Weather Continued Cool LI a Sir igan at t Editorial Congress Should Enact Democr iztzation' Plan VOL. LII No. 41-S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 121 94 2:15 A.M. FINAL Ann Arbor Blackout Set For 10 Tonight o Bombay Police To Use Lashes; Soldiers Fire Into Throngs Strongest Of Measures Ordered To Quell Riots As Outbursts Continue; BombayDeaths Hit 31 Civil Disobedience SpreadsIn India By PRESTON GROVER Associated Press Correspondent BOMBAY, Aug. 11.-The governor of populous Bombay Province tonight ordered massed polie patrols and British Army machine-gunners to use the strongest measures, includ- ing lashing, to quell disorders in this storm center of the Gandhi Free India campaign. The stern new order came after troops and police had fired into many unruly crowds. "I cannot allow this disturbance of the life of the city to continue," said the governor, Sir Roger Lumley. "I am going to maintain order at any cost. Tokthose, therefore, who may be thinking of going on with these disturbances, I now give this plain warning: The police and troops have orders to take the strongest measures whenever necessary." Clashes Continue In continuing clashes between civil disobedience demonstrators and the security forces, 13 more persons were killed and 30 injured today in 10 sep- arate outbursts here, with troops fol- lowing up their repeated actions of yesterday in firing on crowds on one or two occasions. This brought casualties in Bombay alone, since the first outbreaks Sun- day upon the arrest of Mohandas K. Gandhi, to at least 31 dead and more than 250 injured, while more than 500 arrests have been made. There was no accurate count of casualties elsewhere in the teeming sub-conti- nent. At Patna, capital of Bihar Prov- ince, five persons were killed and 19 injured when police fired on demon- strators massed near the government secretariat this afternoon. Whipping Act Lumley foowed up his broadcast warning tonight, with a communique announcing invocation of an emer- gency whipping act for Bombay Province and the drafting of several hundred additional police into the city from other districts. While rioting spread from Bombay in the west to Calcutta in the east, accompanied by work stoppages, the authorities were alert for the spark that might set off communal clashes between the Hindu followers of Gan- dhi and members of the Moslem mi- nority. Hindu students already have stoned Moslem shops here. U. S. Forces Hold Own In Solomon Island Fight Troops Keep Footholds, 'Outpunching' Japs Despite Strong Counterattacks Lights To Go Out For Half-Hour; t'4 Same Rules As First Test ." By C. YATES McDANIEL Associated Press Correspondent GENERAL MacARTHUR'S HEAD- QUARTERS, Australia, Aug. 11.- United States landing forces held their footholds in the Solomon Is- lands tonight despite the force of Japanese counterattack,and the en- tire Allied striking force was pic- tured by an official spokesman as outpunching the Japanese. "We are holding our own," said Prime Minister Curtin in the first word from an official source in Aus- tralia on the progress of the main offensive in the strategic island chain. Heninterpreted Admiral Ernest J. King's preliminary announcement in Washington yesterday of losses on both sides in the developing land, sea and air fight as indicating that Allied gains so far had greatly out- weighed losses. It was disclosed, meanwhile, that American troops exclusively were in- volved in the landings and the fight ashore for control of the vital area around Tulagi Harbor, best fleet massing anchorage in the Archipel- ago. Australian naval units took part alongside the United States Naval Force directed by Vice Admiral Rob- ert L. Ghormley, Supreme Com- mander of Allied Naval Forces in the South Pacific area. Australian planes, too, were taking part along with American air forces of General MacArthur's command in a deadly battering of the whole vast system of Japanese 'concentration points stretching southeastward into the mountainous Solomons. A communique today said Rabaul, big Japanese base in New Britain at the flank of the Solomon operations, had been pounded for the third con- War Department Questions Ground Markings Story WASHINGTON, Aug. 11. -(P)- The War Department today ques- tioned the truth of a story released by Army press agents on Monday telling with accompanying photo- graphs of the discovery and oblitera- tion of ingenious ground markers intended to guide enemy bombers to airfields and war production plants. Asserting the story "may be un- true," the War Department said that Lieut.-Gen. Hugh A. Drum, com- manding the Eastern defense area, withheadquarters at GovernorsrIs- land, N. Y., was conducting a thor- ough investigation. The release was distributed from Mitchell Field, N. Y. The story, and pictures, had to do with sacks of grain stacked in a field in the form of a figure nine with the tail of the figure pointing to an air- craft plant. and plowed fields or woodland clearings shaped like ar- rows pointing to defense plants and air fields. Army Signal Corps Seeking Applicants Experts Claim New Bombers* Are Speediest By The Associated Press LONDON, Aug. 11.-Britain took her Avro Lancaster off the secret list today and British aeronautics writers quickly hailed the battle-tested ma- chine as the biggest and fastest heavy bomber in the world. The newly unveiled giant, like its famous teammate in raids on Ger- many-the short Stirling-carries an eight-ton bomb load, but its pace of 300 miles per hour and up is better than the Stirling's. The Lancaster is armed with ten .303-caliber ma- chine guns mounted in four power turrets. It has a maximum range of 3,000 miles, a thousand more than the Stirling, and is thus the prime weap- on for bold raids on selected targets deep in Germany. Its first officially disclosed operation was the daring daylight raid on Augsburg last April 17. In July several Lancaster squad- rons made the longest daylight at- tack flight of the European war- 1,750 miles through bad weather to bomb the Danzig submarine yards. The Lancaster's weight is 30 tons., It has a wing-spread of 102 feet and a 33-foot bomb compartment. Aeronautical writers reported it is one of the favorites of RAF crews because of its exceptional speed and maneuverability. Little Miss Volunteer For Women's Army Turned Down Flat NEW YORK, Aug. 11. -(,T)- America's new Women's Army lost an attractive young volunteer to the police today. Well-dressed, wearing sun glass- es and carrying a parasol and light suitcase, she was found wander- ing in Queens. Escorted to a police station, she gave her name only as "Dinah" or "Diana." "Where were vni uning9" nnlice secutive day. The war bulletin also reported attacks on Japanese ship- ping south of Timor, more than 2,000 miles to the west, in which a heavy destroyer and two Japanese mer- chantmen were knocked out. In the jungle-cloaked interior pf New Guinea, too, Allied forces were said to have lashed out with attacks in the Kokoda sector yesterday, strongly engaging Japanese advance forces and driving them back. Fresh supplies to keep the offensive moving were poured into" Australia. An Australian spokesman said the new shipments were of "highest pos- sible value" and would "revolutionize offensive operations in the north." There has been no official state- ment here of Allied losses or of losses inflicted upon the enemy in the Solo- mon battle since Admiral King's Washington announcement that an Allied cruiser was sunk, and two cruisersutwodestroyers and a trans- port were damaged. He spoke of "a large number" of enemy planes de- stroyed and Japanese surface units put out of action. Rep. Fish Wins Renominationt Of Repubitcans ALBANY, N. Y., Aug. 11.-(M- Rep. Hamilton Fish overcame three opponents and intra-party opposition led by Wendell L. Willkie tonight to win Republican renomination in President Roosevelt's home congres- sional district. . Widely attacked by rival candi- dates and many Republican leaders for what they termed his pre-war isolationist views, the veteran of 22 years in Congress and caustic peace- time Administration critic held a decisive lead after slightly more than half the primary vote was tabulated. The vote in 122 of 223 districts was Fish, 9,366; Augustus W. Ben- net, 3,682; Emerson D. Fite, 622, and Edward J. Bowen, 63. Two other Congressmen against whom the pre-PearlHarbor isola- tionist cry was raised also were mak- ing strong bids for renomination. One, Rep. Edwin A. Hall (Rep.), of Binghamton, polled a vote of 7,426 to 7,071 for John C. Stott in 174 of 288 precincts in the 34th district. A Democrat, William B. Barry, in 46 of 548 districts in New York City's Second Congressional Ditrict held a lead of 2,346 to 857 votes over William F. Brunner. Stephan Files appealNotice DETROIT, Aug. 11. -(m)-Max Stephan, German-born Detroit res- taurant-keeper sentenced to hang Nov. 13, filed notice of appeal through attorneys tonight from the death penalty pronounced after his conviction by a U.S. district court jury here on a treason charge. Federal Clerk George M. Read kept his office open for more than two hours after normal closing time to receive the notice before the ex- piration of the period in which it might legally be filed. The U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati ruled earlier in the day that a notice filed before sentence was pronounced had been prema- ture and could not stand. The appeal asserted that the jury went beyond the scope of the indict- ment in reaching its verdict, that the indictment was unfounded on fact and that "if Stephan'was guilty of any crime he was not guilty of trea- son." President Withholds Comment On Strikes WASHINGTON, Aug. 11.-(IP)- President Roosevelt wanted more facts and figures today before he would comment on press conference rnactM-nncwhich rpfprvrd +o"wilat" Local civilian defense and law enforcement officials yesterday re- vamped plans for Ann Arbor's blackout tonight,--part of a tri-state Army- ordered test-after announcement of a one-hour advance in schedule from 11 to 10 p. m. came from the sixth regional office of civilian defense in Chi- cago. Under the new last-minute ruling, Ann Arbor along with 41 Southern Michigan counties will extinguish its lights for a half-hour period ending at 10:30, one hour before blackout warnings sound in Illinois and Wisconsin. Tonight's trial alert will be governed by the same rules and regulations used in Ann Arbor's initial test last month, but with stiffer penalties for in- fractions promised by Chief of Police Sherman Mortenson and Sheriff John Osborne. Summonses, not warnings, will be given violaters in the city. 'Holland Under Occupation' Is Of Dutchman's German Subject Lecture Dr. B. H. Sajet of the Netherlands Information Bureau and former member of the Municipal Council of Amsterdam until the Nazi Invasion will give a public lecture on "Holland Under German Occupation" at 4 p.m. Sunday in the Rackham Lecture Hall. The lecture is sponsored by Citi- zens for Victory. Because of his active interest in problems of public administration and his prominence as a member of the Dutch Social Democratic Party, Dr. Sajet's position in Holland after the capitulation became very diffi- cult, with danger of imprisonment. Together with two sons and four companions he crossed the channel to England in a small rowlboat to learn there of the death of a son who, serving in the Dutch Air Force, had crashed in a training plane. Dr. Sajet has completed a fivt month speaking tour throughout Canada. War Geography: Solomon Islanids * WHY ARE THEY IMPORTANT? The Solomons, a group of Brit- ish-owned coral islands whose only economic importance is that be- stowed by a thriving cocoanut' in- dustry, have formed the most ad- vanced stepping-stone for the Japanese thrust to the south which began in the Malay Peninsula and swept through Borneo and North- ern New Guinea to its present sta- tion. These islands form the point of a Jap dagger aimed at the Ameri- can supply line from Hawaii to Australia. From the islands' posi- tion northwest of the "down un- der" continent, Nipponese heavy bombers have been pounding at this line since the Solomons were taken. Dre B. I. Sajet Will Give Talk Here Sunday GilberU=Su llivan Operetta 'Pinafore' Will Open On Repertory Stage Today Final preparations yesterday for the alert saw 3,000 regular officers and volunteer workers in Washtenaw County check assignments for to- night's test. Air raid wardens and auxiliary policemen will join with law enforcement officers to patrol city streets during the blackout With all lights required to be ex- tinguished or shielded as soon as warning signals sound tonight at 9:57, Ann Arbor residents and Uni- versity students were warned again by local officials to stay off the streets during the alert. Only lights permitted tonight will be railroad signals, barricade mark- ers and emergency lights along with those needed by war factories to con- tinue production. Although home has been designat- ed asa safehplacehduring the black- out, residents are urged to utilize light-tight refuge rooms if available. Pedestrians caught on the streets when the warning is given must stand as close to buildings and door- ways as possible and are prohibited from crossing streets. Among rules that will be enforced more strictly tonight than in the previous test will be the ban against smoking and use of matches while outdoors. Leaving a house unattend- ed with lights on will also constitute a violation. City regulations apply most force- fully to automobile drivers-forbid- den to continue driving during the blackout. Motorists must park at once, lock ignition, set hand brake, and seek shelter immediately. Park- ing in front of fire hydrants or dou- ble parking is prohibited. State-wide comments on the black- out point to a "use of discretion" by air raid wardens in enforcing these regulations. Capt. Donald S. Leonard, State Corps Commander, declared yesterday that "it would be a lot better for a warden to rap on a housewife's door and tell her to ex- tinguish a light than to arrest her." Hoie Star Gable Joins U.S. Army As Private LOS ANGELES, Aug. 11.-Screen actor Clark Gable, 41, will be enlisted in the Army Air Forces tomorrow as a private, an Army recruiting of- ficial said today. He said Gable had made applica- tion for assignment as an aerial gun- ner, "He doesn't want to sell bonds or pour pink tea," the official said. "He wants to be a regular soldier." The official did not-say where the actor would be sent for his prelimi- nary training which will consist of both ground and aerial instruction. 1 tn ituuxy DETROIT, Aug. 11.- UP)- John Haines, who recalls that as a school- boy he saw Abraham Lincoln making his first trip to Washington will ob- serve his 100th birthday Saturday. Haines is the last living member of the Detroit G. A. R. and the oldest charter member of the Detroit Fed- eration of Musicians. German Troops Overrun Maikop, Heador Grozny Russians Hol d' Firm In Grim Struggle Fought For Approaches To Stalingrad But Nazis Still Advance In Caucasus By EDDY GILIWORE Associated Press Staff Writer MOSCOW, Aug. 12 (Wednesday).-German troops striking southeast- ward in the Caucasus were reported officially today to be only 200 miles from the rich Grozny wells after overrunning the devastated Maikop oil region in the west. A communique announced the Germans had reached the Cherkessk area, 70 miles southeast of Armavir, in a thrust down the Rostov-Baku rail- way into the Caucasian foothills. (Cherkessk, not shown on many maps, apparently is a town often listed as Kursavka). The Germans have said their troops had captured Pyatigorsk, only 140 miles short of Grozny, but there still was no confirmation here of that claim. The Russians were fighting "heavy defensive battles both in the Cherk- essk and Maikop areas," the communique said, and the Germans also "broke -___ >through our positions" in the Kras- nodar sector 60 miles northwest of Maikop Nine Campus Svie tankmen and Cossacks picked off 19 German tanks and 37 trucks, and killed 700 Germans be- fore withdrawing to new positions '3,,, y e south of Krasnodar, the Russians Hal ivcIntyre said. Grim Defenses Hal McIntyre and Claude Thorn- In the grim fight for the ap- hill now share the top place as the proaches to Stalingrad the Russians two new bands most likely to reach apparently still were holding firm. the"pek o th or hep,"accrd- "In the area south of Kletskaya the "peak of the ork heap, accord- (75 miles northwest of Stalingrad), ing to the results of the Billboard's our troops carried out stubborn bat- Fifth Annual College Music Poll. tles with tanks and enemy infantry," Presenting Hal McIntyre and his the communique said. newly honored band at the season's "The Germans are suffering tre- only big dance, which will be held mendous losses. Bringing up re- from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Friday, Aug. serves, they are attempting to break 21, in the Sports Building, are nine through. One large enemy motorized leading campus organizations. Re- column has been dispersed by our sults of a campus poll brought about troops." a decision to make the dance; a semi- Northwest of Kotlenikovski, which formal affair, and Summer Term, is 95 miles southwest of Stalingrad, Summer Session'and townspeople are the communique said all types of invited to attend, weapons were in action, and "the Twenty-eight schools gave their enemy was forced to go over to de- votes to raise McIntyre and Thorn- fensive operations" in one area. hill to number one place in the Bill- Tank Battle Rages board Poll, and Vaughan Monroe, The Russians said that during a Slast year's winner, slipped to third large tank battle preceding this de- on the list of bands. velopment their Red Army destroyed In casting their votes for McIntyre, 21 Nazi tanks and killed 800 Ger- the college editors, representing their mans. schools, praised his novel arrange- Far to the north on the Upper Don ment and his ability to play right- the Russians said their hwoops still eous jazz while keeping his music held the western bank of that river Turn to Page 4, Col. 1 in the Voronezh area after beating off sereral German attacks. The Russians fighting southeast of Haines ReachesArmavir were favored somewhat by 7 " A h I* i_, L - rougher terrain. "H. M. S. Pinafore," W. S. Gilbert and Sir Arthur Sullivan's ever-pop- ular comic opera of life off Ports- mouth, will open a five-day run at 8:30 p. m. today at the Mendelssohn Theatre. It is the 10th annual summer op- eretta given by the speech depart- menit's Michigan Repertory Players,. in collaboration with the School of Music and the University Symphony Orchestra. Perhaps the most popular of the great English team's operettas, "Pin- a afore" brought such success to au- thors Gilbert and Sullivan that they superstitiously chose to believe that the letter "P" would bring them luck, and consequently named the next three operettas "Patience," "Princess Ida" and "Pirates of Penzance." The story .of a sailor's romance with his cantain's daughter aboard Robert Christman. Harry Elkins, Julian Frederick, John Hathaway, Burt Hendricks, Ted Hildebrandt, Frank Jones, Maynard Klein, 'Wil- liam Ludwig, Bob Mann, Harry Mil- ler, David Payne, Bob Roman, Bob Santway, Dan Saulson, Jim Bob Stephenson, Philip Swander, and Jerry Ziegler, TheZwomen's chorus will include Catherine Brookshire, Anne Carroth, ers, Mary Craigmiles, Sara Hanby, Eleanor Hughes, Rose Hull, Betty James, Mary Eleanor Lake, Frances Lichenstein, Beth McLellan, Betty Mason, Winifred Murray, Betty New- ton, Marguerite Palmer, Ruth Selo, Alice Silberstein, and Lucy Chase Wright. Valentine Windt, Professor of Speech, will direct the Repertory fi- nale, while Cornelius D. Gall con- ducts the University Orchestra. The Pinafore set will be done by famed Nazis To Trade French Soldier For 3 Laborers VICHY, Aug. 11.-(M-.-Germany will release one French prisoner-of- war for every three skilled workers who go to the Reich to help the Nazis, Pierre Laval announced today as he welcomed back to French soil the first lot of 1,000 prisoners liber- ated since the chief of government began recruiting men. The announcement was made at the same time and prominently dis- played in the Paris newspapers that Laval has accepted the honorary presidency of the French anti-Soviet volunteers-the tricolor legion fight- ing in the German ranks on the Eastern front. Laval, speaking at Compiegne, where he greeted the repatriated sol- diers, said the policy based on the Montoire (collaboration) agreement between Hitler and Marshal Petain would have expedited the men's re- turn had it not "unfortunately" been misunderstood by everyone. WLB Is Asked To Raise Wages WASHINGTON, Aug. 11.-(AP)- The War Labor Board is being asked for the first time to allow wage in- creases primarily as a deterrent to labor migraton from a critical war