it ~4tr 4 i 4 ait~ W"eather Waxmer VOL. LIII No. 14 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, APRIL 24, 1943 - - PRICE FIVE CENTS Allies Crack Rommel's Lie at 3 Majority of Diplomats Recalled from Finland Relations Appear Close to a Showdown; Only McClintok and Clerk Left in Helsinki Bulldozer Cuts Out Pathway for Road By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, April 23. - The United States withdrew all but a skeleton diplomatic staff from Fin- land today, and the long-troubled relations between the two nations appeared close to a showdown. The capital eagerly watched to see what bearing the American move may have on the question whether Finland is to go along with Germany, or get out of the war and make a separate peace with Russia. indirect Notice on Finns Both here and in London, there was a belief in unofficial quarters that the United States, by withdraw- ing the main body of its diplomatic staff, was serving indirect notice on Finland to make a break with the Axis while there was yet time. How- ever, the State Department simply described the move as an "adminis- trative" one, and declined to throw further light on it. Six aides from the United States Michigan Liquor To Be Placed Under Rationing Individual Consumers Will Soon Be Limited To One Quart a Week LANSING, April 23 .-(iP)-All hhq- uor outlets in Michigan Monday will be placed under rationing by the State Liquor Control, Commission which promised today that a pro- gram soon will be established to ra- tion liquor to Individual consumers who meanwhile will be limited as well as possible to one quart a week per purchaser. Chairman R. Glen Dunn said Michigan has been allocated a defin- ite quota of supply by liquor distillers and that 70 per cent of this stock would be earmarked for sale in the "Detroit area," 25 per cent for the rest of the Lower Peninsual, and five per cent for the Upper Peninsula. Retail outlets will be limited to pur- chase of 60 per cent of their purchase for the first four months of 1942, but no store may purchase more than $30,000 worth of liquor this year. All drinking houses, hotels serving liquor by the glass and club licensees in Michigan may purchase their quotas once a week, and only on a day designated by the manager of the state store from which the indi- vidual draws his supply, the order said. Specially designated distribu- tors, the privately - owned liquor stores, may purchase only once every two weeks on a day designated by store managers of his supply depot. Churchill Calls Jap, Atrocity 'Cold-Blooded' Day Anticipated When Anericans and RAF Will Attack Jap Cities LONDON, April 24 (Saturday)- (AM-~Winston Churchill denounced today the "cold-blooded" execution of American airmen 1y the Japanese and declared the RAF "earnestly look forward to the day when they will be able to fly side by side with their American comrades to attack Tokyo and other cities of Japan." Mr. Churchill said in a message to General H. H. Arnold, commanding general of the American Air Forces: " I have heard with indignation of the cold-blooded execution of your airmen by the Japanese. "This barbarous and unusual ac- tion reveals in a pecularly significant manner the fear the Japanese have of having munitions factories and other military objectives in their homeland bombed. "I cannot resist sending you this message to assure you that the RAF legation at Helsinki left by special plane with their families and arrived in Stockholm, Sweden. That left be- hind in Helsinki only Charge d'Af- faires Robert Mills McClintock and one clerk, inasmuch as the Minister, H. F. Arthur Schoenfeld, departed for Washington last December. , For some days, reports from Stock- holm had told of increasing German pressure upon the Finns. Informed persons in that capital had expressed the belief the Germans were trying to get the Finns to open an offensive on the Leningrad sector in an effort to reduce that city, second largest in Russia. The Germans were said to have threatened full occupation of Finland, unless the demands were met. No More Soldiers In Sacrifice But Baron von Mannerheim, Fin-1 nish military leader, was reprsented as determined to sacrifice no more soldiers in offensives. As one ob- server in Stockholm summed up the situation last week: "The Germans are no fools. They sensehthe changes slowly developing in the Finnish political line and therefore are putting in demand af- ter demand in an effort to jam any efforts the Finns may be making to remove German influences or gradu- ally step out of the war." Though officials here were silent, it was believed entirely possible that the newest American move may be designed -to counteract such German pressure. Wolverintes Score Fourth Baseball .Win Michigan Nine Takes Advantage of Ilini Errors in 5-2 Victory By JO ANN PETERSON Capitalizing on Illini errors, Mich- igan defeated the Champaign nine, 5-2, yesterday afternoon at Ferry field, in the first of a two-game se- ries, the second of which will be played at 2:30 p.m. this afternoon. Pro Boim pitched the entire con- test as did Andy Phillip for the Illini, Pro allowing only six hits, while Phil- lip yielded seven. Dick Walterhouse led the batting attack for Michigan, accounting for two of the runs batted in, while Bob Wiese, Howie Wikel and Elmer Swanson accounted for one run apiece. The first inning was uneventful, neither side scoring, Wiese missing a long high fly out in center field by such a narrow margin that when he fell the ball was right between his fingers. The home half of the second inn- ing found Michigan accounting for two runs, the first coming when Wal- terhouse scored after Swanson flied out to Prentiss, and Lee Eilbracht, the Illini catcher missed the throw to the plate. Howie Wikel came in a minute later on a hit by Boim to left field. Turn to Page 3, Col. 4 'It Is Not Pleasant Here Berliners Letter Says Describes Devastation in City after RAF Raid in Writing to Friend, 'Dear Walter' By WILLIAM F,. KING Associated Press Co tresponden t ON THE TUNISIAN FRONT, April 23.-"Yes, dear Walter, it is pleasant here, for we live in constant expectation of new and hea attacks." That was the comment of a Berliner who wrote to a Nazi friend fi ing in Tunisia. The letter, sei zed by the Allies, was signed Alfred Levinski. The writer described an RAF raid on Berlin saying: "Fires were ra everywhere. Added to the blaze were many blocks of flats totally destro by bombs and land miines." not avier ght- von ging oyed s This "bulldozer" is one of the machines which is being used to push through the new Alcan Highway to Alaska. These machines smash over trees and cut the primary roads. Russians Drive Ickes Receives Germans Back Full Power Over In Caucasus Coal Production 200 Red Bombers Strike at Insterberg in Sixth Raid of Offensive Interior Secretary Will- Supervise All Branches Of Solid Fuel Industry i By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, April 23.--P)-In LONDON, April 24. (Saturday)- a broad extension of his powers over German troops attacking repeatedly solid fuels, Secretary Ickes received in the northwestern Caucasus again virtually blanket authority today to I say how coal shall be produced and were hurled back to their original distributed. positions, suffering 500 casualties An executive order by President and losing 36 planes, Russia an- Roosevelt empowered the Interior nounced early today. Secretary to issue "necessary policy Moscow dispatches suggested the and operating directives" to the solid fuels industries "to assure for the strength and frequency of the enemy prosecution of the war and the con- attacks indicated a German offensive servation and most effective develop- in that sector where the ground once ment and utilization of solid fuels." again is solid. In addition to the grant of gen- Interbure Hit eral authority - apparently broad Casualties, the letter went on, in- cluded 200 dead and 300 wounded, "but the final figure will certainly be considerably higher." Had Heavy Raid "We have just.come through a ve ry heavy air raid from the first to tie second of March. The sky simply rained down fire and bombs and t'he damage is correspondingly heavy. Just opposite us a factory was burnt to the ground. "A big warehouse in which cars were laid up was burnt out by 'the 'knee.' Six great warehouses ,ere burnt out in the Marchstrasse. Eive houses were burnt down and a :fur- ther eight in the Berlinerstrasse t and eight more by the Tiergarten station; six by the Friendrichstrasse st tion and 18 to 30 houses in the KPiser- allee. Revenge Is Only Thought "When one sees all the misiry here, how the inhabitants of devastated homes wander through the streets with little bundles-all their worldly possessions - it fairly makes j one's heart bleed. One comes blind, with hate and has no thought but re- venge, revenge. Alas, alas, we are so deeply committed in the east that the British can carry out unpunished all these raids on innocent cities. "When, oh when, will there be a change? When shall we be strong- strong enough to finish off in the east and turn out full force against England? When, oh, when? "Hate, hate, and hate alone must will every German's soul. There can be no other answer." 'U" Hospital Unit Needs 40 Nurses Graduates Are Wiated For Overseas Duty Forty graduate registered nurses are urgently needed by the University of Michigan Army General Hospital Unit No. 298, which is now stationed somewhere in England, University officials announced yesterday. This unit went overseas last Oc- tober and the hurry-up call for more nurses comes as a result of a recent increase of the Unit's hospital capac- ity of 1000 beds. The requirements for service with the Unit are urgent and there will be little time lost in getting recruits into foreign service once their cre- dentials and physical examinations are cleared. Any graduate registered nurse who is apparently eligible for military duty may apply for assignment to Miss Rhoda Reddig, directo of nurs- ing, University Hospital. Doughton Say Tax Bill Will Go to House Committee Fails To Report Plan; Parties Conflict on Reasons WASHINGTON, April 23. - OP) - Despite Republican intimations to the contrary, Chairman Doughton (Dem.-N.C.)tonight claimed suffi- cient votes in the Ways and Means Committee to deliver to the House floor a pay-as-you-go bill taxing 1942 income at 1941 rates, and esti- mated to produce about $3,000,000,- 000 additional revenue this year. The committee today failed to re- port the bill, and Republicans and Democrats gave conflicting explan- ations on the reasons why; the for- mer hinting that there were not suf- ficient votes. Meanwhile, a Congressional tax authority, who asked that his name not be used directly, said this mea- sure, supported by Democrats,. would mean 1943 federal revenue from per- sonal income taxes would jump from, $10,000,000,000 to about $13,000,000,- 000. He expressed the view that the increased collections would be ac- companied by a "freezing" of pres- ent rates, preventing any further wartime increases. The hike in revenues would come about by collecting in 1943 on 1943, incomes while taxpayers at the same' time amortized the reduced obliga-! tions on the 1942 income. A third of the 1942 liabilities would be due by Dec. 15, and the remainder in 1944 and 1945. The measure includes a 2 per cent, withholding levy against the taxable portions of wages and salaries. Doughton called another commit- tee session for tomorrow, when the body probably will vote on reporting the bill. Drive To Share Your Smokes Is Ended The five-day Union-Daily spon- sored "Share Your Smoke" drive came to a grand climax yesterday as contributions from campus groups began to roll into the Union Student Offices. As yet there is little indication of the total collected. However, Erwin Larson, '45, chairman of the drive, said late last night that he doubted if the $500 goal was reached. Mosher hall was reported to have contributed 100 per cent. Collections are yet to be made from dormitories, league houses, and about 25 fratern- ities. oints Pilots Wipe Out 20 Nazi Transports Enemny Planes Loaded With Troops, Gasoline Destroyed by British By The Associated Press ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AFRICA, April 23.-Allied artillery barrages and determined in- fantry attacks cracked open three salients in Marshal Erwin Rom- mel's Tunisian bridgehead today, and fighter pilots celebrated another smashing aerial triumph in their destruction of an entire fleet of 20 mammoth six-engined German transport planes loaded with troops and precious gasoline. Barrage Precedes With furious fighting covering two-thirds of the Tunisian front, this was the Allied position at dusk to- night: 1. Preceded by the heaviest single artillery barrage of the campaign, British infantry attacked the Ger- man "Verdun" of the Tunisian front -Long Stop Hill, 28 miles southwest of Tunis. 2. First Army infantry attacked on a nine-mile front between Goubellat BULLETIN - STOCKHOLM, April 2.V) The Swedish Foreign Office con- siders the German answer to its protest against the shelling of the Swedish submarine Draken as un- satisfactory, it was reported au- thoritatively tonight. and Bou Arada and advanced three miles against stubborn opposition to within about 34 miles of Tunis. 3. Gen. Sir Bernard L. Mont- gornery's Eighth" Army stabbed six miles north of Enfidaville along the marshy coastline, while mountain as- sault to the west which resulted in the capture of Takrouna were slowed by continuous counterattacks, ap- proximately 40 airline miles from Tunis. Transports Wiped Out In ten blazing minutes, British, South African and Australian fight- ers who caught the aerial convoy over the Gulf of Tunis wiped out ev- ery one of the 20 transports and shot down ten escorting planes to carry out what was regarded here as the most important stroke against en- emy supply lines since the fighting began. (The War Department said in Washington that the German trans- ports were Merseburg's 323's-not Messerschmitts as previously report- ed from Africa-and described them as power gliders with six engines, 700 to 800 horsepower, and a speed of 125 to 130 miles, capable of carrying 100 to 110 troops.) Capital Moves LONDON, April 24. (Saturday)- (A)-The Daily Telegraph said in a Stockholm dispatch today that Axis headquarters had been moved from Tunisia to Sicily and now were es- tablished in a village on the outskirts of Messina. Coal Producton May Be Halted Negotiators for Miners To Go Before WLB NEW YORK, April 23.-V(M- Pos- sibilty of a general work stoppage in the nation's soft coal fields loomed anew today as negotiators for northern Appalachian bituminous operators left for Washington to go before the War Labor Board, and John L. Lewis declared the joint wage conference had been disrupted. Part of the southern Applachian owner's negotiating committee also left to appear tomorrow before the WLB, to which Secretary of Labor Perkins has certifed the case, while others remained to attend further debate on the United Mine Workers' demands in the morning. Lewis, UMW president, refused to say whether he would comply with msteur "14 A- special communique announced that a striking force of 200 Russian long-range bombers battered the' East Prussian railway center of In- sterburg, on the German trunk sup- ply line to the north Russian front, for more than two hours last night and left the entire city in flames. enough so that Ickes could, if he! found it advisable, tell a retail coal- yard which sizes of coal and how much of each it may stock-the or- der specifically directed that ration- ing authorities consult Ickes on any plans or proposals for rationing of solid fuels, and gave him the final voice after advising with the War Production Board. I , It was added that a single bomber was lost in this sixth raid of the big Russian aerial offensive from theC east which started April 10 with an attack on Koenigsberg. It was the Attracts Crowd first time the Russians had concen-, trated on Insterburg. Previous tar- A burning electric motor in the gets were Danzig and Tilset. heating tunnel below the Natural Large Number of Planes Used Science building last night brought Two hundred planes is the largest the city's fire equipment screaming up number the Russians ever had men- to campus. tioned using in the new wave of raids Ventilators in the tunnel spread the keyed with the RAF and U.S. aerial smoke through the building and onslaught to keep Hitler's citadels white-coated laboratory technicians under fire from both sides. ran into the corridors to find the Air forces of both sides were active smoke. A call from one of them to over the entire area, and the mid- the fire department asked for a small night communique recorded by the truck to put out the smouldering Soviet monitor also reported the de- fire; two large red engines came. struction yesterday of 20 German About 500 curious students gath- planes southwest of Voroshilovgrad ered in front of the building, many in the Donets basin. expressing hopes that "the whole The Russian lines were declared thing burns down." But the fire was still holding firm. out in about 10 minutes. MARINES MOVE IN WITHOUT FIRING A SHOT: Reporter elso Landing at Ellice Islands Reportr '-U (Editor's Note: The Navy disclosed in washington Friday that American forces have established a base in the Ellice Islands flanking the shipping routesbetween the United States and Australia. Navy censors then released the following eyewitness story of the landing there.) By TOM YARBROUGH Associated Press Correspondent OFF ELLICE ISLANDS IN THE SOUTH PACIFIC - (Delayed). - -United States Marines completed the job of moving into the Ellice Islands a few minutes ago without ington Friday disclosed that the United States had occupied Funa- futi in the Ellice Islands group and that enemy bombers had raided it April 22. Secretary Knox told a press conference "we've been there for some time and we've got an establishment there" but declined to disclose the time of occupation or the nature of the establishment. Knox said the Funafuti base had the same value as other island bases guarding the line of com- munications to Australia, but noted that it was much nearer the The only things missing were soft strains of south sea music, waving palms and an announcer's voice taking a "reluctant" farewell. But Americans ashore, in for a rough time at best, had no time to ponder such soft idyls. The Japa- nese were only about 500 miles away in the Gilberts and the Ma- rines were busy preparing a recep- tion for any attempt to dispute their occupation. The Marines went ashore on Funafuti, a low strip of 'palm- covered land shaped like a boomer- bomb radius by several hundred miles. By beating the Japanese to the Ellice Islands, the Marines and the Navy. moved up as easily as the Japanese had moved down into the Solomons earlier in the war. Guarded by cruisers and de- stroyers, transports slipped into the lagoon single file without a sound except from cruisers cata- pulting their planes to maintain an overhead watch. Behind the business of getting there first lay an immense amount ing men, equipment and supplies they jammed their bows into the beach while bronze-colored na- tives looked on pleasantly, and from there on it was just a task of repeating the process until ev- erything was unloaded. Funafuti has a population of about 350 light-skinned Samoan type natives and normally only one European-a British colonial officer. Fliers from our cruiser who alighted in the lagoon said the na- tives were physically excellent, big, strong and friendly. They started