w :. .r Ir1 1 3aitl Weather Fair VOL. LIV No. 135 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, MAY 14, 1944 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - PRICE FIVE CENTS Foremen Continue To Strike WLB Wire Assures No Discrimination By The Associated Press DETROIT, May 13.-- Telegraphic assurances that they would not be discriminated against if they re- turned to work failed tonight to end a strike of more than 3,300 foremen in war plants of six Detroit manu- facturing concerns. Robert H. Keys, national president of the Foreman's Association of America (independent), said a tele- gram from Chairman William Davis of the War Labor Board would not be answered until the union's officials hold an execitive session at 10 a.m. Monday. Davis States Policy Stating that the board expects the strike to be "terminated forthwith," Davis in a telegram to parties in. volved in the dispute said it was the Board's established policy that work- ers who return to work under its ordkrs will not be discriminated against, and that the Board "will expect all companies to act accord- ingly" Dvis said assurances against dis- crimination had been received from five of the six Detroit concerns in- volved. Those replying to a WLB inquiry, he said, were Briggs Manu- facturing Co., Hudson Motor Car Co., Gar Wood Industries, Inc., Pack- ard Motor Car Co. and Murray Corp. of America. Packard Plants Closed Because of the strike of foremen, Packard has closed its plants, making more than 30,000 workers idle. Pro- duction in other plants has been re- ported cut by as much as 50 per cent. Keys said today the FAA has filed with the National Labor Relations Board a charge of unfair labor prac- tices against the sixth Detroit com- pany involved in the strike, the Aero- nautical Products Co. He said 59 foremen had been discharged by this company because they went on strike. Several of the strike-hampered companies °sent telegrams direct to their absent foremen. Briggs Wires Jobs Open Hudson stated there would be no discrimination for the foremen's "un- authorized absence." Briggs wired, "Jobs are open for those of our fore- men who are willing to work as in the past."I Packard stated, "Our desire is to resume production under our former conditions." Gar Wood officials tele- graphed Davis, "Our only concern is to be able to resume normal produc- tion under our former conditions." Two work stoppages affected out- state plants today. At Flint, 350 em- ployes of a General Motors' Chevro- let division plant walked out follow- ing a dispute over what the company described as the "slugging" of a fore- man by a worker. Allied Planes Hit Jap Bases In New Guinea, ADVANCED ALLIED HEADQUAR- TERS, New Guinea, May 14, Sunday -(P)-Allied bombers have heavily bombed Japanese bases and troop concentrations in northern New Gui- nea, General Douglas MacArthur an- nounced today. Mokmer airdrome on Biak Island. 260 miles north of captured Hollandia in Dutch New Guinea, was hit twice by Liberators Friday. Biak is in the Schouten'group. Other planes from MacArthur's air forces, ranging out to, the west of New Guinea, hit Timor, Boeroe air- dromes, and Wewak. Ground troops, mopping up in the Hollandia-Aitape areas, which were invaded April 22, have killed 101 additional Japanese and increased their unprecedented bag of prisoners by 30. This brings the total of enemy dead in the area to 1,716 and the number of captured to 354. These enemy troops fled inland at the time of the invasion. Yesterday's communique told of an aerial foray into the area of the Palau Islands, Japan's naval base on the southeast approach to the Philip- pines. Interest in that westrnmost group of the Carolines was stirred by the announcement that Southwest Paci- fic patrol planes had struck 300 miles east of Palau, damaging an enemy freighter. It was the first time that laps Gain On Chinese Ba ttlefron t Stilwell's Troops Advance in Burma By The Associated Press The Japanese were hit by a new Allied offensive in northern Burma yesterday and were losing ground there, but in China's Honan Province Nippon forces won new successes against hard-pressed Chinese armies. American-trained Chinese troops of Lt.-Gen. Joseph W. Stilwell's com- mand launched drives against three Japanese bases in north Burma. Sup- ported by tanks, dive bombers and artillery, the Chinese struck hard along a two-mile front and advanced in two other sectors. Three Stilwell spearheads were pinted toward the Japanese strong- holds at Kamaing, Mogaung and My- itkyina. An official headquarters re- port said an Allied advance. column was holding Manpin, ten miles from Kamaing. A Japanese attack on that front was thrown back. Chinese Force Stream Another Chinese force, driving from the north, knifed through Nip- pon defenses around Tiangzup, about 40 miles above Myitkyina To the north of Magaung the Chinese forced a stream and surged forward one mile. Heavy fighting raged on northeast India's Imphal front as the Japan- ese made unsuccessful onslaughts to gain a mountain pass leading to the Imphal plain. Meanwhile, Allied fighters and dive bombers battered the Japanese in the Kohima region, north of.Imphal. Other planes were attacking the strategic fortified area of Ningthoukhong. To the south Japanese planes were strafing Brit- ish gun positions at Potsangbam. Two Nippon sky fighters, and probably three more, were shot down. Push Called Sucessful Reports from southeast Asia hea- quarters said the Allied push to drive the invaders from hill positions around Kohima was "mainly success- ful." .The Japanese lost eight, and probably two more, of the 25 planes they threw into this action. Allied air forces suffered no losses. In the Honan wheat belt of China the Japanese severed the east-west Lunghai railway at two points 40 miles west of Loyang. This road was the main retreat line for several hundred thousand Chinese troops in the Ho- nan war zone. Ford Workers Strike DETROIT, May 13.-()-Ap- proximately 1,200 rolling mill workers at the Ford Rouge plant quit work tonight without an ex- planation, a company spokesman said. Two hundred men, however, were said to have remained on the job to keep metal hot and prevent a possible extended shutdown of the mills. The strikers were said unoffic- ially to have protested the disci- plining of a shop committeeman for tearing up the transfer slip of an employe. ° Representatives of Ford Loval 600 of the United Automobile Workers' (CIO) ould not be reach- ed for a statement. Dr. N. C. un W ill Visit TU' Dr. N. C. Liu, former professor of political science at the National Wu- han University in central China and at present a guest of the Department of State, will arrive today fi'om the, University of Chicago to visit the University, Dr. Esson M. Gale, direc- tor of the International Center, an- nounced yesterday. Dr. Liu is one of six Chinese pro- fessors invited by the Department of State to visit the United States. The guests of the State Department are free to visit any universiies and cities of the country. Dr. Liu is expected to give an ad- dress at a Chinese symposium at 8 p.m. Tuesday at the International Center. The topic of his lecture will be "Chinese Constitutional Develop- ments." German-Held Gustav Line Battered Allied Planes HitMajor Nazi Targets 4\1 12 American Bombers Lost I. Skye Duels By The Associated Press LONDON, May 14, Sunday.-Two thousand U.S. bomber and American- Allied fighters hammered three major targets in northern Germany yester- day and shot down 63 Nazi planes in sky duels which cost the invading Americans 12 bombers and ten fight- ers. Up to 750 Flying Fortresses and Liberators, escorted inland by nearly 1,000 U.S. Lightnings, Mustangs and Thunderbolts, and covered in their withdrawal by hundreds of RAF Mus- tangs, attacked a Focke-Wulf plant at Tutow, rail yards and locomotive re- pair shops at Osnabruck, a synthetic oil refinery in the Stettin area and other targets. 8,000 Tons of Bombs Hurled The formation was part of a total of approximately 5,000 American and British planes which hurled 8,000 tons of explosives on occupied Eur- ope in two-way attacks fr9m Britain and Italy during the day. The bag of 63 German planes, -54 by the fighters and nine by bomber gunners, made a two-day total of 213 Axis aircraft shot down over Ger- many. No enemy opposition was met over Osnabruck, the German pilots in- stead ganged up on the formations which flew deep into northeastern Germany. "Many enemy fighters were driven off or destroyed by our escort before they could reach our bombers," the communique said. Unprecedented Series Ended At the same time, Italy-based heavy U.S. bombers continued their far- reaching attacks in support of the newly launched Allied land drive, ripping into rail facilities at 14 points in northern Italy. Their targets in- cluded points in the important Bren- ner Pass through which Hitler sends most of the supplies to his embattled legions in the south. (A French ra- dio broadcast from Algiers, recorded in New York by the FCC, said the Brenner Pans line had been cut.) Invasion Near, Berlin Radio Acknowledges LONDON, May 13.-(1P)-Thp Ger- man high command communique, normally the most conservative of the daily fixtures broadcast by the Berlin radio, declared today that the Allied air offensive against the Nazi continent "may be regarded as the preparation for invasion." It was the first time that the Ger- man command, now confronted by an Allied land, sea and air siege, had used the word "invasion" in its daily bulletins, and the Nazi press specu- lated that the blow would fall simul- taneously with a new Russian offen- sive. Inside France the Nazis were re- ported rushing final preparations, requisitioning all remaining automo- biles and speeding a "Rommel plan" under which virtually the entire male population of France between the ages of 16 and 60 would be put in concentration camps on D-Day to safeguard the German rear. The German command described the new Italian offensive as being "on the largest scale" and as "an obvious attempt to tie down German forces," thus linking the assault with the expected western invasion. German accounts took the new Allied offensive against the Gustav Line as being only the forerunner of a bursting storm. "The German high command expects the flare-up of fighting in Italy to spread to other seitions of the European battlefront," said the Nazi transocean news agen- cy. "We are aware of Gen. Alexan- der's words that the Allied troops in southern Italy are striking the first blow in a final battle." CO. A'S CHOIR-Pictured above is the all soldier choir of Co. A, of the 3651st Service Unit, which will present a concert at 4 V. in., today in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. The concert will feature music of the United Nations. included among the numbers, which the 40 men choir will sing, will be the Fred Waring arrangement of the Welsh folk song, "All Through the Night". Among the other folk se-a lections which the choir will sing are "Land=Sighting," a Norwegian song, which demonstrates the spirit of the ancient Vikings, and "Mowing in the Sunlight", a Venezuelan folksong, which has a tango rhythm. -Daily Photo by Cpl. Robert Lewin, Co. A, 3651st S.U. Collection on 24th Tag Day T o All- Others $1,711 Total Eclipses Last Year's by $490 Exceeding last year's total by more than $400, contributions to the 24th annual Tag Day campaign hit an all-time high Friday, with students, servicemen, and Ann Arbor residents giving $1,711.25. Of this amount, $1,536 were re- ceived from the sale of tags; $150 came from a local manufacturing concern, and $25 were contributed by the girls of Martha Cook. "We were very pleased with the results of this year's drive," Prof. F. N. Menefee, faculty director, said yesterday. "In exceeding our goal of $1,500 and in receiving more than $1,700, we have exceeded any con- tribution from the previous 23 yearsf we have held the drive." Co-chairmen of the campaign were Marge Hall, head of the Wom- en's War Council, and Jim Plate of the Union. "We want to thank all the girls who sold tags, and all the Union men who distributed the tags, and collected and counted the con- tributions," the chairman said. The money from the drive will be used to send 240 boys from metro- politan areas to the University Fresh Air Camp for a month. The boys are chosen by social and case- working agencies on the basis of need, of assistance from sociologists, or phychiatrists. Other members of the central com- mittee irrluded\Charlotte Haas, Peg- gy Moran, Nancy Reber, Robert Roseman, Virginia Rock, and Orris Mills. Dunbar 'Ceniteir Burns Mofrgae President Ruthven To Speak at Cereiony President Alexander G. Ruthven will be among the speakers at 3 p. m., today when the Dunbar Community Center celebrates liquidation of a mortgage on the building. Dr. Ruthven, who spoke at the dedication of the Center seven years ago, will represent the white citi- zens of the community. John C. Dancy, executive director of the De- troit Urban League, will also talk on "Intercultural Relationships." In addition, a brief history of the Center will be read by James Overby and the Dunbar Chorus and the Dunbar Quintet will sing. The Cen- ter will be open for public inspec- tion from 4 to 6 p. m., following the program. STORMY HOMECOMING: Rev. Orlemanski Suspended On Return from Russia U9 SPRINGFIELD, Mass., May 13. - Rev. Stanislaus Orlemanski ran into a stormy homecoming today from his. JuryCharges rate Legislator With Perjury LANSING, Mich., May 13.--()-- State Rep. William Stenson, Green- land Republican whose amazing story of a proffered bribe was a motivating factor in the calling of Circuit Judge Leland W. Carr's one-man grand jury investigation of state government, to- day was accused of perjury by the grand jury. Warrant Issued for Arrest Judge Carr and Special Prosecutor Kim Sigler collaborated in the issu- ance of a, warrant charging the 43- year-old Upper Peninsula legislator gave false testimony to the grand jury by denying under oath that a fellow member of the House of Rep- resentatives also had paid him a sum of money, the sum unspecified, to influence his vote on an anti-branch banking bill in 1941.- The warrant did not identify the other legislator and Sigler told news- men, "Don't ask me who he is." He said Stenson probably would be arrested later today but declined to say where the legislator was. Stenson's story of a mysterious "man in a grey suit" whom he sus- pected of having deposited bribes in a pocket of his topcoat-bribes which he said he refused to accept-was a major factor in the petitioning for the grand jury. Legislator Tells of Bribes The legislator told newsmen in interviews that in 1941, when the anti-branch banking bill was about to come to a vote in the House and only a few legislators could have swung the decision either way with their votes, he found an unmarked envelope containing $350 in $50 bank notes in his topcoat pocket.. Stenson said he replaced the money in the pocket of his coat, which.hung in the House cloak-room, expecting the person who put it there would retrieve it and recognize that the legislator refused to accept the bribe. flying visit to Moscow and conference with Premier Stalin, getting a prompt susension by his bishop as a greeting and quickly declaring in return he was "being crucified for my Church." The Polish-American priest imme- diately said he was appealing the suspension order, stripping him of all priestly privileges, to the Apostolic Delegate in Washington. The appeal, he told newspapermen at a press conference,nautomatically invalided the suspension order and made it possible for him to carry on his parish duties pending action by the Apostolic Delegate, Archbishop Amelto Cicognani, on the appeal.. He said he would celebrate mass in his home parish tomorrow as usual. (Diocesan authorities, however, dis- agreed with this statement, saying that the suspension remained in force until higher church officials had ruled upon the appeal. (They also said that failure to com- ply with the penalty would be a fur- ther violation of canon law and could lead to the imposition of heavier pun- ishment.) Most Rev. Thomas M. O'Leary, Bishop of the Springfield Diocese, an- nounced the suspension only a few hours after Fr. Orlemanski returned from Russia. The suspension stated the priest could not administer the sacraments, celebrate mass or per- form any other divine duties. The priest told the newsmen "I went to Moscow to see what /I could do for the Catholic Church in Po- land, the Ukraine and White Russia. But Stalin made it universal. He went beyond my expectations and agreed not to persecute the Catholic Church not only in those places but in any part of Russia. "He went further than that in agreeing to co-operate with the Church against persecution any- where. Fr. Orlemanski displayed a docu- ment, typed in Russian, which, he said, was Stalin's signed agreement not to persecute the Church. He said the Premier first wanted to make the document public as soon as it was signed but finally agreed to allow Fr. Orlemanski to show it to the Apos- tolic Delegate or to make it public himself, if he found that step nec- essary. "I am being punished for doing something for my Church," the priest added. Allies Continue To Gain Strong Positions in Italy By The Associated Press ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, NA- PLES, May 13.-Allied troops, on the offensive in Italy, smashed deeper tonight into the heavily-fortified Gus- tav Line, inreasing gains of two miles or more that they had recorded dur- ing the day but encountering grim resistance from the Germans in strong mountain positions. Exact locations of the gains could not be disclosed pending tomorrow's daily communique, but already the Allies hold at least five villages and seven strategic hills and were going ahead after the close of the second day of their big push aimed at des- troying the Germans in Italy. Heavy Fighting Resulted Americans, French, British and Poles all were engaged in heavy fight- ing. The French pressed forward after occupying an important area of high ground that commanded the German stronghold of Castelforte. (It was indicated but not definite- ly stated that Castelforte had fallen. German broadcasts announced its evacuation, making 'a total of six villages taken by the Allies.) i A late dispatch from Associated Press WardCorrespondent Sid Feder told of the spectacularly swift fall of the village of Cosmo San Damiano to the American Fifth Army, two miles beyond the Garigliano River and six miles inlandfrom the Gulf of Gaeta, and of the penetration of the adjacent stronghold of Castelforte. Villas Seized British Eighth Army troops also seized the villa, Angelo, on the west bank of the Rapido River, two and one-half miles south of Cassino, direct dispatches said. The Germans scrambled out of Cos- mo San Damiano so fast they left food on tables erected in its ruins. The Americans cornered 200 of them in a nearby cemetery where "we shot them down like jackrabbits," Feder quoted the victors as saying. Others surrendered after being dug out of the ruins of the hamlet. Castelforte Hitt As the Yanks pressed on to a moun- tain ridge northeast of the' village they could see other units hammer- ing theirway into Castelforte, which has been called "Little Cassino" be- cause of two previous Allied failures to take it. Red Bombers Hit Baltic Cities Air Attacks May Be Start of New Drive LONDON, May 13.-(P)--The So- viet high command announced to- night that Russian bombers attack- ing German military trains and stores at Daugavpils (Dinsk) in Latvia and Tartu in Estonia had touched off vio- lent explosions and fires Friday night in a possible prelude to a fresh Red Army northern offensive. The German high command also indicated that Russian troops in force had smashed across the Mol- dava River, 60 miles inside Romania, when it told of fighting between Ro- manian soldiers and a full Soviet rifle division on the west bank of that river. The Moldava is a western tributary of the Siret, joining the larger river 35 miles southwest of Iasi. Moscow has never claimed a crossing of the Moldava but last month announced the capture of Falticeni near its east bank. Neither the Germans nor the Rus- sians mentioned the lower Dnestr River sector near Tiraspol, where Berlin had declared that a Russian bridgehead had been erased and where Moscow said German counter- attacks had failed. No essential changes occurred on the long land front, Moscow said. Yugoslavs Attack Communications Dramatic Attempt To Save Life Of Pilot Proves'Unsuccessful SECOND SURVEY: D -]] TE D -- )A ,A . aasm - SAN DIEGO, Calif., May 13.-()- Battling heavy seas and a high wind, a Navy blimp, a destroyer and a Catalina flying boat joined forces in a dramatic but unsuccessful attempt to save the life of Lt. Hugh F. O'Neil, Akron, O., pilot, whose plane crashed When O'Neil made no attempt to reach the boat, John A. Sosnowski, aviation radioman, was lowered from the blimp and dived into the ocean to help. Unable to maneuver the rubber hnn- thr,,iorhhek,. ,ial ca. cn .,r-