l' rn A*r 3t 4 l Continued Cold VOL. LIV No. 107 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, MARCH 31, 1944 llied Forces Kill 400 Japs in orth urma PRICE FIVE CENTS Battle Reds Take * * *a Five Nip Advances Repulsed More Tlai 1,000 Trapped in Valley By The Associated Press NEW DELHI, March 30.-Lt.-Gen. Joseph W. Stilwell's American and Chinese troops in northern Burma have slaughtered at least 400 Jap- anese in repulsing five savage coun- terattacks launched in an attempt to rescue a force of approximately 1,000 Japanese trapped by a roadblock north of Leban in the Mogaung Val- ley. Stilwell's combined force, which encircled two makeshift battalions of the Japanese 18th division two days ago by cutting the main road 14 miles inside the Mogaung Valley, threw withering fire into the frenzied at- tackers, and when the Japanese fin- ally~ retired they left their dead stacked in front of the Allied posi- tions, it was disclosed today. Perhaps the most amazing feature of the bloody fight was the discovery that not a single American or Chin- ese was killed and only a handful wounded. The toll of Japanese brought to at least 640 the number of enemy killed since Stilwell's forces swept into the Mogaung Valley March 19in their drive southward toward the main enemy base at Myit- kyina. - Admiral Lord Louis Mountbatten's Southeast Asia Headquarters esti- mated that another 2,500 Japanese had been killed by British forces opposing the enemy's invasion of India. Hard but inconclusive fight- ing raged inside the India border yes- terday. Inter-American Speech Contest Will Be Today To select a speaker to represent this area in the National Discussion Con- test on Inter-American Affairs, the sixth regional contest will be held in the Rackham Building today. Eight students from central region colleges and universities will partici- pate in a round table discussion at 2 p.m. in the Rackham West Confer- ence Room and a general symposium and forum at 8 p.m. in the Rackham Amphitheatre. Scholarship Offered The contestants are competing for a $500 scholarship for travel and study in Mexico this summer and a chance to enter the national radio broadcast contest which will be held inWashington, D.C., on Pan-Ameri- can Day, April 13. Inter-American cooperation will be the topic for discussion at the round- table, which will be conducted by Prof. Arthur S. Aiton, professor of Latin American history. In the evening session students will give seven-minute speeches prepared on an assigned topic on the general subject "Bases of Cooperation Among American Republics," following which an audience discussion forum will be held. Dr. Esson M. Gale, Interna- tional Center director, will preside. Discussion To Be Judged Judges will consider both partici- pation in the round table discussion and the prepared speeches in select- ing the winner. Both parts of the Allied Sofia Ao PowerfA Bombers Blast or Second Time, l rut Base of Cernowite By The Associated Press ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, NA- PLES, March 30 .-Explosive-scarred1 Sofia was blasted from the air today£ for the second time in 24 hours by! the largest force of heavy bombers ever sent against a single target from Mediterranean bases. Both U.S. Fortresses and Liberat- ors participated in the new assault RAF Forces a Hit Ger8many Two Heavy Waves Bomb Four Areas By The Associated Press LONDON, March 31, Friday-RAF heavy bombers headed out toward the continent last night in two great forces which took more than an hour to cross the English coast, and almost immediately various German radio stations began filling the air with' warnings. One broadcast said, "One enemy formation is over the Rhine and an- other formation is over the northern; part of the Eiffel area." The Frankfurt radio left the air after warning: "Enemy bombers are heading toward us," and thenlast DNB announcement was, "Enemy formations are over Thuringia, cen- tral Germany and northern Bav- aria." London Has Alert' London itself had a brief alert early today and some gunfire was reported in suburban sections. The RAF night action followed up daylight attacks by U.S. Thunder- bolts on German airfields in Holland and the Holland-German border re- gion. Thunderbolts used both bombs and guns in their attacks upon the air- dromes. The U.S. Eighth Air Force heavy bombers took the day off. One Plane Lost One Thunderbolt was lost and one German plane was destroyed while attempting to land at one of the fields. This brought the total num- ber of Nazi planes knocked out by the Americans in the last four days to at least 106. The Thunderbolt fighter-bombers which attacked objectives "at Eind- hoven, near the Belgian border, and Coesterberg, near Utrecht, reported no enemy air opposition," headquar- ters announced. This was the 25th operation of the month by the Eighth Air Force, of which all but two were made by four- engined Flying Fortresses and Liber- ators. Of the 23 major raids, 15 were directed at targets inside Germany proper. Locomotives and flak towers were shot up by the Thunderbolts en route to the Holland-German border tar- gets and one pilot said eight enemy interceptors attempted to attackI him, but were outmaneuvered. and reached the Bulgarian capital while it still was smoking from a heavy blow last night by RAF Lib- erators and Wellingtons. Fighter opposition was fairly strong over the city, returning fli- ers reported, and the bombers and their escort of Lightning and Thunderbolt fighters destroyed se- veral enemy interceptors. The attack was directed at Sofia's vital railroad yards through which passes the main line from Berlin to Istanbul, Turkey, and other Balkan points. However, other targets in the capital also were hit. The bombing set off huge explo- sions and crews reported smoke rose 10,000 feet as they left and the "choke points" of the rail yards were completely blanketed by their bombs. One navigator, Lt. Charles McCar- thy, West Springfield, Mass., com- mented, "the town was smoking from earlier attacks when we got there and it was on fire when we left." A Lightning outf it-the 82nd fighter group, commanded by Lt. Col. William P. Litton of Shaw, Miss.- passed its 400th victory mark on the raid. Smaller formations of Fortresses and Liberators carried out a diver- sionary attack on two of Yugoslav-, ia's principal ports-Split and Mos- tar. The RAF fliers who made last night's raid also reported good cov- erage of the Sofia rail yards and said they started two great fires. Soviets Clarifv .1 Recognition of Badoglio .Rule By The Associated Press MOSCOW, March 30.-The-Soviet newspaper Izvestia declared today that the Soviet Union's recognition of the Badoglio government in Italy was undertaken to establish direct relations with that government and to put Russia on an equal basis with the United States and Great Britain. Both Britain and the United States had enjoyed these direct re- lations, but not Russia, Izvestia said in a three-column, page one editorial indicating displeasure at having been left out of British and American decisions in Italy. Declaring the exchange did not ne- cessarily establish diplomatic rela- tions but did establish "factual re- lations," Izvestia said the "unequal position" of Russia in Italy had been remedied by the act. It pointed out that the Allies had had many con- tacts in southern Italy with all fac- tions, as well as military leadership there, while Russia had only a "few representatives connected with the consultative council on Italian ques- tions." Threaten Rumania, Hungary, Soviets 15 Miles From Czech Border By The Associated Press LONDON, March 30.-Red Army forces rolling unchecked toward Hitler's satellite lands today seized Czernowitz, German fortress that had guarded the routs to Rumania and Hungary, and climbed up the Prut River banks into the Carpa- thian mountains to a points only 15 miles from the Czechoslovakian border at the "pass of the Tartars." Announcing capture of Czernowitz, an Order of the Day by Marshal Sta- lin called it "an important economic and political center of northern Bu- covina and a powerful strongpoint in the German defenses of the river Prut covering the approaches to the frontiers of Hungary and Rumania." A warning to the Axis satellites to turn against Hitler or be invaded seemed plainly implied. Reds Storm City The city was taken by ptorm after stree fighting that began yesterday, NEW YORK, March 30.-(P)- Russia and Japan had renewed their annual fisheries agreement after negotiations since Dec. 31, an NBC broadcast-from Moscow said tonight. and the Russians immediately spread out to take nearby villages. The Ger- mans acknowledged a withdrawal. For the fourth day since they reached the Prut river boundary of Rumania south of Czernowitz, the Russians refrained from crossing in- to Rumania proper, still leaving the door open for Rumania to chuck her German alliance and invite the Red Army in.. The Russian hold on the boundary stream was extended to a total of more than 80 miles. The Soviets announced that the railway from Pervomaisk, deep in the Ukraine, to Byeltsi more than 150 miles westward, now has been en- tirely cleared of Germans, opening it to Russian use. 'Etude' Editor To Speak Today Dr. James Francis Cooke, editor of "The Etude," music magazine, and president of the Presser Foundation, will speak on "The Fifth Freedom" at 8:30 p.m. today in Rackham Lecture Hall. Dr. Cooke, a native of Bay City, received the degree of LL.D. from the University in 1938. He has been in- vited to speak to University students and the general public by the School of Music. Hoffman Sits Down For Easter Holiday WASHINGTON, March 30.- Rep. Clare Hoffman (Rep., Mich.) went on a one-man sitdown strike against a resolution to adjourn Congress for the Easter holiday today and tied the House in a parliamentary knot. The Congressman threw the leadership of both parties into a series of protesting huddles when he objected to consideration of the adjournment resolution by raising the point of no quorum- and there wasn't a quorum. What's more, there weren't enough con- gressmen in town to make up a quorum. "I'm against a couple of leaders getting together and running this House and then making one mis- take after another," he told a reporter later. "I just wanted to show them that. You know what would have happened if we had adjourned today as they planned? The President could have acted on the service vote bill and sent it here and we would have been ,home. So there wouldn't have been a law. And the President could have told the soldiers: 'Look what your Congress did to you.'- Hou Se Group Wants Swift. 4-F W ork Call BA The Associated Press WASHINGTON, March 30.-Im- mediate induction of 4-F's for a spe- cial Army work corps was recom- mended today by a House military sub-committee. Acting shortly after Secretary of War' Stimson had expressed disfavor for the whole idea, the House group made these formal recommenda- tions : "1. That the War Department ac- cept and use men for special labor duty and that the Department pub- licly so announce. "2. That Selective Service process 4-F's for classification, deferring those then engaged in industry or agriculture so long as they remain so engaged. "3. That appropriate legislation be drafted to cover, and supplement if necessary, compliance with the ac- tion propqsed." By directing deferment for those engaged in industry or agriculture, th program is intended to force a shift of 4-F's into essential occupa- tions rather than labor battalions. 4F Draftee Defects Must Be Noted, First Lady Says WASHINGTON, March 30.-(P)- Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt today warned that physical disabilities of 4-F's must be taken into considera- tion if they are drafted for war work as proposed by Selective Service Di- rector Maj. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey. ~* Strong U.S. Fleet Hits Jap-aHeld Post. By The Associated Press U.S. PACIFIC FLEET HEADQUARTERS, PEARL HARBOR, March 30.-Powerful American naval forces, believed to include new aircraft carriers, opened up an assault Wednesday on Palau Island within 460 nautical miles of the Philippines, and Japanese warships fled the area rather than offer a fight. Announcing the attack in a communique today, Adm. Chester W. Nimitz said: "Our attack continues." Admiral Nimitz said that Japanese ships were observed fleeing from the Palau area before our fleet units could reach "attack positions." The communique explained that the task force had been sighted by enemy planes searching from their bases from the Carolines and New Guinea. The fact that Japanese ships fled is a definite indication that the American task forces probably are of the same overwhelming strength as the aircraft carrier forces which attacked Truk Feb. 16-17 and the Marianas Feb. 22. The Nimitz communique did not describe the nature of the force attacking Palau but it is almost certain that it contains several new and large aircraft carriers. It is likely that the Palau attack is a heavy carrier bombing strike such as those which blasted Truk and the Marianas. The communique text: "Strong Pacific fleet forces, at dawn Wednesday, 29th of March (west longitude date) initiated attacks on Japanese-held Palau Island. After discovery of the approach of our forces by enemy planes searching from their bases in the Carolines and New Guinea, their ships were observed fleeing the area before our units could reach attack positions. "Our attacks continue. No further details are as yet available." The fleet force attacked on Palau is the nearest blow of major power yet delivered in the direction of the Philippines. Palau is 460 nautical miles east andslightly south of Manila and about 2,000 nautical miles from Tokyo., The Palau Islands are a group of 200 small, heavily wooded, volcanic islands at the western end of the Caroline chain. The communique's men- tion that enemy search planes operating from New Guinea as well as the Carolines detected the approaching task force suggests that the fleet force cruised south of Truk in closing in on Palau. The Japanese had withdrawn warships from Truk after that naval base stronghold was battered Feb. 16-17. Some observers believed that some enemy combat ships probably, were using Palau as an operational base. One of the major purposes of the present Palau strike possibly was to try to trap and force a fight with Japanese ships. Babelthuap Island, largest in the Palau group, contains 142 square miles of land. It is the second largest land mass in the Carolines, exceeded only by Ponape. The town of Koro just south of Babelthuap is the Japanese admin- istrative seat for the 1,500 Caroline Islands. (The task force strike against Palau occurred on the same day that Liberators of the Seventh Airforce, probably operating from the western Marshalls, delivered an attack on Truk. And that air attack followed shortly after the first raid of the war on Truk by Liberators from the South Pacific.) The bombing of Tokyo is inevitable, Tokyo radio quoted Gen. Kensuke Fujiye as saying when he assumed command of Japan's tastern defense zone. He warned that the "state of affairs" in the capital of Nippon is "truly urgent." Pacific Planes Hit Truk By The Associated Press Pacific airmen, striking Wednesday ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, South- night also hit Eten Island, and Moen west Pacific, March 31, Friday.-Gen. Island. Douglas MacArthur announced today** in a special communique that South- Allies Hit Ja >Base west Pacific bombers had hit the Jap- - anese base at Truk, for the first time. AtIi Wleai Island The communique reported 200 di- ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN rect hits on the Truk airdrome area SOUTHWEST PACIFIC, March 31. and 49 parked planes destroyed. Friday-()-Allied bombers dropped In a previous communique today 380 tons on Woleai Island in the MacArthur already had announced Caroline Islands west of the Japan- that Navy Catalina bombers had ese base at Truk, Allied headquarters bombed Woleai Island, enemy sea- announced today. It was the first plane base and airfield in the Caro- report of South Pacific aircraft strik- line Islands, 460 nautical miles west ing in the Carolines. of Truk. Navy Catalina flying boats made Eten Island in the Truk atoll was the raid on Woleai airdrome Tuesday the target of the raid at noon Wed- night and Wednesday morning. Two nesday. Five to 20 out of 90 enemy f large fires were started and heavy WORLD NEWS HIGHLIGHTS .,. By The %Associated Press ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, NAPLES, March 30.-The shooting and the shouting were past and the high hopes with which Allied troops worked their way into the ruins of Cassino just two weeks ago were dead today as the Allied communique dismissed action on this vital sector with a one- sentence, seven-word reference to patrol activity. LONDON, March 30.-Stocky Prime Minister Churchill pulled a rebellious House of Commons firmly into line today and won a 425-to-I 23 vote of confidence-his strongest showing since January, 1942-and NATIONAL AAU MEET: Wolverines Hosts to Nation's Outstanding Swimming Stars By HANK MANTHO Michigan will play host to the out- standing amateur swimming stars inj the nation as the long awaited Na- tional AAU swimming meet, which promises to present one of the great- est assemblage of stars ever to swim in one pool, gets under way, today looms as the meet's individual stand- out. This galaxy of stars, in direct con- trast to last year's AAU meet, when not a single record was set, will be in the best shape of their careers, and they may well shatter world records in five events with AAU marks fall-