a_ i I ,; 1 tl IA:41*1 wa14 Weather Fair - - - - -------- - io, ,., VOL, LIV No. 121 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 1944 PRICE FIVE CENTS Ship Fire At Norfolk Kills 15 Fumes Overcome 20 Other Workers By The Associated Dress PORTSMOUTH, Va., April 27.- Fifteen workmen were killed by suf- focation and at least 20 others were overcome by smoke and fumes to- night when fire broke out in the hold of a naval ship undergoing repairs at the Norfolk Navy Yard. Fellow workers of the men caught in the ship crowded the dispensary at the Navy Yard to identify the bodies of the victims whose names naval officers declined to release im- mediately pending notification of their next of kin. Started at 6:20 The fire broke out in the vessel about 6:20 o'clock tonight. The men employed in the repair work on the ship were civilian workers at the yard. All available ambulances were sent from the Norfolk naval hospital to the Navy Yard- to remove the work- men to the yard dispensary, where many were given artificial respira- tion. Damage to the ship was said by a Navy Yard spokesman as not extensive. Edgar B. Johnson, 21, pharmacists mate third class, USNR, of Buzzards Bay, Mass., who sped to the ship on the first ambulance dispatched from the dispensary, told a reporter that when he reached the hold of the ship he saw "at least 25 men lying around, all unconscious." Johnson Exhausted "It was awful," said Johnson, who was put to bed suffering from ex- haustion after applying artificial res- piration to the victims for more than two hours. "We worked on the men right where we found them. The fumes had cleared out pretty well," Johnson continued. "We worked over them until they were pronounced dead. The dead appeared to have been suffocated. Some were burned, but only slightly. None ofrthem seemed to have burns severe enough to-have caused death. We had all the inhala- tors we could get hold of." Nimitz Confers With MacArthur On Pacific War By The Associated Press U. S. PACIFIC FLEET HEAD- QUARTERS, PEARL HARBOR, April 27.-Gen. Douglas MacArthur and Adm. Chester W. Nimitz have "com- pletely integrated their war planning so that a maximum of cooperative effort might be executed against the enemy," Pacific Fleet Headquarters said today. The headquarters announcement said MacArthur and Nimitz recently conferred regarding the "future oper- ations in the Pacific of their two commands." The conference was the first war- time meeting of the two commanders. MacArthur is Commander-in-Chief of the Southwest Pacific area em- bracing Australia, New Guinea, the Bismarck Archipelago and the Dutch East Indies. Nimitz is Commander- in-Chief of the U.S. Pacific Fleet and Pacific Ocean areas including the central Pacific sea and island routes to the Philippines and the China coast. The text of the Navy's announce- ment: "General Douglas MacArthur, Com- mander-in-Chief, Southwest Pacific area, and Admiral C. W. Nimitz, Commander-in-Chief, United States Pacific Fleet and Pacific Ocean areas, regenfly conferred regarding the fu- ture operations in the Pacific of the two commands. "Plans were completely integrated so that a maximum of cooperative effort might be executed against the enemy." Dr. Boikestein To See Campus Dr. Gerrit Bolkestein, minister of education in the Netherlands, will arrive in Ann Arbor today accom- panied by Dr. H. R. Boon, first sec- retary of the Netherlands embassy in Washington and Willard C. Wich- ers, director of the midwestern divi- sion of the Netherlands Information Bureau. Holly Issues Temporary Injunction Against Montgomery Ward, Avery *e * * * -,. .'- *: K i i 7 1 i l I l i i a Two Ore Carriers Sunk In Separate Collsions on Fog-Blanketed Lake Erie French Installations Plastered Woma Cook, B Record 10,000 TonAttack 4 Men Killed; By 1'heAsscite Prss- ___ --] Fi e Ii jired By The Associated Press the same strength at dusk, this time LONDON, April 27.- The U.S. hitting German air bases at Nancy By The Associated Press Eighth Air Force made a record 1,500 and Toul and railroad yards at CLEVELAND, April 27-Disaster heavy bomber flights in a spectacular Blaineville and Chalone-sur-Marne struck through a fog-mantled dawn doubleheader blow against Nazi in- in eastern France. over Lake Erie today, causing separ- stallations in France today, rounding Raid Tops Record ate collisions which sank two ore stio in h r eo drondakin The Eighth Air Force had staged freighters and took the lives of at out 18 hours of roaring attack doubleheader operations several least ten crew members. which more than 4,000 Allied planes times before, but never in such The ore carrier James H. Reed, op- blasted and burned the continent strength. The previous record was erated by Pickands, Mather and Co., with approximately 10,000 tons of around 1,000 heavy bomber sorties. for the Interlake Steampship Co. of bombs. On the peak day of the first all-out Cleveland, sank quickly after a head- air drive late in February it was on collision with the Canada Steam- Piling record on record-it was the officially disclosed that the EighthshpLnStaeAacrf,2 heaviest total bomb load ever poured ofcal icoe htteEgt ship Lines, Steamer Aashcroft, 25 hevist toHtlbombladever ponurd and 15th Air Forces had sent out miles north of Aashtabula, O., car- into the Hitler fortress in such a more than 1,200 heavies from Britain rying four men and a woman cook period-the Allies carried their pre- and Italy together. to their deaths and resulting in fatal invasion softening - up campaign______ ___ through its thirteenth straight day. injuries to five others. Eighteen Planes Missing Dr. Deutsc Tii Two Unaccounted for Nine U.S. heavy bombers, six fight- TocThe Interlake Co. reported late to- ers of the U.S. Strategic Air Force T 1. T day at least two other crewmen were and three Marauders of the Allied I 1o l ay lon unaccounted for. Expeditionary Air Force were miss- Seventy-five miles to the west, the ing. ofColumbia Transportation Co.'s Frank Indicating there was no let-up to- Vigor, carrying a load of sulphur from night, with probably a two-pronged Chicago to Buffalo, foundered after attack progressing, the German radio To Lecture Before colliding with the steamer Phillip warned shortly before midnight that Post-W r Council Minch; operated by the Kinsman single raiders were over western Ger- Transit Co. many and the Budapest radio told of Dr Karl W. Deutsch of the Massa- There were none seriously injur- raiders over Hungary. The Vienna ed in the collision of the Vigor and chusetts Institute of Technologv will SOLDIERS AID IN WAR PLANT SEIZURE-Soldiers from a suburb line up outside Montgomery Ward & Company plant after arriving " Department of Commerce in carrying out executive order" to take ov Chairman Sewell Avery had twice refused to comply with the order. * * * By The Associated Press CHICAGO, April 27.--- Federal Judge William H. Holly tonight is- sued a temporary injunction re- straining Montgomery Ward and Company and Sewell Avery, chair- man of the board of the huge mail order house, from interfering with government operation of the Chicago stores. Judge Holly's rapid action cli- maxed a day of dramatic develop- ments which had seen Avery forcibly ejected by soldiers from the north side plant. Biddle Files Petition Attorney General Francis Biddle filed a petition for the restrainer late this afternoon, asking the court to enjoin the company from interfering with government operation and to order the officers to make available corporate records to the government director, Wayne Chatfield Taylor, Assistant Secretary of Commerce. Earlier in the day Silas H. Strawn, a Wards director and member of the law firm representing the company, said the firm would file injunction proceedings within a few days in an effort to halt government operation. This step and the government peti- tion generally were expected to be the first of many legal maneuvers that may eventually lead to the United Japs Crippled In North Burma Yanks Take Manpin, Approach Myitkyina SOUTHEAST ASIA HEADQUAR- TERS, KANDY, Ceylon, April 27.- (P)-With the monsoon rains less than three weeks ago, Lt.-Gen. Joseph W. Stilwell's Chinese and American forces appear to have brok- en the back of Japanese resistance in northern Burma. In a spectacular six-mile advance yesterday, "Uncle Joe's" infantry and tanks swept through the Mogaung valley jungle into the village of Man- pin, only ten miles from Kamaing and no more than 45 miles from Myitkyina, the enemy's main base of operations north of Mandalay. The campaign to open a land sup- ply route from India to China-Stil- well's pet project-already had car- ried his mixed force some 120 miles into Burma, nearly halfway to a juncture with the old Burma Road at a point inside China. The enemy's counter-invasion of India, meantime, appeared to be rushing toward a bloody climax in the 6,000 foothills ringing the Allied base of Kohima. Report that a major battle had begun there was expected almost hourly. Hollandia Hop Sets Pattern-Stimson By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, April 27.-Longer jumps by American forces toward the heart of Japan's defense may be * * * . States Supreme Court for a deter- mination of the powers of the gov- ernment to seize a private business during war time. Avery, grey-haired chief executive officer of the mammoth mail order and mercantile concern, was ejected bodily from his eighth floor office and was borne to an elevator. Then- seated on the hands of two combat- helmeted troopers-he was taken through an exit and deposited on the sidewalk. He bowed to the military men, then escorted by city detectives, walked to 60 OCs To Be Commissioned At Graduation The 60 candidates in the Fifth OC Class of the Judge Advocate Gener- al's School will be sworn in as sec- ond lieutenants as part of the grad- uation ceremonies and parade, which will be held at 4:45 p.m. today in the Law Quadrangle, it was announced yesterday by the executive officer. Graduation ceremonies for the class will be held at 9:30 a.m. tomor- row. Maj. Gen. Myron C. Cramer, the Judge Advocate General of the Army, who will attend all graduation functions; wil make the commence- ment address. Brig.. Gen. John M. Weir, assistant Judge Advocate General and execu- tive officer of the Judge Advocate General's office, and Col. Robert M. Springer, assistant Judge Advocate General in charge of personnel and training, also will attend from Wash- ington, D.C. Col. Edward H. Young, comman- dant, will administer the oath at the parade today after the letter of ap- pointment has been read by Maj. Jeremiah J. O'Connor, executive of- ficer. Eastern Front -Lull Continues, Reds Say LONDON, April 28, Friday.--( P)- Moscow said tonight that the lull on the eastern front continued through its sixth day today, but the Germans declared the Russians still were at- tacking in northern Romania and in the Carpathian foothills. Tonight's Soviet ommunique said again that there were "no important changes at the front." an Chicago Camp Skokie Valley to assist a representative of the er the Chicago plant after Board * * * his chauffeur-driven car and went to his gold coast home. Attorneys Petition The first of the legal moves and counter-moves that eventually may put the issue before the Supreme Court took shape late in the day. Attorney Qeneral Francis Biddle asked the Federal court here for an injunction prohibiting Avery and other executives from obstructing government operation of the war units and compelling them to turn over corporate records. Developments ensued in rapid-fire order here and elsewhere as the na- tion watched the" controversy as a gauge of the President's power to take over a self-styled non-war en- terprise and a test of the WLB's ability to enforce its directives. S* .,. Investigation Asked By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, April 27.-A res- olution for a Congressional investiga- tion of President Roosevelt's seizure of Montgomery Ward and Company's Chicago plant was introduced today by Rep. Dewey (Rep., Ill.) but Rep. Sabath (Dem., Ill.), chairman of the House rules committee, indicated it would be sidetracked. New Head of Women 's War Council Chosen The installation of Marjorie Hall, '45, as president of the Women's War Council, and Natalie Mattern, '45, as president of Women's Judiciary Council, highlighted the events at Senior Night-Junior Girls Play which began at 7:30 p.m. yesterday in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Miss Hall is an associate woman's editor of The Daily, a member of the Women's Athletic Board, a member of Wyvern, and has been chairman of three recent campus benefit drives: Red Cross, Infantile Paraly- sis and Fresh Air Camp Fund. Miss Mattern has been chairman of Soph Project, vice - president of Alpha Lambda Theta, president of Wyvern and junior member of Judiciary Council. The only public performance of "Jabberwackey," junior play which was given last night for the enter- tainment of senior coeds, will start at 8:30 p.m. today in the Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre. radio blacked out. About 750 American Flying For- tresses and Liberators first hit Ger- man mystery installations on the French invasion coast this morning with about 2,000 tons of bombs, and then roared back again in an un- precedented repeat performance in Yanks Capture Main Hollandia Takeoff Point By The Associated Press ADVANCED ALLIED HEADQUAR- TERS, NEW GUINEA, April 28, Fri- day. -- Capture by American Sixth Army troops of the main Hollandia airdrome, potential takeoff point for bombers within range of the Philip- pines, was announced today. It was the last of three Japanese airfields seized 'at Hollan dia, completely achieving the primary objectives of last Saturday's Dutch New Guinea invasion. Headquarters said that the Hol- landia operation has been completed and that all three captured airfields already are being used by American planes. More than 400 miles to the south- east, the Australian forces which on Tuesday invested virtually deserted Madang and its airfield have moved on north to take Alexishaven which also has an airdrome. Including the Tadji airdrome, seiz- ed near Aitape, 150 miles southeast of Hollandia last Saturday, that makes six enemy airfields falling into MacArthur's hands within a week. GI Stomp Will Be Tomorrow A GI Stomp will be held 3-5 p.m. tomorrow in the north lounge of the Michigan Union. All servicemen and all campus coeds are invited to attend. The taproom will be open and there will be danc- ing to records. Specially invited hostesses are the following: Sorosis, Delta Delta Delta, Pi Beta Phi, Stockwell and Helen Newberry. Servicemen are reminded to come on time. speak to Post-War Council members at 7:30 p.m. today in Rm. 316 in the Union on the subject, "Europe's SmIl, Nations and the Price of Peace." I A native of Czechoslovakia, Dr. Deutsch is now teaching English and history at MIT in Cambridge. In his native country, his family was asso- ciated with the struggle for freedom for several generations, his mother being one of the first women to be- come a member of the Czechoslo- vakian Parliament. His uncle was the first Secretary of War for the Austrian Republic. Dr. Deutsch graduated from the University of Prague with a Ph.D., studied at the University of London DR. KARL DEUTSCH ... to speak today. Crew Includes Local Men Doyle Rogers and John P. Laucks of Ann Arbor were listed as crew members of the ill-fated James Reed by the Pickands Mathew Lines, an Associated Press dispatch said last night. the Minch, which occurred in Pelee Passage, on the Canadian side of the lake, opposite Sandusky, 0. Capt. Donald Ashton of Cleveland, and all the Vigor's crew members were transferred safely to the Minch, which arrived eight hours later at Lorain, O., harbor. Survivors Transferred Twenty - three survivors of the Reed's sinking were transferred to the Ashcroft, which started for Ash- tabula after aiding in the search for missing crewmen for several hours. Capt. Bert Brightstone, Chicago, master of the Reed and Chief Engin- eer R. O. Fletcher, Buffalo, were un- injured. The Reed, a 448-foot vessel built in 1903, was en route from Escanaba, Mich., to Buffalo, with a load of iron ore, and the Ashcroft was traveling light from Buffalo to Toledo for a load of coal. Allies Throw Back Attacks in Adriatic Sector By The Associated Press ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, NA- PLES, April 27.-Allied troops on the Adriatic sector of the Italian front have thrown back two small-scale at- tacks, one south of Canosa and the other in the Ortona area, it was an- nounced today. Both ground and air warfare in the Mediterranean theatre hit the doldrums, with bad weather cutting air activity to 80 routine patrol flights and the small Adriatic action the only noteworthy incident any- where aground. Steady day and night patrol pro" bing and artillery fire continued. On the Adriatic the first attack, by two German platoons a mile south of Canosa, was repulsed, and a sub- sequent enemy movement in the same area was taken under artillery fire. Two other platoons attacked at different points two and a half miles west of Ortona, which was captured by the Canadians after bitter fight- ing last winter. Move Set To Vacate Padgett Sentence Motion to set aside the life sen- tence of twice-convicted William Padgett has been made by Pargtt's i r and received a Masters' Degree at the Harvard Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. He has visited 25 coun- tries in Europe and North Africa. In the United States, Dr. Deutsch was an instructor at a private boys' school, the Choate School in Wall- ingford, Conn. before going to MIT. Dr. Deutsch is the author of "Faith for Our Generation," published by American Unitarian Youth in 1943. His lecture is sponsored by the Uni- tarian Billings Fund at the request of Unitarian students here. Pre-war travels in Europe have made him familiar with many youth movements and the common inter- ests of students in enemy and subju- gated countries and the American students: Dr. Edward L. Blakeman, University religious counselor, stated that, "I wish every student on cam- pus could hear Dr. Deutsch and his experiences." TWO FATALITIES PROMPT ACTION: Traffic Engineers Will Investigate Collisions - - - ---- - Two fatalities within 27 days at the intersection of Stadium Blvd. and Packard St. have prompted the State Dcpartment to send traffic engineers to Ann Arbor today, Police Chief on one side of the intersection, ta- pering to three lanes, police added. The first of the truck-car acci- dents, March 31, resulted in the death of Abram A. "Jimmy" James, asso- recovering at St. Joseph's from in- juries suffered in the crash. Two victims of a truck-car collision yesterday were released shortly after treatment was administered at St. Joseph's Hospital. They were Robert Baldwin, was injured when she was struck by a car driven by Edwin D. VanBlarcon, 40 years old, of 1605 Stadium. Joan, at St. Jo- seph's for observation of injuries suffered when she was hit, dashed