. a won-" on strong-Turn 5 Friday. state college. Linden yesterday. ma mmr mmm rat EMB EMM WASHINGTON, April 23. W Establishment of a war atrocities commission to catalog Nazi mistreatment of prisoners was demanded in congress today. Three representatives introduced resolutions in the house proposing creation of such an agency. By DON WHITEHEAD BUCHENWALD, Germany, April 23. (JP) Eight American congressmen agreed today after inspecting the horrors of Buchenwald prison camp that the evidence of Nazi atrocities committed there exceed the wildest flights of imagination. tt tt tt "This is the most horrible thing that anyone could conceive, said Rep. Rep. Carter Manasco (D.Ala.) after he and his companions had been shown around the camp, where emaciated bodies of Nazi victims are still stacked like corkwood, where men were hung on spikes like pieces of beef until they died and where bodies by the hundreds were burned in furnaces. a tt a "This is barbarism at its worst," said Rep. Gordon Canfield (R.-N. J.). He asserted the evidence bore or written about Nazi brutality. Other members of the group were Henry M. Jackson (D.-Wash.l, N. Earl Wilson (R.-Ind.), Albert Rains (D.-Ala.), Eugene Worley (D.-Tex.), Marion T. Bennet (R.-Mo.), and Francis E. Walter (D.-Pa.). " s Behind one building the congressmen saw a great heap of wasted human bodies, which the. Nazis had left piled up one atop the other like so many logs. Nearby was a truck piled high with 60 more bodies, each bearing a tattooed prison number, tt tt it In the adjacent courtroom was a pile of ashes and bits of bone, remains of the dead who had been burned in the 12 furnace crematory, where blackened skulls still could be seen. Below the furnaces the congressmen were shown a room from which the prisoners said none of their number ever had emerged alive. tt tt Alonff the walls were hooks like those in a butcher shop, and survivors said human bodies, some that were still alive, were bung up until the furnaces were ready. By EDWARD J. DEXXEHY LONDON, April 23. (J) Pro foundly shaken by the horrors they had seen at the Germans' infamous Buchenwald prison camp, 10 members of a parliamentary group began today to prepare a report for submission to the house of commons. Returning last night from the hell camp, they disclosed several of them had wept, and one had fainted at the scene of brutality. it . tt One brought back for exhibition to commons as evidence a long strip of human skin bearing a tattooed prison number and which he said had been cut from the back of a living Buchenwald prisoner by his SS jailer. PARIS, April 23. Christian Ozanne, former Haven News Agency correspond At, said today Princess Ma Aid of Hesse, wounded by a bomb splinter eight months ago at the Buchenwald concentration camp, died in a section of the camp which was used as a brothel, and under care of its inmates. The French journalist said the princess, daughter of King Vit-torio Emanuele of Italy, had been interned at request of her husband, Prince Philip of Hesse, an out everything that had been said ardent Nazi who denounced his wife as not being enthusiastic enough over the Hitler regime. She and her children lived in a villa in a separate section of the camp, Mr. Ozanne added. She was reported wounded in the shoulder by a bomb splinter in an Allied air raid on the area August 26, 1944. tt a tt Mr. Ozanne said the princess was carried to the brothel which was in the camp for use of German civil prisoners there. The women of the bordello, who were mainly Russians and Poles, nursed her. She died about three days after being wounded. tt u tt Mr, Ozanne said the prisoners were so ill nourished they died like flies. He said it was not uncommon to wake up and find the prisoner next to you dead, or to see prisoners drop dead while standing for roll call or working in factories at Buchenwald and Weimer. "Death lost its significance." Mr. Ozanne said. "They simply took the clothes off and threw the corpse in the crematorium or ditch. Dying men were often thrown in with the cadavers."