0 THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, JUNE 6, 1944 .. s __ _.. _.... sa _ . .. _ _. ___ leGerman Open Up Second Fron in France Weapons Show Ingenuity Rccket-P'ropelled .Glider aBomb Used;C Inven.tion Eiployed Me +chani.cal Skill By PAUL KERN LEE Associated Press Aviation Editor All the inventive brains and mechanical skill at the command of Adolf Hitler's Germany have gone into devising and manufacturing weapons with which to combat the allied invasion of Western Europe. Before the invasion German propagandists made much capital of "secret" weapons that would turn any tide in their favor at one fell stroke, and some of the actual German equipment lent color to their Partroopers Frst To L .and On French Soil Veterans of Sicilian, Italian Campaigns Hit at Communications BY I WA COWAN Associated Press Correspondent WITH UNITED STATES PARA- CHUTE TROOPS, June 6.-Ameri- can paratroopers-studded with ba t- tle-hardened veterans of the Sicilian and Italian campaigns-landed be- mind itler's Atlantic Wall today to plant the first blow of the long- awaited western front squarely in the enery's vitals. The Allies' toughest, wiriest men of war cascaded from faintly moonlit s hes in an awsesomedoperation. Twin-engined C-4 S - sisters of America's standard airline flagships -bore the human cargo across the skies, simultaneously towing troop- laden gliders-toc u merge in arsingle sledgehammer blow .paving the way for frontal assault forces. Armed with weapons from the most primitive to the mast modern, the paratroiopers' mission was to disrupt and demoralize the Germans' corh- municatins inside the Nazisown lines. There was n aimmediate indication that their dynamite and lflashing steel and well-aimied fire was not succeeding in the executionaifplans reheased for months in preparation for the liberation of occupied Europe. The steel-helmeted, ankle-booted warriors wore a red, white and blue Aerican flag insignia. on the sleeve and camouflaged green - splotched battle dress. PLANES OVER BELGRADE NEW YORK, June 6.-()- The Romanian home radio announced to- day-at 8:07 a.m., Romanian time, that " :enemy formations are over the Bel- grade area" of Yugoslavia flying northeast toward Romania, the fed- eral communications reported. ( This would indicate an attack from Italian bases. ) >claims. Most of the secret weapon talk, however, was pretty generally written oc as simply hot air. The Germans necessarily have to rely principally on the unromantic realities of fixed fortifications, artil- lery, tanks, machine guns, barbed wire, mines and men with rifles. Besides all this, the Germans have come up with a variety of new weap- ons and new trucks. One of the most spectacular of these is the rocket-propelled glider bomb, used f airly extensively against Allied shipping in the sal- erno invasion of Septemiber, 1943, and also in the Bay of Biscay. This device, released from a specially- equipped plane, is kept under con- trol by nthe bombardier in°dmost' horizontal flight until it finally dives toward the chosen target. While undoubtedly tricky to han- dle, it proved itself possessed of a certain practicality, at least at first. Its lack of use in recent months leads to the belief that it proved either too difficult to manufacture and use or that the Allies figured out a coun- ter to it, just as they quickly did against the acoustic and magnetic nines that the .Germans employed so effectively early in the war. At the other end of the list of German ideas is an item of Sim- plicity itself : the prefabricated pill- box. Instead of laboriously building pillboxes of concrete and stone on the site, the Germans build them of armor-plate steel in home factories, to be trucked to any desired spot. and quickly.buried to the dome. The range of weapons between these two extremes includes the fol- lowing: A fog grenade, discharged from its own special portable thrower, said to conceal everything within a radius of 600 yards in blinding smoke. Laned mines made of plastic or woodetonescape detection by metal- s ens isat imv e Aied minesweepers These include the anti-personnel box called the "wooden shoe." 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Aiiied bozxzbers have been reported striking at Romania over Hungary. ' .: . a + e " . nc uc n s i n n + e cl '' Hero of the African desert, it is1 General Bernard L. Montgomery who is again at the head of the Allied forces, leading the assault of the Allied Liberation Army in northern France today. A two-fisted, hard-fighting, non- smoking tee-totaler, General Sir Ber- nard Law.. Montgomery outfoxed the "desert fox," German Field Marshal Erwin Rommel and became known as perhaps the greatest "winning gen- eral" of the United Nations in the war to -date. Leading successful military cam- paigns is no new task to Gen. Mont- gomery for after his smashing vic- tories over Rommel in North Africa he led the British Eighth Army to more successes in Sicily and Italy and then, late in 1943, was named to lead British ground forces'under Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, supreme chief of the invasion from the west. The son ox an Episcopalian bishop, Montgomery is deeply religious and the Bible has remained his constant companion throughout his cam- paigns. Known to his troops as "Mon- ty," the general has always believed Scorning personal comforts, "Mon- ty" has become a conspicuous figure in the war as, dressed in shorts, wear- ing a black beret that has become his personal trademark and with a re- volver strapped to his hip, Mont- gomery's appearances before his men and the people of England has meant much to the morale of the English. His cry before the final drive on Tripoli was "On to Tripoli!" and then it was "Forward to Tunis-drive the enemy into the sea!" With his chief Eisenhower, 57- year-old Montgomery is one of the youngest generals to lead a major campaign in military history. Born at St. Mark's Vicarage, Kennington, Oval, Borough of London, he was the son of the Rt. Rev. H. H. Montgom- ery, Bishop of the Episcopal Church, and a grandson of Dean F. W. Farrar' author of "The Life of Christ." After beginning the offensive a- gainst Rommel which was so disas- trous to the German cause, Mont- gomery has been on the defensive only once and is a firm believer in offensive action. Hit Normand (Continued from Page One) f erenace room una-rtil the comunyiq~ ue was released sever'al haours af ter the landing, s were mrade. It was mrrade known at Shaef that th.e 5Supremre Coin- iaazd felt it n ecessary .to yield the initiative ix the ar of words to the Germnans in order to retainr the inzitiative onz land aitd keep the German High Coinnaand ini the dark as long as possible. Troops Flank West Wall The great Allied arm adas dwarfed anythinig yet seen on the sea: Huge tIrans port Planes filled with paratroopers and pulling airborne troops in gliders roared over the Gernan west wall to drop their cargos in the rear. Berlin said that masses of Allied parachute troops bailed out over Normnandy, trying to seize airfields. Just before taking off in the darkness the paratroops were wished Gods peed by the lanky Kansas Supreme Comr- in ainder, Geni. Eisenhower. He was accompanied by several other of his comman- ders and his face was tense but confident as he strode down the long lines of fighting men. All night long London and England resounded to the roar of thousands of airplanes, some carrying bombs, some carrying men. Returning RAF bombers met big fleetsof Flying Fortresses on their way out. Greatest Amphibiouts Operation The forces thrown into operation were by far the greatest ever used in an amphibious operation. They had to be. An estimated million German troops waited in their fortfications for the great onslaught under crack Nazi field marshals, Runstedt and Rommel. It was reported earlier this week that Adolf Hitler him- self had a special train ready to rush him to France to take over personal command as he did on the east front. Despite these reports Allied military 'men expected Rommel to be the main tactician on German defense but on the Allied side were the team of Eisenhower and Mont- gomery-the. men who chased Rommel from Africa. Although amphibious attacks are the most difficult in war, a quiet feeling of confidence characterized the Allied .generals. just what element of surprise, if any, the landing troops achieved was not immediately announced by Supreme Headquarters. There was no chance to hide the great con- voys with only 'about five hours darkness on the channel. 'Under the command the General Eisenhower, Allied naval forces supported by strong air forces began landing Allied armies this morn- ing on the northern coast of France." It was announced moments later that Britain's Gen. Sir Bernard L. Montgomery, hero' of the Eighth Army victories in North Africa, Sicily and Italy, was in charge of the assa-a t. A senior officer at headquarters said the times of the landings varied 'o take advantage of the various tide stages at different beaches. Except for the airborne troops, the first landing times varied from 6 a. i. to 8:25 a. m., British double summer time (Midnight to 2:25 a. m. Eastern War Time). Although the Germans almost immediately announced that the grand assault had started, Eisenhower delayed his announcement in order to make absolutely certain the landings had taken hold before say- ing anything. The Allied forces had been ready for days, but were awaiting the best moment from the weather standpoint. "We have been months and years waiting for this," said a senior officer giving correspondents the story at headquarters. s"Geography made it evident to the Gernians as well as us that the shortest way to Europe was across the channel. First reports from across the channel, however, indicate that the Allies definitely controlled the air over the scene of operations. The Allied officer commented that landing against the fixed defen- ses of Western Europe was a task quite different from that in the Mediterranean and sketched briefly the German defensive plan of underwater barriers and shore guns. He said the Germans had possibly 1,750 fighter planes and 500 bombers to oppose the Allies. If the landings were in the places listed by the Germans, the Allied aim apparentfy was to pinch off thc Cherbourg peninsula and the good ports of Cherbourg and Le Havre, make Normandy their first main beachhead and drive up the Seine vlley to Paris. Years for Attck By JAMES J. STREBIG Associated Press Correspondent America built in about two years the winged fury which has now been flung into support of the Allied invasion. The speed in assembling such a vast force rivals in awesomeness the aerial might itself, an air force the like of which had not been dreamed before Munich or since, except in the United States. Hitler smashed into Poland with about 1,500 planes, executed the Norway campaign with fewer than 1,000, and pushed through the lowlands with something over 3,000. When it came Hitler's turn to defend, those figures were dwarfed by the Allied armada, a flying fighting force which counted planes by the tens of thousands, planes which could fly "%- fatr than anything the Nazis ever I In a matter of hours on Dec. 7, isenhower Reports Ho ur o Lberation' NEW YORK, June 6-(AP)-The OWI reported today this statement by Gen. Eisenhower was broadcast by Allied radios in London: "People of Western Europe! A landing was made this morn- ing on the coast of France by troops of the Allied expeditionary force. This landing is part of the concerted United Nations plan for the liberation of Europe, made in conjunction with your Great Russian allies. "Although the initial assault may not have been made in your own country, the hour of your liberation is approaching. 'All patriots, men and women, young and old, have a part to play in the achievement of final victory. To members of resistance move- ments, whether led by national or outside leaders, I say 'Follow the instructions you rave received'. , To&--- GENERAL MONTGOMERY in relentless warfare until his enemy is crushed. Gen. Montgomery was one of the last to get away from the ' beach of Dunkerque in the gloomy days. In December, 1941, he was given the South Eastern Command. Invasion Sidelights and Opinions Four Years Ago Today ... June 6, 1940: The second day of the battle of the Somme River rages two days after the last British soldier had escaped from Dunkerque and after Prime Minister Churchill had declared that Britons would fight on "until God's good time the new world with all its power and might sets forth to the liberation and rescue of the old;" French troops try to absorb German tank thrusts toward Paris with "fea- ther pillow" system, but the Germans gain up to 13 miles and reach the Breslie and Aisne Rivers. * * * Soldiers A ie Seasick .,. patriots. who are not members of organized resistance groups I say, 'Continue your passive resistance, but do not needlessly endanger your lives until I give you the signal to rise and strike the enemy'. The day will come when I shall need your united strength. Until that day, I call on you for the hard task of disci- pline and restraint. "The United Nations have inflicted upon the Germans great defeats in open battle, man to man. Our air offensive has seriously reduced their strength in the air and their capacity to wage war on the ground, our home fronts have given us overwhelming superiority in weapons and munitions of war, and have placed at our dis- posal great reserves of trained fight- ing men. The tide has turned and free men of the world are marching together to vigtory-. "T ha',7v fvll .-.rnfiap in ,,., tion of their homeland. Because the initial landing has been made on the soil of your country, I repeat to you with even greater emphasis my message to the peoples of other occupied countries in western Eur- ope. Follow the instructions of your leaders. A premature uprising of all Frenchmen may prevent you from 6ein of maximum help to your coun- try in the critical hon=r. Be auient. Prepare. "In the course of this campaign for the final defeat of the enemy you may sustain further loss and damage. Tragic though they may be, they are part of the price of victory. I assure! you that I shall do all in my power to mitigate your hardships. I know that I can count on your steadfastness; now, no less than in the past. The heroic deeds of Frenchmen who have nntFntta te ir cr---,ro r --9- 0+ . VI would deliver a special broadcast tonight at 9 p.m. London time. SUPREME HEADQUARTERS, AL- LIED EXPEDITIOARY FORCE, June 6.-It was announced that Gen. Charles De Gaulle, who had just ar- rived in London, would broadcast a message to the people of France later in the day. Peirs hing Is Confident . . WASHINGTON, June 6. - Gen. John 3. Pershing, who commanded American armies in France in the World War, issued the following statement following the announce- ment that a new expeditionary force had lanled in France: "Today, the sons of American soldiers of 1917-1918 are engaged in a like war of liberation. It is their task to bring freedom to peo- Ales who have been enslaved.. I have every confidence that they, together with their gallant broth- ers-in-arms, will win through to Svi ctorv ." Six lionr DifflerenCe . . . In order to clarify conflicting Brit- ish and American differences in time, the British Double Summer Time runs six hours ahead of Eastern War General George C. Marshall, the Chief tf Staff, was in his office con- tinuously since yesterday except for a biief interlude last evening when. he went to the Russian embassy to receive from Ambassador Gromyko the Order of Suvorov, first degree -the Soviet Union's highest mili- tary decoration. *: * Parachute Landings... Prime Minister Winston Churchill told the House of Commons today that the parachute and glider men had made successful massed airborne A senior officer at supreme head- quarters said rough water caused "awful anxiety" for the seaborne troops but that the landings were I made successfully, although some I soldiers were undoubtedly seasick. Hoover Comments . . . NEW" YORK, June 6. - Former President Herbert Hoover, comment- ing on the Allied invasion of Europe, said in a statement today: "The end of German tyranny is on the way. We have faith in our army.- We pray for the safety of all our lI 11'] l T '-a - - c 11 f _ I!