Senior officersstress however, that a major as-sault can come at “any moment.”

Sister Kenny's ConditionStill Listed as Critical

By th* Associated PrtssBRISBANE, Australia, Nov. 27.

—Sister Elizabeth Kenny’s doctorsays he expects the famed polio-myelitis specialist, suffering froma blood clot on the brain, to reacha crisis in four or five days buthe said her chances of recoverywere “very slender.”

He gave this information in amedical bulletin from her homeat Toowoomba, 60 miles west ofhere.

The physician, Dr. John Ogden,made an urgent appeal for a sup-ply of eight vials of a new drug,trypsin, which he believes is inAustralia. A shipment of the drugis expected to arrive from NewYork on Saturday but Dr. Ogdensaid it might come too late.

The 66-year-old nurse sufferedthe attack of cerebral thrombosislast Friday.

OPS Information OfficeHeaded by McClanahan

By th*Associated Press

W. W. McClanahan, jr., hasbeen named director of the Officeof Price Stabilization public in-

| formation division, OPS ChiefTighe Woods said yesterday.

Mr. Woods named Mr. McClan-ahan to succeed Max R. Hjall,who resigned early this month tojoin the Mutual Security Agency.Mr. McClanahan, 38. is a nativeof Springfield, Tenn., and aformer managing editor of theNashville Tennessean and the To-ledo Times.

Delivery Man ReportsHe Was Robbed of SSB

A drugstore deliveryman toldpolice last night he had beenrobbed of SSB after making hisdeliveries in an apartment houseat 3020 Tilden street N.W.

Nathaniel Cunningham, 30, em-ployed by the Woodley Pharmacy,3527 Connecticut avenue N.W.,

r said he was stopped at the backdoor of the apartment by a light-skinned colored man, about 28years old. The man pointed anickel-plated revolver at him, tookhis money and sls in checks, andran.

THE EVENING STAR, Washington, D. G.THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 37, 1953

D.C. Co-ed Finds Skull01 Fish Believed to Be250 Million Years Old

By th* Associated Press

DELAWARE. Ohio. Nov. 27.An Ohio Wesleyan Universityco-ed has found part of the skull’of a fish that scientists believemay be 250 million years old.

Thelma Cook of Washington,D. C., a -senior majoring inzoology and botany, found theskull plate imbedded in a 60-pound boulder while on a geologyfield trip in a nearby gravel pit.

The fish, macropelalichthys,! sometimes grew to lengths of 30feet. It was heavily armored onthe outside and had no bones onthe inside.

| Miss Cook’s discovery is con-sidered particularly important be- 1cause it is a complete skull plate, jFew of these have been found,

although other Ohio Wesleyanstudents have found pieces ofother ancient fish in the area.

Dr. G. Winston Sinclair, chair-man of the university’s depart-ment of earth sciences, said thediscovery, if confirmed, will benamed after Miss Cook.

Miss Cook is the daughter ofMr. and Mrs. J. Williamson Cookof 4915 Forty-fourth street N.W.,Washington, D. C.

German Police SmashBig Black Market Ring

By th* Associated Press

27.—Frankfurt customs police

said yesterday they had smashedone of West Germany’s biggestpostwar black market rings in araid which yielded six and a halftons of green coffee beans and18,000 pairs of nylon stockings.

At least 11 persons were re-jported arrested in the' raid yes-terday at Frankfurt’s big markethall.

** A-5