.mwwwwwmwmmmm4 Weather L Ar 4:,3AVt Editorial Indian Independence Must Await Victory ... Warmer VOL. LII No. 43-S ANN ARBOR, MIIUGIAN, FI DAY, AUGUST 14, 1942 2:15 A.M. FAJ s Nazi Columns Move Nearer Rich Oil Wells Of Caucasus Red Army Still Battling In Don River Regions As Axis Troops Push On In 50-Mile Advance Fighting Reopens On Moscow Front By EDDY GILMORE Associated Press Correspondent MOSCOW, Friday, Aug. 14.-Ger- man troops in a swift 50-mile ad- vance into the Caucasus have reached Mineralnye Vody, only 140 airline miles from the rich Russian oil wells of Grozny, the Soviets ac- knowledged officially early today as heavy fighting broke out on the long- dormant front northwest of Moscow. A Nazi column swinging southeast- ward along the Rostov-Baku railway rolled through Russia's positions in the Cherkessk area to reach Miner- alnye Vody. By road Grozny lies ap- proximately 180 miles farther. The midnight communique other- s wise indicated little change in Rus- sia's suation. The Red Army still was battling the Nazis northeast of Kotelnikovskitbelow the Don and in the Kletskaya area inside the Don River bend. Both areas are .bulwarks to the approaches to Stalingrad on the Volga and Astrakhan on the Cas- pian Sea. Soviets Hold Off Nazis In the western Caucasus the So- viets said their troops still were fighting in the Mainkop-Krasnodar sector in an effort to prevent a Ger- man break-through to the Black Sea. Fighting on the banks of a river (perhaps the Kuban) in the Krasno- dar area the Russians said their troops illed 3,000Germans, destroy- ed 70 tanks and 84 trucks, and knocked out two enemy bridges across the stream. The Russans again referred to the "numerically superior enemy forces" in both the Don River loop and the Mineralnye Vody fighting. The lat- ter appeared still to be the most dan- gerous German drive of all for the Nazis were half-way across the Cau- casus in the drive to the Caspian Sea. The Soviet Information Bureau said that the Red Army had occupied a "populated place" in the north- western area, but a dispatch to the Communist party newspaper Pravda from that front said the Germans had attempted a violent 120-plane raid on Leningrad and scattered par- achutists around the northern city. 30 Planes Downed Without giving the date of the at- tack, Pravda said 30 of the planes were shot down and the parachutists mopped up. Suggesting Russian, not German, initiative in the general area, a com- munique from Berlin said German infantry and armored divisions were tied "in a heavy defensive struggle" on both sides of Rzhev, 130 miles northwest of Moscow. (The scope of this battle was hinted by the Germans who said 71 Red Army tanks were destroyed there yesterday, 55 of them on the front of a single Nazi division.) The Soviet Information Bureau's midday communique said "our troops continue to press back the enemy" at Voronezh. Bond Shelter' Stamp Sale Starts Today Future Blackouts May Be Surprises "We may have another blackout tomorrow at supper-time, next week for breakfast or six months from now for all I know," Chief of Police Sherman Mortenson said yesterday when asked whether Ann Arbor's next trial alert would be unannounced. "Everything depends upon the orders I get from the government," he said. Earlier in the day he turn- ed over all reports of blackout vio- lations to the city attorney and asked that warrants be served to all violaors. Meanwhile, Army and civilian defense officials over a 50,000 square mile midland area were studying reports handed in by their staffs for an accurate reckoning of Wednesday night's half-hour blackout test. Authoritative sources from the industrial areas of Michigan, Il- linois, Indiana and Wisconsin com- mented that the huge blackout was successful. Capt. Jay R. Sheffield, head of the Army's Chemical War- fare and Gas Office in Detroit, however, termed it "an impressive spectacle" but a "miserable black- out test." 'three Papers Under Probe Of Grand Jury Accusation Of Publishing 'Confidential' Naval News Is Investigated By The Associated Press CHICAGO, Aug. 13.-Rear Admir- al Frederick C. Sherman, former commander of the Aircraft Carrier Lexington, and other naval officers conferred with a special prosecutor today as a Federal Grand Jury began investigating publication of allegedly "confidential" naval information by three large newspapers. The newspapers are the Chicago Tribune, the New York Daily News and the Washington Times Herald which published the article June 7. Intense secrecy guarded the in- guiry and the Dly statement from William D. Mitchell, special assistant to the Attorney General, directing the investiation, was: "I will issue no statements at any time. I never tried any of my cases in the newspapers and I am too old to start now. I would like to help you newsmen out butI am afraid you cannot count on me for any releas- es." The government declared an ar- ticle written by Stanley Johnston, Chicago Tribune correspondent, made public confidential information by stating American naval circles knew in advance the strength of Japanese naval forces in the battle of Midway. * * * Hoffman Attacks Knox By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Aug. 13.-Repre- sentative Hoffman (R-Mich.) urged the House today to order an investi- gation of charges made by the Chi- cago Tribune that Navy Secretary Frank Knox "has used his official position for the advantage of his own newspaper published in Chicago." Knox is president of the Chicago Daily News, Inc. Hoffman introduced a resolution asking the speaker to appoint a "non-partisan", committee of five Representatives to inquire into the charges, which he said the Tribune made after a grand jury investigation had been ordered of a story pub- lishedI by the Tribune and two other papers containing allegedly confi- dential naval information. Meanwhile, Secretary Ickes told his press conference today in re- sponse to questions that "In my view, the Chicago Tribune was giving aid and comfott to the enemy." Allied Warships Bomb Japanese Positiom As Marines Advance In Solomon Islands Strike At Greece, U01 S S _ f Axis World " - l s For junction In India U 77777777W >r wr. I 2 d r . t3 EA ' YARCTIC::: CEAIV i ti ii 'iii,°' C 'iC ty i; i+: u R A E L. t 1 My{iYipA4k " x i e ICEI. SIBEitIAL.ASKA R iri r IL I RUSSIA Aa SOY it ic::i ii.. w ^R T N i $ S YiA CtiATKA tr. ISLE t1 s d La 0w% 0 Ctf is ® E is t MONGOLIA .rr :v tr. 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Over-all Axis strategy was seen as a German drive into the Mid- East through the Caucasus (2) and from Egypt (3) for a junction with the Japs pushing (4) into India when the monsoons there stop. American smashes at Japs in Aleutians (6) and Solomon Islands ei (7) were seen-aside from being the first United. Nations offensive in the Pacific-as a diversion which might cost the Japs forces needed D for possible drive into Russian Siberia (5). Projected British-Ameri can second front (I) against Germany cotad divert Nazi troops ti a needed in push to east. a'. Jap Fleet Seen In Tonkin Gulf Large T r o op Movement May Threaten India By The Associated Press CHUNGKING, Aug. 13.-A Japa- nese transport fleet carrying more than 20,000 troops was seen in the Gulf of Tonkin last Saturday-the day before United States bombers based in China blasted Haiphong' French Indo-China port on the gulf- a Chinese army spokesman disclosed tonight. (There was no immediate indica- tion whether the aerial attack had any relation with the troopship movement. The Chinese spokesman said he had no information where the convoy was headed. Such a troop movement might be to reinforce the invaders' bases for a thrust toward India.) A communique from Lieut.-Gen. Joseph W. Stilwell's headquarters said the American "Sky Dragons" had carried out a new attack Tues- day, battering the Japanese-held town of Yoyang (Yochow) in the northeastern corner of Ilunan prov- ince. "The raid was highly successful," the communique said, "and all the American planes returned to their bases." China's troops kept up their at- tacks from the northeast and south- east against the central Kiangsi stronghold of the invaders at Lineh- wan (Fuchow) where an army spokesman said the Japanese had massed fully 20,000 men-40 per cent { of their strength in Kiangsi. Nazis Promise To Halt Serb GuerrillarWarare Gerian Threats Fail 'To Stop Disorders In Occupied Count ries As Talk Of Second Front Continues By NOLAND NORGAARD day night attacked a troop train Associated Pres s Correspondent near Rotterdam. They had threat- LONDON, Au. 13.-The Yugo- ened to execute some of 1.500 promi- slav government in London an- nent hostages unless the men are nounced toinght that" the Germans captured. The Germans ordered all Dutch have threatenei to wipe out all of Iwmnbeten18 ad 40 yars of women between 18 and 40 years of Serbia if continuing disorders in that age to register for a Nazi women's Balkan land force theim to increase labor battalion, marking the first the :size of t!,ir occupation army, attempt to draft women for labor in This of ficiA report was released Holland, while talk of :m Allied second front Norwegian Patriots At Work was rife in all Furope, and execu- The British radio reported Nor- tions, disorders and arrests continued wegian patriots had wrecked the unabated in virtually all occupied powerful turbine installations in the countries in spite of orders from the Stavanger district and set fire to refugee governments to their people two workshops in the aluminum to hold off until the proper moment-- works there. the second front, presumably-ar- The arrest of 50 hostages in the rives. 1 Belgian province of Hainault after Serb Bo.s Deported destruction of dynamos and other Several 1mudL ed Ser b boys have electrical installations in several fac- been sent to concentaton camps or tories was reported by the free Bel- deported to ;reent hem ifrom join- gian news agency. ing guerilla bands, the Yugoslavs A neutral press report from PraguE said, said two men were executed August Early in August, the exili govern- 7 for high treason against the Reich. ment added, German General Turn- ed, military c mander of occupied Serbia, told several hundred civic Goprano ives repesetatvesin elgadethat "if he German Military Command is R e ta T da than the present occupying force for Re ia o a compelled to use one more soldier the suppression of disorders this will mean the annihilation of Serbia." Lambert, Harrod To Give Indicative of the lighting in Yugo- Music School Concert slavia, the Berlin radio broadcast a report that the Yugoslavians lost 3,000 dead and 9,700 taken prisoners Under the sponsorship of th between July 23 and August 8. School of Music, Ellen Lambert, DNB Describes Arrests Mezzo-soprano, and Helen Harrod, DNB, official German news agen- Accompanist, will present a recital cy, in a broadcast dispatch, said a blotto bow p th Geman-on-at 8:30 p,.im., today, in the Assembly plot to blow up the German-con- chmBidn trolled Netherlands radio station Hall of the Rackham Building. 'presumably at Hilversum) had been Miss Lambert of Clearwater, Ne- frustrated by a new series of arrests. braska, took her bachelor's degree The Nazis already had set tomor- from Nebraska Wesleyan University row midnight as the deadline for and has done graduate work at Juil- surrender of saboteurs who last Fri- Biard Summer School, the University --- ..-- of Nebraska, and the University of Michigan under Prof. Arthur Hack- 4 s - i sett. Formerly supervisor of vocal mu- sic at Arcadia High School, Arcadia; Nebraska, she has recently accepted the position of instructor of voice at WASHINGTON, Aug. 13.-{P-_ William Woods College, Fulton, Mo The program will include number, Over War Delpartmentopposition,Debuss '. Willims n i 1 E 3 t 1 e P, D fl e r r e t T e ,e ,y I- ,e ,y 1- ly if a! A it a r, is Knox Ordered To Take Over Defense Plant Roosevelt Has Navy Head Operate Cable Factory As Strike Is Continued By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Aug. 13.-Presi- dent Roosevelt ordered Navy Secre- tary Knox tonight to take over and operate the plant of the General Cable Corporation at Bayonne, N. J. This action followed a vote of a thousand workers at the plant which has orders for cable vital to war op-1 erations, to continue a strike which began Monday. Presidential Secretary Stephen Early told reporters: "The President, at 6 o'clock to- night, signed an executive order di- recting the Secretary of the Navy to take over the plant of the General Cable Corporation, and operate same, at Bayonne, N. J." The workmen at the plant stopped production, although this step was not ordered by their union, in pro- test against a decision by the War Labor Board adverse to their de- mands for a pay increase. The President issued his executive order after receiving a letter from Vice Chairman George W. Taylor of the War Labor Board, which recited a history of the case. It said that the board, meeting today, had "decided by unanimous vote to notify you of the serious situation which exists at the Bayonne plant of the General Cable Company, and respectfully suggest that you proceed with such action as you deem appropriate." The chief executive's order fol- lowed the language of previous ones and provided for termination of gov- ernment possession and operation of the plant as soon as Mr. Roosevelt determines that it will be "privately operated in a manner consistent with the war effort." A spokesman for the Navy said the department "will carry out the Presidents order and take over the Bayonne plant tomorrow." Descriptions, Pictures Of Nazi Spies Found HALIFAX, N.S., Aug. 13. -(,P)- City detectives said today they have photographs and descriptions of three suspected Nazi saboteurs be- France. J.S. Bombers Hit Three Italian Ships In Greek Port As One Escapes American Pursuit Ships Over Frane By The Associated Press GEN. MacARTHUR'S HEAD- QUARTERS, Australia, Aug. 13.- merican Marines slashing through he "green hell" jungles of the Solo- non Islands were reported hurling he Japanese back from at least Iree beachheads in the 900-mile-. ong island chain tonight while Jnited States and Allied warships ained death into enemy positions. Latest reports indicated that the eathernecks, spear-heading an as- ault which may develop into a United Nations grand offensive 1*j rive the invaders out of the SoulA~ eas, were making steady progress gainst bitter resistance. Parachute Troops Used Unconfirmed advices said AmxerF an parachute troops, making th,. Irst historic appearance in battl0. were used as shock forces in the.. ack. Strong American renforcement.; were said to be pouring into t*., even-day old battle as the Japan se ought desperately to hold their stra-- egic island bases 900 miles northe- ast of Australia. (In London, the Netherlands g! ernment-in-exile announced tha a gutch RoyalNavy submarine oper' ing with the Eastern Fleet attack'ed a Japanese convoy and scored hits on two ships. ("When last seen, the ships were fully ablaze and must be considered otal losses," a communique said.) Flying FortressesHit Rabaui In addition, _.t,. Douglas Mac. Arthur's headquarters announced that giant U.S. Army flying for- tresses smashed at enemy shipping off Rabaul, New Britain, a major base for Japanese troop and supply ships movin' to the Solomons. The big four-motored fortresses were officially credited with setting fire to a 15,000-ton enemy ship and two medium-sized vessels and leav- ing a fourth ship foundering. * 'e * Three Italian Ships Hit By U.S. Planes By The Associated Press CAIRO, Aug. 13. - United States bombers severely damaged three Italian cruisers found at Pylos, Greek harbor on the Ionian Sea at cautious distance from the convoy battle which the Axis insisted wa' raging in the Mediterranean. (The latest German claim, uncoffi- firmed, was' that the U.S. aircraft carrier Wasp had been set afire b six bombs and was trying to reaich Malta.) The results of the high-level at. tack made by the huge bombers s the sun set on Pylos were announced today as: Two direct hits on one cruiser, ft.. lowed by a terrific explosion; A second cruiser set afire with col- umns of black smoke pouring from her; A third cruiser damaged by an explosion; A fourth Italian cruiser apparenty escaped undamaged. The four-motored bombers flew'a 1,300-mile round trip, returning in darkness to bases either in Egypt er Cyprus which are about equal diua tances from the west coast of GreeWe, American Pursuit Ships Over France By The Associated Press LONDON, Aug. 13.- American fighter squadrons roaring over the English Channel on 31 sorties ended the first 48 hours of great activity by United States Army Air Forces in the European theatre today just as 250 tc 400 RAF bombers were returning from a second consecutive night of destructive attacks on Mainz in the Rhineland. The disclosure that all-Americar fighting squadrons, flying British Spitfire planes, had challenged the German Air Force over France anc the Channel came as huge Americar four-motored bombers were poised or takeoff aprons over the country The newly completed 'bond shel- ter,' located at the corner of State Street and North University, will be utilized for its first war stamp and bond selling campaign from 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. today, Bob Matthews, chairman of the Student War Board announced today. The first sales drive will be con- ducted by the League and Student Senate and these organizations will continue to sell 10 and 25 cent war stamps and small denomination bonds every Friday throughout the summer. "Other campus organizations are offered the use of the shelter for carrying on activities which contrib- ute to the war effort at any time," Matthews stated, "provided they reg- Plane Executive Up In The Air: Official Says Ex( Tax Would F By The Associated Press WASTHINGTON, Aug. 13.-An air- plane manufacturing official testi- fied today that unless excess profits tax provisions were lightened the proposed new revenue bill "probably would end the existence" of the Boe- ing Aircraft Corp., which developed the Army's "Flying Fortress" bomb- ar.c Bess Profits nd Boeing Corp. war years to develop new types of equipment. Because its invited ,capital was rel- atively small and its earnings in the 1936-39 base period were low, he said, 96.6 per cent of its net income would be subject to the proposed 90 per cent excess profits levy, with the result that taxes would eat up 88.75 per cent of all its profits. This meant, he declared, that the the house passed and sent to y naU11, Llcw LLZC y, YY llllallla, CA"%A ' a less IBrahms, and is open to the general