l l' i MI 1 \ M+ C'N / t> 4btwd- W eaher Wii, and Colder I VOL. LIV, No. 4 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, NOV. 5, 1943 PRICE FIVE CENTS Cary Flash Downed Second Time - . Allies Sink Five Jap Ships in South Pacific, Action Occurs near Allied Bougainville Beachhead - No Allied Vessels Reported Sunk SOUTHWEST PACIFIC ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, Friday, Nov. 5.- ()-A Japanese cruiser and four destroyers were sunk in the navy battle of American and Japanese warships near the Allies' Bougainville beachhead, it was announced officially today. Radio Tokyo previously had conceded the loss of a cruiser and two destroyers in the battle fought Tuesday morning. The battle, -which lasted more than two hours, occurred when enemy units were intercepted heading toward the Empress Augusta Bay sector on Bougainville's west coast where American Marines landed the day before. Two other Japanese cruisers and destroyers were hit. No vessels were, lost in the naval fight. The Japanese force, believed to consist of four cruisers and eight de- stroyers, was met 40 miles from_ Empress Augusta. The intense phase of the action lasted 90 minutes but South Pacific headquarters said the time of the fight and the subsequent pursuit of the fleeing enemy amount- ed to more than two hours.. Down 17 of 67 Planes Later the Japanese sent over 67 planes to attack the fleet units and 17 were downed. Thirty miles south of Bougainville, where the first phase of the nor- thern Solomon invasion opened Oct. 27 with invasion of tiny Treasury Island by American and New Zea- land forces, all organized enemy re- sistance has ceased. The fight against an estimated 200 Japanese there terminated Wednes- day, exactly a week after the inva- sion opened,. Adding to the Japanese losses later on the same day of the naval fight were three destroyers sunk and two heavy cruisers damaged by MacAr- thur's bombers during a heavy raid on shipping at Rabaul. Allied Units Regroup After the Japanese task force broke off the fight, scattering in three groups toward Rabaul, the Allied units regrouped for the expec- ted enemy air attacks which came fter dawn. Although no Allied ship losses oc- curred, "Damage and casualties were sustained," headquarters said. Today's communique reported yet another strike at Rabaul, the eighth since Oct. 12. Obviously in small force, Mitchells on night patrol star- ted fires at the Tobera airdrome, one of five such fields at Rabaul. Near there an 8,000 ton merchantman Was bombed and sunk off Cape Pomas to add to theuapproximately 100,000 tons of shipping sunk or damaged at Rabaul Tuesday. Record Tonna ge Is Dropped on Duesseldorf Bombers Pour 4,000 Tons in 27 Minutes On Ruhr Steel City LONDON, Nov 4-(P)--The RAF's great night fleet poured 2,000 long tons of bombs into Duesseldorf in 27 minutes last night with a record sa- turation attack capping a blazing 18 hours in which British and Ameri- can bombers together rocked Nazi targets with a total .of 4,000 tons of bombs, the greatest day-night ton- nage in history. The Duesseldorf assault was de- scribed by the Air Ministry as "con- centrated and effective," and it left the Ruhr steel and armament city second only to Hamburg as the most heavily bombed spot in the world. "74 Tons A Minute Bombs fell at the rate of 74 tons a minute. The best previous discharge rate by the RAF was 51 tons a min- ute in. one of the raids on Hamburg. This raid and related attacks on Cologne and other Nazi targets came in trip-hammer fashion after yester- day's American daylight raid on Wil- helmshaven, in which a record 1,000 planes participated and 1,500 tons of bombs were dropped. The Air Ministry announced to- night that this operation and the WLB To Vote This Morning On Mining Plan Ickes Hints at Boost Of Coal Prices if Agreement Is Ratified WASHINGTON, Nov. 4.- (')- The War Labor Board was report- ed tonight to be ready to approve the agreement worked out by John L. Lewis and Secretary of Interior Ickes to end the general coal strike. A decision is scheduled for 11 a.m. tomorrow. A majority of the board was ready to vote approval late today but a question arose about the detailed- application of the new wage scale to those who are paid by the ton rather than by the hour. The problem may call for some refinement in the ap- plication of the agreement to that group of employes. Overnight ad- journment was taken to permit fur- ther study of the mathematics of the question. Labor Members Support Plan In a full discussion of the agree- ment today, only the labor members strongly supported it with enough of the public members reluctantly indicating agreement to assure a majority. Industry members did not express disapproval, and one excel- lent source said a decision tonight would have resulted in an 11 to 1 vote. However, the lone dissenter, a public member, may have company by voting time. On Strike Since Monday Most of the 460,000 hard and soft coal miners, on strike since Monday, remained idle during the day. They had been instructed by officers of the United Mine Workers to go back to work as soon as possible. The WLB must approve the agree- ment if it is to become effective, and Ickes acknowledged today that it also probably will require an increase in the price of coal. Moscow Places Nazi Casualties At 2,700,000 LONDON, Friday, Nov 5-(A')- Germany has suffered 2,700,000 cas- ualties, nearly 1,000,000 of them kill- ed and captured, during four months of a still-rolling Red Army offensive which threatens to hurl the Nazi ar- my out of Russia this winter, a spe- cial Moscow announcement disclosed last night. Since July 5 when the Germans "failed disgracefully" in their own brief offensive in the Orel-Kursk- Belgorod salient, the Russians have killed 900,000 Germans and captured 98,000, half of them wounded, said the special war review. The review, broadcast by Moscow and recorded by the Soviet Monitor, was repeated three times by the ra- dio. On the basis of previous official Moscow reviews, the Germans have suffered 9,100,000 casualties since they began the most sanguinary war in history with the invasion of Rus- British Take Road Junction1 Of Isernia Germans Flee Across Garigliano Valley to Aurunci Mountains ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, AL- GIERS, Nov 4-(P)-Striking boldly in pre-dawn darkness, British and Canadian troops of Sir Bernard L. Montgomery's Eighth Army captured the vital road junction of Isernia at the central hinge of the German line early today as the enemy reeled back in almost every sector of the Italian front. On the Fifth Army front near the Mediterranean coast beaten Nazi troops streamed across the 14-mile- wide Garigliano Valley toward their next refuge in the Aurunci Moun- tain Range, closely pursued under clearing skies by British and Ameri- can forces that knocked them, from their elaborate positions on Massico Bridge and San Croce Mountain in bitter fighting yesterday.j Improved Weather Helps The improved weather enabled Lt. Gen. Mark W. Clark to rush quanti- ties.of tanks and heavy artillery into the pounding pursuit of the Germans along the two main highways to Rome, less than 85 miles away. With the capture of Isernia the whole German defense system in the mountainous center of the fight front was threatened andethe Eighth Army was brought to within 90 miles of the Italian capital. Extensive Demolitions Left The enemy's flight across the Gar- igliano Valley was being carried out under the protection of the most ex- tensive demolitions and mine fields yet left in the path of the Allies' in- exorable advance. A savage battle was reported rag- ing around the railway station of San Salvo at the Adriatic end of the front, where the Eighth Army gained its original bridgehead across the Trigno River. Hoover Urges Food Shipment Former President Says Victory Is Imminent WASHINGTON, Nov. 4.- ()- Openly confident that "were cer- tainly in the latter stages of the war" in Europe, former President Hoover urged senators today to start shipping food now to the continent's hungry millions. He said the forthcoming winter- "very probably, I hope, the last win- ter of the war"-is likely to be the grimmest yet for Germany's cap- tives. Hoover had an audience of 200 spectators as he testified before a foreign relationssubcommittee. At the request of newspapermen, Senator Van Nuys (Dem. - Ind.) asked Hoover if he cared to amplify his optimistic remark about the war's end. "I think," Hoover replied, "that we ought to be prepared to carry on the war during the whole year 1944, irrespective of any miracle that might occur in the meantime." He also made it clear that he was referring only to the fighting in Europe. Daily To Feature Sunday Army Page Through an arrangement with The Daily a special page, made up exclu- sively of Army news written by ser- vicemen representative of the seven companies stationed on campus, will appear every Sunday, beginning Nov. 14, Lt. Catherine James of the WAC annannepar+ tndav Pictured above is Lieut. Tom Harmon, reported missing in action since Oct. 30 in China. This picture was taken shortly after Lieut. Harmon received his wings at Williams Field, Ariz., a year ago. Mr. and Mrs. Louis A. Harmon, parents of the All-American grid star, are hope- ful that their son will find a way out if he hasn't fallen into enemy hands. PUBLIC HEALTH: Inter-A merican Conference To Start Monday i n Ann Arbor, Wolverine Star sLost inChina By MARION FORD The parents of 2nd Lt. Thomas D. Harmon were notified last night that the Michigan gridiron immortal has been reported miss. ing for the second time since he entered training in the Air Corps March 31, 1942. A telegram from the War Department yesterday said: "The Secretary of War desires me to express his regrets that your son, 2nd Lt. Thomas Dudley Harmon, has been reported missing in action over China since the 30th of October. If other information is re- ceived, you will be promptly notified. Signed, the Adjutant Gen- eral." His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Louis A. Harmon of 2200 Vinewood Blvd. last heard from their famous son a week ago Monday. The letter, dated October 13, said that he was in good health and promised them a Zero for Christmas. In a letter to Coach Fritz Crisler dated one day later Harmon said that he was doing "alot of flying" and described an engagement with the Japs. He said two of them had encountered 17 Jap planes, disposed of two and come through without a scratch. "Jap pilots are not nearly so good as German ones," he said, com- paring them to "mechanical fliers-you know every move they're going to make." He also expressed the desire to "get this nasty mess over with and come back to Ann Arbor." The former All-American football star has made his home in Ann Arbor since his senior year at the University. A native of Gary, Ind., Harmon brought his parents to Ann Arbor after his graduation in June, 1941. Harmon had been stationed with the 449th Fighter Squadron in China since July, and expressed little- hope of returning home before "Christmas of '44." The elder Harmon said he had gathered from Tom's letter that he was in supporting action in Chinese fighting around Chungking, which was re- ported the brunt of a severe Japanese attack the day Tom is listed as missing. "They say lightning never strikes twice in the same place," he said, "but we've had more than our share." Coach Crisler, who piloted Tom through four years of spectacular foot- ball, visited the Harmon home immediately onhearing the news. "Of course, I live in the hope that he is down and all right," the coach said. "I can'tbelieve he has scored for the last time, and I'll keep hoping tillI hear otherwise." Both parents of the missing football hero expressed confidence in lis ability to get out all right "if he hasn't fallen into enemy hands." "Thefaict that he is missing over China gives us some hope that he has fallen behind his own lines," Mrs. Harmon said. Harmon's first disappearance occurred last April when he and eight members of his crew crashed in the jungles of South America. After wan- dering around the jungle for seven days, Harmon eventually stumbled upon a native village and was taken back to the Army base. Harmon returned to the United States after his jungle escapade but was ordered to fighter duty in the Far East a short time later. He called the experience the "luckiest touchdown of my life" and credited his final escape to his "football legs" and prayer. Mention of Elyse Knox, Harmon's Hollywood starlet sweetheart, was made in his letters home and to Coach Crisler. Ile said that he was hearing from her regularly and that she was "about the same." One of the three brothers, William, is a first lieutenant in the Air Corps and is at present stationed at Cochran Field, Ga., as an instructor. The two other brothers, Louis, Jr., and Harold, are working in Detroit and Akron, 0. He has two sisters, Mrs. Bertram Jensen and Mrs. James Considine, both living in Gary, Ind. Bishop William Quinn, who was active in helping the Doolittle flyers, downed in China, recently returned to the United States and told the Har- mons that he had seen Tom. He was very happy, Bishop Quinn said, adding that he was sleeping between sheets for the first time in months and had built a little hut as his own headquarters. The 24-year-old flyer relinquished a radio sports broadcasting career for the duration when he resigned his Detroit job to volunteer for the air forces. Harmon was flying a P-38 fighter plane and had been previously cred- ited with two Zeros. He received his silver wings as a twin-engine bomber Continued on Page 3, Col. 5 Foresters Will.Hear Ramsdell Speak Tonight at ASF Convention The first Inter-American and the second world conference of Schools of Public Health will convene here1 Monday in the new University SchoolI of Public Health. Sponsored by the Pan-American Sanitary Bureau, the conference will be attended by delegates from nine South and Central American coun- tries, the nine public health schoolsI in the United States and Canada, the Department of State, the W. K. Kellogg and Rockefeller Founda- tions. Post-War To Be Discussed The purpose of the conference is to provide an exchange medium forj developments in the field of public health and to focus attention on post-war public health problems. Dr. Thomas Parran, Surgeon Gen- eral of the U.S. Public Health Ser- vice, and Dr. Hugh S. Cumming, USN1I Offers Commissions to Qualified Men Qualified men from 30 to 50 years of age experienced in teaching cer- tain subjects in colleges and univer- sities may apply for commissions in the U.S.N.R., the Office of Naval Of- ficer Procurement in Detroit an- nounced yesterday. Men are needed who have taught college algebra, trigonometry, geome- try, calculus and mechanics, chemis- try, physics, radio and electrical en- gineering, English, European history1 and government. Men who have taught at least two of the following languages may also apply: French, Spanish, German, Portuguese, Italian, Russian and Ja- panese. Those who qualify will be commis- sioned as officers in the U.S.N.R. and assigned to duty as instructors at An- napolis, Md. Anyone interested may apply at the Office of Naval Officer Procurement, n nn Furls T)nfi-ni+ Director of the Sanitary Bureau, will be the featured speakers at the con- clave. Dr. Parran will open the morning session of the conference Monday speaking on the subject "The Ser- vice of the Public Health Schools to the Nation's Wealth." At the evening session Professor C. E. A. Winslow of Yale University will discuss "The Fruits of Inter- American Relations in the Field of Public Health." South Americans To Talk Noted health leaders from Argen- tina, Brazil, Chile, Cuba, Mexico, Peru, and Uraguay will discuss the education of public health person- nel in their respective countries on Tuesday. The Wednesday and Thursday ses- sions will be limited to a working committee to consist of one repre- sentative from each of the schools of public health and one from each of the cooperating agencies. The University of Michigan, which dedicated its new School of Public Health during the summer semester, is the ninth university in the country to provide public health instruction. Nation's Schools To Attend All the schools making up the As- sociation of Public Health Schools of the United States and Canada will be represented at the coming con- ference. These are located at Har- vard, Yale, Johns Hopkins, Colum- bia, University of North Carolina, University of Toronto, Vanderbilt University, and the University of Minnesota. This is the first meeting of its kind to ever bring together public health officials of the Americas and the first conference of world importance since the public health conclave held 15 years ago in Geneva sponsored by the League of Nations. 'U' Servicemen Give $500 to War Chest Officers and enlisted men on cam- pus have contributed over $500 to the TTniversitv War Chest drive, Prof. A talk by W. F. Ramsdell on "Planning and Training for Military Government in Occupied Territor- ies" at 8 p.m. tonight in the Michi- gan League will highlight the second day of the 22nd annual meeting of the Central State Section of the, American Society of Foresters. Ramsdell formerly was on the staff of the School of Forestry and Con- servation and his speech tonight will be open to the public, according to Prof. Robert Craig, who is chairman of the Society. Also on the program for today is a demonstration at 1:30 p.m. of power falling saws at White Woods on the outskirts of Ann Arbor to which anyone interested is invited. The conference, which -brings to Ann Arbor about 50 foresters, repre- senting state, federal and private agencies in southern Michigan, Ohio, Indiana and Illinois, is discussing cutting operations will also be dis- cussed. Other speakers on the program include Dr. T. D. Stevens and L. A. Schoenman of Michigan State Col- lege, W. U. Carska, flo Bartlett of the State Department of Conservation game division and Dr. Henry Schmitz, president of the national society, Samuel T. Dana, dean of the school of forestry and conserva- tion at the University welcomed the Society in an address last night. U' Student's Action On Will Dismissed NEW YORK, Nov 4-(IP)-Surro- gate James A. Foley dismissed today an action brought by 18 year old Ro- bert Owen Beatty, '45, University of Michigan student, to set aside the will of Mrs. Isabel Mc Hie, Indiana wo-