A, e u e i Y t 43aiti~ Weather cloudy VOL. LIV No. 141 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, MAY 21, 1944 PRICE FIVE CENTS Yanks Wipe Out japResistance atWakde Allies Blast West Wall 6,000 British-Based Planes Hit Defenses By The Associated Press LONDON, May 20-In the greatest mass air attack of the war the allies hurled 6,000 British-based planes at Hitler's West Wall defenses today and blasted a 150 mile strip from Brittany to Belgium with a total of at least 8,000 tons of explosives. Ninteen rail junctions, eight air- fields and numerous other installa- tions which Hitler hoped to use in combatting the coming western in- vasion were pounded in the gigantic onslaught which began soon after midnight and extended twice around the clock into darkness tonight. Losses Announced Allied losses announced for all the operations from midnight to mid- night amounted to seven RAF heav- ies, two U. S. heavies, three Ameri- can mediums, tow American light bombers, five American fighters and one American fighter-bomber-a to- tal of 20 planes. Everytype of plane based in Bri- tain was thrown into the unprece- dented bombardment, with the Allied expeditionary air force-which will move into the continent in support of the invasion landings-flying more than 4,000 sorties. An American armada of nearly 1,250 heavy bombers and fighters set the pace for the daylight blows with attacks on three airfields and one rail center- after the RAF had start- ed the day's cycle with attacks on four important French rail centers. Escort Dispatched The Americans sent out a four-to- one escort-1,000 fighters accom- Wallace Sent To Visit China Carries Message of Good Will from FDR WASHINGTON, May 20.- (/P)- Vice-President Wallace left for China today taking with him a message of cheer from President Roosevelt to the Chinese people and accompanied by aides who include an expert on Rus- sian munitions supply matters. Sev- eral stops are planned in Siberia. His message to the Chinese, Wal- lace said in a statement, is that "neither the swamps of Burma nor the Himalaya Mountains nor Japa- nese w~arships shall stop America from bringing all possible and prompt aid to this great and enduring peo- ple:" A White House announcement of Wallace's departure disclosed that one of those traveling with him is John Hazard, Chief Liaison Officer of the Foreign Economic Administra- tion's Division of Soviet Supply. Quota for UJA Not Yet Filled The campus United Jewish Appeal drive has not yet filled its quota and response from the Jewish students on campusis disappointing, Elyse Zeme, '44, studnt director at the Hillel Foun- dation in charge of the drive, ad- mitted yesterday. Despite the efforts of 50 student solicitors and the Speakers' Bureau, the drive, now extended into an ex- tra week, has not netted the campus quota of $1,600. In view of this fact, the directors of the drive would welcome contri- butions by any interested persons. Such contributions, while not solic- ited, could be either pledged by tele- phone or mailed to the Hillel Founda- tion at 730 Haven, the headquarters for the local drive. Checks should be made out to the United Jewish Appeal. Varieties Show panying a force of approximately 250 fortresses and liberators - in the principal daylight operation. Possibly the Air Command sus- pected strong fighter opposition and wanted to be prepared by sending out one of the highest escort ratios of the war. But the precaution proved unnecessary. The fighters went looking for trouble, yet sighted only a few German planes and no e of these reached the bombers. i Two Nazis were downed while the American loss was two bombers and five fighters, most of them probably victims of flak. Eisenhower Issues First Order to .Army Egropes Underground Forces Will Aid in Approaching Invasion By The Associated Press LONDON, May 20 - Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower's Supreme Invasion Headquarters broadcast its first di- rect orders to Europe's underground today, telling that huge and revenge- thirsty army to make careful and minute note of the Germans' every move to aid in the coming assault. "In due course," the broadcast de- clared, "you will receive advice and instructions from the Supreme Com- mander (Eisenhower) himself," who "counts upon you as part of his force now being marshalled to inflict de- feat on the Germans and bring about the final liberation of your countries." First Message to "V" Army This first message to the "V" ar- my, implying that regular broadcasts would be made, said the next one would be on Monday. "When the Allies come to liberate you they will rely on your help in many ways. In no more valuable way can this be given than by in- formation about the enemy." The headquarters spokesman called on the undergound to note the strength and movements of German troops, and guns, and to spot location of supply dumps. Allies Battle Enemy Ships Meanwhile the Allied air offensive against strategic rail centers and- by German account at least- swift sweeps of the Channel waters by Enemy and Allied ships were fill- ing out the pattern which Berlin says will precede "D" day. Urging everyone to care for his gas mask, Field Marshal Lord Bird- wood, "Father" of the British Army, warned that "although Hitler has promised that he will not use gas, he may at the last moment like a mad and beaten dog release gas.' Mihailovic Is Ousted By Yugoslav ing LONDON, May 20.-(AP)-King Pe- ter of Yugoslavia has ousted Gen. Draja Mihailovic as War Minister in an attempt to appease Marshal Tito and it was considered possible the Cabinet post might be offered to the Partisans' leader. Whether Marshal Tito would ac- cept the post was questionable, since this might strengthen the position of the monarchy for the post-war period-a subject which the head of the National Army of Liberation has said must be decided by his people after victory is won. It seemed possible, however, that Tito (Josip Broz) might agree to some compromise under which he would name his choice for the Cab- inet position which Mihailovic has held. Carrier-Borne Planes Raid Java Naval Base Allies Sink or Damage 18 Jap Ships; Manokwari and Paramnshiro Attacked By LEONARD MILLIMAN Associated Press War Editor American soldiers, killing 34 Japanese for every doughboy lost, have wiped out enemy resistance on Wakde Island in the Southwest Pacific, Gen. Douglas MacArthur reported today (Sunday). Only a small number of Japanese were taken prisoner. Five hundred and fifty were killed on Wakde and the nearby shores of northwestern New Guinea. MacArthur listed American losses for the entire operation at only 16 killed, 83 wounded and two miss- -- Yanks Closing In On Anzio * * * * * 4' ing. Complete control over Wakde, 1,000 miles from MacArthur's goal on the Philippines, was established Friday afternoon. But enemy artillery fire help up the advance on the coast. Overcome in Three Days Three days after Yanks of the 6th Army began the amphibious opera- tion, the enemy was overcome. A sizeable beachhead was taken on the Dutch New Guinea mainland oppo- site the two islands of the Wakde group Wednesday. The smaller of the twoislands was taken the same day. On Thursday the Yanks storm- ed the larger of the two islands, which has the Wakde airfield. The next day it was controlled entirely. Five hundred Japanese were killed in the three-day operation, compar- ed to 16 Americans killed, 83 wound- ed and two missing, a MacArthur spokesman said. A small number of Japanese were taken prisoner. Bombers Clear To Philippines Meanwhile, Allied bombers struck farther out, clearing the road to the Philippines up the Dutch New Guinea coast. Liberators left the airfield at Manokwari, on the head of the island 475 miles northwest of Hollan- dia, so pocked by bombs that it was considered unserviceable. Boston at- tack bombers sank three Japanese frienghters in Manakwari harbor. In other actions repo ted yesterday and today Allied war planes striking at the northern and southern tips of Japan's defense destroyed 21 enemy aircraft and sank or damaged 18 ships. Aleutian based Army and Navy bombers wrecked two Nipponese ves- sels as they struck for the seventh time this month at Paramushiro. Communists To Dissolve 25 Year Party Life Ended by Browder By The Associated Press NEW YORK -- The Communist Party of the United States, in exis- tence for 25 years, voted Saturday to dissolve as a political party. A new party organization will be formed. Earl Browder, the party general secretary, made the motion to dis- band prior to delivering a national convention keynote speech in which he called for the re-election of Presi- dent Roosevelt. The motion was carried unanimously. Party Affairs Liquidated The motion called for the appoint- ment of a committee to liquidate the party's affairs and dispose of its property "and to turn over any sur- plus that may remain to any organ- ization or organizations as, in their opinion, are devoted to our coun- try's winning of the war in which it is presently engaged and in the achievement of a durable peace." National Chairman William Z. Foster presided. Browder's Message Keynoting the party's national convention, Browder, who sought the presidency himself in 1936 and 1940, said in his address that the Presi- dent's retirement now "would be a disaster for our country." "Our enemies in the war would be encouraged to new efforts, our Allies in the war would have deep misgiv- ings, and our own country would be launched upon an uncharted sea of uncontrolled factionalism,"' he said. "That is why the demand for Roosevelt to succeed himself has swept the Democratic party so com- pletely as to silence even most of the disloyal Democrats who have sabotaged the President's program. That is why the labor movement is almost unanimously demanding Roosevelt as a candidate. That is why 'Republicans for Roosevelt' clubs are springing up all over the country. That is why this conven- tion will support Roosevelt." YANKS' MESS HALL-Because all parts of the Allied Anzio beachhead south of Rome are within German artillery range, these mess quarters for evacuation hospital personnel are dug well into the ground. -AP Wirephoto A FIRMER HOLD: Chinese Take Rai City By The Associated Press CHUNGKING, May 20 -Chinese troops clamped a firmer hold on their:re-won section of the Peiping- Hankow Railway today, capturing the rail city of Kioshan, 110 miles south of Chenghsien, the High Com- mand announced. In the north, field dispatches re- ported the encircled defenders of Loyang were doomed to massacre if they failed to bleak the Japanese siege. Communications Cut Kioshan, 43 miles north of the Japanese southern Honan base of Sinyang, was taken early in the day after the Chinese cut enemy com- munications between the city and Mingkiang, 22 miles to the south, a communique said. More than 500 Japanese were killed or wounded in the fierce engagement and enemy, remnants fled southeast with Chin- ese forces in hot pursuit, the bulle- tin added. The Chinese previously had re- ported cutting the Japanese hold on the railway at Suiping, 25 miles north of Kioshan, and to have encir- cled the enemy at Chumatien, 12 miles south of Suiping. Heavy Fighting in Loyang Heavy fighting and fierce counter- attacking were reported in the Loy- ang area where the Chinese Central News Agency claimed the defenders since last Monday inflicted more than 2,000 casualties and destroyed about 50 tanks. The main fighting in northern Honan continued to center around Tayang, a Lunghai railway town 45 Massed Musie Festival Will Be Held Today Constituting the largest orchestra ever heard in Hill Auditorium, 160 instrumentalists from the School of Music and the Michigan Civic Or- chestra Association, will present the fourth annual Michigan Massed Or- chestra Festival at 4:15 p.m. today. Under the baton of George Dasch, well-known director of the Chicago Business Men's Symphony, musicians from Flint, Monroe, Dearborn, Wy- andotte, Detroit and Ann Arbor will present compositions of Bach, Friml, Tschaikowsky and Strauss. Featured on the program will be a series of selections by five harpists, Elizabeth Masters, Margaret Wardle, Virginia Werner and Esther Morgan, with Lynne Palmer directing. Among the selections to be per- formed by the orchestra are the stir - ring Triumphal March from "Sigurd Jorsalfar" by Grieg, overture Fan- tasia from Tschaikowsky's "Romeo and Juliet," "Morning Journals Waltz" by Strauss, Jr., a selection from Friml's popular "The Firefly," and Moussorgsky's "The Great Gate of Kiev" from "Pictures at an Exhi- bition." The concert is open to the public. miles east of Tungkwan, funnel to the great Chinese northwest. In an attack on the Japanese at the Yellow River bulge near Suichen, American and Chinese bombers and fighters were reported to have killed 1,000 of the enemy, and to have in- flicted 3,000 casualties. Foremen Meet; iscuss lae In Management Deciding that the foreman is a part of management, and that he must raise his level of intelligence and understanding or be left behind, a nine-man panel on "The Foreman's Place in Industry and Management" opened the Sixth Annual Foreman's Conference yesterday. Sponsored by the University Ex- tension Service, the conference feat- ured as discussion leaders M. A. Clark, manager of industrial rela- tions, Motor Products Corporation, Detroit, and Dr. C. Copeland Somith, representative of the National Indus- trial Information Committee of the National Association of Manufactur- ers. Speaking on "America's Challenge to the Foreman" at 1:30 p.m., Dr. Smith declared, "It is not true any longer that top management asso- ciaed, indifferent to the cause and problems of foremen." "The Benefit of the Foreman's Club" was discussed in one of the conferences on general topics yester- d Floyd Rhoad, assisted by P. B. Bailey and Otto Henton, all of Jack- son, outlined the main benefits to be gained, and pointed out that the de-j velopment of leadership was most important. Col. G. E. Strong of the Army Air Forces maintained that "you can make. a success of the man who has been a leader in the army, if you make him a worker once more." Speaking with Col. Strong was Dr. Orlo L. Crissey, education director, AC Spark Plug Division of General Motors. Nazis Retreat From Itri; Offer Little Opposition By The Associated Press WITH THE AMERICAN FIFTH kRMY FORCES IN ITALY, May 20. -Yankee doughboys, pushing after retreating Germans from Itri, ad- ranced to within 35 miles of the knzio beachhead today without meet- Ing more than casual opposition. (An earlier broadcast by the Lon- Ion radio, recorded by the Blue Net- work, said the Fifth Army was a ittle more than 20 miles from the beachhead. The broadcast did not Indicate the location of the advance, however, and later dispatches from A.llied headquarters in Naples and from the front-Feder's story was filed at noon, Eastern War Time- ailed to bear out that report.) Enemy Retreating Fast The enemy, retiring the last two days so fast before the rush of the American forces as they stormed. Into new emplacements, left piles of equipment all along the route. Tanks, vehicles and even two big German cannon with 20-mile range had been abandoned along the road. Doughboys ran into a self-pro- gelled gun at one spot and called for a tank for help. The gun was blown apart. Mounted Tanks Used The foot soldiers tangled with an 88 mm. gun mounted on a tank in another spot, and were going so fast they chased the Jerries from it. Having swept the Tyrrhenian coast- al areas of Formia and Gaeta, both of which were smashed to bits by Nazi demolition and American artil- lery and air bombings-even the.tomb of the poet Cicero outside Gaeta was damaged-the Yanks still were on the move westward. * * * Allied Troops Pound Germans To Terracina By Thie Associated Pres ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN NAPLES, May 20.- American and French troops, smashing through the crumbling Hitler line, pounded the whole southern half of the German front back today in a wide swing to- ward a new wall anchored at Terra- cina-only 25 miles from Allied might massed on the Anzio beachhead. Nazis Lose Heavily. The Germans lost heavily in men, tanks and guns as they were being forced back in disorder up to 15 miles to a new "switch line" from Pico to Terracina, headquarters declared. The Eighth Army successfully as- saulted the fortified line farther north, and the French punched deep- er into the mountains in the center. The Nazi "switch line" runs from Pico in the middle of the Italian front 21 miles southwest through a horseshoe-shaped mountain ridge to Terracina on the sea. The lower half of the Hitler line originally had run through Pico to American-captured Formia. Campodimele Lost (The German High Command ac- knowledged loss of Campodimele, southwest of Pico and within a few miles of the Pico-Terracina line.) In nine days of this offensive in- tended to crush the German Tenth Army, 5,500 Nazi prisoners have been taken, with more coming in, and the Germans have suffered considerable losses in dead, innumerable guns and tanks and vast supplies. Election Crisis To Be Discussed A panel discussion on "The Presi- dential Crisis" will be presented by the Post-War Council at 7:45 p.m. Wednesday in the Union, Harvey Weisberg, program chairman, an- nounced yesterday. Those taking part in the panel will be Prof. H. M. Dorr of the political science department, Prof. Shorey Pe- terson of the economics department, and~e Prof. Kenneth G. ~Hnce of the 5 1 r r Michigan Teams Win in Tennis, Track, Golf Michigan's title-bound teams continued their winning ways yes- terday as the Wolverine tennis squad won their sixth Big Ten victory over Northwestern, 51/-31z here in Ann Arbor. At Lafayette the varsity trackmen swamped Purdue, Minnesota and Western Michigan with a total of 65 7-12 points in a quadrangular meet. Climaxing their season with a lopsided win over the University of Detroit, 17 - , the golfers are tuning up for the Conference championships next week. The University of Illinois and Michigan stayed to a 4-4 tie at Champaign in a game which was called after seven innings because of rain. Daily sports writer and special reporters bring you a complete coverage of these events on today's sports pages. See pages 6 and 7. i AND THE OPPOSITE SIDE: Professor Criticizes Statements Made in Article on Nigeria Proves 'A Hit' "One hundred per cent successful" was just one of many comments made by the 3,500 people who at- tended the second Victory Varieties show held last night at Hill Audi- torium. The program, which marked the farewell appearance of Bill Sawyer, Z > The position of Dr. Mbonu Ojike in reference to British policy in Nigeria which was carried in an interview in Tuesday's Daily was severely criti- cized and its "accuracy and ade- quacy" were strongly questioned by Prof. William Kynoch of the depart- ment of wood technology yesterday. Prof. Kynoch said he would oppose 1iirAlHnn nf the statements made Ojike didn't state," he said, "that be- fore Nigeria came under British con- trol human sacrifice was rife, canni- balism was practiced and the slave trade was rampant." He said he doesn't profess to be an authority on the subject, but that he has a British friend who has lived in Nigeria in an official position. Indi- cating an article in "The Outpost," that the Nigerian estimate of the population there is 33,000,000. She states that "less than 50 years have passed since the territories of East and West Africa came under British protection" and that in the early days "trade in Africa usually meant the slave trade... (but) . . . by the early days of the nineteenth cen- tury, Britain had pledged herself to I fied and order produced out of chaos." She states that in Nigeria, "where conditions were at their very worst, an Englishman, Colonel (now Lord) Lugard achieved something little short of a miracle" in subduing the northern Moslem rulers and the southern Negro sovereigns in three years. She says, "It was obvious with i British officials "to play an ever- increasing part in government." She states further that Indirect Rule "has brought a considerable measure of local responsibility to the 'Native Authorities.' Mrs. Kamm says that "Britain's policy is to encourage and instruct Africans to take the fullest possible share in the direction of all branches