a mM ® Weather War",Er, w Ic qan 4a11 Ediforial 'Old Guard' Republicans Still Isolationistse VOL. Lr. No. 150 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN TUESDAY, APRIL 21, 1942 Z-323 PRICE FIVE CENTS Allies Win New Fight WithJaps Chinese, British Divisions Score Gains In Burma In Bold Counterattack Jap Troops Pound Corregidor Island LONDON, April 20.--(P)-Chinese infantry and British tanks teamed up in a bold counterattack to score their first offensive success in Burma by driving the Japanese from Yenang- yaung in the center of the ruined oil fields by a headlong assault, it was announced today. British tanks smashed through the jungle ahead of veteran Chinese in- fantry to erase the most dangerous Japanese penetration in Burma, and theRAF scoured the Arakan coast of West Burma looking for signs that the Japanese were attempting to em- ploy the tactics of Malaya-coastal infiltration toward Akyab, small but only North Burma port behind the British lines. Sweeping 200 miles of the coast,' the planes not only bombed Bassein airport and Allanmyo on the lower Irrawaddy, but also smashed barges and launches at Bassein and in Gwa Bay, 50 miles to the north. They at- tacked two schooners at Andrew Bay and Sandoway, 75 miles north of Gwa Bay. The American volunteer group- The Flying Tigers-also were in ac- tion, successfullyhdefending their Burma base by shooting down two Japanese planes. Reports late tonight from Chung- king indicated that on the Sittang river front, east of the Irrawaddy, the Chinese were retiring slowly north- ward while their rear guards fought vigorous delaying actions in the vi- cinity of Pyinmana, 150 miles south of Mandalay. Corregidor Suffers Casualties, Damage WASHINGTON, April 20. --AP)-- With nine-inch shells from the heav- iest guns they have, the Japanese pounded beleaguered Corregidor to- day in a punishing cross-fire from fresh positions, inflicting "some cas- ualties and some damage," in the words of a laconic communique. The War Department's report at the close of the day made no mention of answering fire from the American and Filipino defenders, althougi a forenoon communique told of telling blows delivered yesterday by gunners of the main fortification and the lesser Manlia Bay forts. 'ine' To Meet Broncos Today U.S. Air Force Reveals New Procurement Plan To meet increasing needs of the Army Air Forces, for air crews to man fighting planes and supporting ground crews, the War Department today announced a plan to recruit men in the colleges and universities of the nation for future requirements of the Army flying services. Two Army representatives, Lieut.- Col. Joseph H. Carr and Lieut. Ron- del L. Cox, will be here Wednesday, April 29, to discuss the new program and show sound movies of aviation cadet training and a recent "March of Time" on Army activity. The plan calls for the procurement of Aviation Cadets through prelim- inary enlistment as privates in the Air Force Enlisted Reserve. The pro- ,Head1Coach .draft .Board' Calls Kolesar Bob Kolesar, regular guard on the Michigan football team, revealed late last night that he had received his draft questionnaire a week-and-a- half ago and would probably be called to training within the next three months. The burly gridder from Cleveland, who has been recognized as one of the greatest linemen in the Big Ten, is the first Wolverine first-stringer to hear from his draft board. That his loss will be keenly felt this fall cannot be doubted, and just who Coach Fritz Crisler will use in his place is highly debatable. Having been accepted to Medical School in March, Kolesar may yet receive an occupational deferment (2-A). He himself says that his draft board will not take that into consideration, and, accordingly, he expects no deferment and will go when the orders are deposited in his mail-box. Coach Crisler could not be reached last night for a statement, and line mentor Clarence (Biggie) Munn claimed he had no knowledge of Kole- sar's draft status. Sixteen Enter Election Race Student Senate Candidates To Run For Nine Posts With the closing of petitioning for ballot po. itions in the Student Sen- ate election Friday, sixteen candi- dates have thrown their hats into the ring, it was announced yesterday. Only one party has entered the scene in this year's poll which will All candidates' statements for The Daily's "Battle Page" must be turned in to Dan Behrman before 5 p.m. tomorrow at the Student Publications Building. Statements should not run longer than 250 words and only statements received before deadline can be printed. choose a completely revamped nine- member senate, final returns indi- cate. This organization, the newly formed University Party, will vie for senatorial posts with the remaining non-affiliated nominees. Reduced from thirty members to nine, the senate has been revised to increase its efficiency and facilitate a stronger representative government on campus. gram will provide opportunities for enlistment on a deferred service basis so that the aviation cadet candidates may continue their education until actually required for Army training. Students enlisted in the Enlisted Reserve, of course, are subject to call to active duty at any time. The plan, however, is to defer them, permit- ting further scholastic training pro- vided they maintain a satisfactory scholastic standard. Students May Continue Studies Students whose courses of study give them the special instruction necessary for meteorology and com- munications will be permitted to con- tinue their schooling to enable them to qualify as officers. Young men enlisted in the Air Force Enlisted Reserve and deferred for scholastic reasons will be identi- fied by an emblem similar to the familiar Air Forces' wing-and-pro- peller insignia. The college recruiting plan was an- nounced by Lieut.-Gen. Henry H. Arnold, Commanding General of the Army Air Forces, in a telegram to centrally located colleges throughout the country, including the University.. These central colleges and universi- ties are to serve as focal points for colleges in their vicinity. Authorized April 4 The Army Air Forces Enlisted Re- serve was authorized on April 4, and for the present is open to college students who have not completed their educational training and who. wish to continue in school. General Arnold has requested that colleges and universities appoint a faculty air forces adviser to provide a definite contact between the repre-, sentatives of the Army and the col- lege personnel. This office, designed to prevent disruption of college activ- ities and bring to the Army's atten- tion the problems that will arise be- cause of local conditions, has not yet been filled for the University.- Honor Students Will Be Feted Convocation To Be Friday; Coucher Will Speak t Outstanding graduate and under- graduate students, recipients of scholarships, fellowships and other special awards, will receive commen-t dation for thier scholastic achieve-1 ment at the 19th annual Honors Con-< vocation to be held Friday at Hill Auditorium. Prof. C. S. Coucher, noted educatorc and historian and graduate of the University in 1909, will deliver the convocation address, "Education and War." Professor Coucher has served as President of West Virginia Uni- versity since 1935 and has been active in educational work throughout the nation. A well known authority on American history, Professor Coucher has taught at several schools includ- ing the University, 1910-1:.t The committee of the 1942 Honorst convocation is headed by ChairmanI Joseph A. Bursley, Dean of Students.1 Other members of the committee are Randolph G. Adams, Director of the Clements Library, Robert C. Angell, chairman of the Department of So- ciology; E. Blythe Stason, Dean oft the Law School, and Shirley Smith, University treasurer.t There will be a meeting of theI entire Gargoyle editorial staff att 5 p.m. today In the Student Pub-I lications Building.S Japs Offer Explanations For Attacks Reports Are%ontradictory Concerning Bombings; WashingtonStill Silent Enemy Says Raiders Sped On To China (By The Associated Press) The Japanese, apparently still try- ing to learn how Tokyo and three other of their greatest cities were bombed Saturday, suggested yester- day that planes came from three United States aircraft carrierstand then sped on to havens in China. In raising this possibility, however, the Japanese Imperial headquarters identified the planes as North Ameri- can B-25's, which are big two-motor- ed army bombers never known to have been launched from the short flight decks of carriers. Tending nevertheless to support the Japanese conclusion, the Reuters News Agency in London quoted "well- informed quarters" in Chungking as saying United States planes which raided Japan had arrived safely at their destinatidn. Chungking had said previously the raids were not launched from China. Washington Still Silent Washington or other capitals of the United Nations were silent as the Japanese accounts continued to contradict themselves and to imply that Japanese "face" and public mor- ale had suffered, in addition to the damage done. An Imperial headquarters com- munique Monday said: "A hostile navy unit centering around three aircraft carriers ap- peared April 18 at a distant point off the eastern coast of Japan proper, but, fearing Japanese counter-attack, fled without approaching Japanese shores. "On'the same day approximately 10 enemy aircraft of the North Amer- ican B-25 type appeared over Tokyo and other areas, flying singly or in pairs. "The hostile pl ne s which man- aged to escape being 'downed appear to have escaped to China. Damage Called Slight "Damage caused was extremely slight." Previous accounts had said nine of the planes which raided Tokyo, Yo- kohama, Kobe and Nagoya were shot down. The Japanese said another was forced down in the mountains of central Japan and its crew of five captured. Leonard Cites Civilian Duties For Air Raids Civilian defense is charged with the duty of preserving the morale of the civilian population during mass bombing assaults, Capt. Donald S. Leonard, of the Michigan State Pol- ice, declared in a lecture yesterday in Hill Auditorium. Delivering the third in a series of talks sponsored by the University War Board and County Defense Council, Captain Leonard stressed the importance of civilian protection plans. An observer of actual raids in England for four months, he praised the morale of the British people and predicted that Americans would re- spond to Axis bombing attacks with the same steadfastness and deter- mination as did their British allies. Emphasizing that the risks in the present war are not assumed only by the military but by women and children on the home front, Captain Leonard called for a complete air raid protection program. Preparation for any eventuality was an absolute necessity, he said. The Midwest is especially vulner- able to air attack. Air raids on this area would accomplish two objec- tives: (1) destroy vital war indus- tries, and (2) affect morale the na- tion over as it would demonstrate the susceptibility of the coastal and other areas to raids. One important element in the maintenance of a civilian protection system is its value in preserving the morale of the soldier at the front, Captain Leonard pointed out. Is Franco-German Alliance Condition For In Europe, Laval States Soviet Pilots, Ground Batteries Destroy 1,500 German Planes LONDON, April 20. -(P)-- Soviet pilots and ground batteries destroyed 1,500 German planes in the six weeks ending April 14 to amass one of the biggest scores of theair war, the Moscow radio announced tonight. The reported bag was remarkable in itself but all the more so because 1,000 of the Nazi craft were declared knocked out during March alone, when blizzards caused some of the worst flying weather encountered by Red airmen. Aerial warfare has exploded in the Far North with the Soviet Air Force smashing heavy Nazi assaults upon the Red northern fleet, the Russians announced. In one engagement 15 German craft were declared downed without a Soviet loss. The biggest news from the Eastern Front was the report that the Rus- sian Army of the center had drawn its big guns up to within range of Smolensk, center of German military power, about 230 miles west of Mos- cow, while northern Russian forces were violently assaulting the main German and Finnish lines about Len- ingrad. Dispatches from the Russian front said these attacks in the north, apparently a supreme effort to re- lieve the second city of the Soviet Union before the spring thaw be- comes general, were loosed along the Volkhov River south of Leningrad Swing Concert Is Tomorrow Tickets Are Still Available For Barnet Program Tomorrow night in Hill Auditorium there will be sizzling seat covers and acoustical dynamite bouncing off the ceiling, according to a conservative estimate by swing concert chairman Buck Dawson, '43. Dawson ventured this prediction on the strength of Charlie Barnet's sax- ophone which will fill the auditor- ium's cloistered chamber from 8 to 10:30 p.m. All profits from Barnet's program will be turned over to the Bomber-Scholarship Fund. Tickets for the concert, third of its kind ever to be held in Ann Arbor, will still be on sale today at the Union, the center of the Diagonal, Burton Tower, and at a State Street bookstore. Barnet's famed sweet and swing will not be restricted to any privi- leged group since all coeds attending the concert will be, granted 11 p.m. permission. Although this will be Barnet's first appearance in Ann Arbor, he is no stranger to local connoisseurs of the best in juke-box jive. and against the Finnish lines on the Svir River and on the Karelian Isth- mus. The Germans, said unofficial ad- vices received here, were hurling every ounce of their strength into the struggle in an effort to hold on at any cost until the ice in the Volkhov melts and it becomes again a strong and fluid barrier to protect the Ger- man flank and rear. The Nazi High Command ack- nowledged "local enemy attacks in both the northern and central sectors C but claimed that all had been broken and that German counter-attacks in the north had been locally successful. On the Svir front, northeast of Leningrad and east of Lake Ladoga, the Russians claimed an advance of two miles at one point, while Berlin itself acknowledged that Axis forces were fighting "defensive battles" there. There was little detail about the progress of the action on the Kareli- an Isthmus west of Ladoga. Fraternities Will Presn WilPeelAnnual Sing Through the courtesy of the Inter- fraternity Council, the campus will be able to watch the sun go down as fraternities vocalize for the seventh annual Interfraternity Sing at 7:15 p.m. May 4 on the steps of the main library.' For the past six years, the mellow- est singing fraternities, backed by sorority cheering sections, have gath- ered at the library to sing songs for cups, judges, sororities, and the gen- eral public. And this year the Coun- cil is planning an even better affair than in previous years. Eliminations to select the top sing- ing groups will be held April 30 in the Union and the League. For both the trials and the finals, participants will need their own accompanist. One song from each fraternity is all that is required, and those houses intending to enter are reminded that eliminations will be held in small rooms, so that the volume of the singing must be held down accord- ingly. Awards will consist of four cups, three permanent trophies and one rotating cup. These prizes are now on display in the window of a local fraternity jeweler. Entry blanks have been sent out to all fraternities, and the houses are requested to return them to the IFC offices as soon as possible so that final arrangements may be made. / Pro-Axis Leader Brands Starting Of Hostilities Against Nazis 'Crime' Weekend Raiders Destroy Jap Planes VICHY, Unoccupied France, April 20.--(P)-Speaking tonight amidst new stirrings of unrest and Nazi or- ders for the execution of 30 more Frenchmen, pro-Axis Pierre Laval branded France's 1939 declaration of war a "crime" and told the French people the condition for peace in Europe lay in friendship between France and Germany. In his first broadcast as chief of government, Laval placed blame for France's predicament upon the old republican regime, declaring that he had "no responsibility whatever in the misfortune which has befallen us." Appealed To Frenchmen He appealed to French men to sup- port his new government with the as- sertion that their choice now lay be- tween rapprochement with Germany or "seeing our civilization disappear." Referring to the Anglo-Saxon pow- ers, he said that " in the past I never have accepted or submitted to any foreign influence, and such is the explanation of the unleashing of pas- sions to whichI I am so often sub- jected, above all in England again" "My thoughts go especially to those among you who have suffered the at- tacks of our former ally, all the more fierce against our territories because she is incapable of protecting her own," the bitterly anti-British Laval continued. Tried To Destroy Fleet "After having led us into war, after having abandoned us in battle, she tried to destroy. our fleet; she killed our sailors and starved our people. "Today her airplanes are again in French skies; after deserting us in a moment of danger they (the Brit- ish) would complete the destruction of our homes which the battles have left unscathed." Reaching an understanding with Germany, Laval said, was "like an obsession" with him. After recalling the meeting he ar- ranged between Chief of State Petain and Adolf Hitler at Montoire, at which the policy of collaboration was arranged, Laval asserted: "Since Montoire, since October, 1940, the war has been extended to all continents and taken on new sig- nificance. To the reasons which de- termined us to seek a policy of ac- cord and reconciliation with Ger- many there have been other reasons which are even more compelling." Destruction Of 40 ;ap Planes Claimed U.S. ARMY HEADQUARTERS in Australia, April 20.-(P)-Destruction of 40 grounded Japanese planes in two weekend raids on Rabaul was re- ported today as Gen. Douglas Mac- Arthur and Prime Minister John Cur- tin discussed operations of the Southwest Pacific command. The conference which'other Allied war chiefs attended was described of- ficially only as dealing with a "highly confidential" subject. The American general's new command is under in- structions to prepare an offensive, and the increasing air attacks on the Japanese footholds on the outer ring of islands possibly presages an early effort to drive the invaders from those bases. In the attacks Saturday and Sun- day on Rabaul, in New Britain, thousands of pounds of explosives were dropped on Lakunai airdrome, wrecking runways and planes, and on Japanese flying boats in the har- bor. A ship also was reported damaged. The United States and Australian airmen drove through tropical rain- storms and heavy anti-aircraft fire to accomplish their mission, Australian Air Minister Arthur S. Drakeford declared he had "cheer- ing news that numbers of the latest American aircraft will be added to the powers of attack." Reports seeping through from Ra- baul said that the Japanese were suf- fering acutely from hunger because their supply ships had been sunk and Peace Bill Cain, Fishman Slated I U~ 'DE * 1 10 H furl For Michigan By MYRON DANN It will be with a feeling of no little' relief that the Wolverine baseball team travels to Kalamazoo today to renew acquaintances with its pesky up-state rival, Western Michigan. For the past three seasons the games with the Kazoo nine have been a nightmare to Coach Ray Fisher's diamond gladiators mainly because of a pint-sized southpaw pitcher named Frank "Stub" Overmire who seemed to have a perennial penchant for turning back the Wolverines. But this year tiny Overmire is reg- istered among the Teachers' alumni and Michigan is anticipating far less difficulty in this afternoon's game with his successors. The tilt will be the Wolverines' first since their re- turn from a southern jaunt in which they won two out of the four games played. Michigan will face a revamped Western Michigan squad today be- cause of the graduation of 10 letter Turn to Page 3, Col. 1 Michigan Squadron ApprovedBy Navy Michigan men already enlisted for flight trailing in the Naval Air Corps as well as students interested in ap- plying for the training are eligible to take their training with the Univer- sity squadron being formed by C. S. L. A. Marshall Will Discuss 'Our Part In The War' Today FBI Arraigns Detroit Citizen For Harboring Escaped German DETROIT, April 20.-UP)-Escape of a German Army combat pilot from an officers concentration camp in Canada was made possible through cooperation of Max Stephan, Ger- man-born proprietor of a Detroit restaurant, the FBI announced to- day. Stephan, a naturalized American citizen, admitted giving the German flier food and money and arranging his transportation out of Detroit Sun- day morning, John S. Bugas, Detroit FBI chief, declared. The flier,'Peter Krug, 21-year-old lieutenant in the German Air Force, escaped from the camp April 16 with a companion, Erich Bohle, 28, also a lieutenant. Bohle was recaptured the following day at Niagara Falls, N.Y. Krug, still at large, is believed try- ing to make his way back to Germany day night, Bugas said, also is under arrest. Her name was not divulged. Kug, captured after being shot down in an aerial dogfight over the English Channel a year and a half ago, made his way to Toronto, then to Windsor after breaking out of the camp. He stole a rowboat in Windsor Fri- day night, the FBI officer related, and using boards for oars paddled across the Detroit River. He then made his way to the home of the woman, whose name he had memorized from bundles she had sent to prisoners at the camp. She hid him, Bugas said, and notified Steph- an, who had him out of Detroit 24 hours later. Stephan came to this country from Germany in 1928 and was naturalized ini 1925_T.His restauriant. forme~rl Drawing from a varied career as a newspaper man and a lieutenant in the First World War, S. L. A. Mar- shall, radio commentator.and military critic for the Detroit News, will speak on "Our Part in the War Today" at 8:15 p.m. today in the Rackham Auditorium. Marshall's is the first public lec- ture ever to be included in the annual campaign of the Ann Arbor division of the Women's Field Army for the Control of Cancer. Part of the re- ceipts from the lecture, along with other funds from the month-long campaign, will be donated to the two local hospitals, and the rest will be sent to the State and National headquarters of the Army for the re- search, education and cure for can- cer. In addition to his work as a radio commentator and newspaper writer, Marshall is the author of several books on military subjects. Some of the most recent of these include, "Blitzkreig," "Armies on Wheels" and "How the Army Organized for Strike Is Threatened At University Hospital University Hospital was threatened S. L. A. MARSHALL have included a canvass of the down- town business districts, canisters