PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY 8VEDNLSDAY, NPRIL 7, 1943 PAGE SIX WEDNESDAY, APRIL 7, 1943 T hree Germans Lose Citizenship In FBI Probe Bund Members Held For Failure To Give Up Foreign Allegiance DETROIT, April 6. --()- Three German born naturalized citizens- one a former Nazi Storm Trooper- lost their citizenship in Federal Court here today. The FBI identified them as: Helmut Wolfang Hauer, 28, who became a member of the Storm Troopers in Hanover, Germany dur- ing 1933, the FBI said. Adolph Goeler, 35, a former mem- ber of the German American Bund. Otto Grimm, 34, a member and former officer of the bund. All three were charged by the FBI with holding mental reservations and failing to foreswear allegiance to Germany when they were naturalized. Judge Arthur F. Lederle signed the revocation orders on application of Louis M. Hopping, Assistant United States District Attorney. Hauer, born in Hanover, came to the United States in 1930 and be- came a citizen six years later. FBI agents said that Hauer has made three trips back to Germany and that in 1933 he joined the Storm Troops at Hanover and remained there for two months. He did not contest the petition to revoke his citizenship. According to the FBI, Hauer said he would not fight for the United States against his home country on foreign soil and expressed a desire to return to Ger- many. Dutch Circles Optimistic for Future of War LONDON, April 6. -(P)- Dutch circles here declared today that the people of the Netherlands are becom- ing increasingly optimistic over the outcome of the war and disclosed that the country is full of reports that "scores of British agents" have been landed and are making secret prepar- ations for an Allied invasion. These sources, whose names can not be disclosed, said that the waves of optimism sweeping the country is being demonstrated by new outbreaks of sabotage and anti-Nazi attacks. The British were said to hve been landing parties of two and three per- sons during the past six weeks, in spite of the heavy fortifications and vigilant patrols along most of the Dutch coast, these -persons making their way to the interior. Only recently the German radio broadcast a report of similar activi- ties in Norway. (The Nazi-controlled Kalundborg radio said in a domestic broadcast that a building yard at the Danish town of Randers, engaged in filling contracts for "large scale installa- tions," was destroyed by fire Monday night. The broadcast, recorded in New York by the U.S. Foreign Broadcast Intelligence Service, said four men had been arrested, indicating that the fire was the latest of a group of sabo- tage acts in that occupied country.) Dutch resistance to German oc- cupation has stiffened greatly as re- ports of Russian victories filtered through the German censorship and the people have seen for themselves the increasing momentum of the Al- lied air offensive. German propaganda in the Neth- erlands is attempting to minimize the role being played by American fliers. Hirh School Buys Bomber GRAND RAPIDS, Mich., April 6.- (P)-Five thousand Grand Rapids residents, many of them South High School students, gathered at the Kent County Airport today for the Army-Navy christening of '"The Spirit of South High", a $300,000 four-motored Flying Fortress pur- chased 'through the high school's "Buy-A-Bomber" campaign. Gov. Harry F. Kelly, Mayor George W. Welsh of Grand Rapids; Col. Ed- ward C. Black, Commandant at the Army Meteorological School here, and Col, A. C. Foulk, Commandant at Lockburne Army Air Base at Col- umbus, 0., from where the big bomber was flown for the ceremony, were among those who offered their congratulations to the students for their campaign, which resulted in sale of more than $375,000 worth of war bonds. The bomber arrived here shortly before the ceremony, the sides of its fuselage bearing the insignia, "The Spirit of South High." It left as soon as the christening was com- pleted. The ship was formally christened by LaVonne Kronberg, student queen of the high school, who released half a dozen helium-filled balloons in the Republicans Win Easily As Ziegler Defeats Reid Victories Indicated for Bishop, Hayward In Regent Race; Dr. Elliott Is Reelected (Continued from Page 1) The Supreme Court race developed into a see-saw contest between 71- year-old Circuit Judge Neil E. Reid of Mt. Clemens, a Republican, and Justice Bert D. Chandler, a Democrat, with a second Republican, Justice Emerson R. Boyles, definitely a contender. The fourth candidate, Probate Judge Frank L. McAvinchey of Genessee County, a Democrat, appeared to be out of the running. Chandler was the pace-setter in early unofficial returns, but Reid over- hauled him in the mid-afternoon< ASSOCIATED D~d POCTuR E PRESS NE W ~S count, which included populous pre- cincts in the Macomb-Wayne County industrial district. At most stages, however, Boyles was fewer than 5,000 votes behind the leader and it ap- peared tonight that only the official canvass could determine the two winners. Dr. Eugene B. Elliott, State Super- intendent of Public Instruction since 1935, paced the Republican ticket in his successful quest for a fourth term. Unofficial returns gave him an advantage of more than 80,000 votes over Edward W. McFarland, Wayne University Professor and for- mer Democratic Chairman of the State Liquor Control Commission. In the remaining contests, unoffi- cial returns indicated the election of R. Spencer Bishop, Flint, and Ralph A. Hayward, Kalamazoo, to the University of Michigan Board of Regents over their Democratic rivals, Dr. Ira D. McCoy of Bad Axe and Charles P. Nugent from the Univer- sity of Detroit Law School; of W. G. Armstrong, Niles, and Sarah Van Hoosen Jones, Rochester, to the State Board of Agriculture over Democrats Arthur Jewett, Mayor of Mason, and Joseph B. Carey, Mt. Pleasant; and of Stephen S. Nisbett, Republican, of Fremont, over Bernard T. Foley, Benton Harbor. Democratic leaders expressed dis- appointment at the light vote, par- ticularly in their Wayne County stronghold, which ordinarily can be counted upon for roughly one-third of the total of ballots cast. Wayne County-and Detroit-went Demo- cratic as usual but unofficial returns indicated the metropolitan area British Open IV New Offensive Against Axis (Continued from Page 1) munique failed to mention air action in connection with the Eighth Army's new attack, but there was every rea- son to suppose coordinated Allied fighters, fighter bombers and bohib- ers from bases both to the'south and west of the battle area pitched in to hammer Rommel's exposed points. Yesterday's bag of enemy aircraft shot down was placed tonight at 52, the greatest number ever downed in one day in the African campaign. To the previously announced toll of 48 planes shot down during the day were added four blasted out of the sky shortly after dusk last night by RAF Hurricane pilots who at- tacked a quartet of tri-motored Ital- ian torpedo planes attempting to sink Allied shipping off the Algerian coast. The biggest event of the day was the double-barreled operation in which Mitchells inflicted heavy dam- age on an enemy convoy in the straits of Sicily, and whose American Light- ning fighter escort, on the way home from the raid, intercepted a big Ger- man transport plane formation pro- tected by Stukas and fighters and shot down 31 in all. polled only about 105,000 of the state's 400,000-vote total. In the highway commissioner race, Reid rolled up an advantage of more than 20,000 in Wayne County, but dropped a quarter of that edge in Republican Kent County alone and lost virtually every out-state county, ELECTION RESULTS DETROIT, April 6.- (P)- Re- turns from 3,310 precincts out of 3,754 in the state give: For state highway commission- er: Charles M. Ziegler (Rep.) 203279, Lloyd B. Reid (Dem.) 160897. For supreme ,court justices (non-partisan) 3317 precincts out of 3754 (two to be elected): Emer- son R. Boyles (Inc.) 154464, Neil Reid 158688, Bert D. Chandler (Inc.)2156756, Frank L. McAvin- chey 62091. For superintendent public in- struction 3202 precincts out of 3754: Eugene B. Elliott (Rep.) 210802, Edward W. McFarland (Dem.) 127865. For University regents 3274 pre- cincts out of 3754 (two to be elec- ted): R. Spencer Bishop (Rep.) 205812, Ralph Hayward (Rep.) 206346, Charles P. Nugent (Dem.) 130159, Dr. Ira Dean McCoy (Dem.) 129677. For state board of education 3292 precincts out of 3754: Steph- en S. Nisbett (Rep.) 216090, Ber- nard T. Foley (Dem.) 133329. For members state board of ag- riculture 3291 precincts out of 3754 (two to be elected): W. G. Armstrong (Rep.) 206992, Sarah Van Hoosen Jones (Rep.) 200409, Arthur Jewett (Dem.) 128848, Jo- seph B. Carey (Dem.) 133779. AMENDMENTS - No. 1 (Election of township offi- cers): 3,219 precincts out of 3,754 gave 176,618 .yes, and 104,996 no. No. 2 Homestead deeds and mortgages): 3,221 precincts out of 3,754 gave 144,805 yes and 102,280 no. save for a few in the upper peninsula where results in the main were close. The voters also approved two pro- posed constitutional amendments. One, which the attorney general has held applied to successful candidates in this election, extended the terms of township officers, including mem- bers of county boards of supervisors, from one to two years. The other, advocated by the Michigan State Bar, validates certain deeds to home- steads which have led to past litiga- tion because they lacked the signa- ture of the signer's spouse. CITY CLIMAXES BOND SALES GRAND RAPIDS, Mich., April 6.- (LP)-Grand Rapids war bond buyers Will choose a "Destroyer Girl" during April through their bond purchases, it was announcel today by the War Fi- nance Committee, in charge of the campaign to sell $8,000,000 in Gov- ernment securities here this month. T R A I N L 0 A D 0 F T A N K S-Shrouded M-4 tanks cast shadows along the track as a train- load of the all-welded vehicles leaves a General'Motors war plant for the front. C H I E F S-Philip Murray, CIO head (standing), and William Green, head of the AFL, snapped at hearing before senate war in- vestigating cointnittee. T O U C H S E N T R Y D OG-A boxer dog.,trained for Army sentry duty, leaps at the arm of Lieut. Harold Baker, who wears a padded suit in a demonstration at the Chicago Quartermaster depot. Several of the dogs are already on duty. CLASsIFIED ADVERTISING CLASSIFIED RATES Non-Contract $ .40 per 15-word insertion for one or two days. (In- crease of 10c for each additional 5 words.) $1.00 per 15-word insertion for three or more days. (In- crease of $.25 for each additional 5 words.) Contract Rates on Request HELP WANTED WANTED-Experienced men coun- selor for YMCA Camp Birkett on Big Silver Lake. June 20 - Aug. 22. Phone 9613. HELP WANTED: Bookkeeper and office manager for small office. $150.00 per month. Write Box 95 Michigan Daily in own handwrit- inna ndinclude mqalifications and WANTED WANTED-One snare drum. Michi- gan .Union, Room 202. Telephone 2-4431. WANTED-Used clothes. Best prices paid. Ben the Tailor, 122 E. Wash- ington St. Phone 5387 after 6 p.m. WANTED: 50 students to work for meals. Cooperative plan. Special weekly rate. Baker's Restaurant, 512 E. William. WANTED - GOOD BINOCULARS. Will pay cash or can trade Leica or Argus miniature cameras with equipment. Box 102, Mich. Daily. MISCELLANEOUS MAKE MONEY--on your used cloth- ing by phoning Claude H. Brown, 2-2736, 512 S. Main. WASHED SAND AND GRAVEL- HIE'S AN ICE SKATE R-ames Caesar, an lee skater, practices an ice ballet stunt in a Los Angeles, Calif., pool. When tried over water, difficult leaps attempted for the first time don't end in broken bones. N 0 S H 0 E P I N C H H E R E--shoe rationing won't ham- per Ellen Ballon, Canadian pianist (above), who made this col- lection of footgear in various countries where she has given re- citals. She thinks she'll like the wooden clogs. .~, ~j'~ ~W" ~low*