I Editorial Modern War Demands Dynamic Administration itgk tt Weather Slightly Cooler VOL. LII. No. 5 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY MORNING, JUNE 20, 1942 2:15 A.M. FIN. Nazis Smash At Sevastopol; Russians Hurl Back Assaults Black Sea's Naval Bastion Holds Off Tank-Plane Supported Axis Forces; Huge Losses Reported Kharkov Campaign On Reduced Scale Reformed Cannibals Assist Naval Fliers English Speaking Natives Provide Help, Map, Meals To Air Crews In South Pacific Islands Churchill Reported Asking Aid To Stilze editerranea rea; Br itish Jolt Nazi Forces InLibya MOSCOW, Saturday, June 20.- (P)-Reinforced German infantry covered by a smoke screen and sup- ported by hundreds of planes and tanks, smashed four times at one point in the Sevastopol defenses yes- tertlay but were hurled back each time with heavy losses, Soviet dis- patches reported early today. At another point, four German in- fantry regiments attacked fiercely for 15 hours in a desperate attempt to break into the Black Sea naval bastion-and came close to 'their ob- jective-but finally were repulsed. The eGrmap claim that their troops had penertated Sevastopol's northern defenses was not confirmed here,#but the Germans nevertheless appeared to be increasing their pressure. A Sevastopol dispatch to Red Fleet, the Nlavy organ, said the Nazis had thrown fresh reserves into the battle. The artillery and air bombard- inents increased in intensity, it was said, burying alive some Red Army f gun crews. In one of the German assaults, the ground forces were supported by masses of planes, flying in groups of sixty. A companidft attack 400 miles north on the blood-soaked gteppes below Kharkov was declared continu- ing on a much reduced scale. On the Kalinin front northwest of Mos- cow, the Soviete communique de- clared that "the enemy was driven out of several positions" and that prisoners and booty were seized. Alled Planes Blast Enemy On All Fronts Smash Large Transport In New Guinea Por!A U.S. Fliers Over Turkey SAN FRANCISCO, June 19-0)-- Allied fliers smashed a 10,000-ton Japanese transport in Rabaul Har- bor on New Britain, scoring three hits on the craft, the Allied head- quarters in Australia announced to- night. The communique, broadcast over the Melbourne radio and heard by the CBS listening station, said also that three bombs landed in the mid- dle of a group of Japanese bombers " ~on the Rabaul Airdrome, and that other ships in the harbor probably were damaged. Seven Zero Japanese fighters and other planes rose to intercept the attackers. One Japanese plane was shot down ,and another was believed destroyed. U.S. Planes Over Turkey NEW YORK, June 19-0P)-The Berlin radio broadcast an Ankara report today that 13 or 14 United Nations warplanes flew over Turkey again last night on their way to the Black Sea coast and that they were fired on by Turkish anti-aircraft batteries. The Berlin broadcast, heard here by CBS, said: "According to information from Ankara, American planes have again flown over Turkish territory on their way to the northern coast of ' the Black Sea. "There were 13' or 14 machines, which were fired at by Turkish anti- aircraft batteries. According to the latest reports the shooting took place in the coast district during the eve- ning of Thursday. "An official Turkish communique has not yet been received." U.S. And Cuba Sign Cooperation Treaty HAVA A, Cuba, June 19. -(e)- {'Cuba and the United States signed a treaty of military cooperation today, (This is another in a series of stories supplied to the Associated Press by the Chicago Tribune, whose foreign correspondent, ptaney Johnston, was the only American newspaperman aboard the aircraft carrier Lexington in the Coral Sea battle.) By STANLEY JOHNSTON Fcfreign Correspondent of the Chicago Tribune CHICAGO, June 19 - Reformed and benevolent cannibals who sj5eak English, who feed and nurture Unit- ed States naval flyers, and who assist them to rejoin the fleet or to reach Australian ports apparently populate the Archipelagos of the South Paci- fic Ocean. Such are the reports-including yarns to dim the adventures of Swiss Family Robinson and Robinson Cru- soe-that our air crews make when they are rescued after having been shot down or forced to alight on the ocean among the islets of the Coral Sea Pilots Rescued There were a number of pilots whose planes were damaged during the heavy air fighting in the Coral, Sea when an American two-carrier, sea-borne air force 'caught and de- cisively defeated greatly superior Japanese forces. Almost to a man these airmen were rescued, and in Work Res tmed After Brief Halt In Detroit Plant Hudson One Day Stoppage Because Of Race Conflict Is Ended In Short Order DETROIT, June 19. -P)- Naval officers in charge of the Hudson Na- val ordnance plant said today pro- duction had been restored "100 per cent" following a one-day work stoppage in protest against the em- ployment of Negroes on machines formerly operated by white workers Officers of the United Automobile Workers-CIO exhorted the day-shift workers to resume their jobs when they returned to the plant today, and Capt. A. S. Wotherspoon, chief Navy inspector, said all but a few complied promptly. Earlier Navy (Secretary Knox had demanded im' mediate resumption of work, in- structing Wotherspoon that the sit- uation indicated the menuwho quit work were ""disloyal and subject to immediate dismissal."' Another brief stoppage which Richard T. Frankensteen, UAW re- gional director, said affected only one building in the big plant slowed the resumption of production this morning. Frankensteen said none of the men employed on the day- shift left the plant, however, and predicted there would be no more interruptions. Five O'Clock Whistle To Get Mid-Day Tryout With three sirens and two whistles blasting simultaneously, Ann Arbor's air raid warning system will receive a second test at noon today, it was announced by Police Chief Sherman H. Mortenson yesterday. Chief Mortenson predicted a big improvement in the city's air raid warning system due to the addition of a new siren at the water plant and the adjustment of the whistle at the Cook Spring plant. Other several cass their planes were re- covered intact as well. These strange adventures include those of the crew that prepared to sell its life dearly when approached on the Island of Rossel- notoriously the home of cannibals-by skirted natives with bone ornaments in ears and noses and spears and stone axes in theik hands. As the flyers made ready to fight for their lives the na- tives greetedthem withthe words: "Hello, Airmen." Later the supposed cannibals provided the aviators, with comfortable lodgings and, wonderful to relate, a late type of air chart of the Southern Pacific-a navy hydro- graphic office publication. Then there was the Arabian Nights tale of the seaplane scout pilot who missed his rendezvous with the fleet and drifted in his plane in the Gulf of Papua for seven days. He was picked up by the fleet at the end of that time when navigators diverted the course of the American task force toward the spot where they had calculated he would be blown by the winds. Land On Rossel Along with these is the story of the four seaplane scout pilots who also landed on Rossel, remained a month, and with the assistance of Royal Australian Air Force patrol crews, who found them, finally re- paired the minor damage their air- craft had sustained. At the end of that time the American fleet passed close to Rossel, and the scout pilots all flew out and were taken aboard their own cruisers. And there were a number of cases in which pilots made crash landings of their planes on islands and either were picked up by destroyers or flown to Australian bases by patrol planes. The moral to all of the accounts is, of course: "The Navy takes care of its men." I have known of instances in which admirals ordered destroyers, in time of war when a destroyer is worth it9 weight in gold and when its jobs always are double its capacity, to T fn to 'Page 4, Cl. 4 200 UA WCIO Workers Meet Here Monday Hd d Educational Heads Arriv' In Ann Arbor Today; Haber To Appear More than 200 representatives of the Michigan UAW-CIO will arrive in Ann Arbor today and tomorrow to register for the first labor study- conference in the history of the Uni- versity. Headed by Richard Deverall, na- t onal director of education for the UAW-CIO, , and Thomas Angott, Michigan director the contingent ar- riving today will be assigned rooms in the East Quadrangle for the week- long meeting. Although program details have not as yet been revealed, it is known that three members of the University staff including Prof. William Haber, new- ly appointed head of a War Man- power Commission department, will act as instructors at the conference. Others participating are Prof. Wes- ly B. Maurer and Arthur B. Secord. Among the labor representatives and instructors expected to attend are Victor Reuther and George Addis. 1 Tobruk Prepares Defense For Expected German Assault; RAF In Action Huge Axis Cannon To Bombard City CAIRO. June 19.-()--British(mo- bile forces, fanning out northward from their new line along the Egyp- tian border, jostled German prepar- ations for an all-out assault on To- bruk today and gave that isolated but vital British seaside fortress time to perfect its defenses, Tobruk, Libyan pot 80 miles from Egypt, bristled with newly-strung barbed wire, fresh-laid minefields and strengthened pillbo es curving in great arcs around ail its shoreward approaches. The Germans were hastening to bring up great 210-millimeter (8.26- inch) cannon to, try to reduce the defenses which defied them for near- ly eight months last year. Already, Tobruk's outer works were under attack, as indicated by a Brit- ish communique which reported de- struction of three Axis tanks and damage to four others in the Tobruk area. But the hour of decision was de- layed by British armored sorties from their strengthened frontier lines. These, said a communique, have suc- ceeded in confining the enemy col- umns to the desolatei coastal strip. Chinese Oset Jap dvrtces, Report Claims Kinki Retakei; Nanchang, Jap Base In Kiangsi SubjectedTo Attack CHUNGKING, June 19.-GP)-The Chinese reported local successes to- night in pperations against Japanese bases in Kiangsi and Hupeh Prov- inces, offsetting somewhat new en- emy gains in a threatening back- door drive upon coastal Fukien Prov- ince and an additional seaborne in- vasion of neighboring Chekiang. Nanchang, Japanese Kiangsi base, was said to be under mounting pres- sure by Chinese forces which have had the city under attack for more than a week, and the High Com- mand announced recapture of Kinki, 80 miles to the south. Repossession of Kinki checked one thrust of the hydra-headed Japanese overland drive against Fukien, but the Chineseacknowledged that the enemy had made an additional ad- vance south of Kwangfeng. The Chinese Central News Agency asserted that in Hunan Province, which borders Kiangsi on the west, several hundred Japanese were killed and 60 taken prisoner yesterday in Chinese attacks on the outskirts of Yochow, another big Japanese base. Yochow was the starting point of previous Japanese offensives against Changsha, all of which were turned into smashing defeats for the in- vader. Japanese forces, making still an- other landing along China's sea- board, swarmed ashore from six war- ships yesterday north of Taichow Bay in Chekiang Province, which is north of Fukien, the Chinese communique reported It said this landing was made north of Taichow Bay, which is about 85 miles south of Ningpo, and the in- vaders seized and applied the torch to the town of Siaosiungshih' New Ensigns Commisio. e ANNAPOLIS, Md., June 19.-(P)- The nation's military forces extend- ed welcoming arms to 577 newly- commissioned Naval Ensigns and 29 Marine Corps lieutenants today fol- lowing commencement exercises for 611 United States Naval Academy midshipmen, With the words of their Command- Reason For Libyan Reversals Given As Gun, Tank Shortage British Public Bitterly Condemns Whole Handling Of Campaign; Surprised At Sudden Setback LONDON, June 19 -P)-Britain uphappily sought tonight the rea- able information military experts sons for her sudden reversal in Libya, drew these conclusions: and competent military critics sup- 1. Lieut. Gen. Neil M. Ritchie,e plied the least pa'latable answer: the commander of the British Eighth German Rommel had bigger and Army, lacked sufficient numbers ofr better guns and tanks and used them United States 28-ton tanks. When with greater skill. the excellent 88-millimeter guns oft (A serious shortage of Michigan'- the Germans knocked many of themc made 28-ton "General Grant" tanks, out of action the British had to de-r bulwark of the British defensive ac- pend too much on light cruiser tnks tion, to replace those tanks dam- whose two-pounder guns had beene aged in recent weeks, was officially relegated to the peashooter class,. cited as a cardinal reason for Britisft 2. The British still haveSlessons tot failures.) learn about tank tactics, and braveryt A week ago Britons were assured cannot be substituted for the re- that the battle was going satisfac- quired skill. I torily and only a few subdued voices , RAF Dominantt uttered reminders of other reversals 3. Air power over desert battle-t in the wild desert fighting of the fields cannot be made the dominantt past two years. factor. The RAF started with airt Public Unprepared superiority and still claims it. Bomb- Thus the public was not prepared ing and strafing of some supply ve- for the abrupt discovery that the hicles cannot be decisive when hun- British "strong points" had become dreds of others get through., traps from which troops were forced 4. Establishment of a strong, staticj to flee and the public was not con- defense line anywhere in Cyrenaicat soled when correspondents reported between Egypt and Tripolitana inf that Rommel lacked sufficient gaso- the vicinity of El Agheila is out of line to push his tanks on into Egypt. the question because of limitationst One of the first acid comments on the number of troops which can came from the Evening News, which be maintained efficieitly in thei asked the reason for repeated "frus- desert. - trations" in Libya and supplied its- own answer:e "Quite simply and bluntly the rea- Ns son is that from the beginning we N have underestimated the strength,s cunning, resources and recuperative ax P oposal power of the enemy. "We did not believe he could have era To H ouse better tanks than ours, but he did. "We did not imagine he would have a still deadlier anti-tank gun. Committee Members Call "The volume of our transport was P 'fantastic' but we did not calculate Chances For Passage that Rommel's would be even more Of Latest Bill 'Excellent' fantastic. It is a bitter lesson." The whole story has not come yet WASHINGTON, June 19.1 -(-- from the battlefields but from avail- ____A new Treasury proposal for collect- ing individual income taxes at the1 A nkara Court source was presented to the House Ways and Means Committee today Convicts Two and members said the chances were excellent that it would be approved. Sofiet Plotters 1It contemplates that beginning Jan. 1 dmployers would withhold from employes' paychecks 10 per cent of MOSCOW,June 19.-(4')-The of- the amount above an allowance for ficial Soviet News Agency Tass to- night declared the conviction by an basic exemptions, Half the amount Ankara court of two Russians on withheld in 1943 would be credited charges of complicity in a bomb plot against the payments due on this against Franz von Papen, Germanyerstxan hlfgist14 Ambassadorrto Turkey, was the re- years taxes, and half against 1943 salt of a Gestapo plot ' taxes due March 15, 1944. - sato asGestap ,-n Under this plan, slightly more than a ss rasserteuss anT c ish re half of the total amount withheld aions. sat osurce during 1943 would be avail- Moscow newspapers printed Tass' able in March, 1944, as a credit resume of the trial, completed two against 1943 income tax liabilities. In days ago, under such headlines as: this way, the transition to collection "Disgusting verdict of Ankara Court at source would be spread over the in provocational case of 'attempt, two years, 1943 and 1944. on Papen." Earlier, the committee reiterated The press found it "shocking" that its decision to impose a 94 per cent the two Russians, Georgi Pavlov and excess profits tax on corporations but Leonid Kornilov, had been sentenced appeared hopelessly divided on the to 20 years' imprisonment on charges question of a post-war refund to soft- of having organized a plot against en the blow of such a high rate. Franz von Papen, German envoy to The taxpayer would be permitted Ankara, (Kornilov has been identi- to credit against his March 15, 1943, fied as a transport, counsellor and instalment oh 1942 taxes, half of the Soviet commercial representative at amounts withheld at source du'ring Istanbul.) January and February, 1943 German Threat In Libya Decreases Possibilities Of Second Allied Front Capitol Awaits News Of Leader Parley LONDON. June 19, -(A)- Prime Minister Churchill was portrayed by competent informants tonight as urg- ently asking for United States rein- forcements to stabilize the Mediter- ranean front, even though this means that the opening of a full-scale "sec- ond front" on the European continent must wait until next spring, Axis successes in the Libyan des- ert, these persons said, had thrust the Middle Eeast to a position of the highest priority in United Na- tions strategy. Hence Churchill, now conferring with President Roosevelt in the United States, is said to be convinced that the Mediterranean basin must be held from west, cen- ter and east as a necessary prelude to a European victory offensive. Commando Attacks In the meantime there are expect- ed ot be larger-scale commando at= tacks on the west coast of the Ger- man-occupied continent and very heavy air raids in which American flying forces will take part. It was pointed out in London that there always is the possibility that if some commando sortie should result in a'goodp continental foothold, then actual Allied invasion might be. a reality sooner than is expected. The London informants said that the Russians fully appreciated the necessity of holding the Middle East and were confident they could bar the southern German armies of General Fedor Von Bock from the Caucasis if the British and the Americans can keep the Germans out of Egypt, Syria and Iraq and meantime maintain an adequate flow of supplies direct to Russia. East Can Be Saved The British feeling is said to be that the Middle East still cant be saved if the Axis African Corps can be held throughout thet orrid season in the desert o nthe promise that the Yanks will be coming with dive bombers, bigger guns and tanks to reinforce 'all lines by the time the weather cools. Strategists here .know that Egypt must be held if the Allies are to keep Hitler from the oil fields east of Suez; they also feel that is the main bar- ricade to German-Japanese union in the Indian Ocean or Red Sea for a division of the riches of the Indies and severance of the southern Allied supply lines to Russia. The fact that U.S. Army bombers now are operating with the RAF in the Mediterranean area is taken here as proof that President Roosevelt fully appreciates the importance of this theatre, Capitol Awaits News Of Lead'er Parley '. Rubber Collections Mount Daily;' Alummum Salvage Drive Fails By LEON GORDENKER Heaps of scrap rubber piling up on filling station drives had already accumulated by noon yesterday to the extent of 112 tons on Washtenaw County, according to an estimate made by Paul R. Kempf, state rub- ber salvage committeeman. Gasoline wholesalers began col- lections of the scrap yesterday. They will send the scrap rubber to re- finers and reprocessors. Officials of the rubber drive, en- couraged by early returns, empha- sized that citizens must continue to turn in every available bit of rubber. All obstacles such as the lack of scales have been pushed out of the way by patriotic citizens. Farmers, raking their barnyards and looking through their machin- ery, have managed to surprise de- fense officials by salvaging 146,583 pounds of rubber according to to= day's WPII returns from 27 counties. To complement the return of rub- ber farmers dug up 1,633.220 pounds of scrap steel. A suggestion that the rubber mats in luggage compartments of auto- mobiles might be turned in as scrap rubber met quick response among the employes of Kalamazoo's Kellogg Company. County officials urged other citizens to fllow suit. Aluminum Drive V tv - F N . , I r White Race Cannot Def.at Japanese, Declares Chemist WASHINGTON, June 19. -4-)- The surprise Roosevelt-Churchill con- ferences today keyed this capital to anticipation of momentous decisions bringing some new and dramatic turn in the war. In Congress and elsewhere, specu- lation revolved for the most part about the possibilities of a British- American invasion of the European coast and of dispatch of a British- coast and of dispatch of a large American expeditionary force to the Middle East. None professed, how- ever, to have any information other than that released by the White House. The progress of the talks between the President and the British Prime Minister-where they were meeting and what aides they had called in -was hidden in the deepest military secrecy. White House Quiet For the time being, the White House stood on its announcement of last night that Mr. Churchill had arrived in this country for conferen- ces with Mr. Roosevelt on "the war, the conduct of the war and the win- ning of the war." Stephen T. Early, Presidential Sec- * - -c+ r rI~ - i"- F_- of 1-. Startling a gathering of bankers at the Book-Cadillac Hotel in De- troit, Dr. J. William Hale, former professor of chemistry at the Uni- versity, declared Thursday that even if we win the Battle of the Pacific we cannot defeat Japan. Dr. Hale, consu!vant to the Dow Chemical Company and president of the National Agrol Co., made this statement at the fifty-sixth annual business session of the Michigan Bankers Association. The announced fifn .,Ii-,- ah - "!rmi--- There are twice as many yellow men as there are white. They have a' right to run their own show, and they are going to do it. I don't love the Japs, but I have the sense to know that we don't know the yellow peo- ple," After the gathering, Dr. Hale com- mented that he envisioned a world divided into four spheres, "each com- pletely satisfied as regards the ele- ments each needs." The four spheres, he sair would nronhably inelid the