it431U at t Cloudy and Warm VOL. LIV No. 137 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, MAY 17, 1944 PRICE FIVE CENTS Briggs Concern Closes Detroit War Plant n Japs Menace Indian Border; Chinese Push Past Salween Thrust Advances Nips to 11 Miles of Frontier; Chinese Burma Drive Gains Momentum By The Associated Press SOUTHEAST ASIA HEADQUARTERS, Kandy, Ceylon, May 16.-Jap- anese troops have stabbed close to the borders of India in a new thrust far to the southwest of Imphal, Allied Headquarters disclosed today, while across Burma to the east, Chinese forces continued to pour across the Salween River in a co-ordinated Allied drive to crush Japan's ambitions in India and reopen the road to China. The new Japanese thrust was revealed in a communique which said an enemy attack was repulsed ten miles west of Daletme, only 11 miles east of the India frontier and 220 miles southwest of Imphal, Allied base on the Indian Plain of Manipur, where pre- vious Japanese penetrations are slow- ly being driven back. In the Kohima area 65 miles north- east of Imphal, tank supported Allied troops have cleared an enemy road- block at Kohima Junction and joined with another unit moving up from Treasury Hill to the west, today's communique said. Reports reaching headquarters said the enemy had acknowledged being on the defensive in .that sector and had ordered its troops to hold out at all costs. Chinese Drive Speeds Up Lt. Gen. Joseph W. Stilwell's forces driving down the Magaung Valley on both sides of th Mogaung River were wiping out Japanese pockets at War- ong, northeast of Manpin, where his main forces are poised to drive on the Japanese base of Kamaign, ten miles farther south. Burmese levies also drove ahead from the north to- ward the main Japanese base of'My- itkyina. The surprise Chinese offensive from Yunnan Province toward Burma was pictured by official Chungking ad- vices yesterday as gaining momentum while far to the north fierce fighting raged around Loyang in the Honan sector. Chungking Reports New Gains In the latter area the Chinese fur- ther loosened the Japanese hold on the north - south Peiping - Hankow railway but the invaders continued to press westward toward the gateway to China's great northwest. While the Japanese radio claimed the Salween drive was a "miserable failure," Chungking reported further advances. Information from the Chi- nese High Command carried a sug- gestion that the Chinese were devel- oping a pincer maneuver against the Japanese-held section of the Burma Road. Tag Day Drive Collection Tops Previous Years With the final total of the 24th an- nual Tag Day reaching $1,894.95, at least 240 boys from metropolitan areas will be assured of a month's vacation, Prof. F. N. Menefee, fac- ulty director of the drive, said yes- terday. The contributions this year ex- ceeded any of the previous 23 years, he pointed out. All groups contrib- uted more generously. A total of $1,536.25 were colected by coeds who sold tags on campus and downtown. Merchants and business establish- ments contributed $118.60, and three factories gave a total of $205. Martha Cook donated $10, and Mosher con- tributed $25. Co-chairmen of the drive were Marge Hall, president of the Women's War Council, and Jim Plate of the Union. More than 400 women sold tags last Friday. FDR Says War B udget Slashed WASHINGTON, May 16.- (VP)- President Roosevelt reported today that the budget for the Army, Navy and War Shipping Administration for the new fiscal year has been cut $8,400,000,000 under January esti- mates, chiefly because losses of equip- ment and weapons to submarines and in battle have been less than anticipated. He told a news conference the over-all war budget for the 12 months beginning next July 1 now stands at $85,700,000,000 compared with a January preliminary estimate of $90,500,000,000 and this fiscal year's $92,900,000,000. Kelly To Speak At Educational Institute Today Other Speakers Will Be Griffin, Prophet Gov. Harry F. Kelly will highlight today's sessions of the 12th annual Adult Education Institute, speaking on the "Education of the Returning Veteran" at 11 a.m. in the lecture hall of the Rackham Memorial Build- ing. In morning sessions today Dr. Clare E. Griffin of the business ad- ministration school will discuss Stu- art Chase's book, "Where Is the Money Coming From?" at 9 a.m., and Prof. Edward C. Prophet will speak an hour later on "Invasion Geography." Slosson To Lead Panel Afternoon sessions will be high- lighted by a panel discussion headed by Prof. Preston Slosson, of the his- tory department, on "A Foreign Pol- icy for the United States." President Alexander G. Ruthven, drawing on experiences gained from his visit to the British Isles last fall, spoke on "Adult Education" in open- ing day sessions yesterday. Dr. Ruth- ven told of British work in adult education conducted despite wartime handicaps. In an opening address Dr. Charles A. Fisher, head of the University's Extension Service, discussed existing programs for adult education in the United States. He revealed that few adult education programs sponsored by universities are self-sustaining but are partially subsidized by the states. The extension head asserted that formal education for adults was vital to freedom. Vet Relates War Experiences Lt. James R. Griffith, stationed at the Percy Jones General Hospital, Battle Creek, told of his experiences in New Guinea during another morn- ing session yesterday. Griffith, who was wounded in New Guinea in 1942, spoke on "What the Man in Combat Is Thinking." Afternoon discussions included a panel led by Dr. Edward W. Blake- man, University counselor on reli- gious education, on "Minority Groups," Partisans Rout Enemy Column in Eastern Bosnia LONDON, May 16.-(P)-Marshal Tito (Josip Broz) said tonight his Partisan troops had routed an enemy column of several thousand men in Prijoj, Eastern'Bosnia, and that "vio- lent battles" were taking place throughout the Yugoslav front as the Germans sought to clear threatened communications lines. "On the Majevic (Bosnia) sector the enemy are endeavoring at all costs to drive our forces away," his broadcast communique reported. "Battles are taking place in Saridzak on the Prijepolie-Senica" communi- cation line. French Troops Smash Center Of Gustav Line Army Threatening To Outflank Cassino, Liri Valley to Rome By The Associated Press ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, Na- ples, May 16. - Vengeful French troops, after smashing through up to eight miles in the center of the Germans' Gustav Line, tonight threatened to outflank the enemy's entire defense system guarding Cass- ino and the mouth of the Liri Val- ley leading to Rome. The swift French advance between the Americans on the south and the British on the north already had routed the Nazis from ,the first line of hills overlooking the Liri Valley and had eliminated one great ad- vantage the enemy previously held- direct observation of all Allied move- ments across the Lowland approach- es. The British have thrown hundreds of tanks across the Rapido River near Sant' Angelo in readiness for a di- rect smash in the Liri Valley, and WITH THE EIGHTH EVACUA- TION HOSPITAL, Fifth Army Front, Italy, May 16.-()-Fred- erick Faust, who thrilled millions with his fiction of adventure under the name of Max Brand, died in the forefront of battle within 30 minutes after the Allied offensive opened last Thursday night, the seventeenth American correspon- dent to be killed in the war. this concentration of fast-moving armor would complicate any enemy efforts at an orderly withdrawal from the Cassino area. American troops occupied the lofty German stronghold of Spigno, four miles from the Gulf of Gaeta, after a fierce fight on the approaches of the rubbled town, and were reported engaged in a hard struggle for Cas- tellonorato, between Spigno and the coast. The most advanced American units seized Mount Cavita, about a mile southwest of Spigno. Front dispatches said there was evidence the Germans were with- drawing their infantry from the American sector - possibly back to the Adolf Hitler Line-and leaving artillery to fight a delaying action. Soviets Bomb Pol tsh; British Squadrons Idle LONDON, May 17, Wednesday- (R)-Soviet airmen heavily bombed the Nazi-held city of Poltsk near the Latvian-Polish border Monday night, Moscow announced tonight, continu- ing an aerial campaign against Ger- man communications in the east sim- ilar to the Allied pre-invasion as- saults from the west. There was "no essential changes" on the land front, said the broadcast Russian war bulletin, recorded by the Soviet Monitor. Meanwhile, Germans were warned of night air raiders by the Berlin radio at midnight after a day in which British-based Allied squadrons were idle. Indicating the RAF was returning to the pre-invasion attack, a Nazi broadcast to the Reich said: "Several nuisance raiders are approaching northwest Germany and Schleswig- Holstein." The Canadian pilot of a Mosquito, Charlie Scherf, of Edmonton, Alta., shot down five German planes in a quick sweep to Stettin. He also dam- aged a bomber on the ground and a Dornier flying boat moored in the water. * * * * x 4 'GO AHEAD' GIVEN: University Approved Victory Varieties Features Six Acts Allies Reveal Pacts with Axis Ruled Nations Agreements Approved By Norway, Belgium, Netherlands Leaders By The Associated Press LONDON, May 16.-In pre-inva- sion announcements possibly hinting at the direction of Allied thrusts into Europe, London and Washington to- day disclosed agreements with the exiled governments of the Nether- lands, Belgium and Norway for ad- ministration of their liberated home- lands. The agreements with Belgium and the Netherlands were signed by the United States and Britain. Russia expressed approval but did not par- ticipate in the arrangements. . She did, however, sign the agree- ment with Norway. This raised the possibility that Russian forces strik- ing across Finland might have a hand in wresting part of Norway from Hitler's control. Northern Nor- way adjoins Finland. The Dutch and Belgian agreements were the first to be formally an- nounced for western Europe and raised speculation that Anglo-Ameri- can invasion forces thrusting out from tht British Isles might strike directly into those territories. In Algiers, the DeGaulle committee yesterday proclaimed itself to be the provisional government of France. The United States, Hull told his press conference today, has not changed its policy with respect to the committee, which means that the intention here still is not to recognize it as a provisional government until it has actually gone into France and proved its ability to govern. Carr Probes Allegations of Liquor Graft LANSING, May 16.-(P)- Circuit Judge Leland W. Carr today removed a suppression order and disclosed that his one-man grand jury was investi- gating charges that graft conspiracy existed in the State Liquor Control Commission and the State Highway Department. The broadened order was issued at the request of Special Prosecutor Kim Sigler, whose formal petition asserted that "a conspiracy has existed for several months' time among the of- ficers, employes, agents or servants of the Liquor Control Commission" under which the state was defrauded of "upwards of $70,000." This portion of the complaint as- serted that a transportation company not otherwise identified "has receiv- ed large sums of money based upon overcharges and improper bookkeep- ing entries for breakage of bottles, overcharge for rent, electricity and various other itemfs," for which the estate paid through the existence of a conspiracy. Sigler's petition asserted that "a conspiracy has existed for several months' time in the Highway De- partment of the State of Michigan in the furnishing of campaign funds for various candidates seeking elec- tion to the legislature, all of which was calculated to influence the vote of said candidates in the event of election." The special prosecutor also alleged that a conspiracy existed "relative to See CARR, Page 6 Church Admits Fr. Orlemanski Spspension Lifted on Priest Who Saw Stalin SPRINGFIELD, Mass., May 16.- (I)-Upon receipt of a letter of apol- ogy, Most Rev. Thomas H. O'Leary, Bishop of Springfield, today lifted the four-day-old. suspension of Rev. Stanislaus Orlemanski, Catholic priest who gained headlines by his visit with Marshal Stalin recently. Fr. Orlemanski, who was suspended by Bishop O'Leary on his arrival last Saturday from Moscow for leaving his parish without permission, still was under a doctor's care when lift- ing of the suspension was announced. In his letter, Father Orlemanski Action Leaves 10,000 Men Idle on Jobs Navy Refuses To Take More Goods By The Associated Press DETROIT, May 16.-The Briggs Manufacturing Co. cfosed its Mack Avenue plant, which employs nearly 10,000 on all shifts, with the an- nouncement tonight that the Navy's Bureau of Aeronautics had refused to accept any more of its output. A short time later the Hudson Motor Car Co. announced it would shut down some of its assembly lines tomorrow "because of the unauthor- ized absence of certain supervisors" and "in order better to insure the quality of its product." Hudson said the step was to be taken with the approval of Army officers. More Than 60,000 Idle The shutdown brought to more than 60,000 the number of idle war workers in 25 plants in the Detroit area, 'among them striking members of the Foreman's Association of America, unaffiliated, whose leaders have been summoned to appear be- fore the War Labor Board in Wash- ington to answer for an 18-day stop- page. A Briggs spokesmansaid the Mack Avenue plant shutdown followed no- tification by the Navy that no more of the plant's output could be accep- ted "because of the lack of company supervision and inspection which is resulting in quality inacceptable to the Navy." Union Officials Protest Melvin Bishop, Regional Director of the United Automobile Workers (CIO), and Norman Matthews, presi- dent of the Packard local of that union, telegraphed a protest against what they termed a lockout of pro- duction workers to Undersecretary of War Robert Patterson and chairman William H. Davis of the War Labor Board. As the dispute between the Inde- pendent Foremen's Association of America and the management of 13 companies remained deadlocked and kept the big Packard Motor Car Com- pany plant closed, unrelated strikes affected operations in seven Chrysler Corporation factories here and the Buick Motor division's aluminum foundry at Flint. War Production Halted Production of amphibian tractors and parts for aircraft and marine engines was halted by a walkout of about 3,800 workers at the Graham- Paige plant here. The men were re- ported to be protesting a War Labor Board ruling. Most seriously affected thus far by strikes in the Detroit production area is the big Packard plant. Closed last Fridiay because of the foremen's strike for recognition, the plant has stopped production of engines for the P-51 Mustang fighter plane. WLB Takes Action On Foremen Rows WASHINGTON, May 16.(A)-The War Labor Board called today for a showdown on the foremen's strike at war plants in the Detroit area, which Undersecretary of War Patterson des- cribed as potentially the most serious walkout of the war in its effect on combat aircraft production. Shortly after the Undersecretary had expressed his fears at a news conference, the WLB summoned the president and the ten-man executive board of the Foremen's Association of America to a public hearing at 10 a.m. tomorrow "to show cause why the board should not immediately take all stes necessary to invoke the sanctions and penalties provided by the War Labor Board Disputes Act and the executive orders of the Pres- ident." Pontiac Teaehers Vote To Hold Strike PONTIAC, May 16.-(1')- T. E. Wiersema, chairman of a joint com- mittee of the Pontiac Federation of Teachers (AFL) and the Pontiac Teachers Club, said tonight that a majority of the city's public school teachers had voted to strike tomor- row to- enforce pay increase demands. The action, he said, was taken at a meeting called following defeat by Sponsored by the University, the second Victory Varieties show, sched- uled for 8 a.m. Saturday in Hill Audi- torium, is being presented in line with a recent ruling of the University Regents that gave the go-ahead sig- nal to the current drive to provide servicemen stationed on campus with a wider range of entertainment. The six professional vaudeville acts which will appear in the show are among the finest in the country, ac- Emerson Will Speak on Health Columbia Professor To Address Students "The Administration of Health Services at the Four Levels of Gov- ernment" will be the subject of a lecture to public health students by Dr. Haven Emerson, professor emer- itus of public health at Columbia University, at 11 a.m. today in the School of Public Health auditorium. A member of the Board of Health, New York City, since 1933. and a trustee of the W. K. Kellogg Foun- dation, Dr. Emerson has directed health and hospital surveys in many cities. He served as a colonel in the Medical Corps of the U.S. Army with the AEF in 1918 and 1919. Born in New York City, Dr. Emer- son took his AB degree at Harvard and received an AM degree from Co- lumbia University in 1899. cording to Dean Walter B. Rea, while the farewell appearance of Bill Saw- yer and his orchestra, the songs by the University Women's Glee Club and "Doc" Fielding as master of ceremonies provides talent that is more familiar to campus residents. Lenny Gale, an impressionist who has appeared in New York and Chi- cago for a number of years, is billed as the show's headline act. The oth- er star acts to appear on the hour- and-a-half of entertainment are Ed Ford and his performing dog Whitey, the roller-skating Whirling Spinners, the Carltons, the acrobatic Rockets and Del Kosno, the king of balance. Tickets are now on sale at the League, Union, USO, "U" Hall and the East and West Quadrangles. Camp Will Keep Wayw ard Boys LANSING, May 16. -(P)- Garret Heyns, state corrections director, es- timated today, on the basis of a sur- vey among Michigan probate judges, that the new state institution at Cas- sidy Lake for wayward boys would house "several hundred" youths by the end of this year. Probate judges, Heyns said, had been asked not to commit boys to the camp until July 1, when legislative appropriation for the operation of the institution become available. He said if the initial influx is small the Corrections Commission would con- tinue to train at the camp youthful inmates sentenced to state prisons, segregating them from the juveniles. The prison inmates will be sent elsewhere as the juveniles become more numerous, he said. Heyns reported the commission had decided the Cassidy Lake Camp must be administered independently of any penal institution. Ten Men Killed in Navy Airship Crash PHILADELPHIA, May 16.-(P)-A Navy training airship crashed into a hangar at the Lakehurst, N.J., Naval U. S. IN WORLD ORDER: Williams Tells President's Post-War Jobs 'N_______________________________________--_ 4 Leading the United States into some form of effective world organ- ization and actively promoting the welfare of the masses of the Ameri- can people should be the two domin- ant tasks of the next President of the United States, Prof. Mentor L. Williams of the English department stated yesterday. On the issue of post-war peace Pick Your President In'the second of a series of polls of student opinion on current is- sues, The Daily this week is sur- veying the campus on the question "Who would be your choice as the next President of the United person elected should "be cognizant of domestic problems and promote measures which will continue to provide for the welfare of the masses of the American people." "There must be a militant for- wardmoving program to take care of our domestic problems, for the gen-