Weather LI r EfrL Slightly Warmer Ar attlj Editorial Censorship Rules Should Be Revised.. ... VOL. LII No. 47-S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN THURSDAY, AUGUST 20, 1942 2:15 A.M. FINAL Russians Holding Stalingrad Line; Retreat In South Germans Win Krasnodar, Suffer Numerous Losses Of Troops,_Equipment Soviet Bombers Hit Baltic Ports By EDDY GILMORE Associated Press Correspondent MOSCOW, Aug. 20 (Thursday).- Russian troops have abandoned Kras- nodar in the Western Caucasus in an apparent retreat toward the Black Sea base of Novorossisk, but the So- viet communique early today said there was no material change in the Don River bend lines west of Stalin- grad. Forty-four German tanks were re- ported destroyed and more than 1,150 Germans killed in fighting extending from the Caucasian foothills in the south td Leningrad on the Baltic. "After stubborn battles during which heavy losses were inflicted on the enemy in men and equipment our troops evacuated the town of Kras- nodar," the communique said. The Kuban River stronghold of Krasnodar, which the Germans claimed Aug. 9, is about 60 airline miles from Novorossisk, Soviet Black $ea naval base, and Russian troops also were fighting south of Krasn9- dar in an apparent westerly with- drawal from the abandoned Maikop oil fields. Southeast Of Kletskaya The communique located the Sta- llngrad battle scene as ,still "south- east of Kletskaya" in the Don River bend, and "northeast of Kotelnikov- ski." Kletskaya is 75 miles north- west of the Volga industrial city, but unofficial reports have said the Na-s zis were theatening the western bnk of the Don which ts only about 50t miles from Stalingrad., Kotelnikovski is 95 miles south-i west of Stalingrad. The Russians said the Germanst concentrated more than 100 tankss nn one sector southeast of Kletskaya1 in an effort to crash through the Soviet lines. Thirty-one of these werer reported destroyed as well as 25v trucks filled with Nazi troQps. Alto-f e gether 400 Germans were killed inc this single sector, the communiquec added. . Fight Through Nightl The fighting on both approachest to Stalingrad continued through the night.. In the Caucasian foothills Ru-c sian troops still were battling grimlys to check the German sweep throughs Pyatigorsk toward the Grozny oil fields beyond. 'Today's communique indicated the Russian lines for the moment were holding in this sector.t Local fighting was reported on the Leningrad-Volkhov front near the Baltic. A German attempt to cross af river in the area was declared to haver been repulsed by Soviet artillery. Attacked By Air The Russians still had time to lashE out by air at Germany proper. An announcement last night said thatt Soviet bombers had raided Danzig,E Koenigsberg and Tilsitt on the Nazi- held Baltic coast, setting a large number of fires in all three cities_ without the loss of a single raider. (British sources said in London that stiffening Red Army resistance finally was slowing the German drive into the Caucasus, but that the Ger- mans had reached the west bank of the Don at its bend 50 miles from Stalingrad.) U. S. Forces Buck Japanese Thrusts In Solomons Fight' GENERAL MacARTHUR'S HEAD- QUARTERS, Australia, Aug. 19.-(A) -Fighting in the Solomon Islands, which apparently had settled down to a methodical extension of foot- HEADQUARTERS OF GEN- ERAL MacARTHUR, Australia, Aug. 20.-(JP)-Allied planes at- tacked Japanese warships in the Northern Solomons yesterday in continuing support of the U.S. invasion forces in the southeast, and the loss of the 10,000-ton Australian cruiser Canberra was disclosed officially today. Succeeds Auchinleck Gen. Harold Alexander, former commander in Burma, has been named British commander-in-chief' in the Middle East. He succeeds Gen. Sir Claude Auchinleck. Planes Sink f Two U -B oat sf NearBrazil By The Associated Press RIO DE JANEIRO, Aug. 19 - Two submarines were declared sunk off{ the Brazilian Coast, one other was attacked and two more were sightedf in the waters of the Wesern South Atlantic in recent operations, totaled1 up late today as Brazil cleared the sea lanes of all her merchant ship- ping. The most recently attacked subma- rine was sunk early today ne r Bahia where it was sighted by planes of Brazil's coastal patrol. The sinking occurred shortly after announcement1 of the destruction of a U-boat by a3 United States medium bomber, pi- loted by Capt. Jack Lacey, U.S.A., off the coat of Sergipe. Radio report reaching here, sup- posedly from British Guiana, told of one submar ine attacked and another sighted by Royal Air Force planes yesterday in the West Indies. In the face of the renewed and concentratd attacks on subs which have sunk five Brazilian ships _ three days, Brazil called all ships into the nearest ports. The government recalled all fur- loughed soldiers and prepared Nava forces for counter-blows on the sub- marines, but there was no indication 01 an imrn diate declaration of war. Authorities .had not gone beyond a war ministry spokesman's state- ment that Brazil stood at the gates1 of war or President Getulio Var- gas' promise that unrestricted U-boatI warfare would not go unanswered. Labor Union Sets Deadline UAW-CIO Local Demands RecognitionToday - A deadline for recognition of th UAW-CIO by the Precision Parts Co. has been set for 11 a.m. today, and unless that recognition is granted a general meeting of all employes will be called to determine future policy,. A. J. Crance, head of the plant UAW- CIO local said yesterday., "We want union recognition, the closed shop and the checkoff now, and unless we ket it the men will leave for other shops where they can get union representation, higher wages and better conditions. "It takes about three months for the WLB to reach a decision in some- thing like this, and by that time all the men will have left." An appeal for the closed shop and Army Orders To Terminate 1-B Draft Class 'Limited Service' Abolition Brought About By Near Exhaustion Of 1-A Pool Group To Be Pt In Either 1-A, 4-F By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Aug. 19.-The Se- lective Service System today abol- ished its "limited service" class 1-B, the group with minor physical de- fects, and ordered all but the totally unfit reclassified as available for military service. Nearing exhaustion of the pool of 1-A registrants, those free of any known physical handicaps and not deferred from active duty for any other reason, , the Army recently called for induction of men from the 1-B class.- 4-F Or 1-A This decision, resulting in filling local draft quotas with 1-A and 1-B registrants, has made the latter classification meaningless for all practical purposes of the Selective Service System, and its members will either be placed in 4-F, if totally un- fit for service, or shifted to 1-A. The order is effective tomorrow, said an announcement by Selective Service Headquarters, but the re- classifying of men in this group will begin September 1, to be completed by New Year's Day. Not more than one-fourth of the 1-B registrants in any local board area are to be shifted to class 1-A in any single month. When members of this group are reclassified, they will be sent 'to in- duction centers as local boards fill their quotas, and the Army will de- cide after their induction whether to assign them to full or limited duties. Men To Be Re-Examined In the reclassification process, the men will be reexami ed by the local draft board physiciags to determine whether there ,are any physical de- ficiencies which would prevent them from performing any, military serv- ice. If such defects are discovered, the registrants will be placed in class 4-F. While physical deficiencies were th only basis for assigning men to class 1-B in the original classifica- tion, the local boards were warned that their status may have changed since that time, and possible defer- ment for dependency, family rela- tionship or occupation should be considered in each case. The charge also will have a lim- ited effect on some conscientious ob- jectors. Those previously classified 1-B-0, fit for limitedservice in non- combatant units, now will be classi- fied 1-A-O if fit for noncombatant service. Relief Dance Will Be Held Tomorrow With the proceeds going to the swelling funds of Russian War Re- lief, United China Relief and Bomb- er Scholarship, students and towns- people will be dancing from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. tomorrow at the Summer Prom, to music by Hal McIntyre and his orchestra in the Sports Building. For the benefit of those still in a quandary as to just what "semi-for- mal" involves, authoritative sources wish to submit a definition. Girls are to come in formals and the men may either don their white coats, bow ties and patent leather shoes or simply wear a business suit. One rule which must be observed, the central committee announced, forbids the wearing of corsages by women. This rule, similar to the one promoted by Michigan J-Hops, will be strictly enforced. McIntyre, who has been playing at Eastwood Sym-. phony Gardens, will feature his four feminine harmony vocalists, the Four Lyttle Sisters, and Terry Allen, the male vocalist. A partial list of patrons includes: Dean and Mrs. Walter B. Rea, Dean and Mrs. Erich A. Walters, Dean and Mrs. Wells I. Bennett, Dean and Mrs. M. P.. Cooley, Prof. and Mrs. George Y. Rainich, Prof. and Mrs. John Shepard, Prof. and Mrs. LeRoy Wa- terman, Prof. and Mrs. Brinkman, Prof. and Mrs. A. H. Marckwardt, Prof. and Mrs. J. R. Nelson, Madam Lila Pargment, and Mr. and Mrs. Clark Tibbetts. Chaperons for the dance will be Col. and Mrs. W. A. Ganoe, Maj. and German In Smas Wheir Comm hing Day -Long Assault Comniando Forces, Tanks Blast Zandos Struck '44 .. BIRMINGHAM _____ eNORWICH -__ COVENTRY -~ - --~--CARI. ENGLAND BRISTOL EXETER SOUTHAMPTON DOVER PORTSMOUTH - -PLYMOUTH, - -- - -- - - - - - - - - - - Allied Re-Embarkation Is Successful; Destroy Six Large Nazi Coastal Guns, Radio Station, Ammunition Dump By WES GALLAGHER Associated Press Correspondent LONDON, Aug. 19-Commando forces and tanks of the Western Allies: Americans, Canadians, British and Fighting French, invaded and lambasted Germany's ironclad zone of coastal ports at Dieppe today and withdrew as planned after achieving an all-day assault on the enemy shore of the English CIfnnel, something Hitler never dared to try. Nine hours after the first forces landed the re-embarkation was completed, just six minutes behind schedule. A communique. tonight said losses on both sides were heavy. But it was understood that every one of the principal Allied objects was achieved. Preliminary results ashore reported up to early tonight were these: The size of the force still was an official secret hours after the mission was completed but some of the returning troops told how a mile-long string of invasion barges set out for, the raid at twilight Tuesday. The barges, es- corted by destroyers and corvettes, moved under their own power. Destruction of a 6-gun shore artillery battery,.an ammunition dump, an anti-aircraft battery and a radio location station. - BREST: -ti i | r~Th - Coastal Ports At Dieppe I ST.B EUC -Ht--.tf hunnet BOULQGN . _ o D 0" [E R BR EVAL iLE ROUEN AVRE C ccupie II 111111 11 A FRANCE LANES C HAR TRES 'LE'MANS' OAII ElA1NS' AAZAIR TOUR 4N£S rt; s f r v '= '""S 1 1 'HHHHHHHHHHH! 111,JRF ____ LC)R.IENT TTI-rl-m - - Ear V A . EI Indicated on the map are the Dieppe area where U.S. and Allied commando troops and tanks have aimed their heavy assault on Ger- man ports and, to the northeast, the Boulogne sector, the scene of a previous raid. --------- Nelson Warns' Al Who Would Impede WPB Production Chief Declares Board Wil Not Accept Alibies From Now On By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Aug. 19 - War Production Chief Donald M. Nelson, obviously fighting mad and ready for a showdown on his administration of the war program, asserted today that "from now on any one who crosses my path is going to have his head taken off." Asked if he planned to "get tough" in licking materials shortages and in refuting charges of some critics that WPB had mismanaged the war pr- gram, Nelson told he Associated Press: "I'm going to get tough enough1 to get this job done, and the job will be done, you can be sure of that, There'll be no more alibies. I'm sick of them." Nelson, ordinarily calm and even- tempered, smashed a fist into his hand tci make the point. Swiftly attacking one internal problem-the "leak" of confidential WPB reports-Nelson gave immedi. ate effect to his warning that heads would fall by dismissing a $5,600 WPB employe. "He's fired," Nelson said flatly. A WPB spokesman, who declined to be quoted by name, identified the victim as Frederick Libbey, an en- gineering consultant. Libbey, the spokesman said, discussed contents of a confidential report with a news- paper reporter. The report, which Libbey wais drafting, covered operations of the WPB 'iron and steel branch, and the newspaper story said it accused the branci of operational waste and in- efficiency. 24 Blackout Violators Face $100 Fine Or Jail Twenty-four violators of Ann Ar- bor's second blackout test last week face a maximum penalty of $100 or 90 days in jail under the city's black- Jap Warship Is Destroyed In Aleutians By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Aug. 19.- The Navyiannounced today that an American submarine had sunk a Japanese cruiser or destroyer in the Western Aleutian area. Prevalent weather conditions, which long have prevented accurate observation of the effect of bomb- ings and surface raids, made it im- possible to determine exactly which type of enemy warship had been sent to the bottom. Since the Japanese landed at Attu and Kiska, they have been almost constantly harassed by American sea and air forces. On Saturday it was announced that a surface raiding force struck on Aug. 8 and 9, and with assistance from the air dam- aged a destroyed and two cargo ves- sels and sank a third cargo ship. The submarine attack reported to- day brought the total of Japanese ships damaged or destroyed in the Aleutian area to 23. Describing xit, the Navy said: "A United States submarine has reported the sinking of a Japanese cruiser or destroyer in the Western Aleutian area. Conditions made im- possible an exact identification of the type of the ship." Allied fighter planes, making up canopy yet sent aloft, shot down at] 4 Federal Jury Says Papers Are'tGuilty' Investigation Discloses No Infringement Of Law By Publications fgd By The Associated Press CHICAGO, Aug. 19.-A Federal grand Jury's investigation of the publication of allegedly confidential Naval information by the Chicago Tribune, the New York Daily News and the Washington Times-Herald ended today with a decision that no violation 6f the law had been dis- closed. William D. Mitchell, special as- sistant to the attorney general who directed the inquiry, stated the jury had "considered the case fully and its conclusion that no violation of the law was disclosed settles the matter." Col. Robert R. McCormick, editor and publisher of the Tribune, stated "I never had the slightest fear of an indictment." He added: "The attitude of the Tribune is today what it was before the grand jury investigation was launched and as it was the day before Pearl Har- bor. Our whole effort is to win the war, and we will not indulge in any factionalism excepting insofar as we - are persecuted and have to defend ourselves." Subject of the investigation was a story published on June 7. Material for the article-an estimate of the size and strength of the Japanese fleet defeated in the Midway battle- was gathered by Stanley Johnston, a war correspondent for the Tribune. His newspaper reported it was writ- ten here and that it was based on knowledge Johnston gained while witnessing the Coral Sea, engage- ment, information in the publication, "Jane's Fighting Ships," Naval an- nual, and his previous discussions with Naval officers and experts. IThe investigation was announced Aug. 7 in Washington by Attorney General Francis Biddle. He said he ordered it as a result of a preliminary inquiry and upon the recommenda- tion of the Navy Department. what perhaps was the greatest aerial least 82 enemy aircraft and probably destroyed or damaged more than 100 others, in addition to a number smashed by Naval vessels. Some 95 Allied planes-out of a total force of approximately 1,000- were lost. In some quarters it was believed that the German plane losses rep- resented close to one-third of the Luftwaffe's fighter strength in the western occupied zone of Europe and it was considered likely that the Germans would have to move fight- ers west, from other areas, possi~by even the Russian front. Important in the Allied air action was the work of 24 American Flying Fortresses, which, at the start of the Dieppe action, raided the Ger- man fighter drome at Abbeville. $ * * Germans Declare Allied Forces Were Destroyed BERLIN (From German Broad- casts) Aug. 19--(P)-The German High Comamnd said in a special bul- letin tonight- that the Allied forces which attacked the French Coast near Dieppe today were "destroyed without the calling up of reinforce- ments of important strength." The Allies suffered "very high cas- ualties in killed and wounded," and German defense forces captured 1,500 prisoners, including 60 Canadian of- ficers, the communique said. The Allies also lost three des- troyers, two torpedo boats, four tran- sports, one speedboat and 83 planes in this "invasion catastrophe," the Germans said. From 300 to 40Q landing boats participated in the first wave of the attack, the communique said, pro- tected by 13 to 15 cruisers and des- troyers, * * * Grinning' Return To Commandos British ,Rase American Rangers Learn Art Of MayhemAt British Schools A SOUTHERN BRITISH PORT, Aug. 19-(P)--Grinning, singing Al- lied Commandos were landed at this port early tonight from power- driven sea-going barges, grimy but happy after the 9-hour battle of Dieppe. Truck-drivers cheered them as they were loaded into lorries for tran- sportation to headquarters. The wounded, also, were arriving and taken to hospital trains. Black, green and yellow paint splotched the faces of the . Com- mandos, their uniforms were torn and one walked barefoot across the street, carrying his boots in his hands. All.wore Balaclava helmets and the majority had on soft tennis shoes. "Good show, boys!" the waiting transport drivers shouted. Cottagers, during a brief delay while one group of Commandos waited for places in trucks, rushed indoors and came.' out with cups of tea and cigarettes for' the soldiers. One truck drove off so quickly that a Commando had no time to return his cup. The woman who had given it to him looked glum for a second, then said: "Well, he's worth it." French Mistake Rangers For Texan Namesakes By The Associated Press; UNITED STATE RANGER HEAD-; QUARTERS SOMEWHERE IN BRI- TAIN, Aug. 19-Uncle Sam's Rangers who have been taking lessons in rough and tumble slaughter from their British counterparts, the Com- mandos, went along to Dieppe today on a field trip to practice what they had learned on live Germans. With a name and tradition for toughness taken from one of the most adventurous eras of American history, the Rangers went through the most harrowing battle school in the United Kingdom for weeks in St. Nazaire and Bruneval, the United States Rangers-volunteer all---have built iron endurance in grim prac- tice: Beach landing under actual fire, silent slaughter in hand-to-hand and bare knife fighting. That training has been secret. I was the first American newspaper- man to visit them in camp as they put on the finishing touches to their training for such veni ures as the Dieppe raid. I rode with them in a practice landing on a beach wnere tracer bul- lets from a British Bren gun splatter- ed almost within hand-reach of the .iii -c .3...TnA ..,np ana rl -nnniac