Wyeather Cold. it igtrn 4a i4J Editorial Student War Board May Fill Need .. . I VOL. LI. No. 135 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, APRIL 3, 1942 Z-323 PRICE FIVE CENTS RAF Suffers Heavy Losses In Paris Raid To Aid Russia Loss Of Air Advantage In Battle For Darwin May Induce Japanese To Attack New Guinea 15 Bombers Lost By English Force BULLETIN SOUTHEAST BRITISH COAST TOWN, Friday, April 3. -(A)- A strong force of German night raid- ers strewed bombs over a consider- able area early today. The attack, more intense than any for some time, came about two hours after a light raid which caused neither casualties nor damage. F (By The Associated Press) LONDON, April 2.-Back again over the suburbs of Paris and into north and northwest Germany, the RAF blasted early today at the Mat- ford works, pre-war Ford factory at Poissy and at the Reich's railroad network which is pouring munitions toward the Russian front. Fifteen bombers were missing from these far-ranging raids, interpreted authoritatively here as primarily blows to assist Russia. The Paris factories are reported turning out vehicles for the Germans in the east and the German railroads are strain- ed to the utmost in transporting sup- plies for spring offensive action against the Red armies. RAF's Biggest Loss It was the RAF's biggest loss in a single night since the Nov. 7 raid on Berlin in which 37 British planes were destroyed, and it was above the average of 10 to 12 which the RAF feels it can afford to lose in one night at the present scale of operations. Bright moonlight aided the attack- ers and the German night fighters alike. Canadian airmen, led by Jhn ny Fauquier, Ottawa bus flier, told of blasting debris high into the sky at Poissy, eight miles west of Paris on the left bank of the Seine, of setting bright fires and of feeling the blast of bombs which made direct hits on the Matford factory from extremely low altitudes. One of the Canadian-flown Well- ington bombers came out of the tar- get area at 500 feet, and the pilot said the bomb blast "nearly lifted us out of the sky." Matford Factory Damaged ] Vichy reports said that the Mat- ford factory was "damaged slightly" and that one person was known to have been killed and several wound- ed. Paris anti-aircraft defenses were active during the alert-from 4 to 5:30 a.m., and bombs were said to have been dropped in several of the western and northwestern Paris out- skirts. Latest reports from Vichy said that fairly heavy damage was caused at Poissy, with the Matford factory the chief target. Japanese Bomb Australian Port MELBOURNE, April 2.-(P)-The Japanese bombed the northern port of Darwin today for the eleventh time, but their loss of air superiority in this theatre of war led to predic- tions that their next move might be a sea-borne attack on Port Moresby, key city of New Guinea. A brief communique from the of- fice of Prime Minister John Curtin said that seven bombers with fighter escorts conducted the Darwin raid but that no damage or casulaties were reported and that the action was the only one reported in the entire area of the fair southwest Pacific. The probability that the Japanese will switch to a sea thrust at Port Moresby, less than 300 miles from the Australian mainland, was raised by the Sydney Sun. It said that with heavy rains halting the Japanese drive overland from the north New Guinea coast and with the American and Australian forces having won at least temporary air superiority, a re- sort to naval action was "suggested by recent movements of enemy ships, which are constantly being attacked at Lae and Salamaua by the allied air forces." Melodrama Concludes hrma Season Toanim ht Thirty-Two Engineers Join Tau Beta Pi Ranks Highest Campus Engineering Society Holds Formal' Initiation In Union; 24 Undergraduates Honored Recognition for outstanding schol- ones to determine the terms of that arship, character and service went peace when the fight is over, Prof. to 24 undergraduate engineers, three G. G. Brown of the chemical en- graduates, two engineering industri- gineering department was the speak- al men and three engineers from er of the evening. other colleges yesterday when Tau "There are two types of men," he Beta Pi Association, highest of the pointed out. "When trouble breaks campus engineering honor societies, out some men run toward the trouble held its formal initiation in the and others run away from it. When Union. things are normal once more it Junior engineers elected to mem- should be those men who haverun bership were Roy K. Bradley, Her- toward the trouble who take the job man S. Chiu, J. Ross Clark, Herman of insuring that the trouble does Doehner, James M. Edmunds, RobertI not reoccur." W. Ehrlich, William W. Hutcherson, Reasons For 'Doing' Benjamin M. Lent-Koop, Kenneth Noting that the Axis nations have R. Moehl, Duane A. Pagel, Thaine built up teir government around W. Reynolds, Tom S. Rice, Edward the technical groups, Professor A. Rutan and Philip E. Sharpe. Brown declared that the leaders of Other junior members are Fred the nation today "must find reasons B. Sleator, Robert J. Sundquist, F. for doing things rather than for Carter Taylor, Charles M. Thatcher, not doing things if we are to avoid Donald C. West, Paul D. Wingate stagnation." and Marvin L. Zeskind. Toastmaster for the evening was Engineers Honored Prof. A. D. Moore of the elec- Honored senior engineers were trical engineering department. Other Walter F. Prosek, Raymond I. Schne- speakers on the program were Tau yer, and Gordon J. Van Wylen, while Beta Pi President Bob Wallace, '42E, graduate men elected were S. Stan- who welcomed the initiates, and Phil ford Manson, Cedomir M. Sliepce- Sharpe, '43E, who gave the response, vich and Robert C. Werner. __ Max W. Benjamin of the DetroitR Edison. Company and Leonard Bod- ROTC Names were also given recognition by the Ne society for their outstanding servicesaNewnitosohernc and .contribtuions to the advance- ment of engineering.o R I Initiated for other Tau Beta Pi For g chapters were Lloyd E. Brownell, for New York Theta Chapter at Clark-I son College; Clarence I. Lewis, for Kennedy Is To Be Colonel; Texas Gamma Chapter at Rice In- Company And Battalion stitute, and Paul A. Meyer for the r o na Kansas Alpha Chapter at Kansas Proniotions Also Made University. Emphasizing that the young men In General Order 3 from ROTC who are now fighting for peace Headquarters, Verne C. Kennedy, Jr., should make sure that they are the '42E, was promoted to cadet colonel and regimental commander, highest Japanese Troops Land At Akyab, Less Than 100 Miles From India; 0 22,000 Germans Slain In Russia _ Moscow Reports Many Enemy Troops Killed In Ferocious Fighting Battles Are Waged STwo aim A reas (By The AssocateO Press) MOSCOW, Friday, April 3-The Russians announced officially today that more than 22,000 Germans had been killed in the Leningrad and Kalinin sectors in a violent Red pre- lude to Adolf Hitler's threatening spring attempt to smash the Soviet Union.- Twelve thousand Nazis were slain in the Leningrad area between March 23 and March 31, a special communi- que said. A regular communique is- sued at noon yesterday said that 3,000 Germans had been killed in the' last two days, indicating the grow- ing ferocity of the battles around the approaches to that important Baltic city. 10,000 Nazi Dead On the Kalinin, or northwestern front between Lake Ilmen and Rzhev, the Russians said, 10,000 more Nazi dead were counted between March 21 Largest Part Of Philippine Area Remains Under American Flag Only Five Of 7,000 Reefs And Islands Are Occupied; Filipinos,_Bewildered By Retreats, Remain Loyal UNITED STATES ARMY HEAD- QUARTERS in Australia, April 2.- (/)-By far the greatest part of the Philippines, both in territory and in population, still are free of the Japa- nese invader and still are under the American flag. The people are unwavering in their loyalty to the United States, although considerably puzzled over the Allies' continued withdrawals and their fail- ure to take the initiative against Japan. No Japs En route to Australia, where I ar- rived three days ago, I traveled hun- dreds of miles over Philippine waters and by car over the islands without seeing a single Japanese plane, war- ship or soldier. It is well to recall that there are Student Senate Sells Defense and April 1. It is in this area, at Staraya Russa, that the Russians have been steadily cutting down the encircled 16th Nazi army despite vast k i Men To Get Instructions In First Aid, As a direct result of the Student' Defense survey conducted on campus, several months ago, University men will get their chance to pitch into the war effort by enrolling in a first aid course-for men only-to be sponsored by the Michigan Union un- der the supervision of the Red Cross Tuesday. Any man interested in taking the course is asked to contact Ed Holm- berg, '43, of the Union Executive Council. A certificate will be given upon successful completion. When the questionnaires were passed out among the students re- cently in order to determine what courses they wanted the University to offer in line with defense, many men indicated their preference for a program of first aid. Thus, the new course proposed by the Union seeks to follow out the suggested trend. Two first aid courses for men will be offered, at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday evenings in Room 316 of the Union for two hours each. The courses will last a full six weeks and will be conducted by a professional doctor. post attainable in the University unit. Named as cadet lieutenant colonels in the same general order were Lind- ley M. Dean, regimental executive; officer; George D. Gotschall, com- manding officer, first battalion, and; Alfred M. Owens, commanding offi- cer, second battalion. Cadet captains, company com- manders, are Harold S. Klein, Co. A,' Robert J. Ogden, Co. B, James H. Garvin, Co. C, Thaddeus W. Kuchar- ski, Co. E, Joseph W. Pezdirtz, Co. F, Rudolaph A. Axelson, Co. G, Doug- las G. Knoght, Co. I, Robert L. Col- lins, Co. K, Neal G. Sperhake, Co. L, and Robert G. W. Brown, Band. Ivan R. Schafer and Robert A. Carlson were assigned as adjutants of the first and second battalions,! respectively. These appointments were made up- on the basis of recommendations of their instructors, the result .of four years work in military science, The cadet officers exercise direct command of the regiment of cadets, organized on the lines of an infantry rifle 1egiment less heavy weapons companies, and are responsible for the maior part of drill instruction. Ap)lpoin tmnents of cadet non-coi- missioned officers, made during the last few weeks by verbal order of the professor of military science and tac- tics, were made official in this same general order. Previous appointments not men- tioned in the order are unchanged. numberstof German reserves thrown -" Stam psToday agains the Rdcordon. After days of official silence, the Russians issued a series of communi- First In Projected Weekly ques listing an enormous haul of Drives To Be Conducted German booty, captured or destroyed. Among the items reported de- In Center Of Diagonal stroyed on both fronts were 58 Nazi airplanes, 642 ammunition and sup- The :first in a proposed weekly ply trucks, 108 trench mortars, 39 series of Defense Stamp Days will tanks, 100 guns and machine-guns, be inaugurated today with the sale six ammunition dumps, one food of war savings stamps from 8:45 a.m. warehouse, and a great number of to 4:15 p.m. in the center of the blockhouses and reinforced Nazi dug- Diagonal. outs. Sponsored by the Student Senate Material Listed and approved by the Student War The Russians listed this haul in Board, Defense Stamp Day is aimed captured material: seventeen tanks at stepping up campus purchases of and armored cars; 515 machine guns; war savings stamps by making them 86 trench mortars; 62 guns: 1,347,300 a "habit." rounds of ammunition; 9,000 shells The stamps will be sold today in and 158 cases of shells: 165 trucks; ten and twenty-five cent denomina- 17 motorcycles; 5,300 hand grenades tions, in addition to albums for those and 54 cases of grenades; 11,300 who have not as yet joined the drive. mines and 220 cases of mines; 15 Today's drive is the outgrowth of radio transmitters; 130 horses; 3,000 a Student Senate plan to reawaken flares; 300 pairs of skiis; eight oil campus interest in the defense sav- tanks, and other equipment. ings program. Sales have fallen off As usual, the Russians refrained harply since the first major drive from identifying the specific locali. several months ago. Permanence of ties where their armies were fighting, this service will depend on student but insisted they retained the initia- response today. tive begun last December when the "This is one of the best opportuni- Germans were rolled back from the tics offered men and women students gates of Moscow. alike to do something concrete for the war effort," senate president Bob Krause, '43BAd, declared yesterday. Standard1 d U iead(L Stamps purchased today should be tit gpaced in an album and turned in -afterthe proper amount has been £11 I)1L) gg accumulated for an $18.75 Series E bond. They may also be obtained at . .the post office and from University WASHINGTON April 2.----/[P--Of- cashiers. 7,000 islands and reefs in the Archi- pelago, and that so far the enemy has landed on only five. The Japanese control the princi- pal cities and highways in central and northern Luzon and a few ports in southeastern Luzon. However, the main prize, Manila Bay, still is be- yond their reach. Recently the Japanese occupied five points on northern Mindoro. Theydmaintain a small force on the island of Masbate; occupy Davao and Zamboanga, at the eastern and west- ern extremities of Mindanao, and also hold the island of Jolo. The Japanese do not control the inner Philippine Islands or the in- land waters. Occasionally an enemy warship raids shipping and ports in the so-called "inland sea." But the Japanese apparently are afraid. to keep a destroyer or a light cruiser on patrol there. Torpedo Boats Needed From what I have seen of the American torpedo boats in action, I believe a few squadrons of those hard-hitting, speedy vessels in which Gen. Douglas MacArthur began his trip to Australia could keep the is- land's inner shipping lanes entirely clear of the enemy. There are dozens of airfields and scores of ports in the inner Philip- pines from which American planes and ships could operate. There are American and Filipino fighting forces on almost every island. The war goes on not only on Ba:. taan but on Mindanao, where the Moros, under U.S. officers, frequently attack the Japanese. Group Revises Officer List Bomber-Scholarship Body Includes Congress Head Replacing the chairman of the now-defunct Committee of 1942, the president of Congress will be a perm- anent member of the Student Bomb- er Scholarship Committee, it was an- nounced yesterday. The nine-member committee, rep- resenting heads of major campus or- ganizations, will also take over the functions of collection and publicity previously allocated to the Commit- tee of 1942. This bomber scholarship commit- tee will become effective May 1, when it replaces the present body headed by Art Rude, '42. Rude also announced that plans, have been made to facilitate contri- butions from individual students. He declared yesterday that "the plan will not attain ultimate success un- til every student recognizes the neces- sity of using the plan as a medium of sacrifice to the war effort." Compromise On Question Of Indian Independence Indicated AsPossibility Proposal Rejected By Congress Party (By The Associated Press) LONDON, April 2. - Japanese troops protected by cruisers and de- stroyers have landed at Akyab, the chief,,western Burma port within 100 miles of the Indian frontier, and thus have raised a menace to the whole of the present right Allied Burmese Line, a Chinese Army spokesman announced today in Chungking. British and Chinese communiques indicated meantime that action afield in Central Burma had fallen into a lull on both the right and left Allied anchors, the one about Prome on the Irrawaddy River and the other above Toungoo in the Basin of the Sittang. Mountains Intervene Between Akyab and tie Irrawaddy Basin a mountain range intervenes, but a trail leads from the city across the mountains to Minbu, 100 miles north of Prome and only 20 miles below the center of the Burma oil fields at Yenangyaung. A heavy enemy flanking movement over that trail, it was pointed out, might soon make indefensible the present British positions about Prome, aside from putting the oil fields in imminent danger. The enemy naval forces reported to have effected the Akyab landings were presumed to have operated eith- er from fallen Rangoon or from the recently seized Andaman Islands in the Bay of Bengal. The Chinese spokesman said the enemy units comprised two heavy cruisers, three light cruisers, five de- stroyers, four transports and two supply ships. No Substantial Change From the Prome front, the Brit- ish Command reported no substan- tial change since yesterday and said there had been none other than patrol action. Already outnumbered, the British forces-English and Scottish troops and some Indians-were faced with a rising threat by traitorous Burm- ese. Four thousand such mercen- aries were officially reported now to be in action in aid of the Japanese on the Prome front alone, 1,000 of them standing on the west bank of Irrawaddy in a threat to the British right flank. On the Chinese-held front above Toungoo, said a Chinese communi- que from New Delhi, quiet had fallen after the heavy and bloody fighting that preceded the establishment of the present Chinese positions around Nangyun, 12 miles above Toungoo. Compromise Is Possible For Great Britain, India (By The Associated Press) NEW DELHI, India, April 2.-With Japanese invaders reported barely 100 miles from the Bengal border, the pressing problem of India's fight- ing participation in the war ap- peared tonight to have been saved from a cold stalemate by indications of willingness to compromise on de- tails of the independence issue. The executive committee of the powerful All-India Congress Party rejected; point by point, Britain's of- fer of post-war dominion status in return for full war participation un- der British direction, but it was re- ported to have advanced its own counter proposals which might keep the discussions going. Sir Sttfford Cripps, special envoy who brought Britain's offer to India, changed his mind about leaving for home next Monday. He declared, in- stead, that "I think I can possibly do something useful next week." He had before him already the pre- vious rejections of Britain's proposals by the Sikhs, warriors of the Punjab, and by the extremist Mahasabha group of Hindus. Yet to be heard from formally, however, was the Moslem League, second largest of India's complex pol- itical and religious groups, whose working committee meets tomorrow at Allahabad. 3 Wainwright 'Mops Up': U.S. -Filipino Troops Stop Jap Attempt To Crack Bataan Line WASHINGTON, April2. /V'A savage onslaught by Japanese as- sault troops succeeded today in pne- trating the defense line on Bataan Peninsula before the invaders were halted by a fierce American -Filipino counter attack. The War Department reported re- assuringly, however, that. the line was restored, and a "considerable num- ber" of enemy units trapped. These were being mopped up late in the day, LieutL-Gen. Jonathan M. Win- wright advised .. Meantime, the anti-aircraft gun - ners of Corregidor fortress off the southern end of Bataan destroyed three Japanese heavy bombers and a fourth bomber blew up in mid-air. The attack which penetrated the defenders' main line was the second launched in 24 hours, a late day com- munique said. The first, made near the center, was readily masred by heavy artillery fire and counter-at- tacks which regained outposts that bef n restor'el and the enenmy advaiIce ha: d, the communique reported, adding that while Japanese losses were heavy, the defenders' casualties were "surprisingly small. The onslaugh ts were ihe secod ici and thurd to be made ri rapd suc (essol) by ULIeiit.-Ge'ii. 'T)iioyuki Yrnashitar's reinforced invasion for- r('cs111( an d ca tedstrongly to observ e 11' 0 thtthe r.1Japaneu( .: wre rintent onl efiding t(Ie he lippim, ,sta1lemalte ol more than three mouths. The four bombers raised the def- inite Japanese losses over the Manila Bay fortifications to 32. The air raids were accompanied by further artillery duels with Japanese batter- ies oul the south shore of the bay. Enemy air raids on beach def enses of Ba ta an put General Wainwrig lit's forces on iltme alert for an attepited Japanese flanking attack by sea. The War Department reported that ficials of Standard Oil Company (New Jersey) acknowledged today that the company sought in 1930-40 to prevent individual companies from undertaking development of Stan- dard's synthetic rubber for use in tires, but said this policy was adopted in the belief that large scale develop- ment could be achieved only by coop- erative action of the major rubber companies This testimony was give to the Senate Defe; use Investigating Com- mittee by W. S. Faris]i, president, and F. A. Howard, vice-president, of the Denying that the obrjetive of the company's policy was to maintain a monopoly control over synthetic rubber llrocesses acquired from I. G. anpany' Geman asso- (late, the othejas ssertd (hat they had taken the id in attempting to develop synthhet it(rubber in the United States and had followed a policy recommended by the Army and Navy Munitions Board. IIIA*I(Od P ie Ire r AppearSumLay S-t:1 P-L-N-S-E! That's "The Lady Vanishmes," Al fred Hitchcock's "super spy drama," The Graduate Council will meet at 5 p.m. today in the East Lee- ture Room of the Rackham Building. Michigan's Supreme Penalty: Murderer Of Three is Given Life Imprisonument Sentence PONTIAC, April 2.-G(y)For two years Dominick Piccone fretted in prison and planned his vengeance against his 71-year old benefactor. Tonight he is back in prison, sen- tenced to spend the rest of his life at hard labor and solitary confine- nent because he carried out his ven- geance. Picoone had promised to return and kill Cassius Barber when he got out of prison, and he did it-one of three killings carried out in a 24-hour period Tuesday and Wednesday, dur- ing a 900 mile tour of the State, Taken into Circuit Court before Judge H. Russel Holland, he pleaded guilty. "Since nothing I could ,say would have any efect on you, I have no old man over spending money; how he finally beat the old man and fled; how he stole a pistol from Barber and later used it to force a young school teacher to drive him from De- troit to near Barber's farm where he intended to kill the farmer; how she had fallen and he was convicted of felonious assault because of her in- jury, and how Barber at his trial had identified the stolen gun. All that was two years ago, Then, March 17 of this year he was released from prison at the expira- tion of maximum sentence and with $18 in his pocket, he bought a gun. Tuesday night he went out to the Barber farm in the rain and sleet. He stopped first at the home of Ro- maine C. Potter. 75. Barber's eousin,