Weather Generally Fair Y Official Publication Of The Summer Session :Iai ti Editorial You're Wasting Time If You Read This ..., I VOL. LI. No. 27 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, AUGUST 1, 1941 Z-S2 PRICE FIVE CENTS Germans Report Gaining Pressure About Leningrad Russians Reassert Claims Of Heavy Nazi Losses In Smolensk Direction Counter-Offensive Planned By Reds *(By The Associated Press) BERLIN, July 1.-The pressure of German and Finnish armies on Len- ingrad, seconc city of Russia, in- creased by the hour tonight, and speculation arose as to whether the city soon will be placed under actual siege. Reticent German military leaders made no specific claims and indulged in no predictions as to the fate of Leningrad. But military dispatches reported seven additional Soviet divi- sions had been destroyed by the Ger- mans in the northern hector, and news that the Finns were making steady corollary progress gave the impression the two pronged advance on Leningrad was moving toward a climactic point. MovingIn From South The German armies are moving in from the south, in Estonia, the High Command said today, they threw back the Russians in tlie latest operations. The Finns are descending on Lenin- grad from the north.' Reported destruction of the Russian divisions was described, by German military'correspondents as "success- ful culmination of a German encircle- ment movement." In addition to thousands of prisoners the Germans said they captured here 30 cannon, ~"68 trucks, 7 anti-aircraft batteries, 23 anti-tank guns and some tanks. Units Cut Off In addition there were increasing reports that larger and smaller Red Army units were being cut off from the central Leningrad defense zone. Dispatches from the regions where the Finns alone or Finns and Ger- mans are operating stressed the diffi- culties of the terrain and told of some instances in which the retreat- ing Russians drenched forests with naphtha, then ignited them with ar- tillery shells to form blazing barriers to the German-Finnish 'advance. - * * * Moscow Says Nazis Still Outside Smolensk MOSCOW, Friday, Aug. 1.-(A)- Strong Red Army counter attacks have hurled the German invaders back with heavy losses in the bitterly contested Smolensk approach to Mos- cow, the Soviet information bureau reported today. In an enthusiastic communique, it said, "specially stubborn fighting de- veloped in the Smolensk direction, where our troops by counter attacks threw back the enemy with heavy losses. "We captured prisoners and booty. Our air force, cooperating with land troops, dealt blows to enemy mechan- ized units and infantry." This latest counter-thrust came, according to private Russian advices, after the Soviet forces had staved of 42 gigantic German attacks in the Smolensk sector since July 16, always retaining control of the key city which the Germans claimed more than two weeks ago had fallen. Elsewhere along the front, the 40th day of the war found Russian troops still fighting the Germans in the same familiar sectors, the Soviet coin- munique said. These were around Porkhov and Novorzhev, roughly 150 to 200 miles southwest of Leningrad, and Zhitomir, the western approach to the Ukrainian capital of Kiev. Red Army Reported Preparing Offensive LONDON, July 31.-(RP)-The Red command is preparing a counter of- fensive of more than 3,000,000 Rus- sian troops to begin within two weeks if by then it is deemed the German invaders have expended their reserves, Soviet military informants declared here today. Russian reservists, it was said, are being assembled and completely equipped for this prospective push. The thrust, if it comes, will be head- ed by great masses of tanks and armored cars covered by fighter and bomber aircraft, it was added, but it was indicated this would be the only similarity with the German advance into Russia. Peru Agrees To.End Fight With Ecuador QUITO, Ecuador, 'July 31.--(P)- Diplomatic representatives of Argen- tina and the United States announced by radio today. Peru -had agreed to halt hostilities with Ecuador at 6 p.m. tonight. This announcement- was followed by the reading of an executive order revoking one issued July 24 in which Ecuador ordered the mobilization of the 1916-19 military classes. The Brazilian and United States ministers, Caib Mello Franco and Boaz Long, also broadcast expressions of satisfaction that the truce halting the century old conflict would aid in establishing peace on the continent. t. Argentina Ends Radio Trouble Over German Envoy Ordered To Get Rid Of Transmitter; Action ,Follows Putsch Failure BUENOS AIRES, July; 31.-)- Close upon a police announcement that a putsch against the govenment had been smashed in Entre Rios pro- vince, foreign office sources tonight said the German ambassador had been ordered to get rid of a portable radio transmitter which caused a round of diplomatic arguments. The ambassador, Edmund Von Thermann, has been under the fire of Argentine Congressmen in con- nection with his protests against seiz- ure of the radio by a Congressional 'ommittee investigating anti-Argen- tine activities. e-Export Or Destroy The foreign office required the com- mittee to restore the radio July 29. The orders to Von Thermann to "either re-xport or destroy" the radio came after police announced they had broken up a "subversive plot intended to overthrow present author- ities of Argentina" by arresting nine persons and seizing a large quantity of propaganda in the Entre Rios pro- vincial capital of Parana. Doors and walls of the raided houses were decor- ated with swastikas, police said. The province, lying northwest of Buenos Aires between the Parana and Uruguay Rivers, is a reputed hotbed of Nazi activity. - Geographically it controls the wat- erways leading to Paraguay, Bolivia and Brazil and faces Uruguay across the Uruguay River.- 'Diplomatic Baggage' 7 The affair of the portable radio came to light last week. A German attache was said to have taken it from Buenos Aires to Lima, Peru, by air ?as "diplomatic baggage." Peru refused to admit the package because it was over the weight allowed for diplomatic baggage, so he returned to Argentina with it and the Congres- sional investigators seized it. They said the same baggage also contained "elements of propaganda" and that a full report would be pre- sented to a Federal court. Meanwhile, to the north, on the' Chilean coast, another German diplo- mat, Ernst Wendler, waited for a ship to Japan as a result of his ejection by Bolivia as minister to La Paz. Tatuta Maru Sued7 By N. Y. Company SAN FRANCISCO, July 31.-(P)-I A $15,000 libel suit was filed against+ the Japanese Liner Tatuta Maru late today almost coincidentally with an announcement by Federal officials that legal obstacles had been ironed+ out to permit it to sail at noon to-] morrow. The suit was filed under admiraltyj -law by Arnhold & Co. of New YorkI City because the firm had failed to get delivery of its portion of the ship's Scandinavian Ports Made Air Targets British Follow Out Policy Of Attacking Germans Wherever Discovered Raids Follow Lull Caused By Weather LONDON, July 31.-()-The Bri- itsh Navynhas carried l{he war to Arc- tic Finland with heyy air attacks on the Finnish port of Petsamo as well as the Norwegian port of Kirk- enes, the Admiralty announced to- day, thus carrying out the Govern- ment's policy of strikirig at the Ger- mans wherever they are found and preparing the way for passage of Bri- tish supplies to Russia. The RAF simultaneously renewed its offensive against Germany and German occupied territory on the Continent after a several days' lull caused by bad weather. The Arctic raids were made Wed- nesday. Bombers Concentrate Fleet bombers from an aircraft car- rier-which must be accompanied by a protecting flotilla-concentrated on harbor works at Petsamo and caused "generally great damage" to port facilities there despite strong fighter and anti-aircraft opposition, the Admiralty said. At Kirkenes, where especially heavy' resistance was met, the naval bombers scored two hits on the 1,460-ton Ger- man warship Bremse, before the war a gunnery training vessel, accord- ing to an Admiralty communique. At last four supply ships were hit, the Admiralty said. British Acknowledge Losses The British acknowledged 16 of these naval aircraft were lost in the two attacks and said four German planes were shot down. (The Ger- mans announced 40 British naval planes launched the attack, and 28 were destroyed.) RAF raids on the continent were resumed Wednesday with an attack on Helgoland Bight, off the German northwest coast, continued through the night with attacks on the Aachen and Cologne regions of western Ger- many and on Boulogne, in German- occupied France, and resumed again this afternoon as bombers and fight- ers struck out for the French coast. German shipping between Boulogne and Calais was reported attacked, in addition to land targets. House Debates New Defense Tax Measure Charges Of Prodigality And Waste Are Leveled At New Deal Forces WASHINGTON, July 31.-()- Charges of "New Deal prodigality and waste" and demands for reduc- tions in non-defense expenditures marked nearly five hours of desul- tory House debate today on the new $3,529,200,000 tax bill. At times only a dozen representa- tives were on the floor, and when the discussion touched on appropria- tions, Rep. Cooper (Dem.-Tenn.) de- ,lared the time to talk about expendi- tures was when appropriations bills were up, not when tax bills were be- fore theHouse. Chairman Dougton (Dem.-N:C.) of the Ways and \eans Committee also arose several times to comment that he agreed with observations con- cerning the necessity for reducing expenditures, but that appropria- tions already made had to be pro- vided for in tax bills. After Rep. Carlson (Rep.-Kan.) had expressed disappointment be- cause income tax exemptions were not lowered, Doughton explained fu- ture tax bills might contain reduced exemptions and other taxes which he would not favor now. He went on to say that while he was "inherently opposed to a sales tax," even that form of taxation might become nec- essary. Reps. Buck (Dem.-Calif.), Dewey- (Rep.-Ill.), Magnuson (Dem.-Wash.), Rolph (Rep.-Calif.), and Jenkins, (Rep.-Ohio) attacked the provision for mandatory joint income tax re- turns by husbands and wives. Rep. Michener (Rep.-Mich.), say- ing "the Republicans undoubted y Names Super Economic Board U. S. Accepts Japanese Apology For 'Tutuila' Bombing; F. D.R. Officials Forget Routine To Make Hurried, Full Apology For Bombing Draw U. S. Protest Against Censorship TOKYO, July 3i.-(/P)-The high- est officials of Japan's foreign min- istry cast aside diplomatic routine today to make a -full and hurried apology to the United States for the Chungking bombing of the little American gunboat Tutuila-even be- fore such an apology had been form- ally demanded. U.S. Ambassador Josep C. Grew had not time this morning to leave to make the American protest before Vice Foreign Minister Kumaichi Ya- mamoto appeared at the embassy with a request for an interview for his chief, Foreign Minister Vice Ad- miral Teijiro 'oyoda. Subsequently, Grew was asked to call at the foreign office. There, in a 20-minute eonversation, he was assured by Toyoda of Japan's regret at the Tutuila incident and informed that the Japanese armed forces every- where had been instructed to take the utmost care that American pro- perty not be damaged. Meanwhile, the :chief aide of the Japanese Ministry of Navy called up- on the American naval attache, Com- mander Henri Smith Hutton, to ex- press the reg'ts of that branch of the service. The Tutuila was superficially dam- aged yesterday by a bomb which fell near it during a Japanese air raid on the Chinese Capital of Chungking. None of its people was injured. During the day, however, Ambassa- dor Grew delivered three protests against a telephone and cable cen- sorship which had prevented news of the Tutuila incident leaving the coun- try until this morning's diplomatic meeting. '* * * Japanese Formally Occupy Sigon SAIGON, French Indo-China, July 31.-(A)-A fully equipped Japanese army of crack troops, obviously ready for action .and taking nothing for granted, formally occupied Saigon to- day and with smart precision took up strategic positions. It was obvious to trained observers that Japan had sent a first-class army to occupy military bases in southern French Indo-China in accordance with the agreement between the Tok- yo and Vichy governments. In equipment, discipline and effi- ciency the military outfits sent here were recognized has among Japan's best. The army which arrived is a fighting army and not for ekhibition. The Japanese army, navy and air force are working together and pro- ceeding in a serious and business- like manner, apparently not taking it for granted there would be no opposi- tion. The Japanese are not depending upon local food, housing and trans- portation. They brought their own motor trucks, gasoline, food stuffs, tents and a wide variety of other equipment. At all points along the stretch of Indo-China's southeast coast from Turaone down to Saigon the Japan- ese occupation troops seem prepared to go into action if necessary. Wallace Appointed Head Of Agency To Direct American Stand WASHINGTON, July 31. -(A- Super-board to direct America's eco- nomic offensive against the Axis was established today by President Roose- velt. At its head he placed Vice-President Wallace, long a student of economic strategy and of vitally affected affairs of the Latin American nation, and to its membership he named the Secretaries of State, Treasury, Agri- culture and Commerce and the At- torney General. An accompanying Executive order gave the new agency a long list of formal duties and responsibilities. In reliable quarters, it was learned, meanwhile, that its activities would include such things as: Duties Of Board Handling the frozen assets of the Axis powers, keeping a close watch on 1,800 firms in Latin America re- cently blacklisted as over-friendly to Germany or Italy, watching export controls designed to keep essential war goods from reaching the Axis nations, and recommending anti- trust suits to disestablish Axis-influ- enced monopolies here. At the same time the day's develop- ments included several closely related to the economic defense of the na- tion:% A White House conference dis- cusse'd "everything on the inflation front," while legislation was in pre- paration to empower the Administra- tion to fix maximum prices and rents. Oil Conservation Secretary of the Interior Ickes, de- fense petroleum coordinator, called upon the oil industry to close its 100,- 000 eastern service stations from 7 p.m. to 7 a.m. There was a hint that stations refusing to comply would lose their sources of supply. The Commerce Department an- nounced Japan had suspended trade with the Republic of Panama since Japanese ships were stopped from transiting the Panama Canal. The Department pointed out it was the first time Japan had suspended ex- ports to any Latin American country. Recital Offered By Whittington Chillicothe Music Director Will Sing Today Richard Whittington, tenor, di, rector of music in the Chillicothe, Ohio, public schools, will offer a re- cital at 8:30 p.m. today in the Rack- ham Assembly Hall accompanied by Charles Shrader. Included on the program will be selections by Bach, Sarti, Rosa, Scar- latti, Handel, Schumann, Franck, Faure, Hahn, Watts, Bespily, Rach- maninoff and Campbell-Tipton. A graduate of Otterbein College in Westerville, Ohio, Whittington is a former student of Melius Christian- sen and during the past few summers has been studying under Prof. Arthur Hackett of the School of Music. Enid Szantho, contralto, George Poinar, violinist, and William Beller, pianist, will present a concert at 8:30 p.m. Sunday in the Pettingill Auditorium of the Ann Arbor High School. Miss Szantho, who will sing three compositions by Schubert and "Kindertotenlieder" by Gustav Mah- ler, will be accompanied by Prof. Ava Comin Case.-. Speech Group To Give Plays At High School A bill of one-act student directed plays will be presented by the speech department's Laboratory Theatre un- der the direction of Hugh Norton at 3:15 p.m. today in the Pattengill Auditorium in Ann Arbor High School.- The Laboratory Theatre is designed to give students experience in acting, directing and the staging of plays. This makes it possible for students who can't work under the pressure of the weekly performances of the Michigan Repertory Players of the Department of Speech to participate in drama work. The Secondary Theatre under the direction of Nancy Bowman will pre- sent a bill of one-act plays at 10 a.m. tomorrow in Pattengill Auditorium in Ann Arbor High School. The Second- ary Theatre has the specific purpose of producing plays that can be used in high school under high school con- ditions. Draft Revision Aamin Debated By'Committee Joint House-Senate Group Considers. Deferment Of Men Older Than 28 WASHINGTON, July 31.-WA- Members of a joint House-Senate committee discussed today writing into a pending Selective Service amendment a, provision which would permit selectees who are already in the service and who are at least 28 years of age to be released upon re- quest The joint committee disclosed the provision in connection with pending legislation to require deferment of all 28-year-olds who have -not yet been inducted into the service. Final action on the deferiment pro- posal has been held up because the House refused to accept a provision which would give President Roosevelt power to take over defense plants when an interruption of production impeded the defense program. Debate Continued / Brigadier General Lewis B. Her- shey, who was confirmed by the Sen- ate today as Selective Service Di- rector, announced Selective Service boards had been directed not to draft men over 28 pending a Congressional decision on the deferment legislation. While the Senate-House conferees were meeting the Senate continued debate' on another measure permit- ting the President to extend the serv- ice periods of all army personnel. Senator Wheeler (Dem.-Mont) led the fight against this measure, but expressed doubt Congress would "have the course" to defeat it. Wheeler, taking" the floor for a desk, thumping speech which lasted about an hour, told his colleagues General George C. Marshall, the Chief of Staff, had revised upward several times his estimate, of the number of men needed for defense. Wheeler Speaks "What do they want them for if they don't want to send them out as an expeditionary force?" the Mon- tanan shouted.' "If you break faith with millions of boys, if you break faith with their mothers and wives and sweethearts, I fear for the wel- fare of the United States of America. And that is far more important than that General Marshall and some other military men in the army should have their way." Before crowded galleries which in- cluded a sprinkling of uniformed Iraftees, Wheeler repeatedly attacked Wendell L. Willkie and declared the 1940 Republican Presidential nomi- nee is "the man that's making policy." Excursionists Must Sign For Jackson Trip Today Incident Regarded Closed By Welles Following Parley With President Tokyo Promises To Pay Damages WASHINGTON, July 31. -(A')- Sumner Welles, Acting Secretary of Staite, announced tonight the United States had accepted official apologies of the Japanese Government on the bombing of the U.S.S. Tutuila at Chungking, China, and that the inci- dent was regarded as closed. Welles made the announcement after consultation with President Roosevelt. The official apologies of the Japan- ese Government, together with an offer to pay indemnities for the bomb- ing of the gunboat and to take meas- ures to prevent such incidents in the future, were made late today by Ad- miral Kichisaburo Nomura, Japanese ambassador. Entirely Accidental In answer to queries concerning the ambassador's visit, Welles said the envoy had called on official instruc- tions and had expressed regret of the Japanese Government. He added that the Japanese Gov- ernment viewed the incident as en- tirely accidental. The Tokyo government, Welles said, has informed the United States of concrete and detailed measures which it has taken to prevent a recurrence of such incidents. In addition, Welles said, Japan offers to pay indemnities in full for any damage as soon as the necessary investigations have been completed. As the ambassador left the State Department,'after conferring 10 min- utes with Welles, hetold newspaper- men he was making every effort to improve relations between the United States and Japan. Hurried Regrets Earlier Japanese officials at'Tokyo had hurried expressed regrets but, until tonight, the United States Gov- ernment had taken the position the incident was not closed. The importance which had been at- tached to the bombing was empha- sized by Welles' disclosure that he'd summoned the Japanese envoy to the State Department yesterday and at the same time instructed the Ameri- can ambassador in Tokyo to make representations. Bridie's Play Continues Run Storm Over Patsy' Is On At 8:30 PM. Today "Storm Over Patsy," James Bri- die's well known London success, will be seen at 8:30 p.m. today in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre under the direction of Prof. Claribel Baird of the speech department at the Okla- homa College for Women. Among the featured performers in the comedy are June Madison as Mrs. Flanagan, James Moll as Francis Bur- don, Clara Behringer as Victoria Thomson, Lillian Canon as Mrs. Skir- ving, William Altman as Provost Thomson and George Shapiro as Mr. Skirving. Others in the cast are Marjorie Adams, Hollister Smith, Roger Reed, Paul Blackburn, John Weimer, Her- bert London, Robert Rittenour, Mar- vin Levy, John Sinclair, Merle Webb and Crab, Ann Arbor's favorite ca- nine actress, who will play the titl role. Tickets are on sale for $.75, $.50 and $.35 today at the box office of the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre at the League. Summer Quarterly FReview Is Issued' The 1941 summer Quarterly Review of the Michigan Alumnus has been issued, featuring Edward Weeks' "On Counting Your Chickens Before They Hatch," the address delivered this spring on the occasion of the annual awarding of the Hopwood Prizes. The Quarterly contains several manuscripts whichEvwn awards in the t_,_ .: ): 3 A a'6 7 i . si 1 ti. }',_ Professor Hobbs Writes Book; On Polar Region Experiences Prof. William Herbert Hobbs, pro- .proved that the land was a continent, fessor emeritus of geology, is the au- thor of a recently published book, "Explorers of the Antarctic.". Delving ' into his own experience as an Arctic explorer and his studies of thq polar regions, Professor Hobbs Professor Hobbs will deliver an illustrated lecture on "Polar Ex- ploration" at 8 p.m. Monday in the" Rackham Lecture Hall. The and of the other great men connected with polar exploration-Amundsen, Scott, Byrd, Ellsworth. Professor Hobbs is the author of 11 other books, ranging from "The World War and Its Consequences" to the standard, full-length life of Peary. His work as author, explorer and edu- cator has been characterized by the anecdote of a fur-coated explorer gazing at the glacier-gripped land- scape of Greenland, flapping his arms