Weather Intermittent Rain. Ait'41 4 alt 3 Editorial Allies Must Win India's Support,.. m mEnbDA - 74 VOL. LM No. 138 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, APRIL 7, 1942 Z-323 PRICE FIVE CENTS Soviet Fliers. Gunners Take Terrific Nazi Aircraft Toll Russians Bag 415 Planes Over Eight Day Period While Losing Only 84; Weekend Count Is 221 RAF Armada Hits Germany, France KUIBYSHEV, Russia, April 6.-01') -Russian airmen and ground bat- teries, scoring one of the biggest bags of the war, destroyed 415 German planes in blazing aerial war during the eight-day period up to and in- cluding yesterday, a Soviet communi- que announced tonight. This tremendous toll was rolled up, a Moscow communique said, at a cost of only 84 Soviet planes. On Sat- urday and Sunday alone, it added, 221 Nazi craft were destroyed. Erupting in full fury over the weekend, the biggest day's total was reported yesterday, when 119 Nazi craft were listed as destroyed in the air and on the ground after Satur- day's count reached 102. The communique said briefly that ' No essential changes took place at the front." Worse-than-usual weather of a sodden Russian spring, along with the Red Army's unceasing pressure on the key German forward bases, was regarded tonight as seriously dam- pening German hopes fcsr an early spring drive to the east. An unprecedented Easter snow on some parts of the bat ;lefront empha- sized the lateness of she season this year and underlined the prospect of weeks of slow thawin'g that will turn roads into rivers of mud and fields into quagmires. RAF Spreads Destruction Over France, Germany LONDON, April 6.-(R -One of the ightiet British air fleets ever to cross the English Channel-a force of more than 300 bombers-cast a thousand tons of explosive and countless fire bombs upon German war plants in an overnight raid ex- tending from the French coast in- land to the Parisian industrial sub- urbs and on east to the heart of the Rhineland. In this great attack, a part of a master plan to choke the flow of German arms eastward to the Rus- sian front, only five British craft were lost, the Air Ministry announced today in briefly recapitulating one of the most successful operations of re- cent months. Speech Classes Select Finalists Winners In Preliminaries To Meet Tomorrow Six students were chosen in a pre- liminary speech contest yesterday to represent the Speech 31 classes in a final meet at 4 p.m. Wednesday in the Natural Science Building audi- torium. The winners of this preliminary contest and their speeches were Archie Bonk, '44, "The English Lan- guage"; Roy D. Boucher,.'45, "A Look at American Labor Unions"; Alan E. Brandt, '44, "Academic Snobbery"; Maurine Peterson, Grad., "Justice for All"; Clare Tucker, '44, "For Whose Freedom"; and Marjorie Young, '44, "To This There Is No End." The judges for this contest were chosen from the members of the De- partment of Speech. They were Ed- ward J. Lantz, Prof. Richard Hol- lister, Dr. Glenn E. Mills, Prof. Henry M. Moser, Hugh Norton, Dr. Arthur Secord and Neil Smith. Four students will participate in the University finals of the Northern Oratorical League contest at 4 p.m. today in Room 4203 Angell Hall. There will be one winner and one alternate chosen from this meet. The participants will be Albert Cohen, '44, Paul Lim-Yuen, '43, Richard Stuart, '44, and Bennet Yanowitz, '44. Violinist To give recital In Mendelssohn Theatre In partial fulfillment of the re- quirements for the degree of Bache- Allies Gain In Pacific In War 's Four Months head In Far East As Japs iStruggle Of Attrition United Nations Forging A Lose Men, Materiel In By EDWARD E. BOMAR WASHINGTON, April 6.-(A)-The Pacific war turns the four-month mark tomorrow with the United Na- tions apparently forgirg ahead in a savage struggle of attrition to com- pensate partly for previous losses of territory to the Japanese. A mounting score of Japanese ships and planes destroyed or crippled tops developments buoying hopes of a turning tide. Others include: Arrival in Australia of Gen. Doug- las MacArthur and "considerable numbers" of American ground and air forces, to halt the enemy's south- ward drive and make ready for a future offensive. British success in smashing Japan's "sudden death" air onslaught on the Colombo, Ceylon, base in the Indian Ocean. At least 57 of possibly 75 at- tacking planes were downed or dam- aged in this Easter attack. Raids of American submarines in the Java Sea and the Indian Ocean which sank or damaged two enemy light cruisers and five other vessels. Evidence that American fliers may have won aerial mastery over the northern approaches to Australia, where this last weekend they de- stroyed a score or more of enemy planes at a cost of three of their own. Four months after Pearl Harbor, however, the Japanese are hammer- ing with renewed fury at the be- sieged defenders of the Philippiies, and continue to push forward in Burma on the eastern border of In- dia. Military movements arouse suspi- Guggenheim Award Given W H. Auden Renowned Poet Granted Foundation Fellowship For EnglishLetters To University Lecturer Wystan Hugh Auden, perched on the brink of induction into the Nation's Armed Forces, the Guggenheim Memorial Foundation yesterday sent news of a fellowship award for work to be done in English letters.9 No announce- ment was made regarding the sum of the award, al- though in the past the stipend has usually been $2,- 500 for one year. The work to which the Guggenheim Committee referred in their choice probably in- cluded "The Double Man," generally considered as among the best volumes of poetry published last year; "The Ascent of F6" and "The Dog Beneath the Skin," both done in conjunction with Christopher Isherwood; and the "Letters from Iceland," done in conjunction with Louis MacNeice. English by 1rth and a graduate of1 Oxford University, Auden came to the United States in January, 1939, to continue with his work. He )ec- tured in the Rackham Auditorium in January, 1940, and has acted as a poetry judge in past Hopwood con- tests. Funds forthcoming from the Foun- dation, Auden said, will be used dur- Turn to Page 2, Col. 7 'cion too that they may soon clash with Russia in Siberia, synchronizing their attack with a Nazi offensive in the West. In the Philippines, the renewed Japanese onslaught on the Bataan Peninsula and the nearby Manila Bay fortifications has confronted the defenders with the severest test since General MacArthur fought the foe to a standstill in February. The fourth month of the war brought a succession of bad news for the United Nations which was only partly offset by successes. Java, citadel of the Netherlands Indies, fell at the start of the month, major resistance apparently ceasing March 8. In the battle of the Java Sea Feb. Turn to Page 2, Col. 6 Allies Smash ' Japs' Harbor 'In New Britaina Three Japanese Merchant. Vessels Sunk By Navy;. Admiral Lost At Sea U.S. ARMY HEADQUARTERS int Australia, April 6.-(?)--Raids de- scribed as "among the heaviest yet ' made by the Allies" were reported 1 carried out today by flying Aussies1 and Americans striking at Rabaul1 and Gasmata in New Britain where Japan was said to be reinforcing her badly wrecked and overmatched air, forces. The Sydney Herald, which report-c ed the raids, said direct hits were scored on large Japanese ships in1 Rabaul Harbor on the northeast New Britain coast, where the Japanese secured their first foothold on Aus- tralia's outer island rim. Both at Rabaul and at Gasmata, cn the south coastt of New Britain aircraft were said to have been dam-i aged on the airdromes.1 Earlier it had been reported that Japan was strengthening her air forces in that area to bolster her fal- tering Australian offensive, and it was assumed that the Allies deter- mined to destroy the new planes be-' fore they could get in action. t Admiral Wilcox Lost Overboard1 WASHINGTON, April 6. -UP)- Rear Admiral J. W. Wilcox, Jr., hasC been lost overboard "at sea in heavy weather during normal cruising," the Navy announced today. No additional details were disclosedv by the Department. Admiral Wilcox had been on duty at sea since November, 1941.J The Navy also disclosed that Amer- ican submarines battering steadily at Japan's long supply lines in the Western Pacific have sunk three more enemy merchant ships, two of them heavily laden tankers. Destruction of these vessels raised to a total of 51 the Japanese shipsv blasted by far-roving U.S. undersea raiders--a total made up of 30 sink- ings, 10 probable sinkings and thet damaging of 11 other ships. Thea over-all score of Japanese vessels sunk and damaged by both Army andc Navy forces mounted to 209 in thes four months of war ending today.r Few Ballots Cast As City Has Election Moore, Kurtz, Doll, Pew, Allmendinger Chosen In Alderman Contests Va der Velde, Alien Fail To Win Posts By BOB MANTHO Voting machines-back in Ann Ar- bor after 16 years of paper ballot- ing-sent officials home before 9 p.m. yesterday in a city election which was conspicuous for the light vote cast and which saw Prof. Arthur D. Moore (R), of the engineering department, gain a 130 to 66 victory over Prof. John L. Brumm (D), of the journal- ism department, for the post of sixth ward alderman. Total number of votes registered on the machines fell below the 1,500 mark. The race for first ward alderman was a close affair all the way, with Prof. Lewis G. Vander Velde (D), of the history department, finally suc- cumbing to his Republican rival, Her- man D. Allmendinger 63 votes to 82. Edwards Takes Seventh Prof. Shirley W. Allen (D, of the forestry school, was only able to garner 136 votes for the post of seventh ward alderman, while John W. Edwards (R) was rolling up 216 to win. In the other aldermanic races, Walter L. Kurtz (D) defeated Mark M. Mayne (R), 179 votes to 109 in the second ward. Cecil O. Creal (R) piled up a 124-39 advantage over Ralph Atwell (D), third ward. 1Mtaur- ice F. Doll (D) received 192 votes against the 98 for Lester H. Pollock (R) in the fourth ward-only one to go completely Democratic. Thomas C. Pew's 105 Republican votes were enough to defeat William X. Pegan's 81 in the fifth ward contest. Fitch D. Forsythe (R) received 88 votes and was returned first ward supervisor over Leon H. Pierce (D), who received only 56. In the second ward, Harold J. Finkbeiner (R) de- feate-. Alfre Boworth D, 168 votes to 119 for supervisor. New su- pervisor for the third ward is Fred J. Williams (R) whose 108 votesj carried him to victory over the 60 Duane S. Wiltsee (Dreceived. O'Brien Defeats Rhoades Lewis C. Rhoades (R) went down to defeat before Francis L. O'Brien (D) in the race for fourth ward su- pervisor. The vote was 192 to 101. Supervisor for the fifth ward is John H. Pielemeier (R, who defeated his Democratic opponent Elona A. Eck- stein, 103 to 81. Warren E. Forsythe (R), director of the Health Service, ran alone for sixth ward supervisor as incumbent and Mrs. Jesse E. Coller (R) was also uncontested for the post of seventh ward supervisor. Board To Poll Senior Plans On Graduation The commencement plans of a war-disrupted Class of '42 will be sur- veyed Thursday when the Student War Board polls senior opinion on the questions of attendance, location, and guests for the annual ceremonies. Polling boxes will be set up at all central points on campus and every senior will be given a chance to par- ticipate. The main question up for refer- endum is the prospective shifting of the ceremonies' location from Ferry Field to Yost Field House. In the past, Ferry Field has been used with the Field House held ready in the event of unseasonable weather. Seniors will be asked if they plan to be present at the May 30 com- mencement and also the number of guest tickets each individual plans to uise. Since holding commencement in- doors would be a wartime economy measureuthe Student WarBoard voted last Friday to hold the poll., Japanese Bombers Raid Towns Along India Coast; Enemy Gains On Bataan Waves Of Assault Troops Gain Ground In Third Day Of Fierce Fighting Pacific Command Aided By Quezon WASHINGTON, April 6. - (P) - The Japanese hurled wave upon wave of assault troops at Lieut.-Gen. Jon- athan Wainwright's American-Fili- pino forces today, and gained ground in the third day of fierce fighting on the Bataan Peninsula. A late day communique from the War Department said the attacks were supported by heavy artillery fire and dive bombers, and, for the second time in three days, reported that "the enemy made some gains," al- though paying heavily in casualties. Anti-aircraft gunners shot down one of the dive bombers, the second they have bagged in two days. Japs Repulsed Twice On the east coast of the peninsula, where the Japanese have been re- pulsed twice in the last 72 hours in attempts to land troops for a flank attack, enemy artillery harassed the defenders, firing from barges in Man- ila Bay. Most of the shells fell short of their targets, the communique said. The action reported today was the seventh massed drive against the Bataan defenses in less than two weeks. Since Saturday the hammer- ing at the right center of Wain- wright's line has been almost contin- uous. There was no mention in depart- tent of casulaites among the defend- ment communiques today of the ex-. ing forces in the savage fighting of the last three days, but it was be- lieved likely that they have been much lighter than the Japanese losses. Landing Frustrated A morning communique, covering the fighting of yesterday, had report- ed the Japanese unable to gain and related the frustration of the second attempt to land troops from barges on the peninsula shore. Light artillery fire from the beach defenses broke up the landing at- tempt, a Department communique said, and the Japanese, despite the tremendous power of the attack on the Bataan line, were unable in sev- eral hours of savage fighting to ex- tend the slight gains they had made in a similar attack the day before.. Philippine President Aids Allies In Australia MELBOURNE, April 6.-(P)-Man- uel Quezon, the small dynamic leader of the Philippine people, is working hard with military authorities some- where in Australia on preparations for eventual reconquest of his island commonwealth. , Details of Quezon's trip to Aus- tralia still cannot be published be- yond saying that he had the oppor- tunity of conferring personally with many of his people and assuring him- self of their firm loyalty to the Com- monwealth and United States gov- ernments. Information reaching the presi- dential party from the occupied por- tions of the Philippines reports that the Japanese are proving their own worst enemy by brutal treatment of the people. Faces Sedition Charge Silver Shirt leader, advocate of totalitarian, anti-Semitic William Dudley Pelley is in custody today, by order of Attorney General Bid- dIe under the Espionage Act of 1917. Revived by new application, the old law, reassuming importance, will be explained by Prof. John P. Dawson in a War Board lecture in Rackham Amphitheatre at 8 p.m. today. His topic will be "War and Civil Liberties." New First Aid Class For Men To Start Today Union To Present Movies On American Seapower In Defense Show Today In answer to the desires of a large number of men as indicated in the recent defense survey, first aid class- es-for men only-will begin at 7:30 p.m. today in Room 316 of the Union. The six-week course is under the sponsorship of the Union and will be supervised by the Red Cross. The instructor is to be a professional doc- tor and a Red Cross certificate will be presented to every student who successfully completes the course. Two courses are to be offered, one meeting Tuesdays and the other Thursdays. Each class will be two hours long. Any man interested in enrolling in either course is asked to contact Ed Holmberg, '43, of the Union Execu- tive Council. The third in a series of defense movies will be shown at 7:30 p.m. today in Room 319 of the Union. Two films, furnished by the Detroit Naval Station, are scheduled to be shown. They are entitled "Submar- ines at Sea" and "American Sea- power." The series, under the auspices of the Michigan Alumni Association and the Student Offices of the Union, will continue every Tuesday and Thursday. Scheduled for Thursday is a movie on the Army Air Corps, which was taken at Wright Field in Dayton, Ohio. Naval Force Is Disclosed Ranging Bay Of Bengal As War Reaches India U.S. Representative Enters India Parley (By The Associated Press) NEW DELHI, India, April 6. - Bombs fell among the people of India proper today when Japanese planes, attacking the Indian coast for the first time, raided two ports in Madras Presidency, and worse to befall was hinted in the disclosure that a Jap- anese naval force is ranging the Bay of Bengal. The naval force, which includes at least one aircraft carrier, already has attacked commerce both with its sur- face ships and its planes, said a com- munique. First Manifestations Of War These first direct. manifestations of war came to India as its people still were torn with hesitation on their political future and a few hours after Premier Gen. Hideki Tojo.in a broadcast from Tokyo had warned of "great calamities" to her 390,000,- 000 people. These would be unavoid- able, he said, "in the course of our subjugation of Britsh forces," a reference which seemed plainly to indicate his determination to direct a Japanese invasion. The raiding force which attacked Vizagapatam, a city of more than 40,- 000 and site of a British naval base, and Cocanada, nearby provincial capital of 40,000, was officially de- scribed as small. Vizagapatam and Colombo, capital of Ceylon and sixth largest port in the British Empire which the Jap- anese attacked on Sunday, are two of, the points from which the Japan- ese might expect war . mPlies AP. move to Burma from China. Only Slight Damage Slight damage to the Vizagapatam Harbor area, which was attacked twice, was reported and only a few casualties occurred at Cocanada- possibly because the raiding force had been dealt with so severely when it attempted the surprise blow at Colombo only to be ambushed by a waiting RAF which asserted 27 of the 75 raiding planes were shot down and 30 more damaged. Vizagapatam and Cocanada, al- most half way up the Eastern Indian coast between Madras and Calcutta, are about 800 miles from the Anda- man Islands where Japan secured her first foothold in the Bay of Bengal. The towns are just north of Masu- lipatam where the British made their first settlements in India, and north of the region where Robert Clive,be- gan the conquest of India nearly two centuries ago. Cocanada has a large export trade. Two Aircraft Carriers (A hint came from London naval quarters that the Japanese *naval force included two aircraft carriers and that British warships already' might be searching for the Japanese task force. (London observers pointed out that Rome broadcasts 10 days ago report- ed a strong British squadron, in- cluding two battleships, two carriers and several cruisers and smaller war- ships had rounded the Cape of Good Hope en route to the.Indian Ocean.) American Emissary Joins Indian Parleys NEW DELHI, India, April 6.-(A')- Louis' Johnson, a special emissary from the United States, sought in a round of conferences today to assist in solution of the complex Indian independence question, rendered even more urgent by the first Jap- anese air attacks on the mainland. Friendly assurances of the Ameri- can government's interest in India's freedom and future were believed to have been given by Johnson in talks yesterday and today with Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru and Maulana Abul Kalan Azad, leaders of the All- India Congress Party, the country's major political group of Hindus. Johnson then conferred with Sir Stafford Cripps, British dabinet min- itser who brought to India an offer of post-war dominion status. While the American position was rloc-rnharln in nnva enc~a 4nvrnldna It's Up To John Q. Citizen: Home Defense Burden Rests On People, Brewer Asserts Coeds : Late Hours For Bomber Fund: Tickets For Barnet's Swing Concert To Go On Sale Today By GEORGE SALLADE Success of civilian defense in the last analysis depends on John Q. Citizen, Major W. A. Brewer warned a Hill Auditorium audience yesterday in the first lecture of a series on home defense sponsored by the University War Board and the County Defense Council. Deputy Chief of the Training sec- tion, civilian protection division, of the Office of Civilian Defense, Major Brewer declared that it is up to the American citizen to see that the "enemy is sent back with his mission unaccomplished." While admitting that the defense activity of the pri- vate citizen is limited. Major Brewer pointed out that the individual can ous in every section of the country but particularly so in areas where war industries are concentrated. "This state," he said, "is fortunate in having the University to take the lead and contribute as it has in so many directions to a successful pro- gram of civilian defense." Chief responsibility for civilian de- fense rests with the local communi- ties according to Major Brewer. The federal government is willing, how- ever, to offer plans and advice and to serve in a supervisory capacity. It is in this respect that the American system differs from the British set- up. In Britain all measures are di- rectly under the Ministry of Home of Security and are secondarily the Treasury Faces Fact- Defense Becomes War WASHINGTON, April 6.-(AP)-De- fense Bonds and Stamps today be- came officially "War Savings Bonds and Stamps." Persistent suggestions that the change be made have been received by the Treasury ever since Pearl Har- t 7 i 7 i By DAN BEHRMAN Sale of tickets for Charlie Barnet's swing concert here April 22-two and a half hours with "the King pf the Sax"-will begin today, according to concert chairman Buck Dawson, '43. Alpha Phi Omega representatives will canvass campus dormitories to- night and explain the concert and its purpose of contributing to the Bomber-Scholarship Fund. Tickets will be sold in dorms Thursday. The fraternities will be covered to- morrow night, according to Dawson, and Thursday will see the nnoningI plan for aiding student war veterans after the Armistice. Barnet's rise to royalty in the realm of jazz has been almost phe- nomenal. Virtually unknown a few years ago, he crashed the nation's juke boxes with such favorites at "Pompton Turnpike," "Cherokee," and "Between 18th and 19th on Chestnut Street." (In addition to placing him among America's top musicians, "Cherokee" also made Barnet an honorary Indian chief.)