leather Scattered showers Y it 43UU 4)a Editorial India's Stand Tragically Unrealistic . I VOL. LII No. 39- ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN SATURDAY, AUGUST 8, 19424 2:15 A.M. FINAL Kaiser Given Nelson's Okay Oan 100 Cargo Planes NOW Navy Reacts Unfavorably, But WPB Head Declares He'll Stick To Decision To Build 70-Ton 'Mars' Combat Planes Still Retain' Priorities By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Aug. 7.-Henry J. Kaiser, West Coast builder of dams and ships, got the go ahead today from Production Chief Donald M. Nelson to build a fleet of 500 70-ton "Mars" flying boats, but there were plain indications that the Navy had balked at the plan.; A WPB official, who declined to be quoted by name, acknowledged that the Navy had "been reacting all afternoon" to Nelson's announce- ment in the morning that Kaiser would get a letter of intent to build 100 cargo planes of the Mars type Ih shipyards, to be followed by 400 more if he makes good on the first batch., A source in the middle of the situ- ation said Nelson was determined to sign the commitment himself if the Navy would not. , inder his wartime powers, the WPB chairman had authority to di- rect that contracts be placed by other government agencies.' Nelson told reporters one impor- tant strirg was attached to his com- mitment to the shipbuilder. Kaiser must demonstrate, before he starts construction, that his program will not interfere with combat plane pro- duction by severely draining materi- als, machinery or equipment. A second letter of intent will be issued to Kaiser, a WPB spokes- man said, authorizing him to pre- pare designs and engineering specifi- cations f6r a 200-ton flying 15oat, in- tended to be a cargo carrier vastly greater than anything in the skies. This commitment, however, will not cover construction of the mam- moth plane. Conccessions Not Granted, SaysPetrillo Denies Any 'Make 'En, Play 'Em, Break 'Em' Agreement Exists By The Associated Press CHICAGO, Aug. 7.-James C. Pe- trillo, American Federation of Mu- sicians' president, said today he had given no "make 'em, play 'em, break 'em" concession to anyone in his cur- rent fight against recorded music on radio. George S. McMillan, secretary of the Association of National Adver- tisers, announced in New York Wed- nesday the union had assured him it would permit its 138,000 members to make transcriptions for commercial broadcasts provided the recordings were played only once over a station and then destroyed. 'Mr. McMillan is misinformed," Petrillo said. "I gave no such per- mission nor did any other officer of the Federation. Any recording com- pany wishing to make such an agree- ment would have to apply to us in writing and none has." Petrillo ordered the membership to cease making records for radio broadcast July 31, contending use of recordings and transcriptions was costing musicians work and wages. His action prompted an anti-trust suit bythe federal government. Interlochen Ban Called Shortsighted PORTLAND, Me., Aug. 7.-(R)- James C. Petrillo's banning of radio broadcasts by the National High School Orchestra at Interlochen was described as "short-sighted" today by the president of the National Fed- eration of Music Clubs. The president, Mrs. Guy P. Gan- net, said she sympathized with the president of the American Federa- tion of Musicians' "desire to secure all possible employment for adult musicians," but she added. U.S. Only Ankle Deep In War: Eleventh Hour Warning To Nation i German Armies Drive Nearer Oil Fields Of Maikop * * * * * * * * * * * * , ' By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Aug. 7.-The Office of War Information, warn- ing that "WE COULD LOSE THE WAR," declared tonight that pro- duction of fighting planes, tanks, most types of artillery and naval vessels fell behind schedule in June and that increasing sacri- fices must be made by civilians if the war program is to be success- ful. Presenting a gloomy and critical review of the military and pro- duction situation at the present time, OWI asserted that indi- vidual Americans had made great sacrifices but "as a nation we are not yet more than ankle deep in the war." . Referring by indirection to de- mands for the opening of a second front in Europe, the OWI declared that "popular pressure for action on this front or that of the many possible fronts can serve no useful purpose." American military forces are being disposed "as and where the military commanders believe they get the maximum of results," and "when we cannot be strong and hit hard everywhere, we must be able to hit hard where it counts most even at the price of leaving other areas inactive," OWI said. "We always knew that, for us, 1042 would be largely. a year of preparation, and that our allies would have to do most of the. fighting during most of the year. Before we can do much of the fighting we must move great numbers of men and vast masses of material over enormous dis- tances. "This job, so far, has been done with entire success; but we are going to have to keep on doing it, in increasing volume, until the war is won."~ The review declared that our allies thus far have carried most of the load "and we have not given them as much help as we had led them to expect." This was due partly to enemy victories, the re- view added, but "by and large, we have not been producing war material to the maximum of avail- able capacity and have not been. getting that material to the fight- ing fronts in the time and in the volume that will be needed to win." "We are deep in what may be the decisive year of the war." the review continued. "But 1942 will be the decisive year only if our enemies do not succeed in inflict- ing crippling blows on our allies before the year is out. Asserting that the military forces had done "pretty well but ., not well enough," OWI said "we held the central Pacific and rein- forced Australia; but he (the en- emy) still holds the Philippines, and the Dutch islands and the rubber that we need." "Even if they fail in that they will still take a lot of licking. "But, if they should paralyze the striking power of Russia or wear down the endurance of Chi- na, or break the British power in the Middle East, the war will be decided in some later year not .now foreseen, and victory will be far more costly." The situation at home likewise is a job done "pretty well but not well enough." OWI asserted. "Our production. measured by our standards of a couple of years ago, is amazing; measured against what we need to win, it is not yet enough. In June we fell slightly below schedule in total military planes, in total combat planes, and in most of the individual types; we made more planes than any other country in the world, but we did not make as many as we said we were going to, make, The same is true of tanks, of most types of artillery and of naval vessels-particularly the small craft needed to fight submarines." In July, the review said, the curve of submarine sinkings throughout the world started downward and, while it was hoped this trend would continue, "pro- duction of small- vessels for the anti-submarine campaign is still lagging and in June was less than half of schedule." "Even if shipbuilding continued to rise and sinkings to decrease, we shall probably be well into 1943' before we again have as much merchant shipping as we had on December 7, 1941," the review de- clared. OWI was critical of "faulty control of inventories and of flow of materials" which it said had forced some temporary shutdowns in war plants. The review added, however, that the war production drive was taking a new turn to emphasize output of materials and that "mistakes made this time were perhaps unavoidable and will not be made again." "But, their consequences will be with us for some time to come," the review added, "and the resolu- tion not to repeat them must be backed up by an intensified effort of the entire nation." "Too many people seem to feel that we are fighting this war out of a surplus-a surplus of re- sources and productive capacity, a surplus of time," OWI said, "That is not true. We have plenty of some resources; in others we are a have-not nation. "We should all lik- to believe for instance that we are going to have all the rubber we need for pleasure driving as well as for military and essential civilian uses. But there is no present pros-, pect of that; if people eagerly be- lieve everybody who tells them that there is going to be plenty of rubber, they are only fooling themselves and helping the en- emy." Allies Discuss Plan To Save Russia 'Now Other Nazi Troops Smash Closer To Stalingrad; IDon Battles Continued Russians Retreat Toward Armavir 4 5 WMC Plans 1 Direct Grants For Students To Assure Proper Supply Of Army, Navy Officer Material andSpecialists By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, August 7.-Edu- cation sources disclosed today a special committee of the War Man- power Commission was considering a proposal for wartime "democratiza- tion" of American colleges through direct money grants to students, as a means of assuring an adequate supply of Army and Navy officer ma- terial and other trained personnel for the general war program. An educator, who preferred not to be quoted directly, predicted that unless the Government subsidized 'higher education the number of stu- dents in colleges and universities might drop as much as 30 percent dur;g the next school term. Student subsidy is but one of sev- eral proposals beings weighed by the special manpower committee, he said! and it was understood there was con- siderable difference of" opinion among educators as to the proper so- lution of the college problem. A subsidy program would require congressional approval, with some doubt/ in educational quarters that any action could be had before open- ing of the fall terms in September. A subsidy program might embrace women students as well as men, in the scientific and professional fields. Dr. Edward C. Elliott, president of Purdue University, is chairman of the manpower committee formulat- ing the co-ordinated plan. Congress man' Says Russta, Japs- At War By The Associated Press SEATTLE,] Aug. 7.-"Japan is al- ready at war with Russia and it is common knowledge in Washington, D.C., that the Japs have already sunk several Russian ships in the Pacific," Rep. Warren G. Magnuson (Dem.-Wash.), a member of the Naval Affairs Committee. said today in an interview. "The last was sunk very recently," he said. "They are justifying their action on the ground that the Rus- sians were carrying American ma- terials." He said he knew only in a general way of the sinking of Russian ships by Japanese submarines. He said he had heard the name of the vessel most recently sunk in the North Pacific but had forgotten it. Army Judge-Advocate School To. Be Brought To Uniersty By HALE CHAMPION The Army announced today that fhe Judge-Advocate General's school will be transferred to the University Law School early next month. Dean E. Blythe Stason of the law school expressed his satisfaction with the arrangements made by the Board of Regents, declaring, "We are for- tunate in being able to aid the war effort in this way." The action of tine Board of Regents in arranging the occupation of the Cook Law Quadrangle-completed in 1933' at a cost of $7,000,000-marked the temporary end of .a full-sized University law school. The services have so far depleted registration that instruction of the few remaining reg- ular students will be carried on alongside instruction in the Judge- Advocate school. Associated Press reports from Washington quoted Gen. Myron C. Kramer, Judge-Advocate General, as State Will Get 'Air Spotters Van Wagoner Announces TuesdayMeeting LANSING, Aug., 7.-(A)-Governor Van Wagoner announced today that a meeting to organize a complete air- spotter system for Michigan will be held Tuesday in the executive office. Van Wagoner disclosed that Mich- igan for several months has operated an emergency air-raid watcher sys- tem and that permission for the cre- ation of a more permanent organi- zation now has beert granted by the commanding general of the Sixth Service Command at Chicago. The emergency spotting system, he said, had included the Coast Guard, State Police, Conservation Depart- ment, Lighthouse Service, sheriff's officers in many counties, and night watchmen at private plants. Some of those organizations may be kept in the permanent system, Van Wag- oner said. saying that the chief reason for the change-the school has been located since last .February at National Uni- versity Law School in Washington- was the congested condition of the capitol.I Lecture halls and offices have been set aside in Hutchins. Hall, and, offi- cers will be quartered in the Law Quadrangle. Ordnance students now living in the Quadrangle will have graduated before the Army detach- ment arrives, but their successors in the course will have to find other quarters. Roosevelt, Still Studying Fate Of Saboteur's WASHINGTON. Aug. 7.-0)- There was no indication tonight as to when the fate of the eight alleged Nazi saboteurs would be announced. The White House merely let stand a statement by the Chief Executive that he had not yet completed his study of testimony obtained by a military commission which tried the men on charges they came to Amer- ica on Nazi submarines to destroy key war installations. Mr. Roosevelt said late last Tues- day he would finish his review of the case in "two or three days." But in the three days that have elapsed he has had relatively little time to de- vote to the voluminous documents laid before him by the military com- mission, since Queen Wilhelmina of the Netherlands has been a White House guest. In response to an inquiry about an International News Service story that the Chief Executive had ap- proved death sentences for six of the saboteurs, William D. Hassett, assis-I tant Presidential Secretary, told re- porters "the President has not yet concluded his reading of testimony in the saboteur case." The Chief Ex- ecutive himself repeated that asser- tion at a press conference. Investigations Of News Leak To BeOpened Chicago Tribune Involved In Grand Jury Inquiry Into Midway Stories By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Aug. 7.-Attorney General Francis Biddle announced tonight that a grand jury investiga- tion would be started immediately at Chicago into the publication "by cer- tain newspaper on Sunday, June 7, 1942, of confidential t information concerning the battle of Midway.", Biddle said he had directed the in- vestigation as a result of a prelimin- ary inquiry and upon the recommen- dation of the Navy Department. The official announcement did not name the newspapers, but Robert W. Horton, head of the news bureau of the office of war information, said the investigation "involved the Chi- cago Tribune, the New York Daily News and the Washington Times Herald." The grand jury will be directed to investigate the possible violation of any criminal statutes, Biddle said, particularly the act of March 28, 1940, forbidding the unlawful com-1 munication of documents or infor- mation relating to national defense. Horton said that the three news- papers he named published a story stating that the strength of the Jap- anese naval forces engaged in the battle of Midway was known in ad- vance in American naval circles. The story cited as its authority "reliable sources in the Naval Intelligence." Murray Stries, At AFLPoicyA Blames Union For Evading Joint Comnmittee Plan, PITTSBURGH, Aug. 7.-(R)-CIO president Philip Murray declared to- night in a telegram to the War La- bor Board that the American Feder- ation of Labor has "tried to evade" his suggestion that a joint"CIO-AFL committee be set up to arbitrate jur- isdictional disputes. The telegram read in part: "The CIO has repeatedly informed the War Labor Board of its willing- ness and readiness to submit all jur- isdictional disputes involving the AFL to arbitration, so as to avoid all stoppages in the interest of winning the war. "This offer has likewise. been re- peatedly made to the AFL. It was included in my letter of August 2 to William Green. In replying, 'Urgent' Moscow Conclave Attended By Diplomats, MilitaryStrategists By The Associated Press LONDON, Aug. 7.-Urgent confer-j ences on means to save Russia now1 as an essential to winning of the war were reported in session at Moscow today among strategists and diplo- mats of the United Nations. This in- NEW YORK, Aug. 7.-(P)-The Tokyo Radio tonight "broadcastJ Japanese editorial comment con- taining the first hints from there that Japan herself might 'open a second front with an attack on1 Russia in Siberia. The broadcast noted reports of the arrival in Moscow of Allied representatives and said the moves in the Russian capital were "indic- a'tive of 'further Anglo-American machinations aimed to open up a second front to save the Soviet Union from collapse." formation came from sources whose identity could not be disclosed. Known to be conferring with Rus- sian militarists in the Kremlin were: Admiral William H. Standley, American Ambassador to Russia who flew from the alternate capital at Kuibyshev; Maj.-Gen. Follett Bradley of the United States Air Forces, who flew tb Moscow from the United States with a personal message from Presi- dent Roosevelt to Premier Joseph Stalin; Sir Archibald Clark Kerr, British Ambassador to Russia; Roger Garreau, head of the Fight- ing I(rench mission to Russia; Maj.-Gen. William Steffens, Nor- wegian military attache to Kuiby- shev. The established presence of these conferees suggested that others rep- resenting their own and other United Nations were in Moscow to help de- termine how to relieve the pressure on the Red Armies defending the Caucasus oil and the Volga lifeline of supply.. Gandhi Opens Drive T o Oust British Power, BOMBAY, Aug. 7.-(P)-In the bi- zarre setting of a canvas pavilion fit- ted with electric fans and aipublic- address system, Mohandas K. Gan- dhi called on his nationalist followers today to rise with him in an unprece- dented mass campaign of civil dis- obedience aimed at driving the Brit- ish out of power in allIndia. "Our movements for freedom in the past will become insignificant compared with the forthcoming movement," the frail little ascetic or- ator declared as he sat motionless, bare above the waist, his bare legs crossed on a couch before which a microphone had been adjusted. "Now is the occasion when we will have to rise." Yet with this dramatic summons to action he coupled warnings that the campaign must be passive, that he would not tolerate violence, an~d that Japanese invasion would be "a dangerous thing-you must remove it from your minds." Ten thousand spectators heard him in a. hush so deep that the hum of the electric fans was clearly. audi4 ble throughout his address., The occasion was the opening of an All-India Congress party session called to sanction a resolution which will make Gandhi the non-violent generalissimo of the independence drive. Approval, perhaps tomorrow, is regarded as a foregone conclusion. Brown Appointed Pethodv Libr arin By The Associated Press MOSCOW, Aug. 8 (Saturday)- German armies plunging deeper into the Caucasus have driven to the Armavir area within 60 miles of the Maikop oil fields while other Nazi forces moved closer toward the threatened Volga city of Stalingrad, the Russians announced officially today. Indicating that the Nazi masses had stormed across the vital Kuban river in the western Caucasus, the midnight communique reported that fierce engagements were being fought in the Armavir area and to the south of Kushcehvka. Armavir is 160 miles south of*Ros- tov on the Rostov-Baku railroad. It is almost on the Kuban river, sflghtly to the west of that waterway. New Reverse Described The midnight report told of the new reverse in the Caucasus in these terse phrases: "In the area south of Belaya Glina , our troops have been waging defen- sive battles for several days against advancing German Fascist troops. After bloody battles against superior enemy forces our troops re- treated to a new defense line in the direction of Armavir." The violent- battles of the Don Bend, where some of the biggest tank engagements of the war were being fought, continued without let-up. The communique declared several German attacks were repulsed in the Kletskaya area, some 75 miles north- west of Stalingrad. One guards unit alone was said to have hurled back 17 enemy tank attacks and destroyed more than 100 tanks. Nazis Nearer Stalingrad But, the Russians acknowledged, the Germans had pushed a wedge north of Kotelnikovski closer to Stalingrad. Just how far this Ger- man threat carried toward the city of the Volga named for Joseph Stalin was not disclosed. Kotelnikovski is 95 miles southwest of Stalingrad and below the Don River. The Soviet troops pressing the Ger- mans in the Voronezh sector at the northern end of the front were re- ported to have forced a crossing of the upper Don River and occupied two large populated planes. The Russians are attempting to relieve the pressure on the south by the action around Voronezh. At sea, the Russians said, Red fleet warships operating in the Baltic sank an enemy transport of 10,000 tons. No details on this feat were given. But with all the Russian resistance, bolstered now by reserves, the pene- tration into the Caucasus in the Armavir region was the deepest thus far reported by the Soviets in that important sector. The fresh reserves apparently were checking the superior Nazi forces in all save the area below Belaya Glina, through which the German tanks have plunged toward Armavir and the Maikop oil fields. RAF Bombs Ruhr District Industrial Section Blasted In ThirdNightRaid LtONDON, Aug. 7.-(e-The RAF sent a strong force of bombers through thick weather to the Ruhr valley for the third successive night last night, blasting the big indus- trial center and inland river port >of Duisburg and other points. The Air Ministry~ acknowledged that six planes were missing after these attacks and other raids on Nazi airdromes in the low countries, but did not disclose the number of participating planes. However, a British source said that in the days before the 1,000-bomber raids last night's force would have been re- garded as "a whopper." The German High Command ad- mitted there had been material dam- age to buildings and said the raids 'Air Raid Shelter' To Be Built To. Boost Sale OfWar Stamps Before the eyes of passersby today! the campus's first 'public air raid shelter' will be erected at the corner of State Street and North University, to boost the sale of U. S. War Bonds and Stamps. Realistically sandbagged the 'V' shaped booth, cooperative project in man, and ThomAs Donegan, painter foreman, and the common labor un- der Russell C. Trombley, grounds foreman; all of the Buildings and Grounds Department. Several students have volunteered to supply the common labor neces- sary and have been busily at work