Y 4titt %t Weather Rain and Calder VOL. LIII No. 29 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, NOV. 6 PRICE FIVE CENTS C American Forces Hit Japs Hard Guadalcanal Is Scene of 'Violent' Battle; 70 Guns Are Captured By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER Associated Press Correspondent WASHINGTON, Nov. 5.- Violent fighting flamed in a new sector of battle-ravaged Guadalcanal tonight as Americn troops, already heavily and successfully engaged on their western flank, sought to crush the eastern arm of a Japanese pincers move before it could be formidably strengthened. Thie extent of American successes to ,the west was shown in a Navy communique announcing this latest development. The communique said that in the western sector 350 Japa- nese were killed'on November 3, and three enemyl field pieces, a dozen 37 min. light artillery guns and 30 ma- chine guns were captured. New- Shelling Meanwhile both naval ships and army aircraft had struck new blows against the enemy's western threat to the strateic American airfield on the $olomons Island, bombing and shell- ing supply dumps and troop concen- trations on the north coast of Guadal- canal in the vicinity of Kokumbona. The airfield is the focal point of all operations on Guadalcanal Island, both American and Japanese, and the directions east and west are de- termined from it as center. In an obvious effort to divert some American strength from their main forces to the west, the Japanese threw a force of troops onto the island east of the field on the night of November 2-3. The Marines had started their counter-offensive to the west against the enemy's jungle-protected troops on November 1, and had gained two miles in the initial actions. Jap Landings Today's communique said that on the night of November 3-4, the Japs again effected landings to the east, in. .the vicinity of Koli point, about six miles from the airfield. Appar- ently it was about the time these lat- est landing operations were being completed that Marine units of the Army-Marine forces defending the field made their assault in the east, for the communique's first reference was a statement that they suffered an "initial repulse" at dawn on No- vember 4. Recovering from this setback, they again attacked and the communique reported that they are now "pressing their attacks on these enemy troops. Considerable significance was at- tached here to the outburst of fight- ing on the American east flank. It showed that the seriousness of the Japanese threat at that point had demanded prompt American counter- action and also that the American defenders were entirely capable of undertaking a two-front battle with- out waiting for the enemy to begin it. Bombing Assault The report of Air and Naval actions against the enemy concentration area around Kokumbona-which is about 6 miles wet of the air field-con- tained no detail of results achieved. Army bombers carried out their as- sault on November 1 as the land of- fensive was getting under way and the Naval bombardment was delivered on the night of November 3-4, even as the Japs were building up their strength east of the air field with new landings. Previously U.S. warships had been in action against the enemy's north Trouble for the Harvards University Press Club Begins Second 'Session Today in Union ELMER MADAR The Harvards, who ordinarily are not averse to a good rousing tiff with the Yales or the Princetons, will have plenty to worry about to- morrow afternoon when they look into the face of Elmer Madar, whom line coach Munn calls "the roughest little monkey on our entire first team." Vandenberg Advocates Coalition for Victory Speeches Covering Newspapers in War Head Day's Meeting More than 100 Michigan newspaper editors, here for the 25th annual meeting of the University Press Club, will enter their second day's activity today with a full schedule that in- cludes eight speeches, a luncheon, a dinner and a play. J. S. Bugas, Detroit FBI chief, will open the morning session in the Un- ion ballroom at 10 a. m. with a speech on "The FBI and the War." Two speeches on manpower and the war will be presented by Col. William A.1 Ganoe, head of the University ROTC and Prof. William Haber, director of the Planning Division of the Federal Security Administration. At the afternoon session, 2 p. m. in the Union ballroom, three men will tell, from first hand experience, the inside story of one of our enemies and two of our allies. Joseph P. Junosza, late of the Poly- technical Institute of Warsaw, will speak on Poland, and Wolfgang H. Soviets Repulse Nazi .hordes at Staino rad MOSCOW, Nov. 6. (Friday)- ()- Wave after wave of attacking Ger- mans faltered and died in the rubble heaps of Stalingrad yesterday, and the Red Army also held firm and even gained ground in the battle of the Caucasus, the Soviets announced ear- ly today. Thus far the Germans have lost more than 100,000 men killed, 800 tanks and 1,000 planes in their futile effort to subdue the Volga River city,1 the Moscow radio said in quoting a letter from the Stalingrad garrison addressed to Premier Joseph Stalin. The midnight communique told how the enemy continued "throwing in his reserves" yesterday in repeated attacks, but said every assault was repulsed and heavy losses inflicted on the Nazis. Eight hundred more Germans were wiped out northwest of Stalingrad, and five enemy blockhouses were de- stroyed by Red artillery, the Russians said. In the Caucasus southeast of Nal- chik on the approaches to the Geor- gian military highway across the Caucasian mountains, the communi- que said, the Red Army wiped out a party of tank-borne German tommy- gunners who had penetrated behind the Russian lines. More than 700 other Nazis also were killed in the same area, and four tanks and many motor vehicles were destroyed, it added. Northeast of Tuapse on the Black Sea coast the Russians said their troops "forged ahead somewhat," an- nihilating an enemy battalion and occupying another height. The communique also mentioned a new sector-east of Novorossisk- where a Russian group surrounded a farm occupied by 60 Germans and wiped them out to the last man. No fighting has been mentioned in this area for weeks since the Russians abandoned Novorssisk in their retreat along the coast toward Tuapse. By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Nov. 5.-A leading; Senate Republican, Vandenberg of Michigan, today proposed a Republi- can-Democratic victory coalition- with "politics and New Dealism" out for the duration-as the solution to' war-time problems arising from the close party alignments in House and Senate. His idea is that Congress should] now create a "unified committee on war cooperation." The Administra- tion "should deal more openly with Congress"-including the Republican leadership-and with the country. The election, he added, had demon- strated popular dissatisfaction with the conduct of the war. Meanwhile, the Househeard de- mands that the wage-hour law and National Labor Relations Act be re- pealed, while a Senate colloquy found a prominent Republican and a lead- ing Democrat agreeing that Tues- day's many Democratic losses could not be attributed to any lack of unity on the war front. Senator Connally (Dem. - Tex.) Fraternity Tells Tragic Story of Pilot's death Members of Phi Gamma Delta fra- ternity last night told the tragic story of First Lieut. Lynn C. Riess, Jr.-"he had a good word for everybody"- who was killed somewhere in England when the Liberator bomber he was piloting on a routine flight acciden- tally crashed. Riess graduated from the Univer- sity of Michigan only last June and anlited in the TT. Air Corps one arose, he said, to make it clear that the reverses of the Administration party could not be interpreted by the propagandists of Berlin and Tokyo as any "repudiation of our war pur- poses." Public Impatience He attributed them to public im- patience with the prosecution of the war and resentment against Wash- ington bureaucracy. Actually, he said, the voters had "registered a more desperate will to carry this war to triumph and victory." Senator McNary of Oregon, the Republican floor leader, agreed that "no issue of patriotism or unity" was raised in the campaign, and added that the administration had com- mitted "enough mistakes and errors" to justify the people in calling it to account. Returns Expected The Democrats' defeats, he said. represented revolts against wastes in expenditures which "astounded, abashed and shocked" him and against unnecessary employment by the government "of people who should be home working at real war efforts." Vice-President Wallace, leaving a conference with President Roosevelt, told reporters that Mr. Roosevelt was in "excellent spirits." Wallace said the elections turned out the way they did because only a relatively. small number of voters participated. JOSEPH P. JUNOSZA, who late in 1940 escaped from a German concentration camp in Poland will speak on "Inside Poland" at the 2 p. m. session today in the Union1 ballroom. Kraus, a German recently natura-1 lized, will discuss "Inside Germany."1 Prof. Esson M. Gale, of the University1 political science department, will pre- sent an address entitled, "Inside China." Professor Gale returned from Chungking by clipper plane only last month to take up teaching duties here.7 At a dinner in the League ballroom at 5:45 p. in., President Alexander G. Ruthven and vice-president James D.' Bruce will speak. The entire Press Club group will attend the Play Production offering, "Sundown," written especially for the occasion by Prof. John L. Brumm of the journalism department. Voting Figures Reveal Sharp Ballot Decline LANSING, Nov. 5. - (P) - G. T. Hartman, deputy Secretary of State, estimated today that a total of ap- proximately 1,200,000 votes were cast in Michigan's general election Tues- day, a decline of almost 60 per cent from the 1940 Presidential year poll of 2,085,929. With the decrease showing out- state as well as in metropolitan areas, Tuesday's balloting fell below the 1938 total of 1,605,214, Hartman said. He said it was impossible to deter- mine what a percentage of registered voters had cast ballots because regis- tration totals are not made available to the Secretary of State's office by the counties. Although county clerks previously had been instructed to expedite re- turns, Hartman said official results were straggling into the Secretary of State's office and that the state board of canvassers planned to "shake up tardy clerks before Tues- day. The board is required by statute to meet within 20 days after an elec- tion. Polish Lecturer AXis Commander Taken byBritish - BULLETIN-- BRITISH EIGHTH ARMY HEADQUARTERS in the Egyptian Des- ert, Nov. 5 (9:55 a.m.).-(P)-Lieut.-Gen. B. L. Montgomery, commander of the Eighth Army, announced this morning that the Eighth Army battling the Axis had achieved complete and absolute victory, and that the enemy now was in full retreat. Axis forces left at the southern end of the Alamein line face the British troops, he said, but they will be put "in the bag." General Montgomery also announced the capture of Gen. Ritter von Thoma, Axis Afrika Korps commander, who was taken yesterday in a tank action. Von Thoma spent the night at British headquarters. General Montgomery continued: "We will not stop fighting now. We will wipe out all the Axis forces in North Africa." The British leader said that infantry and royal artillery was respon- sible for the shattering of the Alamein line, and that it was "now the armor's turn to destroy the enemy completely." The Allied Air Force had played a great part in breaking the morale of the enemy troops, he pointed out, and the victory was gained by the combined operations of army and air forces which worked as one. By EDWARD KENNEDY Associated Press Correspondent CAIRO, Nov. 5.- The broken and bleeding Axis desert Army fled across the sands of western Egypt tonight in a desperate attempt to escape ap- parently certain annihilation at the hands of triumphing Allied forces whose British commander declared: "Complete victory is almost in sight!' Over a 40-mile front littered with hundreds of wrecked enemy tanks planes, and gunposts, the British 8th Army and its homeless Allies-fight- ing Frenchmen, Greeks, and Poles- drove relentlessly forward on the heels of Marshal Erwin Rommel's ex- hausted columns withdrawing hastily toward Fuka, 62 miles west of th shattered Alamein line. Airmen Attack U.S. and RAF airmen streaking overhead steadily moved their "bomb- line" ahead of the advancing Allies infantry and tanks. By day and nigh they hacked at the remnants of th( Axis desert legions who were so cer" tain of victory last summer that Pre mier Benito Mussolini of Italy mad hurried plans for a triumphant per. sonal appearance in Cairo. Front dispatches said the retreat ing Axis armored detachments-o Turn to Page 2, Col. 4 * * * British Official Calls Fate of Axis Army By The Associated Press LONDON, Nov. 5.- The Axis Arm in Egypt "is busted and virtuall, helpless" and is being subjected to tl grimmest kind of slaughter in a nar row trap along the Mediterraneai coast, a high British official said lat today. The informant, who cannot b identified by name and who usuall has been extremely reserved, said tb fate of Marshal Erwin Rommel's for ces would finally be sealed soon an that the British Army, Navy and A Force were engaged in what amount to virtually a mopping-up procevs. The official estimate came but short time after the Allied eldc statesman and Premier of South A rica, Marshal Jan Christian Smut had suggested strongly that the tr umph in Egypt was "the turning poir of the war." Preliminary to Invasion Sir Stafford Cripps, lord privy sea declared the north African battle wf but one of the new offensives the A lies would mount against the Axi Expied governments in London exdlt in the prediction that the dese smash was preliminary to an invasi of Europe itself. r~r1-.. .fine- 1sshn arar nrlR - Stinson Blasts Training Plan in 18-I9 Draft WASHINGTON, Nov. 5.-(AP)-The Senate's proposed requirement of a full year's training before drafted 18 and 19-year-olds may be sent to a fighting front was vigorously assailed today by War Secretary Stimson as a product of "pre-war mentality" which e would "put shackles on the war ef- fort." y With this proviso attached, the e war secretary told his press confer- ence sharply, the law lowering the draft age promised no benefit and could result in actual peril to victory. 9 "Who can foretell with certainty - our future in the rushing war?,Who d can foretell with certainty what mea- , sure the military will be called upon e to take to crush the enemy? National disaster may result from any legal - restrictions imposing on us shackles e as to how the army may use any ele- - ment of its strength," Stimson said. - Adopted 39 to 31 by the Senate, the r year's training provision has yet to be acted on by the House. Stimson announced that orders had been issued for creation of 5 addi- tional infantry divisions, rounding out the program expanding the ground forces this year to some four score divisions of all types. ty i Van Wagoner r- t Invites Kelly x To Cooperate r- LANSING, Nov. 5.-(A)-Governor d Van Wagoner disclosed today he has ir invited Governor-Elect Harry F. Kelly ts to share with him the responsibility of governing the state between now and inauguration day. a Van Wagoner, declaring he har- er bored noaresentment against Kelly as a result of the latter's election vic- s' tory, said he would not seek reprisal - for coups the Republicans sprung on nt him when he took office two years ago after having defeated his pre- decessor, Luren D. Dickinson. al, He said he already has assured as Kelly no appointments will be made .- by the executive office for the balance is of the term without first being cleared ed through Kelly. rt "I will not put Kelly in the position on that I was put in, when I was the in- coming governor," Van Wagoner said mi ate. r a n+-enpp 14He ralled how FODOR ADVOCATES POST-WAR PLANNING: 'FilDemands o ndia Fischer Cautions By MARION FORD "Only by giving India the partial gy of this war," he said and, pulling cooperation can any such strategy b ,L4..i 4- 1