W hehr Occasiona~l Showers, Warmer Ig i4 Satli Editorial Rtussia. Is The Enemy After Axis Powers . . VOL. LII. No. 168 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, MAY 12, 1942 Z-323 PRICE FIVE CENTS Petain Dashes Back To Vichy As Martinique imar Nears United States Negotiations For Control Of French Caribbean Possessions Proceed AtMartinique Nazi Propaganda StationiDestroyed VICHY, May 11. -(A')- Chief of State Marshal Petain hurried back toward Vichy tonight for reasons of "imperious concern" as this capital awaited developments in the United States-Martinique negotiations, and as the British-now called "the en- emy" here-sought to extend their foothold on the French island of Madagascar. The aged Marshal and his wife were expected tomorrow morning af- ter cutting short their Riviera vaca- tion because of undisclosed "events.," (Presumably Washington's action in dealing directly with Admiral Geor- ges Robert, French High Commis- sioner in Martinique, for a new "ar- rangement" about that French Car- ibbean island, instead of with pro- Axis Pierre Iaval, was one of the "events" dictating Petain's return.) Nine youthful members of Jacques Doriot's Rightist, Collaborationist Party paraded yesterday before the American Embasy here, shouting "Down with the United States; Long live France." Several hundred other Frenchmen soon booed them off the scene, call- ing them "pigs," and "traitors." (The dispatch telling of this dem- onstration was delayed a full day by Vichy censorship.) The announcement of Petain's re- turn was the first public knowledge of his absence. He and Laval, his Chief of Government, have been in telephone communication daily. An authorized source said that Laval was unable to make a decision concernng' Martinique 'until he had heard from Vichy's ambassador to Washington, Gaston Henri-Haye. (Henri-Haye conferred with Sec- retary of State Hull on the "delicate problem" today, but the results of the meeting were not disclosed.) (The German radio broadcast a Vichy dispatch saying the United States had demanded that French warships in Martinique be demo- bilized and that U.S. garrisons be permitted on the Caribbean island.) /iAmericans Continue Islands Negotiations WASHINGTON, May 1.-(')-Ne- gotiations for an effective safeguard against Axis use of French Caribbean possessions continued tonight on Martinique. There was no official word, how- ever, as to the reaction of Admiral Georges Robert, French High Com- missioner, to the American proposal laid before him Saturday by an American mission, and no official disclosure as to details of the "ar- rangement" sought by the United States. Vichy's Ambassador, Gaston Hen- ry-Haye, called at the State Depart- ment shortly before noon, and, after an hour's conversation with Secre- tary of State Hull, told newspaper- men he hoped the negotiations with Admiral Robert would result in a sat- isfactory solution. He indicated he had come to dis- cuss the situation with Hull, not to deliver a formal protest from his gov- ernment. He declined to comment on the nature of the American proposal and added: "The less I say today, the better. I am trying to avoid complication by; refraining from commentaries which, might interfere with adjustment of a delicate problem." Secretary Hull had no comment on1 the trend of his conversation with Henry-Haye, Nazw Propaganda Station Destroyed (By The Associated Pressj Saboteurs have wrecked Radio Paris, the key broadcasting station for Nazi propaganda in Occupied France and the station is silent for the first time since the Germans marched into Earis nearly two years ago, the London Daily Mail reported; in a dispatch from the French Fron- tier today. "The giant masts and pylons at: Bourges, 130 miles south of Paris. I -.- - - - - I .-- - 'Nazis Begin Spring Offensive With Push In Eastern Crimea Germans Door Commence To Valuable Onslaught Caucasian . Towards Russia's Fuel Deposits MOSCOW, Tuesday, May 12.-(I)- The first big Nazi spring thrust be- gan yesterday in the Eastern Crimea with a lunge toward Kerch, a key peninsular point along the shortest possible hop to the Soviet's Caucasian oil riches, the Russians announced at midnight. "During May 11 in the Kerch Pen- insula," the communique said, "our troops waged stubborn battles against the German Fascist troops who had taken the offensive." This departure from the custom- ary "nothing to report" phrase indi- cated the Germans had begun a large scale movement toward the oil fields so heavily prized by Adolf Hitler that Nine Defeated By Ypsi, 5-1, In Wild Game By BOB SHOPOFF Loose fielding and ineffective hit- ting by the Michigan nine gave Mich- igan Normal a 5-1 victory over the Michigan baseball team travels to Detroit today to meet Wayne University at the Northwestern High School field. Don Smith will be on the mound for the Wolver- ines. The game will start at 4 p.m. Wolverines before a handful of spec- tktors at Ferry Field yesterday. It was the lowest total of runs scored by the Varsity in one game this year. Coach Ray Fisher's crew didn't look like a team that was a potential Big Ten champion in its game against the Hurons because its infield combi- nation had more holes in it than a sieve as they ran up a total of seven misplays. Tommy Higgins, who started the game at second, garnered three errors while every other mem- ber of the inner garden had at least one muff against him. While the Wolverines outhit their neighbors from Ypsi nine to eight, they failed to collect the safeties when they counted and the result Turn to Page 3, Col I Gas Warfare Will Hurt .Axis LONDON, May 11.--P)-Compe- tent military observers said tonight the scales were heavily weighted in favor of Britain and her Allies if Germany tried to break the Russian deadlock with poison gas in the face of Winston Churchill's assurance that the RAF would retaliate with the same weapon against the Third Reich. Britain, these experts said, has the air power to launch a gas offensive which would cripple communica- tions, drive industrial workers from factories and possibly strike a dam- aging blow at German morale. Dispersal of gas from planes flying at 27,000 feet is "perfectly feasible," they added, and they pointed out that within the last month, four- motored RAF bombers have been able to bomb targets on the German Bal- tic Coast, in Czechoslovakia and in Italy. he has expended uncounted thous- ands of lives in previous efforts to get them. Thus, as many observers including the Soviety military leaders, had ex- pected, the Germans' main effort appears to be direced at smashing across the narrow Kerch Peninsula not only to grab the rich fuel deposits but also to be in a position to turn the Allied middle eastern flank in another oil kingdom, Iran. The Crimea was the first sector of the Russian front to shake off the paralyzing winter which aided in thwarting the Germans' drive toward Moscow last November. When I traveled through the Cau- casus in mid-April the terrain al- ready was hard and dry-ready again to provide a footing for the Nazis' mechanized might and the challeng- ing iron monsters marshalled by the Soviets. But the Germans have had two det- errents on the Crimea front-the fact that the Russians are so firmly en- trenched in the town of Kerch after hurling the Nazis out of the area last December, and the fact that the Rus- sian defenders of Sevastopol have put up such a heroic battle to hold that important Soviet port at the southwestern end of the island. The Crimea front also was the scene of a reported German intro- duction of poison gas. That hap- pened for the first time in the War last Thursday, the official agency Tass said. Aviation Cadets Will Be Sworn Westfall Will Be Iicluded Among New Inductees Officers of the Army Air Forces' traveling examination board will swear in over 55 University students in a public ceremony at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow on the steps of Angell Hall. The group of new inductees, "which includes All-American Bob Westfall, is the largest single group to be pro- cured in the state since the beginning of the war, according to Lieut. F. A. Wilgus, recorder for the traveling board. The public ceremony will precede a mass meeting at 8 p.m. in the Rackham Lecture Hall, which will be addressed by Lieut.-Col. Joseph H. Carr and Lieut. Rondel L. Cox, both of Mitchell Field, N.Y. Carr and' Cox will describe the Army's new officer's procurement plan which per- mits students to enlist in the Aira Forces on a deferred service basis The program will include new sound movies on Aviation Cadet training. The traveling examination board will be at the Health Service today through Thursday to examine can-' didates for both immediate and de- ferred service. Mental examinations will be given at 9:30 a.m. and 12:30 p.m., and interviews on the enlisted" reserve program will be held from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., each day. Senior students should call for their commencement announce- ments from 1:39 to 4:30 p.m. to- day through Thursday in front of Room 4, University Hall. Balance on orders is due at this time. Conn Breaks Mauler' But Mauls Irate Father PITTSBURGH, May 11.-()- Heavyweight Billy Conn displayed a broken left hand today and said he got it last night in a fight with his father-in-lawr, Jimmy Smith, when what Billy thought was to be a "love feast ended in blows. The injury-to Conn's meal- ticket mauler-blasted Pittsburgh Billy's chance of meeting Heavy- weight Champion Joe Louis in their second title match, slated for June 25. Louis knocked out Conn in the 13th round of their fight last June. A few days later, Conn, braving the stormy objections of Smith, married Smith's daughter, Mary Louise, a former model. Billy and Jimmy, a former major league ball player, haven't had any kind words for each other since. Jap Shiploads Believed Lost ' On Coral Sea Epic Battle Piobably Took~ Heavy Toll As Australia Is Warned Of Optimism ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, Aus- tralia, May 11.--(P)-The possibility that Japanese invasion troops per- ishec by the shipload in the Coral Sea Battle was advanced today by competent informants who empha- sized that Allied announcements of enemy losses thus far have made little mention of damage to transport units known to have been part of the enemy force. Conservative and still incomplete reports of the epic battle have listed only two Japanese transports or sup- ply ships sunk and two more dam- aged but these observers said that when the full score is tabulated it may include a greater number of Japanese troop carriers. The officially announced number of Japanese ships sunk or badly dam- aged in waters lrrtheast of Aus- WASHINGTON, May 11.-(!_ Destruction of a Japanese destroy- er and two cargo vessels by United States submarines operating in the western Pacific was announced to- day by the Navy Department. tralia in the last seven days stood at 21. A communique from General MacArthur's headquarters early to- day added two submarines sunk or damaged to the previously announced 19, but these figured in an action separate from the Coral Sea engage- ment. United States and Australian ships and planes continued on the alert for additional signs of the enemy al- though there was no true indication that he had reformed his forces for another test of Allied fire and steel. (The Nazi-controlled Paris radio broadcast a report that powerful Jap- anese naval forces had arrived in the Coral Sea for resumption of the bat- tle but confirmation was lacking.) 'Ensian Distribution Begi1is sTomorrow; To Last Till Friday 'ruckloads of the new 1942 Michi- ganensian, featuring elaborate art work in simple styles and covering all campus activities, will roll into town tonight for distribution start- ing tomorrow at 7:45 a.m Receipt holders may call for their yearbooks at the Student Publica- tions Building from 7:45 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. tomorrow, and the sale will last till Friday or until all the books are distributed. If the receipt has been lost, 'Ensians can be received by pre- senting an identification card. Balance payments must be paid immediately or the book will be for- feited, because the supply is limited and the demand is high. A few 'Ensians will be on sale at Wahr's, Ulrich's, Slaters and Fo- lett's bookstores tomorrow at the re- otlar urine Canadian Minister Asks Conscription OTTAWA, May 11. - (P-- Prime Minister Mackenzie King moved in Parliament today to legalize con- scription for overseas service, and in protest P. J. A. Cardin resigned as Minister of Public Works and Trans- nort. Jaws Of Burma's Death Trap Still Grip Japanese; Malta Halts Nazi Raiders Egyptian Reinforcements Help RAF Bag Record Number Of Axis Planes 'Fiercest Barrage' TakesHeavy Toll VALLETA, Malta, May 11.-P)- Aided by reinforcements flown in from Egypt, the RAF joined ground batteries in destroying or damaging 70 Axis aircraft over Malta since Saturday midnight, a record bag, British headquarters announced to- night. Twenty-five raiders were knocked down for sure, 20 more were listed as probables and 25 were damaged. In Sunday's fighting alone the is- land's defenders accounted for 63 enemy craft-42 of them listed as knocked down or probably destroyed and 21 damaged. Fighters shot down three more today and damaged four. In the 48 hours ending Sunday midnight 29 Axis bombers and fight- ers were bagged, 27 probably de- stroyed and 37 damaged-all this at a cost of only three RAF fighters. Two heavy raids were aimed at Malta late today, the first by fighter- escorted Italian bombers and the second by Germans. Heavy and light artillery threw up one of the fiercest barrages ever wit- nessed on this island-which is say- ing a lot, for this most-bombed spot on earth has produced some earth shakers during more than 2,300 Axis attacks since the war started. The RAF, striking back with equal and sometimes superior forces, clear- ly dominated the weekend fighting over the island. One official said the island's pres- ent strong defenses "make it simply murder for the Axis airmen" to con- tinue the assault. He expressed hope this would force the Germans and Italians to call off their long siege. In Sunday's fighting the flaming carcasses of Axis dive-bombers lit- tered one airdrome. Senaute Juntior Administrative PostsOpened Four junior positions on next sem- ester's Student Senate administra- tive staff will be opened to eligible students today when the senate in- terviews prospective candidates at 7 p.m. today in the Union. Since these positions will run into next year, only students with present sophomore standing are eligible for the junior jobs and possible appoint- anent as administrative director of the senate. The present senate organization has placed a campus-elected group of nine in a legislative position. Pro- posals initiated by this body are turned over to the administrative .staff which is entrusted with the function of carrying them out. in addition to their duties of trans- lating policy into action, junior mem- bers of the administrative staff will also be in charge of sophomore and freshman tryouts for their positions, At a later date a call will be issued for sophomores and freshman inter- ested in the administrative staff. Each spring the junior staff is to be selected from the sophomores and the two senior officers from the junior staff. Objector Gray Finds Arrest Is Alternative Twice objector to participation in any form of military service, Harold Studley Gray, Ann Arbor owner of the Saline Valley Farms, was yester- day ordered to register for selective service or submit to arrest. Gray, who once faced a death sen- tence bymilitary court martial, but later had it commuted to life, refused to register in the draft for men aged 45-64, and sent Attorney General Francis Biddle a statement of his reasons for conscientiously objecting. Planning to confer with his attor- ney and federal officials tomorrow, Gray faces the alternatives given him by Assistant U.S. Attorney General Kenneth D. Wilkins - compliance with the selective service act or arrest and almost undoubted conviction. A graduate of Harvard and scion of a prominent Detroit family, Gray was first drafted when abroad in 1917. When he returned he was sent to Fort Custer where he was tried and finally taken to Fort Leavenworth, Kan. After the war he was par- doned. He has written a book about his experiences entitled "Character Bad." Naval Review To Be Today Cadets To Present Parade Before Ruthven, Lovell Parading before President Alex- ander G. Ruthven, Dean A. H. Lovell,' Capt. R. E. Cassidy, and members of the University War Board, 200 cadets of the Naval ROTC will march in review at 7 p.m. today on Palmer Field. Led by the Unit's Drum and Bugle Corps, the marchers will parade un- der NROTC Lieut.-Comm. J. A. Mac- tier, '44, ranking cadet officer. In the first of what is to be a series of annual ceremonies, Mrs. Ruthven will present the colors to the com- mander of the company chosen as the color company for next year. The company which is to receive this honor has been chosen on the basis of excellence in drill, attend- ance, scholarship, proficiency in sailing, use of small arms and load- ing of the Unit's four-inch gun. Members of the Advisory Commit- tee of the Military and Naval Science Departments, of which Dean Lovell is chairman, will also take part in the review. BULLETIN ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, Australia, Tuesday, May 12.--()- Allied bombers struck two more Japanese transports and straddled a large tanker with explosives in the islands above Australia yes- terday after last week's repulse of the enemy fleet in the Coral Sea, General MacArthur's headquarters announced today. This brought to 23 and perhaps 24 the number of Japanese ships sunk or damaged in about a week's time by Allied naval-air operations in the southwest Pacific. l Chinese Lines Hold Strong Despite Reinforcements Rushed In From South Wavell Reorganizes Indian Commands CHUNGKING, China, May 11.-(P) -Chinese lines of entrapment held fast tonight around the remnants of a Japanese column enveloped and slaughtered on the Burma Road de- spite the shock of reinforcements rushed from Burma by the frustrated invaders of Free China's back door. Two hundred and fifty miles south of this dramatic scene of Japanese annihilation, another all but forgot- ten Chinese army, by-passed in the reckless and headlong Japanese dash up through the Shan States, was of- ficially reported to have smashed three attacks by a fresh Japanese column in.the Loilem sector near the river Salween. Japs Lose 4,500 In western Yunnan Province, where the Burma Road begins its tortuous ascent on Chinese soil, the hapless Japanese column which is reported to have lost 4,500 shock troops in the Chefang trap, and which has turned about to try and reach safety, still was surrounded by the Chinese, the High Command said. General Lung Yun, Governor of Yunnan Province, said in a state- ment that the situation was develop- ing in China's favor, but warnedof the possibility the Japanese might; attempt to drive on Kunming. "If the Japanese risk suchean ad- venture." he said, "they will encoun- ter stout resistance from several hun- dred thousand Chinese troops in Yunnan who are firmly resolved to drive the invader out." Japanese reinforcements rushed up from Burma were intercepted before they could reach the Chinese cordon and heavy fighting was in progress, a communique added. Result In Doubt The result of this battle remained in doubt. The Chinese, however, were receiving air support from the Ameri- can Volunteer Group, which shot down two Japanese planes yesterday. The High Command claimed a clear-cut victory for the Chinese force which, down on the Salween front, dealt out more than 500 cas- ualties to a Japanese column at- tempting to advance last week from Liolem to Kongkum on the Salween. The Chinese stopped three Japa- nese thrusts, one supported by tanks and the final one bolstered by land reinforcements and aircraft. All this was in the east Burma back country which the Japanese ap- parently counted out of the war when they sent their fast spearheads dashing north to Lashio, Mandalay, and the Burma Road. Wavell Reorganizes Indian Commands NEW DELHI, India, May 11.-tP)- Britain's commander in India, Gen. eral Sir Archibald P. Wavell, was dis- closed tonight to have reorganized the three Indian military commands into powerful and competent mobile armies to meet ,land or sea attack from the Japanese on eastern or southern India. With the Japanese still reported marshalling a Bengal invasion fleet at Rangoon, and with only the gal- lant but exhausted force of Gen. Harold Alexander standing between the enemy and the northern gate to India, Wavell upset the 100-year-old Indian military policy by which the strongest Imperial forces were held on the northwest frontier. Divorces Fighting Units His primary purpose was, howevek, to divorce the administrative func- tions of the Army from the fighting units so that the defense along the coast and the eastern and northern frontiers would become the sole funs- tion of the fighting forces. Three army commands were cre- ated-Northeast, South and North- west. The vast central area will be administered under the central India command, whose major function will be to train new defense forces. A fm tof He oiaA 1M*-4Un*% t Builds Future in A Laborator,: Research Student Symbolizes Spirit Of Modern, Unified China At work 20 hours out of the 24 in a fourth floor laboratory in the Na- tural Science Building is one of the men who will help to build China's future, one of the men who sym- bolizes China's new spirit. Dr. Chang K. Tseng is that man, and the story of what lie is doing is somehow the story of modern China. Granted a" Horace 1-. Rackham Memorial post doctoral fellowship for his work in botany, Dr. Tseng is now carrying out a research program which will help in the reconstruc- tion fo his home country after the war is over. He is examining the sea-weeds of the South China Sea to determine possible developments of it for food and medicinal purposes, hoping to raise the standard of what America would call a sub-marginal industry to a point where it will assist the great masses of Chinese neonle to Calif., to Cambridge, Mass., and to New York City's famed Botanical Gardens in order to find the neces- sary specimens for the completion of his work. Little worried by the various haz- ards in the path of final accom- plishment, Dr. Tseng continues to work day and night in his laboratory, cheerfully bearing his own small bur- den in the making of a modern, fr(e China, in the making of an equal in the family of nations. A revolutionary with Chiang Kai-N Shek in 1927, he has always been in- tensely interested in the political movement which he happily declares has completely unified China. An avid student of everything that hap- pens in his home country today, he is firmly convinced that although Chiang Kai-Shek is the heart and soul of unified China, his loss or desertion of the cause would not les- Hershey, Draft Director, Says Industry Must Replace Youth DElTRO1r, May 11.-(P)-Man- agement was told today by Maj.-Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, National Selective Service Director, to "begin now" the replacement with older men and wo- men of "priceless youth" needed for combat service. "Each day we must come to you for a pound or more of flesh," he declared before the Economic Club of Detroit. "We may even get to the place where practically every able- bodied person must go. It won't be June, 1942, but it may come," them" and predicted a critical labor shortage might be reached by next October. "In 1943, when things get tighter," he said, "people will not want to see anyone sitting around and saying, 'I won't play.' The people themselves will be demanding that everyone do his part." Manpower, he continued, must be shifted, ,"intelligently, with a mini- mum of disturbance." "It will be cultivating very bad habits." he added. "tro wait until+1h