_ d i, itia 4k au Weakher Cloudy and Warmer VOL. LIV No. 119 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 26, 1944 PRICE FIVE CENTS - -T __ . _ i Infantry Backed at Hollandia Yank, Aussie Planes Support Drive Against Jap Held Airdromes; India Advances Made By The Associated Press American and Australian fighters and bombers roaring off from the Japanese-built Tadji air strips are supporting the double-edged Ameri- can infantry drive closing in through the Dutch New Guinea mountains on Hollandia's three airdromes, Gen. Douglas MacArthur announced to- day (Wednesday). In India English and Indian troops captured Kanglatongbi Village, 22 miles north of Imphal, as they began smashing Nipponese road-blocks on the 60-mile highway linking the Al- lied bases of Imphal and Kohima. Another road running northeast from Imphal to Ukhrul near the Burma border was cleared of Japanese. Indian Railroad Cleared Long cblumns of tanks, guns and Allied' infantrymen were reported pouring down the Dimapur-Kohima road from the once threatened Ben- gal-Assam railway to break up the remaining pressure on Kohima. Light tanks led the slow advance of Lt.-Gen. Joseph W. Stilwell's Am- erican-trained Chinese soldiers down the Mogaung valley of northern Bur- ma. A solitary Japanese plane, striking on the third day of the three-fold invasion, was the only air defense Tokyo gave her Hollandia garrisons. No Nipponese air opposition was re- ported 150 miles down the coast in the Aitape sector where MacArthur said all enemy troops had been cleared from around the Tadji air- field. Bombers Blast Airfields Allied bombers ranged on either flank of the New Guinea fighting, blasting enemy airfields and installa- tions from the big Manokwari base 500 miles northwest of Hollandia to Madang, northeast New Guinea, to- ward which Australian troops have been pushing slowly. Central Pacific amphibious forces seized Ujelang atoll in their deepest permanent penetration of Japan's mandated islands. Feeble enemy re- sistance was overwhelmed in a two- day invasion last week-end, Adm Chester W. Nimitz announced yester- day. Patton Calls for Allied Destiny' General Declares U.S., Britain Will Rule World LONDON, April 25.-(P)-Lt.-Gen. George S. Patton, Jr., declared today it was undoubtedly the destiny of British and Americans "to rule the world and the more we see of each other the better" . Patton spoke before an American and British audience of about 200 persons 'at the opening of a United Kingdom Service Club to welcome United States soldiers. "The only welcoming I've done for some time," Patton said, "has been welcoming Germans and Italians into Hell. I've done quite a lot in that direction and have got about 177,000 there." "The sooner our soldiers write home and say how lovely the English ladies are the.sooner American dames will get jealous and force the war to a successful conclusion." "Undoubtedly it is our destiny to rule the world-we British, American and of course the Russian people. So we must get better acquainted," the London Daily Mail quoted the general as saying. FDR Wins Support of Easterners Voters in Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, Select Convention Delegates By The Associated Press First returns f rpm yesterday's Mas- sachusetts Presidential primary gave delegates favoring a fourth term for President Roosevelt a better than four to one lead over those pledged to the "favorite son" candidacy of former Governor Joseph B. Ely, an Administration opponent.{ Initial ballots counted came from the third and sixth Congressional dis- tricts. It was the first challenge to be made at the ballot box on the fourth term issue. The President also was polling a surprising number of Republican write-in votes in Pennsylvania's pref- erence primary, early tabulations showing him second choice behind Gov. Thomas E. Dewey of New York, in addition to running off with the state's 72 Democratic delegates by default. Far behind Dewey in the Pennsyl- vania write-in voting were Gen. Douglas MacArthur, Lieut. Comman- der Harold E. Stassen, former Min- nesota chief executive, Governor John W. Bricker of Ohio and Governor Ed- ward Martin of Pennsylvania. The only other delegate-picking yesterday was in Kentucky, where Republicans named six to complete a delegation of 22. Party leaders said they would be for Gov. Simeon Willis on the 1st ballot and then for Dewey. Montgomery Ward Defies FDR's Order WASHINGTON, April 25.- (1P)-_ Montgomery Ward and Company to- day defied an order from President Roosevelt to resume full relations with a union in its Chicago plant, and told him seizure of its properties would be unconstitutional. The President, directing the big mail order company to extend an expired labor contract with a CIO union pending determination of the question whether the union still has CHICAGO, April 25.-(A)- The Chicago Tribune said tonight that President Roosevelt is reported to have issued an executive order for seizure of the Montgomery Ward and Company Chicago plant and that Departmentof Commerce of- ficials were reported enroute here to assume control. a bargaining majority, had advised company officials that in the absence of that step "I shall take such further action -as the interests of the nation require." Montgomery Ward, in response to the President's message, agreed only to maintain "wages, hours and relat- ed terms of employment" for the workers who had returned to the job today, ending at the President's dir- ection a strike begun April 12. Menefee Appoint ed As Commissioner Charles C. Menefee, Ann Arbor at- torney, has been appointed Circuit Court Commissioner to succeed Al- bert W. Hooper, the governor's office at Lansing announced yesterday. Menefee, who took undergraduate work at the University and received his law degree here in 1937, was ap- pointed by Ann Arbor Probate Judge' Jay G. Pray, County Clerk Luella M. Smith, and Prosecutor Francis W. Kamman. Yank Planes Hit France, Germany; Fuebrer Inspects Atlantic Defenses Hitler Deputy Moves To Curb DanishSabotage Nazis Fear Denmark Will Be Weak Point; Benito, Adolph Meet By The Associated Press LONDON, April 25.-Adolf Hitler was reported giving his "Atlantic Wall" defenses an 11th-hour inspec- tion tonight in preparation for the Allied invasion, and his sub-Fuehrer in Denmark moved swiftly to crush rising sabotage which might provide the Allies with a crumbling breach in these defenses. Werner Rest, Hitler's special depu- ty in Denmark, threatened a whole- sale execution of imprisoned sabo- teurs unless underground activities are curbed. He added that the Ger- mans would "attack swiftly and sternly" and show no mercy toward saboteurs and others acting against German interests. He indicated they would be summarily shot. Communication Stopped This warning came just one day after the virtual isolation of Den- mark in another move to get the Nazi house in order for the invasion. Communication and travel between Denmark and Sweden were ended, and the restive little nation was in effect under a blockade. Selected aides accompanied Hitler on his inspection of the "Atlantic Wall," according to a report received here through a reliable connection with the Continental underground, including Admiral Karl Doenitz, su- preme commander of the German navy, Gen. Guenther Korten, chief of staff of the German air force, and a Professor Takn, inventor of the anti- aircraft towers which feature the anti-invasion defenses. The German strength ready to battle the Allied invasion is estimated at between 54 and 60 divisions, with little change since a recent swift shift from the eastern front. Dictators Meet The report of the Hitler tour reachedheretsoon after a Berlin an- nouncement that Hitler and Benito Mussolini had met Sunday and Mon- day at a "secret" meeting place and reaffirmed their joint aims. There was a swelling flood of in- vasion talk from Berlin and Paris commentators and from neutral Swe- den, but there was no talk of the western front seeping from their island bastion, virtually isolated from the rest of the world as "D-Day" ap- proaches. There is just a steady shut- tle of Allied air power between Britain and the continent. Holland Is Deleted From Next Payroll The name of Ray K. Holland, Ann Arbor, director of the Public Service Commission, was deleted from the commission's next payroll, Thomas J. Wilson, state director of civil service, said yesterday. Wilson said he would continue to refuse payment to Holland, who was charged by the civil commission with holding his position irregularly. Hol- land last week received back salary amounting to about $4,500 for ten months work, despite protests by At- torney General Herbert Rushton. The Auditor General's office indi- cated it would ask for right to pay Holland on a separate payroll not connected with the civil service de- partment. ,5~ * * ANCIENT CASTLE, MODERN WAR-U.S. troops billeted in an old castle somewhere in the British Isles roll out of the grounds in tanks for pre-invasion maneuvers. Meanwhile, drastic travel restrictions and censorship in Britain insured that plans for the impending blow against "Fortress Europe" would not be divulged. UNIFIED ARMY-NAVY: War Secretary Stimson Asks Centralized Military Command WASHINGTON, April 25.-- (/P)- Despite the best cooperation in their history, disagreements and duplica- tions among the nation's armed for- ces have cut power and speed in the current war, Secretary Stimson told Congress today in urging immediate approval of the principle of unified command. Actual unification should await the end of the war, the Secretary of War said, but establishment of the prin-, ciple would in itself promote cohesion among the forces. Backed by Lt.-Gen. Joseph T. Mc- Nary, Stimson testified before the Sigma Rho Tall Will Discuss special House committee on post-war military policy, members of which have indicated overwhelming senti- ment for a single command. The blueprint for the single de- partment of the armed forces recom- mended by Stimson was outlined by Gen. McNary: The overall organization would be headed by a Secretary for the Armed Forces, aided by undersecretaries for the Army, the Navy and the Air Forces and the head of a common supply service; military strategy and budgetary recommendations would be in the hands of a joint board headed by a Chief of Staff and in- cluding chiefs for the Army, the Navy and the Air Forces, with a subordi- nate officer in charge of a common supply service. Experiences of the present war Stimson told the committee, have left the "inescapable" conclusion that I I { k Darr'ow, Hume Run for Post On Publications Students To Vote at 'U' Hall, Engine Arch George Darrow and Bob Hume will be the opposing candidates in an all- campus election today to fill a stu- dent vacancy on the Board in Control of Student Publications. Polls will be open from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at voting booths in University Hall and the Engine Arch. All stu- dents except Army men may vote on presentation of their identification cards. The winning candidate will hold his position on the Board in Control for two, semesters, replacing Warren Burgess, retiring member. Tom Bliska, a previously an- nounced candidate, withdrew his name from the ballot at the last minute yesterday. The Men's Judiciary Council has ruled that no electioneering will be permitted within 50 feet of the poll- ng places, according to Joe Linker, president of the Council. Anyone who violates the voting regulations will be subject to disciplinary action. 'Pre-Invasion . Fleet of 1,000 Drop Bombs Romanian, Nazi Cities Left in Flames by Raid; Attack Enters 12th Day By The Associated Press LONDON, April 25.-A pre-invasion fleet of more than 1,000 American bombers and fighters today hurled hundreds of tons of explosives on three airfields deep in France, in- dustrial targets in southwest Ger- many, and Channel fortifications on the 11th day of an unprecedented Al- lied sky assault which has rocked Axis Europe from the Atlantic coast to the Black Sea. The American assaults costing sev- en bombers and two fighters, followed. heavy RAF night attacks on Karls- ruhe and Munich in Germany, and American blows by Mediterranean command planes yesterday on oil re- fineries at Ploesti and rail yards at Bucharest in Romania. Great fires were left raging in those major Axis cities. At 11 p.m. the German radio warn- ed that Allied planes were approach- ing, which meant the attacks were en- tering the 12th consecutive day. Nearly 500 American Flying Fort- resses and Liberators escorted by 500 U.S. Lightnings, Mustangs and Thun- derbolts and RAF Mustangs hit Ger- man fighter bases at Nancy and Metz, 170 miles east of Paris near the German frontier, and Dijon, 160 miles southeast of Paris, and unspe- cified targets in southwestern Ger- many across the Vosges Mountains. Gerimany's fighters offered only slight opposition, a communique said. Ten of their planes were shot down in combat and an unspecified number of others destroyed on the ground. Dr. Deutsch Is Lecturer for Council Friday "Europe's Small Nations and the Price of Peace" will be the topic of an address to members of the Post- War Council by Dr. Karl W. Deutsch of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology at 7:30 p.m. Friday in Rm. 316 at the Union.. A native of Czechoslovakia, Dr. Deutsch graduated from the Univer- sity of Prague with a Ph.D., has studied at the University of London and received a Master's Degree at the Harvard Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. His family have been associated with the Czechoslovak struggle for freedom for several generations, and his mother was one of the first wo- men to be a member of the Czecho- slovakian Parliament. His uncle was the first Secretary of War for the Austrian Republic. Dr. Deutsch is coming on the Uni- tarian Billings Fund as the request of the Unitarian students here. Dr. Edward W. Blakeman, counselor for religious education, has recommended that all students attend this lecture. New Post-War Plan Is Propo ed Reuther Suggests PPB To Regulate Industry DETROIT, April 25.--(P)-Imme- diate creation of a single Peace Pro- duction Board (PPB) with councils in every major industry to recom- mend procedures-and even establish prices-is proposed by Walter P. Reuther, international vice-president of the United Automobile Workers (CIO), as part of a program to facili- tate post-war reconversion. Reuther, one of a group of labor representatives who will meet in Washington Thursday with the War Production Board to discuss post-war planning, disclosed his program in an interview today. Besides the Peace Production Board I nion :ation I i {k 1 '} * V simplification is necessary "if our i "ShoudjEngineedrbUnionizeswillnation is adequately and most effec- be the subject of debate and discus- miel odencndition s."rsude sion in the Oxford Union Forum of modern conditions. the Stump Speaker's Society of Sig- ma Rho Tau to be held at 7:30 p.m. 'SONG OF THE EARTH': today in Rm. 318 of the Union. Professor F. N. Menefee of the1] twT s School of Engineering will speak at Choral W orKS the meeting. He will be followed by five students: Robert Dangl'45E,hler Be Jerry Cardillo, '45E, Phillip Snyder. .. '46E, Barbara Fairman, '46A, and- Patiicia A. Ryan, E. Discussion of "Das Lied von der Erde" of Gustav1 the topic from the floor will be called Mahler and Mendelssohn's "Elijah" for after the short speeches. The are the two major choral works to bet meeting is open to the public. heard at the 51st Annual May Festi- I Snyder. vice-president of Sigma val which will begin Thursday, Mayt Rho Tau, described various aspects of vlwihwl ei hrdy a the problem as involving the fact 4, and continue through Sunday. May that the engineering profession has 7, at Hill Auditoriun. no real lobby group, the questions of In addition to the Philadelphia Or-t whether an engineer's union would chestra under Eugene Ormandy, per- cause a loss or gain of 'professional- forming at all six concerts of the ism' within the group, whether such Festival, such famous soloists as a group would materially help young h ilst engineers, whether, if established, it Gubzohatogorsky Nat anM sstas national labor groupse of the operatic stage as Charles Kull-t n a ti n a l a b o r g r o u s. m n , K r stn T h o r b o rg , B id u S a y a o _ an ert n h rb rg id ayoand Salvatore Baccaloni will be Swedes Re t head.. Opening Features Baccaloni For the second year in a row, Mr. S R es Baccaloni, the basso buffo of the Metropolitan Opera, will present the WASHINGTON, April 25.-(A)- opening concert at 8:30 p.m. Thurs- of Mendelssohn, Sung at Festival Nathan Milstein and Gregor Piati- gorsky. Milstein has the rare dis- tinction of being the last pupil of Leopold Auer, the famous violin teacher of Heifetz and Elman. Pierre Luboshutz and Genia Nem- enoff, duo-pianists, will be heard in Harl McDonald's piano concerto with the composer as guest conductor on the Saturday afternoon program. The Youth Festival Chorus under Mar- guerite Hood, an annual feature of May Festival, will also perform on the same program, singing "Song of the Two Americas," especially or- chestrated by Eric De Lamarter. Stevenson To SENIOR NIGHT TO FEATURE JGP: War Council President To Be Named The new president of the Women's' War Council will be announced at Senior Night at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, preceding Junior Girls Play which will be given at 8:30 p.m., according to Mary Ann Jones, '45A, chairman of the play committee. Tickets are now being sold for the public performance of the play at 8:30 p.m. Friday, for which members of the Naval and Marine V-12 Unit only to graduating seniors, who must wear caps and gowns, to coeds who will graduate in October and Febru- ary, who must bring identification cards, and to special guests and pa- trons. The play, directed by Blanche Hol- par, '44, is a musical comedy starring Faye Bronstein, '45, and features Jo- an Selmier, '44; Marge Rosmarin, '45; Mavis Kennedy, '45; Shirley Rob- 'Ai . - a n ,'.* ~,f.-., or 'Ag Other directors of the production are Rae Larsen, '44, and Beverly Wit- tan, '46, who direct the dancing, and Marcia Netting, '45SM, and Phyllis Crawford, '45SM, who are in charge of the singing choruses . Marge Hall, '45, is chief "prop girl," and Dee Les- ser, '45, is stage manager. "Crash" Is Rumored Senior Night, according to rumor, will be "crashed" by a group of fra- Head School Russell A. Stevenson. of the busi- Sweden has rejected an American C y, amay± eouu ne rtswa .II request that she halt shipments of be given Friday evening, Saturday ness administration school, will be ball bearings and a selected list of afternoon. and evening and Sunday presented as new dean Saturday when similar hard steel products to Ger- afternoon and evening. alumni hold their 15th conference many, and American officials pre- Featured in the performance of the at the Michigan Union. pared tonight to renew their insist- seldom heard "Das Lied von der Erde" Dean Clare E. Griffith will preside ence that the Swedes reconsider. of Gustav Mahler are the American over the evening session at 6:30 p.m. . r z n t a -n--3tenor. Charles Kullman. and the Nor- when Prof. Marvin L. Niehuss. of the t