I I ,;"~ H' / N .4fl n14 4 '- 14. ft 44 VOL. LIII No. 143 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, APRIL 20, 1943 PRICE FIVE CENTS William Nagel FIVE CENTS A PACK: Is Accused in Share Yo Stephan Trial Drive Get Harmon at Dutch ur Smokes' Guiain Are s Under Way Base as Comrades "Share your Smokes," the five day drive undertaken by the Union and Traitor Says Former The Daily in order to send a million cigarettes to our boys overseas officially Postmaster of Detroit got under way yesterday as nickels began to flow into the campaign's collec- tion boxes on campus as well as in all fraternities, sororities and dormitories. Advised Help to Nazi The cooperation of a tobacco company in agreeing to relinquish its profits has made it possible for every five cents contributed to "Share your fly The Associated Press Smokes" to send one pack of cigarettes to some American service man By Te AsocatedPres Iabroad. DETROIT, April 19.--U. S. District arToday and tomorrow have been designated by the Union and the League Judge Arthur J. Tuttle today ad- as special sale days because for ev-- mitted to the record of the Max Ste- phan treason trial a four-page letter in which the convicted traitor charged a former Detroit postmaster, William J. Nagel, advised him not to turn over an escaped Nasi prisoner- of-war to federal authorities and contributed $3 for the fugitive's bus fare. Nagelhas repeatedly denied any connection with Stephan or the flight of Luftwaffe Oberleutnant Hans Peter Krug from a Canadian prison camp, and the FBI has said it found no substantiation of Stephan's statement concerning him. Agents said today, however, that he would be recalled for questioning in view of the German-born restaurant- keeper's fight to escape the gallows. Court Delayed Action Stephan, sentenced to hang, won a stay of execution from the U. S. Supreme Court with his attorney's promise to present new evidence in the case. The charge against Nagel was the new evidence, a letter from Associate Justice Murphy - also, made a part of the trial court's record today-disclosed. Murphy advised that if new evidence was to be sub- mitted it should be presented to Tuttle without delay, and Stephan's letter followed. Stephan's letter told of "showing Peter Krug a good time on his 22nd birthday" April 18, 1942. While Krug was sleeping in a hotel room after the celebration, Stephan wrote, the restaurant-keeper "made up my mind to ask Mr. Bill Nagel of Sey- burn Ave. what to do with Krug, to make sure I would do no wrong." Says He Respected Nagel "I had great confidence in Mr. Nagel," Stephan added, "because he has been postmaster of Detroit and was known as a very respectful American. He was also a good friend of Hon. Supreme, Court Judge Frank Murphy. My opinion was that Mr. Nagel would come out with the truth voluntary to the Supreme Court. "Between 10 p.m. and 12 p.m. April the 18th 1942 Mr. Nagel had been in my restaurant at 7209 E. Jefferson. I did, ask Mr. Nagel what he would do if a lady would call by phone and told him she had an es- caped German prisoner of war from Canada in her house. "I told Mr. Nagel that I showed Krug a good time on his twenty-sec- ond birthday, that Krug wanted to go from Detroit to Chicago and that he would try and go back to Ger- many." customers, the tobacco company will ery two flat fifties sold to cigarette add three additional packs of twen- ties to the campus total. Of the five hundred dollars which the drive has set as its goal, $250 is expected toecome from fraternities and sororities and the remainder from the dormitories, league houses and the servicemen in the East and West Quads. The cigarettes which the contribu- tions to "Share your Smokes" buy will, after being turned over to Army and Navy service departments in 50 carton package lots, be shipped by these departments to American fighting units all over the world. Instead of the usual revenue tax stamp which seals a pack of cigar- ettes, will be a red, white and blue slip reading, "Good Luck, Good Smoking from the Michigan Student Body, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor." Erwin Larsen, '45, chairman of the "Share your Smokes" drive com- mended the students on "their ex- cellent support during the first day of the drive" in a statement last night. Germans Lose VN Z'i- " A r S-a 0* 1,60(U MVIen in Costly Attack Red Army Repulses Reckless Nazi Drives, Destroys 17 Planes By The Associated Press LONDON, April 20 (Tuesday)- Fierce new German attacks launched reckless of costs in attempts to widen their bridgehead in the Caucasus near Novorossisk have been repulsed with about 1,600 more Nazis wiped out and 17 planes destroyed, the Russians announced early today. Fighting Monday at times "devel- oped into hand-to-hand clashes" as the Germans kept up repeated coun- terattacks striving "at all costs" to drive back the Red Army squeezing ever closer to Novorossisk, said the midnight communique as broadcast by Moscow and recorded by the Sov- iet Monitor. All of Monday's attacks were re- pelled, with two battalions of enemy infantry, or about 1,600 troops, wiped out, the Russians said, bringing the four-day toll in determined fighting to nearly 8,000 German troops killed and 42 planes downed on this front as the Nazis threw air power in sup- port of ground forces. Twenty-five planes had been re- ported shot down Sunday. Fighter planes downed 13 more yesterday, and anti-aircraft gunners bagged four, the midnight war bulletin said, while seven other German planes were damaged. I Allies Destroy 96 Axis Planes In North Africa Bag 68 Transports Along Rommel Supply Line in Savage Attacks By The Associated Press ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AFRICA, April 19.- Allied airmen have destroyed 96 Axis planes, including 68 big Junkers freight and troop transports, in less than a day and a half of savage at- tacks against the enemy's aerial sup- ply line to Marshal Erwin Rommel's troops in Tunisia, the Allied com- mand disclosed today. Fifty-eight enemy transports were sent flaming to earth and into the sea in one destructive engagement yesterday when an Axis outbound convoy was ambushed at the north- eastern tip of Tunisia, and 10 more of the three-engined aerial freight- ers were destroyed within a few hours today. Sixteen Axis fighters were shot down as they tried ineffec- tually to protect their unwieldy char- ges yesterday and another was de- stroyed today. (Military spokesmen in Cairo, headquarters for the Western Desert Air Force whose Warhawk and Spit- fire fighters accomplished the mas- sacre of German airpower, said transports shot into the Mediterran- ean and onto the beaches and rocky hillsides of northeasternnTunisia were loaded with troops.) American, RAF and South African fighter pilots patrolling the Sicilian straits late yes t er day afternoon sighted the huge formation of Junk- ers, with strong fighter protection, flying toward Sicily almost at water level. Warhawk squadrons dived into the lumbering, three-engined transports, their machine guns chat- tering, while Spitfires took on the protecting Messerschmitts. In a matter of minutes the trans- ports were plunging to earth. RAF Bombs Italian Naval Base at Spezia LONDON, April 19.-GP)-Throw- ing its mighty home-based bomber arm into the battle to finish off the Axis in Africa, the RAF crossed the Alps in strong force overnight to de- liver for the second time in a week a violent and concentrated attack on Italian fleet units huddled in the Spezia Naval base on the northwest coast of Italy. A single bomber was lost in this long-distance assault-a 1,350-mile round trip-and it followed closely the greatest Allied air victory of the African campaign: the destruction in Mediterranean skies of 74 Axis planes, 51 of them transports. The big Spezia roadstead and fit- ting basins were hard hit, one re- turning pilot reporting that he had counted six fires leaping up through the clear night, and in the base un- doubtedly were harbored some among Mussolini's half dozen battleships, his light cruisers, destroyers and scores of other fighting craft. ~Gary G 'Old 98' Talks To Folks at Home From Hospital in South America By CADET El ZALENSKI Telephone wires bridged the gap of 2,000 miles from a base hospital in Dutch Guiana to Ann Arbor and brought the voice of Lieut. Tom Har- mon to his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Louis A. Harmon, yesterday after- noon. Less than two days after the news of his discovery was broadcast to a waiting world, Harmon reached his home on Vinewood Street by long distance telephone. It was exactly 1:34 p.m. yesterday when the phone rang and the opera- tor informed the anxious Mrs. Har- mon that her son was calling. It took eight minutes for the overseas operator to complete connections and, in the interim, military censor- ship was explained. The operator warned the Harmons not to ask any questions concerning military mat- ters, weather conditions, Tom's exact location and other similar details which might aid the enemy. Tom Greets Mother Tom's voice came over the wire at exactly 1:42 p.m. His first words, clear and distinct andin the same voice that made him known to thou- sands of radio listeners, were, "Hello Moms!", his favorite greeting to Mrs. Harmon. The grey-haired mother of the Michigan All-American football hero was noticeably nervous as she held the telephone. When she heard his familiar greeting her excitement in- creased and she cried out, "Tom! How are you?" "I'm safe and well," came the an- swer from a man who had just been through a harrowing experience af- ter cheating death. Mrs. Harmon was overjoyed. "You are. That's great. Everyone here has been pray- ing for you. All the family is here now. Is your crew all right?" Friends Not Found And Tom's answer to the question which has been burning in the minds of thousands was, "I haven't heard." Harmon and members of his B-25 bomber were separated after bailing out over the South American jungles. "Fritz Crisler is here," Mrs.Har- mon continued. "Would you like to speak to him?" She handed the phone to Michigan's football coach and athletic director. "Hello, you ghost. Are you all right?" Tom's only answer was, "Yes." And when Crisler asked Harmon if he was hurt, Tom replied, "I got a little shaken up and a few scratches." Crisler's parting words were, "Good luck to you, my boy." Tom's father, 70-year-old Louis A. Harmon, was elated on hearing his son's voice and asked him if he was Turn to Page 3, Col. 3 Hotels Fail To Meet Fire Rules host' Telephrones Harinons View Piclure of Their Son Mr. and Mrs. Louis A. Harmon, shown above, yesterday received an inter-ocean phone call from their son, Lieut. Tom Harmon, former Michigan grid great, whose plane, the 'Old 98' had crashed in French Guiana April 8. Davis Is Asked To Demonstrate His Press Conference Methods By The Associated Press the Office of War Information and WASHINGTON, April 19.- A the Coordinator of Inter-American presidential request for $47,342,000 Affairs, Nelson A. Rockefeller, to file f with it copies of all "propaganda" for the Office of War Information Iset tforinntin and -to the sent to foreign nations adt h reached Congress today at a time American armed forces. when a Senate committee, consider- * ing an investigation of government news dissemination, had just asked ef r D v Elmer Davis, the OWI director, to J give it a demonstration of his press conference methods.D The appropriation, asked for the 12 months beginning next July1,R bS p compares, with about $36,000,0 0 which the agency received for the WASHINGTON April 19.-UP current fiscal year. The request to Davis for a com- Rubber Director William M. Jeffers mand performance at the Capitol tonight termed "stale, inaccurate and came from the Senate Judiciary confusing" a report issued Saturday Committee, and the OWL director by the Office of War Information agreed to appear at 4 p.m., Eastern o h ubrstain n le War Time, Wednesday. Chairman on the rubber situation, and Elmer Van Nuys (Dem.-Ind.) told reporters Davis, OWI Director, retorted that the idea is to make a preliminary in- "So long as I am here I propose to quiry before considering legislation tell the people the truth as accurately for a formal investigation of govern- as I can ascertain it whether Mr. ment "dissemination and control of Jeffers likes it or not." information." The report which touched off this "We will ask him (Davis) to con- exchange reached the conclusion duct his conference at the Capitol that the great bulk of the 27,000,000 just the same as in his own office," civilian passenger car owners can Van Nuys explained. "After that not expect new synthetic tires before the committee will go into executive the last half of 1944. session to decide what will be done." In recent testimony before a Sen- The investigation was proposed by ate Committee, Jeffers had estimated Senator O'Mahoney (Dem. - Wyo.) it would be possible to distribute who told reporters the committee 12,000,000 new tires to civilians this would have other government infor- year, including 5,000,000 synthetic mation men follow Davis in appear- tires. ances before it While the committee was arran- ging this inquiry, Senator Taft ss ia Army Sought; 0 Family Former 'U' Grid Star Picked Up By Natives After 4 Days in Jungle By The Associated Press SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico, April 19. -Although Lieut. Tommy Harmon is the only member of a six-man bomber crew to be found alive since the former All - America football star's plane crashed in a South American jungle April 8, reports reaching here tonight indicated that at least two of his companions also parachuted to earth. These brief reports said fliers searching the area in the vicinity of the crash spotted three parachutes hanging from branches of trees in the jungle. Scene of Former Crash The plane cracked up near the vil- lage of Caux, French Guiana, in the same region where an American transport crashed last January and carried 35 men, Including Eric Knight, the author, and P. E. Fox- worth, crack G-man, to their deaths in the worst disaster in American aviation history. Harmon was one of the two pilots of the bomber, named "Little Butch" and carrying the number "98" which Tommy wore during his brilliant career at the University of Michigan. He landed near the charred wreck- age of the plane, reports reaching here said, and made an unsuccessful search for other members of the crew. (Dutch Guiana dispatches said Harmon found the bodies of two crew members in the wreckage.) Guided By Indians After wandering in the jungles for some time, Harmon was found by friendly Indians who guided him to Paramaribo, Dutch Guiana. He now is reported resting at the U. S. Army base at Paramaribo and in good condition. The U.S. Army was reported comb- ing the jungles for other missing crew members. IDr. Tolley Will Speak at Dinner Phi Beta Kappa Will Initiate 56 Students Dr. William Pearson Tolley, Chan- cellor of Syracuse University, will address the annual initation banquet of the Michigan Phi Beta Kappa Chapter at 7 p.m. today in the Mich- igan Union. Fifty-six students including jun- iors, seniors antI graduate students in the literary college will be initiated at the banquet. (The complete list of names ap- peared in the Honor Convocation list in Sunday's Daily.) Dr. Tolley who is president of the American Association of Colleges holds three degrees from American instutions of higher learning. He is a former president of Alleghaney College and holds his degrees from Syracuse, Drew Theological Semi- nary and Columbia University. Dean Edward H. Kraus of the lit- erary college is president of the local Phi Beta Kappa chapter and will preside at the dinner meeting. Prof. Sharf man Gets Russell Award The Henry Russell Lecture Award annually given to a member of the faculty who attains high distinction has been awarded to Prof. I. J. Sharfman, Chairman .of the eco- nomics department, Dr. Frank Rob- bins said yesterday. The lecture in his honor which was scheduled for April 27 has been post- poned indefinitely because Prof. Sharfman is now on leave, holding the chairmanship of the Railway Emergency Mediation Board in Chi- cago authorized by the WLB. Pamphlets Will Explain World Student Fund A Letter from Student, Message from Mme. Chiang To Be Included Pamphlets describing the World Student Service Fund are being pre- pared for sale Thursday to aid the. annual drive now being conducted on campus, Barbara Smith, '44, chair- man of the committee, said yester- day. Included with the pamphlet will be a letter from a student who has been helped by the Fund and a recom- mendation from Mme. dhiang Kai- Shek. The pamphlet describes what the WSSF is, how it is organized, and what it does. This year's goal for the University of Michigan has been set at $2,000, Miss Smith said. Latest returns yes- terday indicated that only $128 had been received. "World banks" where contribu- tions may be received have been placed in the League, the Union, the Offices of the Dean of Students and Women, all sororities, fraternities and dormitories, and several depart- mental offices. Money given in the drive by stu- dents and faculty members is used to feed, clothe, supply medical care, nnri .ffpr frvm in r n. ( vtui itiips andi Sgt. Lewis Missing Flight Sgt. Howard Clark Lewis, of the RCAF, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy F. Lewis, 2220 Washtenaw Ave., is one of four pilots to have been re- ported missing following a raid on Essen, Germany, March 13-14. Sgt. Lewis, who is twenty years old, has been with the RCAF in Eng- land since November, 1941. ARGENTINE SCHOLAR: Dr. Frondizi ) Inter-America By NEVA NEGREVSKI Dr. Risieri Frondizi, Grad., will present an interpretation of the "De- velopment of the Old and New Uni- versities in Argentina," at 8 p.m. to- day, in the Rackham Amphitheatre in the fifth of a series of lectures on Inter-Americanism sponsored by the Latin-American Society. Harvard University made Dr. Frondizi responsible for the philoso- phical section of the Handbook of Only One Conforms To Present Regulations With the exception of one small new hotel, there is not one hotel in Ann Arbor which conforms to city or state fire regulations, it was stated last night in a meeting Of the City Council. Every hotel fails to conform to a really" dangerous extent, Prof. J. B. Waite, alderman, said. They were W ill Speak in notified in January of these defi- ciencies and advised about necessary n Lecture Series steps for compliance with the state and city laws. This notice expires at the end of this month. for a book on American Realism. He However, it was stated that the has been also appointed as a Dele- local officials have no authority over gate from Argentina to the First the fire regulation of the theatres and that only state laws are effec- Inter-American Conference in Phil- tive o osophy that will be held in Yale Uni- The Majestic Theatre does not versity on April 30, where he will comply with the fire protection regu- read a paper on Contemporary Ar- lation of either the projection booth gentina Philosophy. or the furnace and needs consider- Immediately after his graduation able change. The Whitney only par- in Buenos Aires in 1934, Dr. Frondizi tially conforms to the furnace regu- came to Harvard University to study lation. (Rep.-O.) proposed that the oenate look into another phase of Federal information activities. He asked in a resolution that the Senate require 60 U' Students Help Husk Corn PEM Classes Salvage Farmer's Fall Crop In spite of the weather and the fact that corn is usually husked in' the fall, more than 60 University stu- dents have been helping local farm- ers salvage their crops. Two PEM classes were volunteered yesterday to help Frank McCalla husk the grain that couldn't be got- ten in last fall because of the damp weather and lack of labor. McCalla's two sons are in the Army and the 55 members of the class did the work they would have done had they been here. Another group went out on Satur- Food Con erence WASHINGTON, April 19.- (P- Relaxation of restrictions on press coverage of the International Food Conference was predicted today by Senators after Dean Acheson, Assis- tant Secretary of State, appeared be- fore the Senate Foreign Relations and Agriculture Committees. Acheson was reported to have told members that the decision on such a move rests with President Roosevelt. In a turbulent session behind closed doors, members of a group led by Senator Vandenberg (Rep.-Mich.) protested against the imposition of what the Michigan Senator was said to have termed a "gag rule." N.avy Pilot To Speak To University Club Lieut. Frederick W. Luebke, a Navy fighter pilot, will speak before the University Club at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Ballroom of the Michigan Union. I T-Tamp. nftpr . v ~rin +I', Paneifin_