Weather Fair and Warmer. lg Its. 3attop Editorial Ayres Unjustly Treated By Press . . . VOL. LII. No. 134 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, APRIL 2, 1942 Z-323 PRICE FIVE CENTS I Sikhs Reject Brit1sh Offer Of Post-War Independence Majority All-India Group To Make Final Decision; Chances For Passage Are Considered Slight, India Wants Khan For Defense Head BULLETIN LONDON, April 1-(IP)-Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru and Gen. Sir Archibald Wavell, British com- mander for India, have arranged to meet for a talk on control of Indian defense, said a dispatch late tonight from New Delhi to the Daily Herald. NEW DELHI, India, April 1.-(iP)- The Sikhs, warriors of the Punjab, and the extremist Mahasabha group of Hindus tonight rejected the Brit- ish plan for Indian post-war inde- pendence, and all India awaited tensely the decision of the Majority All-India Congress. In the light of expectations that the working committee of the Con- gress would turn down the plan be- cause of British insistence on con- trolling India's war-time defense, there was an increasing awareness of the consequences of failure of Sir Stafford Cripps' mission to this sub- continent. The deepest impression was made by strong comment of the British and United States Press, pointing out that if Indian leaders, by bargain- ing, cause the plan to collapse, In- dians will forfeit the good opinion of the United Nations. Congress Adamant Yet it was doubtful whether such warnings would be enough to change the Congress Committee's attitude. The average Indian nationalist seems bewildered by what he regards as failure of Britain and the United States to understand his point of view on the need for an Indian de- fense councillor. He argues that only an Indian can rally the country and he asks what objection there can be to placing the defense portfolio in the hands of an Indian like Capt. Sir Sikander Hyat Khan, premier of the Punjab, which provides the present bulk of Indian troops. The prevalent attitude in both the Congress and the Moslem League is that Hyat Khan is intelligent enough to take advice and guidance from Gen. Sir Archibald P. Wavell, Bri- tain's Commander in Chief for India. Even the moderates led by Sir Te Bahadur Sapru, one of Britain's best friends in India, feel this way, Britons Glum Today's first definite minority re- fusals, auguring ill.for the success of Cripps' effort to align India firm- ly behind the Allied war effort, were received glumly by Britons, and the press sounded solemn warnings that if the plan were scrapped, nothing could be done until the war ends. The Sikhs, numbering 4,500,000, turned down the program through their all-parties committee for fear they would be placed at the mercy of the Moslemn majority of 13,500,000 in the Punjab. Ideal America Is Nec essary, Declaring that a clash with en- trenched capital and its philosophers is inevitable, Prof. Mentor Williams of the English department told mem- bers of the Student League of Amer- ica last night that only a functional democracy will achieve a decent post- war world. He stressed that an ideal America would be founded on bases of com- plete social, economic, and political democracy, and constantly reminded his audience that the winning of the war would not insure or even imply internal improvement. Most dangerous enemies of this ideal America, Williams emphasized, were not mere tools like Father Coughlin and Rev. Gerald L. K. Smith, but the selfish capitalists who inspire their activity. He laid at the hands of these same men, the pres- ent campaign against labor and in- dustrial uncooperativeness in the vic- tory effort. In the decent post-wa'r world which Williams honorl we mirrIt finally Jap Siege Of Toungoo Broken In BloodyBattle Stilwell's Enables Masterful Direction City's 'Lost' Garrison Of To Chinese Armies Slash Way Out By DANIEL DE LUCE WITH THE CHINESE ARMY ON THE TOUNGOO FRONT, Burma, April 1.-(A)--Under the incessant week-long blasting of Japanese dive- bombers and artillery, a Chinese garrison has slashed its way out of encir- cled Toungoo, forded the Sittang River and rejoined the main Chinese armies in a bloody withdrawal action personally directed by Lieut.-Gen. Joseph W. Stilwell with all the shrewd serenity of a chess-master. This is the story of the fiercest battle yet fought in Burma: The Japanese aiming north toward Mandalay encircled Toungoo a week ago. The Chinese garrison (reported by Chungking to have numbered 8,000 men, against 40,000 or more Japanese) was cut off from all aid but stuck to shallow trenches and pits with ma- --- chine guns and rifles, staving off re- peated assaults. General Stilwell, the lean, gray American commander of all Chinese forces in Burma, brought his armies from the north in an attempt to raise the siege. Convoy Breaks Through For five days the counter-attack continued, but only a single convoy of ammunition got through to the Toungoo garrison. Heartened by this help, the men fought on. By Sunday, however, it became evi- dent that Toungoo could not be re- lieved. Lack of air support was a vital factor. In short-sleeves, calmly smoking a cigarette in a black holder, General Stilwell went into a huddle with his Chinese aides, his fluent Chinese audible above the clatter of nearby machine guns. He then flashed orders by radio to the Toungoo garrison to be ready to crash through the Japanese lines at a specified point on the northeast. Feints To Southwest He moved his relief forces in a southwesterly direction, drawing off considerable Japanese strength to meet his feint. The British Imperials in the Irrawaddy Valley farther west also began an attack to divert as much Japanese pressure as possible. Yesterday, the scene was set and the Chinese in Toungoo dashed from their tree-screened positions out into the open. The Japanese artillery laid down a blanketing fire, but the Chinese scattered and pressed on, splashed and swam across the Sittang under point-blank shelling, and reached the sanctuary of the farther hills through fields littered with Japanese dead. Chinese Are At Nangyun Now the Chinese lines stand 12 miles north of Toungoo, around the smouldering ruins of the Nangyun railway station, which is a half-mile west of the Burma Road and five miles south of Yedashe. (In a somewhat similar situation on the Irrawaddy front, the British announced they had accomplished a withdrawal, mauling the Japanese at Shwedaung, 10 miles south of Prome, and rejoining their main de- fense line to the north. As in the Chinese case, a British communique said Japanese air superiority was a telling factor.) Fall Speaks For Itself As the first big-scale test of the Japanese and Chinese armies in Burma, the final fall of Toungo speaks for itself, but the issue might have been different if the Chinese forces now available had been able to reach the scene at the start of the Japanese encirclement maneuver. General Stilwell, who brought up every man he could as quickly as possible, came to the front in an American armored scout car with First Lieut. Carl Arnold, one-time los Angeles music instructor, and Sergeant Francis Astolfi, of Wilkes- barre, Pa. Both carried sub-machine guns, but they had no occasion to use them, because the Chinese sur- rounded Stilwell with a strong escort of their own. Grad Awards Are Presented Dean Yoakim Announces Scholarship Winners Dean Clarence Yoakum of the Graduate School yesterday an- nounded the following recipients of annual graduate school scholarship awards: Special Awards: Betty Margaret Robertson, Brooklyn, N.Y., $600 from the Emma J. Cole Fellowship; Ruth Eyles, Atlanta, Ga., $350 from the Albert Euclid Hinsdale Memorial Fel- lowship. Three persons were anounced win- ners of the F. C. and Susan Eastman Newcombe Fellowship: Solon A. Gor- June Induction Will Draw On Feb.16 Group Draft Heads Indicate Some May Be In Army Camps As EarlyAs Next Month WASHINGTON, April I.-(U)- Draft headquarters served notice to- day that some of the men who regis- tered on Feb. 16 may be summoned to the training camps in May, and that June most probably would see a por- tion of them in the service. Those who registered on that date were men between 35 and 44 inclu- sive and those who had become 20 and 21 in the recently preceding months. The intent of the Army regarding this group was made plain in a Selec- tive Service order to all local draft boards. They were told to start class- ifying the new registrants immedi- ately and prepare to fill the June call, and possibly the May call, in part from them. This clarified an uncertainty as to whether these men would be lumped with the earlier registrants and be- come subject to early call or whe- ther the Army would exhaust the first group before tapping the second. The method of coordinating the two groups is to be explained in de- tail in a later announcement. As re- cently outlined, the plan is as fol- lows: after the men have been class- ified, a local board determines how many from each group are 1-A. If it has, for example, sixty 1-A men from the first group and 40 from the second, all calls form the Army for new men are filled 60 per cent from the first and forty per cent from the second. "Local boards," the Selective Serv- ice Headquarters announcement said, "were instructed to start classifica- tion at once of the several million men who enrolled on Feb. 16, and to prepare to fill the Army's June call for men, and possibly the May call with these registrants and regis- trants from the first age group." Dance At Union Will Represent ForeiganLands University students are invited to join their fellow students who are natives of foreign lands and dance to the music of Bill Sawyer and his orchestra at the annual International Ball which will be held Friday, April 17, in the Union Ballroom. One of the most colorful events during the university year, the Inter- national Ball will donate all of its proceeds to the Emergency Fund for Foreign Students. Many of the for- eign students attending the all-cam- pus dance dress in their native cos- tumes. The ball is being sponsored by the newly formed Interclub Board of the International Center. This board in- cludes representatives from all the clubs and cultural interest groups meeting in the International Center. Decorations for the dance are being designed by Eduardo Salgado, Spec.A, one of the most eminent of Filipino artists. He has had exhibitions of his paintings in many of the leading art centers of the United States. Daly's XMeloramua Will (Tiiin in e 1 un "Under the Gaslight," Augustin Daly's old-fashioned melodrama of the '60's, will be presented for the second time at 8:30 p.m. today in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre un- der the auspices of Play Prodiu ction Great Clash Is Foreseen For Russia Offensive Will Determine Result Of Spring Battle Along Soviet-Nazi Front Entire Line Locked In MovingConflict LONDON, April 1. -()- Bitter fighting now under way in the Don- ets Basin on Russia's southern front was reported tonight to be gradually developing into a titanic clash which ultimately may determine the out- come of 1942's warm weather opera- tions on the entire Russian-German battlefront. Dispatches from both Moscow and Berlin indicated that the entire front from Leningrad to the Black Sea now is locked in a see-saw struggle, with both the Russian and German High Commands moving masses of reserves into the central and southern zones. In view of this, London observers find it difficult to'predict that either side could develop any lightning spring offensive. Rather, they preferred to view the current action in the Donets Basin, where the roads are now drying steadily, as pivotal fighting holding the key to the entire warm weather situation for the remainder of the year. The side winning the advantage here is expected to prevail. Germans Counter-Attack Incessant German counter-attacks to recover lost ground and relieve the encircled Nazi sixteenth army in the Staraya Russa sector on the north- western front are stressed in reports from Stockholm. These reports state that the be- leaguered German force, which orig- inally numbered 100,000 men, has been cut in half by methodical Rus- sian bombing and artillery fire. Tonight's Moscow communique told of a number of successful operations on the Leningrad front in which about 3,000 German officers and sol- diers were annihilated during the past two days. A Russian drive to close a pincers movement on the strategic town of Vyazma from the north is believed to have advanced further with a Soviet announcement that 12 vil- lages on this northwestern front had been recaptured within 24 hours. Meanwhile the Moscow radio broad- cast to the people of Vitebsk, only 75 miles from the Polish border, that their hour of liberation is "not far off." Russians Widen Advance London observers interpreted the northwestern front advance and the radio announcement as an indication that the Russian High Command was strengthening and widening the arm of their westernmost advance on the north of Vyazma. This line extends back to Rzhev, which the Germans still are holding doggedly. Any extension of it with- out a substantially guaranteed chal- lenge to the Germans north and south of this spearhead will place the Russians in a precarious position, London observers believe. These observers watched the south- ern front action, however, as a more trustworthy forecaster of what warm weather, dry land fighting is to bring everywhere in Russia this summer. The fronts farther north still are presenting what amounts to a con- tinuation of the Russians' winter successes Feminine Designer Drafte Who Planned Uniform (By The Associated Press) WASHINGTON, April 1-Army of- ficers shy off discussing it, but a woman clothing consultant has been called in to help military designers with a problem in er-er-feminine unmentionables that they overlooked in thinking up snappy uniforms for the Women's Auxiliary Army Corps. The Army, which prides itself on Aviation Board Checks Students For Air Corpsa Examinations To Continue In Health Service Today For Prospective Fliers Twenty-five students were exam- ined for enlistment in the U.S. Air Corps yesterday in the opening day] of a three-day examining period nowa being conducted in the Health Serv- ice Building by the Sixth Corps Area Traveling Aviation Cadet Examining Board. Further examinations will be given" at 9:30 a.m. and at 12:30 p.m. today and tomorrow, and all students in- terested in Air Corps enlistment, es- pecially those who intend to enlist at the end of the semester, are urged to report at one of these times. A former requirement of two years of college work has been waived, Lieut. George R. Comte, public rela- tions officer, has revealed, and stu- dents may be accepted for flight training upon successfully passing the examination. Ground officer candidates will still be required to present the educational requirements, however, and are asked to bring their academic grade tran- scripts with them when they apply. By applying for enlistment at the present time, students may avoid the rush which will mark the end of the semester and still get deferment until that time, Lieutenant Comte said. April Fool Pranksters Don't Fool City Police "Crack-pots" ,.that's the label police tagged onto April Fool prank- sters yesterday who called in the morning's small hours to report a broken water main which didn't exist. Too smart for the pranksters, pol- ice checked the phone calls and closed the case when they found the complaints came from University rooming houses. One gas station attendant called the police for an explanation when someone gave him a five dollar bill with George Washington's picture on it. d To Save Faces Of Men1 , 'Forgot' Other Items being prepared for any emergency, was naturally considering designs for the girls uniforms, so the latteri couldn't claim "they hadn't a thing to wear," if and when the bill setting up the Auxiliary Corps is finally passed by Congress. But, it has leaked out, the design- ers overlooked the fact that women wear such items as girdles, panties and bras. Nor did they remember night gowns or pajamas. The rumor is that the subject came up when some woman inquired if the soldierettes would b issued girdles. It's said that this resulted in some hasty red-faced conferences in high ranking Army officialdom. When the generals got to discuss- ing it, it was realized that it would be difficult for the dough girls to buy their underthings out of their $21 a month. This prompted other worries. Army1 designers really have been trying to fashion a uniform that women would "just love to wear." They probably had visions of women, used to wear- ing tea-rose satin nighties and pink sheer panties, declining to volunteer because they didn't like the under- wear. It was enough to make strong men shudder! It was no time at all until some strong male remarked it was past time to call in feminine help. What is being decided in the way of underthings is something of a military secret. The best that can be learned is that they likely will be of cotton. Whether the soldierettes will get girdles or have to get curve- control by exercise is also in the dark. Farish Admits Hiding Rubber Process Details Standard Official Keeps Manufacturing Methods From 'Full Disclosure' WASHINGTON, April 1. -UP)- The president of Standard Oil Com- pany (New Jersey) acknowledged to- day that the company failed to give all information about its synthetic rubber processes to a Navy represen- tative in 1939 but contended that the company did furnish "everything the government could make practical use of." W. S. Farish, Standard president, made his statement after Senator O'Mahoney (Dem.-Wyo.) had chal- lenged his testimony that Standard gave "full information" to the Army and Navy "covering Standard's syn- thetic rubber activities." "When you testified that you were making full disclosure," O'Mahoney asserted, "as a matter of fact you were not." Farish protested O'Mahoney's con- clusion, asserting that the company had given the Navy's representative "everything that he was interested in." Assails Navy Plans "The Navy was not, as I under- stand it," Parish told the commit- tee, "interested in the manufacture of the product but in its possible use. "The idea was to see if this rub- ber had such properties that the Navy would be interested in using it." "It was your judgment and not the government's judgment that governed the disclosure," O'Mahoney asserted during the exchange. O'Mahoney raised the point in con- nection with a letter, taken from Standard's files and read into the record last week by Thurman Ar- nold, anti-trust chief, indicating that a Navy Department civilian employe, identified only as Mr. Werkenthin, had visited Standard's plant in 1939 in search of information. No 'Complete Picture' Farish said that Werkenthin visit- ed the plant "at the request of our people who were working with the Army Generals Embarrassed; Girls' Uniforms Lack Dainties U.S. Resistance Stiffens In Philippines As Japan Gains Ground In Burma Enemy Attack On Bataan Defeated As Americans Wipe Out Supply Bse Australia Mobilizes Full Armed Might (By The Associated Press) f American resistance was rising last night in the Philippines, Australia's mobilization was reaching the peak of urgency, and only in the Burma theatre was the Japanese eneny mak- ing progress of consequence. Successive War Department com- muniques told of the defeat of a major enemy attack on General Wainwright's main line on Bataan Peninsula, Luzon, and reported two audacious and highly successful American-Filipino raids on the Phil- ippine Island of Mindanao far to the south. There one body of troops struck a Japanese supply base near Digos and burned 22 enemy military ware- houses to the ground, while native Sulus thrust to the very center of the Japanese-occupied city of Zam- boanga, destroying machine gun nests and other enemy positions, killing many Japanese and withdrawing without losses to themselves. Hand-To-Hand Fighting On Bataan, some American out- posts had to withdraw a short dis- tance under heavy enemy assaults which were subsquently checked in violent hand-to-hand fighting with the loss of no material American position. Moreover, as the accent remained on American military action, the Navy announced that U.S. Naval and Army forces had now destroyed or are presumed to have destroyed a total of 28 Axis submarines, the bulk of them in the Atlantic. Three of these sinkings were announced dur- ing yesterday. (Donald Francis Mason, the Naval enlisted pilot who recently "sighted sub, sank same," has done it again, it was anno'unced Wednesday, and for his unprecedented double success has been awarded the equivalent of a second Distinguished Flying Cross and given an officer's commission). New Australian Draft All single Australian men from 18 to 45, and the married as well be- tween 18 and 35, were called up for immediate military service and the toughest kind of war training was put into effect under the general super- vision of Generalissimo Douglas Mac- Arthur and the personal direction of his right hand for all the Allied ground forces, Gen. Sir Thomas Blamey. While these determined prepara- tions went forward, Allied bombers rode the southern skies again in a continuation of their strong and thus far successful counter-offensive against the enemy's invasion bases on Timor to the northwest of the mainland and New Guinea to the north, and their successes against enemy aircraft within the last three days were thus tabulated: Four planes shot down for certain, 18 destroyed in all probability, 11 known to have been damaged, for a total of 33. Bomber Sets Record In Atlantic Crossing LONDON, Thursday, April 2.-(1) -An American-built four-engined Liberator (Consolidated) bomber has flown 2,200 mile's fromNewfoundland to Britain in the record time of six hours and 40 minutes, the ferry com- mand announced today. The new time of 400 minute eclipsed by exactly one hour the trans-Atlantic flight record set three months ago by a young English pilot. The Liberator pilot averaged 330 miles per hour, The bomber command said that the record was due "to a combination of the qualities of the airplane, an exceptional tail wind, and magnifi- cent navigation." Norwegian Ships Flee Swedish Port STOCKHOLM, April 1.-(P)-Ten Norwegian ships berthed in Sweden since the German invasion of Nor- Yours Almost For The Asking:- Civil Service Jobs For Students Easier To Get, O'Rourke Says By GEORGE SALLADE Chances for the appointment of any college grade students to a fed- eral civil service position are im- measurably greater today thaii at any time in the past, Dr. L. J. O'Rourke, director of research for the United States Civil Service Commission, told a guidance and occupational infor- mation conference yesterday in the Rackham Lecture Hall, The war has increased the demands for more personnel, he said. Any senior graduating from the Univer- sity ought to be able to secure a job in either government or industry easily. Particularly scarce are econ- hours after their names come up in the placement lists. Dr. O'Rourke stressed the fact that students should attempt to fill jobs that are essential to the war effort. He explained also that government employment does not guarantee de- ferment from the draft. The Presi- dent has ruled that government serv- ants will not be deferred for more than six months unless their service is indispensable. Persons who have not been employed at least six months will not be granted any deferment, In other sessions of the conference openings for men and women in de- fense industries were discussed by John Haien, of the Chrysler Corpora- tion, and Thomas P. Garrity, assist- ant director of vocational training