Ii.. l p l :Y r1 t m 4a1L Weather Scattered Showers VOL. LIV No. 132 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, MAY 11, 1944 PRICE FIVE CENTS Avery Seeks Court Ruling on Ward Case Allies Blast' Europe in Heavy Raid Austria, France, Belgium Bombedj By The Associated Press LONDON, May 11-RAF bomb- ers again pounded targets in en-t emy-occupied territory during the night, the British announced to- day, carrying the Allied aerial offensive into its 27th straight day. LONDON, May 10.-Well over 3,500 Allied bombers from both Britain and Italy dropped more than 4,500 tons of explosives on Hitler's Europe today. with American heavyweights from Italy highlighting this 26th straight day of aerial assault with attacks on Wiener Neustadt in Austria and Knin in Yugoslavia. American and British medium, light and fighter-bombers from Bri- tain spent the day in methodical blows at rail cents and an airfield in France and Belgium. Follows Night Raid The continuing onslaught quickly followed overnight and pre-dawn at- tacks by 750 RAF planes on ten high- priority targets that included the channel coast and the Paris and Ber- lin areas. German installations along the French coast received probably their heaviest attack of the war. The American Liberators and For- tresses based in Britain stayed at home today, the first time in 17 days that a full day has passed without at least one mission for the big "dump' trucks." Yugoslavia Points Hit The Italy-based Liberators and Fortresses hit the Messerschmitt fac- tory and nearby airfield at Wiener Neustadt, 27 miles south of Vienna, for the sixth time, returning to pound the buildings that survived the pre- vious raids.They encountered heavy anti-aircraft fire and numerous en- emy fighters, several of which were shot down, but no figures were avail- able for losses of either side. At the same time a Liberator for- mation dealt a new blow to Kninin, Yugoslav rail junction 40 miles north of Split and 30 miles northeast of Sibenik in an apparent "assist" to the hard-fighting Yugoslav Partisans. Nazis Retreat at Aventino River Allies Capture Three Villages in Advance ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, NA- PLES, May 10.-(IP)-The Germans have retreated across the little Aven- tino River in a second day of with- drawal on the British Eighth Army front and Allied forces moving up be- hind them have occupied three vil- lages and are continuing to press the pursuit, Allied Headquarters an-I nounced today. The German retreat has ranged from seven to 111/2 miles from their line as last announced several weeks ago, although some Allied forces have been beyond it more recently. In their advance behind the with- drawing foe the Eighth Army occupied Palena, Fallascoso and San Angelo and at last report was moving direct- ly toward the important German base of Sulmona, which is 11 miles beyond Palena and about 33 miles from the Adriatic coast. Allied troops also seized high ground near the hamlet of Gamberale, two miles northwest of San Angelo on the road to Palena. Competent military quarters de- clared the Nazi withdrawal appeared to be without significance beyond the enemy's natural desire to straighten his line and eliminate -a salient in the rugged mountains where lack of communications made large-scale op- erations impossible. China To Be Discussed At Lawyers Guild Meeting A talk on the legal system of China in both occupied and unoccupied areas will be given Wednesday in the Book-Cadillac Hotel in Detroit by Dr. Wie Wen Han of the Chinese Embassy, opening a series of four luncheon meetings - of the Detroit Nazi Transports, Ships, Sunk By Russian Black Sea Planes Germans, Romanians Flee Sevastopol; Reds Claim No Land Front Changes LONDON, May 11, Thursday-(.LP) -In one of the final chapters of the fall of Sevastopol planes of the Black Sea fleet sank two 4,000-ton German transports, a patrol launch and sev- eral high-speed landing craft and damaged several other vessels aboard RED SOLDIERS . . . guard Prut bridge. which the Germans and Romanians were trying to flee, the Russians announced last night. .On the land fronts there were no important changes, said the Soviet' midnight communique, broadcast from Moscow. The Germans contended there still was stiff fighting on the Sevastopol beaches on the extreme western tip of the Crimean peninsula. That area Forrestal Gets Nominatton To Knox Post WASHINGTON, May 10. - (/P) Under Secretary of Navy James V. Forrestal, a Democrat and big navy advocate, was nominated today by President Roosevelt for the Navy's No. 1 job as Secretary to succeed the late Frank Knox. Forrestal, one-time New York in- vestment banker and neighbor of the President in Dutchess County, N.Y., has been Undersecretary for four years and since Knox's death on April 28 has been acting Secretary. His appointment, urged by many Democratic and Republican Con- gressmen, climaxes the Washington career he started in 1940 when he gave up the presidency of a Wall Street investment firm to serve as a presidential assistant. As the Navy's No. 2 man, he was Knox's right-hand man in building the world's biggest navy, going fre- quently to Capitol Hill to testify be- fore committees considering Navy Appropriations.I On many occasions, he has urged the maintenance of this giant fleet in peacetime, declaring that peace which is not backed by power "is only a dream." At 52, 18 years' Knox's junior, he will be one of the youngest men in the President's Cabinet. Congressmen on both sides ap- plauded the Forrestal appointment and Chairman Walsh (Dem., Mass.) of the Senate Naval Committee pre- dicted speedy confirmation. is small and flat, in contrast with the hills around Sevastopol itself, so that if the German and Romanian rem- nants have indeed made a stand there it was likely to be of short duration. The Russians already had begun. the gigantic task of repairing the port of Sevastopol even while the smoke of the furious final assault curled over the ruins. Experienced British naval and military men pre- dicted the Russians would have the port in working condition, "in some degree" within a very short time, and that its possession would give the Soviet airmen dominance over the whole Black Sea area immediately and soon would make possible in- creased trade with Turkey and op- portunities to supply the Crimea and western Ukraine with lend-lease sup- plies by water instead of the previous long rail routes. Jap Atrocities At Singapore Made Public ADVANCED ALLIED HEADQUAR- TERS, New Guinea, May 11, Thurs- day-(AP)-Japanese atrocities, in- cluding nailing Chinese to palm trees oy driving iron spikes through their foreheads, were made public today simultaneously with the release of a headquarters report that American invaders of Hollandia and Aitape freed 707 enemy prisoners. General Douglas MacArthur's com- munique said that 462 of the 707 were Sikhs who are natives of India. At the same time, the Australian department of information an- nounced that the liberated Sikhs strongly indicted Japanese treatment of them. Some of the Sikhs were quoted by the department as saying: "On an 18 days march from Singa- pore to Kuala Lumpur (in Malaya) we were herded along a road like cattle. At one place we saw a number of Chinese who had been nailed to palm trees with ironspikes driven through their foreheads. "Fifteen Sikhs who had become ill were put to death at Rabaul (New Britain). "On a ship which took us to the Admiralty Islands, we were herded below decks like cattle-2,000 of us." "The men were frequently beaten with sticks and rifle butts. "At Manus (in the Admiralty Is- lands since captured by MacArthur), we had to dig slit trenches for the Japanese but were left entirely un- protected ourselves." The'Sikhs I saw appeared to be in fair physical condition, better than the condition of the American, Aus- tralian, German and Dutch mission- aries who were liberated later. Former 'U' Student Missing in Action Second Lt. Harold F. Stewart, for- mer University student, has been re- ported missing in action while serv- ing as a Flying Fortress navigator, according to a War Department no- tification yesterday. Lt. Stewart was president of the class of '39 and received a Bachelor of Arts degree in journalism upon graduation. He was a member of Kappa Tau Alpha and Delta Omega Gamma fraternities. Automotive Heads Split Over Labor Congress Drawn Into Policy Fight By The Associated Press DETROIT, May 10.-Management of the great automotive war industry split over labor policy today and Congress was drawn into the dispute. Hard upon the Ford Motor Com- pany's signing of a contract with its foremen, the Automotive Council for War Production demanded that Con- gress make clear "it does not intend to permit labor leaders to take over the management of our war produc- tion plants." The demand of the council, which claims to represent 20 per cent of the national war production, came as more than 3,300 foremen in a number of plants remained on strike and Ford, Ltd. Strike Ends WINDSOR, Ont., May 10.-P)- Striking employes of the Ford Motor Co. of Canada, Ltd., voted at a mass meeting here tonight to return to work tomorrow morning, terminating their second strike since April 20. The vote to end the current strike, which began May 2, was taken after the reading of a national wartime labor relations board statement refusing to deal with points at issue "as long as the strike continues contrary to the wartime labor relations regulations." Ford's 9,000 foremen spent their first day under a contractual arrangement with the company. Alvan Macauley, president of the council, said in a statement sent to President Roosevelt, Congress and other government offices that the drive to unionize foremen was "a long step" toward placing industrial man- agement "in the hands of union labor." Ford has signed a one-year bar- gaining contract with the Foreman's Association of America, an indepen- dent union which long has been seek- ing recognition in the automotive industry. ~Little HWoment' To Be Given Here Tomorrowt Ann Arbor children, University stu- dents and "grown-ups" will have an opportunity to see one of America's favorite stories in dramatic form when the Children's Theatre of the speech department presents "Little Women" at 3:45 p.m. tomorrow and 1:30 and 3:30 p.m. Saturday in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Leading roles of Louisa May Al- cott's famous book will be taken by members of the University's Play Production. Cast in the part of Jo will be Florence Underwood. Claire Meisels will portray Beth, Marilyn Mayer will be Meg, and Bobette Ringland, who will be remembered as Becky in "Tom Sawyer," will be Amy. Jean Loree will portray Marmee, John Merewether will be Laurie, and Betty Godwin will be the crotchety old Aunt March. Others in the cast include Marion Zander as Hannah, Marilyn McKee- ver as Sallie, Thelma Davis as Annie, Vivian Adelson as Mary, and Charles Benjamin as Mr. March. Tickets for the production will be on sale from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. and from 2 to 5 p.m. tomorrow and Friday at the Lydia Mendelssohn box office. Tickets will also be available from 10 a.m. to curtain time Saturday. PREPARED MEN of a U.S. quartermaster battalion wait on a pier somewhere in Britain ready to move to their base, as the accumulation and organization of men and material approaches its climax there. $1,500 GOAL: Tags To Be Sold on Campus Tomorrow To Aid Camp Fund "Send a boy to the Fresh Air Camp" will be the slogan on campus and in the downtown business district when 400 coeds sell tags from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. tomorrow for the 24th annual Tag Day campaign. Tag Day, which has become a Michigan institution, will have as its goal the raising of $1,500 to send several hundred boys from "metro- politan areas to the University Fresh Air Camp for a month's vacation. Located on Patterson Lake near Pinckney, the camp has become not- ed as a workshop in adjustment prob- lems. Educators, social workers, vis- iting teachers and research workers have an opportunity to work with and help the boys who have been sent to the camp by some 25 social and case-working agencies. The boys, between the ages of eight and 13, are chosen by the agencies on the basis of need for assistance; there is no religious or racial distinction are to sell tags are to pick up their buckets and tags at 7:45 a.m. tomor- row in Rm. 4, University Hall. The six posts downtown should be covered by 8:45 a.m., Miss Hall added. All 28 campus and downtown posts will be covered until 4 p.m. by Uni- versity coeds. "It is important that each person be responsible for-seeing that her post is covered before she leaves, and for bringing back her bucket and tags to headquarters at Rm. 4, University Hall, Union men will be in charge of the headquarters, and will make periodic checkups on the posts," the chairmen pointed out. Pajama-Clad Renegades Cry 'Spring Swing. Company-CIO Controversy Brews Again Subsidiary Strike Referred to FDR By The Associated Press CHICAGO, May 10.-Board Chair- man Sewell Avery came back to his Montgomery Ward and Company headquarters today and declared the basic issues in the controversy that led to government seizure of the Firm's Chicago properties "still must be determined in the courts." Twenty hours after federal author- ities had delinquished control of the plants and 13 days after he was carried out by soldiers, Avery return- ed to his office and issued a state- ment. "Ward's Denied Rights" He asserted the War Labor Board has "thus far been successful in de- priving Ward's" of a judicial deter- mination of the- legality of Board's orders affecting the concern, and be- cause of the government's action in turning back the facilities to the management, "Ward's has once again been denied the right to a decision by the courts." Avery added: "When Ward's refused to surrender its plant and business on April 26, 1944; because it believed the demand to be illegal, the Attorney. General of the United States did not submit the matter to the courts. Ward's was de- prived of its property by force and bayonets. "When public opinion forced the Attorney General to turn to the courts he sought and obtained an extraor- dinary order in the night without notice to Ward's and in a hearing from which the public was barred" Avery said the Attorney General delayed a decision onthe firm's mo- tion to dissolve a temporary court order, restraining company execu- tives from interfering with federal operation, until the plants were re- turned. No Government Comments Yet There was no immediate comment on Avery's new statement from gov- ernment officials. These other developments occurred during the day: A new struggle between Montgom- ery Ward and a CIO union, revolv- ing about the issue of maintenance of union membership, took shape. The WLB in Washington voted to submit to President Roosevelt a labor dispute at the Hummer Manufactur- ing Company, a Ward subsidiary in Springfield, Ill. Approximately 450 workers have been idle there for five days. The International Association of Machinists (AFL) claimed the Management had rejected as- illegal a WLB order for a contract provid- ing a wage increase and maintenance r of union membership. Ward execu- tives had made no statement. At- torney General Francis Biddle has said the plant produces carburetors, propellors and gun mounts. Federal Judge William H. Holly dropped litigation rooted in the gov- ernment's seizure of Ward's Chicago units. He did not rule on the legality of the federal move in taking pos- session after the company had de- clined to comply with a WLB direc- tive to extend an expired contract s with a CIO union. s- s Laing Talks on Free e Trade after War - Y Prof. Lionel Laing of the political - science department said that "free - trade went out in the Victorian era" Sand thus underlined the controversy over Far Eastern exchange problems in the post-war world, at a panel dis- cussion sponsored by the Post-War Council yesterday. Professor Laing stated the belief that the problem of Asiatic trade could not be considered except with the basis of an overall international organization to coordinate economic planning after the Far Eastern phase of the war is concluded. Prof. Douglass Creery of the geog- raphy department stressed the fact that the dominant note in dealing with the problem should be adherence to the principles of free trade. Fox Killed, Companion Injured in Accident made. Marge Hall and Jim men of the drive, rep students have been co for contributions. All Rutivei I IEdlucationi President Alexander has been appointed a ten-man committee to ning a new program of adults by Governor K nounced yesterday. Getting under way mental basis, the gover ed Dr. James D. Bruce who is president of the Lion Institute, to the ten and invited the St cil, the Michigan Fed bor, the railroad br shop crafts, the M Grange and the Michi Bureau each to name member. In commenting onk bership, Governor Kell war has made necessa our educational meth as we changed our in ods. A roving band of pajama-clad ren- a Plate, chair- egades disturbed the austere silence orted that 18 of the General Library last night with ntacting stores crys of "Spring Swing" and littered students who the floors with a poor substitute for Kleenex carrying the same message. SAi The idea was to let people know . 0 that the dance will be held from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday in Water- man Gym and will feature the music of Sonny Dunham and his orchestra. Tickets will be on sale at the center r G. Ruthven of the diagonal all day today. member of a Dunham has appeared here pre- assist in plan- viously at Soph Prom in 1941 and f education for has been playing engagements in elly, it was an- night spots in New York and Chicago Following his appearance here, he on an experi- plans to go to Hollywood. rnor also nam- The committee in charge of organ- of Ann Arbor, izing the dance has initiated a "Bean e Adult Educa- Guessing" contest. Purchasers of committee of tickets to the dance have been in- ate CIO Coun- vited to guess the number of beans eration of La- in a jug located where the ticket otherhood and are purchased. Students who guess .ichigan State most accurately the number of beans gan State Farm in the jug will be presented with a one additional gift certificate donated by State Street merchants. the new mem- The dance is being sponsored by ly said that the the University as part of a new pro. ,ry revisions of gram of activities to add to the en- ods, the same joyment and entertainment of stu- dustrial meth- dents and servicemen stationed on campus. CLAIMS DEMOCRATIC PRINCIPLES AT STAKE: Dorr Objects to Third-Term Amendment Proposal By AGGIE MILLER "In my opinion, the proposal on a third-term amendment by Mr. Harry Scherman, reprinted in The Daily yesterday, is fundamentally weak, if not actually stupid," Prof. Harold M. Dorr of the political science department stated in an interview yesterday. "Mr. Scherman's supporting ar- into the House, if a 60 per cent majority is not obtained by the presidential candidate, is reaction- ary in that it tends to make presi- dential elections less direct, and therefore less democratic." "In his proposal Mr. Scherman mentions a 10 per cent handicap for candidates. One might ask why cap were proposed it could be stat- ed that a man who served as a Representative to Congress before running as a candidate for Presi- dent be given a 2 per cent handi- cap; or if he was a Senator, a 3 per cent handicap; or if a governor a 5 per cent handicap. In addition we could add to the future cast by the winning candi- date. If we admit that this argu- ment is true, it is also reasonable to anticipate that problems of nation- al concern are becoming such, that we 6hould attempt to insure unity except by arge xuaJo.i ., ana pos- sibly actually insist upon longer terms of office in order to take advantage of. accumulation of ex- required not as popular majorities but as governmental majorities. There is a distinction between pop- ular opinion and exercise of power by governmental agencies. "Secondly, a 2-3 vote is not re- quired in reaching decisions in ordinary powers of government. Nevertheless, in all cases cited, ex- amples of an extraordinary use of