4 Editorial Amnerican People Will Refuse Socialsm... it 43 U agqq"gi Weather Light Showers. VOL. LII. No. 9-S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, JUNE 26, 1942 2:15 A.M. FINAL i Czech Village Is Wiped Out In Nazi Move For Revenge All Males Slain To Avenge Heydrich Assassination; Budapest Radio Reports New Savage Massacre Arrests Continue In Prague, Bruenn LONDON, June .25. -('P)- Nazis have obliterated a second humble Czech village and slain all its men in reprisal for the assassination' of Reinhard Heydrich, the Hangman, it was stated today in reports filter- ing from the terror-ruled coifines of Germany's "new Europe.' The community was Lezaky, popu- lation 100, in a farming district of Bohemia about 70 miles southeast of Prague. Its death sentence apparently was identical to that which the Germans themselves announced on June 10 had been meted out to Lidice, near Prague. Lidice's male population of about 350 all died by firing squad, its wo- men were sent to concentration camps and its children to "educa- tional institutions." !" Today listeners for the Czecho- Slovak government-in-exile reported that a Budapest broadcast said Le- zaky had been razed. The Budapest radio quoted official announcements in the Prague newspapers. It did not say what happened to the people, but the Vichy French News Service quoted the announce- ment as saying all adult males had been executed. As in the case of Lidice, the excuse was the allegation that Lezaky liar- bored parachutists blamed by the Germans for Heydrich's death. n less spectacular phases of the continuing purge,- It was announced in Prague hat48'1 Ozeehshadbeen sentenced to ceath there and 12 at Bruenn yester ay on charges of be- ing in contact with enemy agents, possessing weapons or failing tq re- port to police. Liberal Ideals ,.. M otivate' W ar, Contrasting domestic policies of Presidents Wilson and Roosevelt during wartime, Prof. Howard M. Ehrmann of the history department declared last night at a Post-War Council meeting that the Atlantic Charter is a policy of "internation- alizing the New Deal." American historians neglected the causes of the last war because they regretted the beginning of the last war as the end of the Wilsonian era of the "New Freedom," Professor Ehrmann said. This indication of failure of liberal domestic policy dur- ing war is not present during this war, he continued. Following an historical presenta- tion of the events preceding the declaration of the Atlantic Charter, Professor Ehrmann pointed out the great stress laid upon economic ad- justments and principles by Presi- dent Roosevelt and Prime Minister Winston Churchill. The influence of the "Four Freedoms"-enunciated before Congress by the President- was also noted by Professor Ehrmann. The provisions of the Atlantic Charter are "quite general in the mtter of political and territorial provisions," Professor Ehrmann stat- ed as he pointed out the difference of amount of detail between the At- lantic Charter and Wilson's Four- teen Points. The adherence of the United Na- tions and the International Labor Organization to the Atlantic Charter and ever-closer tie-ups of the Lease- Lend Agreements to the Charter as steps during the war in the fulfill- meit of its principles were pointed , out by Professor Ehrmann. U.S. Planes Raid Japanese Bases On New' Guinea Civitians Strafed In lap Attack On Dutch Harbor Anti-Aircraft Guns, Rifle Fire Drove Off Invader's Planes; 98 Persons Evacuated To Seattle British, German Forces InE Engaged In Climactic Stru FDII, Churchill Believe Suez gypt ggle; Safe SEATTLE, June 25. -(iP)- First eyewitness accounts of the Japanese bombing of Dutch Harbor in the Aleutians, made public' today, dis- closed how heavy anti-aircraft fire and even rifle fire drove off the at- tackers and that the pipponese ma- chine gunners strafed fleeing civilians 'like rats in a trap."~ Civilians among the 98 persons from Unalaska (Dutch Harbor is in Unalaska Bay) and from nearby Cold Bay, evacuated to Seattle aboard an Army transport, told in- terviewers that a Japanese fighter pilot strafed. 250 civilians as they fled to the bare rocky hills for safety. A housewife told how Unalaska's mayor-John W. Fletcher-who ac- companied the evacuees here, direct- ed the flight of five truck loads of w6men and children to the hills when the Jap bombers and fighter planes came over. How many Jap planes were downed has not been announced officially, and tales brought here by civilians and service men, many of the latter wounded, failed to clarify that point in accounts approved by the Navy. Mayor Fletcher said application Student Draft Registration To BeTuesday All University students between the ages of 18 and 20, except those specially exempted or previously reg- istered, are lcheduled to register for Selective Service from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tuesday at the Armory Build- ing. As announced in President Roose- velt's proclamation of May 26, the fifth regisration will inlude all male citizens born on or after Jan. 1, 1922 anid on or before June 30, 1924. Raking the total by an undis- closed number of men, this registra- ttion willgxp .:the Selective Service System to include all men between the ages of 18 and 65. Students who are 20 years of age and have regis- tered at a previous time should not register again. Foreign students attending the University must also register and give the country of citizenship. Those having Alien Registration Cards must give the number of this card as, part of the registration Pro- cedure. Foreign students who have taken out first citizenship papers only, are not citizens of the United States. All members of the federally rec- ognized National Guard; Offiers Reserve Corps; Regular Army ne- serve; Enlited Reserve Corps; and members of the advanced corps, Se- nior Division of the ROTC are ex- empt from registering. The place of registrationi for all University students and employes within the age limits; 4s the Armory Building, 223 E. Ann St. However, students living in nearby communi- ties, who travel back and forth each day are requested to register 'in their home community. Although the registration office in the Armory will be open at 7 a.m. and will not close until 9 p.m., Uni- versity students are requested to re- port between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. to facilitate the registration which will be carried on by volunteer workers. Anyone failing to register will be held individually responsible. <.. was made for 35 death certificates Nafter thc June 3 bombing and straf- ing, but the total American casualty lists have not been made public. Joseph Wynans of Des Moines, Wash., said the fleeing civilians, run- ning toward the ravines, threw them- selves on the ground as one Jap plane swooped toward them, aid the strafer failed to hit a single one though his tracer bullets kicked up spurts of dirt and pebbles all around. J ap Russian Tension High Over Incident Official Moscow Radio Claims Jan Submarine Sank Soviet Freighter (By The Associated Press) Relations betwee Russia and Ja- pan, already tense because of the ever-present possibility of war be- tween those ancient enemies, became definitely strained today when the Moscow radio flatly charged that a Japanese submarine sank a Russian kSfreighter May 1 only 32 miles off the coast of Japan. r) The Moscow radio speaks as the official broadcaster of the Soviet Union. Its pronouncements, coupled with private information in Chung- king that Japan has 1,000,000 troops in Manchuria for "n attack on Si beria next month, brought the shad- owy threat of hostilities much nearer reality. The Moscow announcer today made the first Soviet reference to the freighter, the 4,760-ton Angar- stroi, although Japan and Germany have long claimed-without sub- stantiation-that a Unitedk States submarinetmoredo the vessel to bring about trouble between Russia and Japan. Briefly, the Moscow announcer made these charges: 1. That the Angarstro was halted April 2 by Japanese warships 130 miles off the roast and escorted to a Japanese port for inspection. 2. That upon her release and while homeward bound she followed a course laid down by the Japanese 3. That she was sunk by a torpedo 32 miles off the coast of Japan. 4. That the crew, now enroute home, reported two Japanese sub- marines surfaced immediately after the Angarstroi sank and stayed with the survivors until another Russian ship picked them up. Senate Members Name Junior Staff The junior administrative staff of the Student Senate was niamed yesterday, it was announced by James Landers. '43, Senate president. The seven juniors chosen include Harry Bayer, Betty Willging, Milan Cobble, Mort Hunter, John McKin- nen, Richard Rod and Mille Otto. Adopting a new plan for the sum- mer, the policy-forming branch of the Senate has decided to assume the functions of the senior administra- tive heads as well as its ordinary policy-making duties. N'N______ - - Canadian Prime Minister Joins In War Council; Overall Outlook Good British Libya Defeat Argued B Senate WASHINGTON, June 25.-()-In two extraordinary conferences at the White House, President Roose- velt and Prime Minister Churchill painted an encouraging picture of, the over-all war situation today, -and Churchill was reported to have ex- pressed confidence that th Nazis would be repulsed in Egypt. Congressional leaders and mem- bers of the Pacific War Council at- tended the conferences, and said they had received very definite im- pressions that there were reasons for encouragement in the world situa- tion. Walter Nash, New Zealand Minis- ter, revealed that !a second front against the Nazis had been dis- cussed. Eisenhower In f unmand' "They'll be hit, all right," he said. At the same time, and as another foretoken of the creation of a second front in Europe, the War Depart- ment announced the formal estab- lishment of a European theater of operations, with Major General Dwight D. Eisenhower in command. The department defined a "theater of operations" as "an area where combat is in progress or will be." Meanwhile, the Senate heard a de- mand from Senator Ellender (Dem.- La.) that Mr. Roosevelt be desig- nated "supreme leader" of the United Nations. His suggestion was prompt- ed, he said, by "the appaent apathy of the British military leadership." The fall of Tobruk, he added, has endangered the Allied position and "something must be done before it is too late." Don't Play Hitler's Game Replying, Senator Le (Dem- Okla.) said this was no time to criti- cize an ally. He warned against "playing Hitler's game by falling out among ourselves." The meeting with Congressional leaders, who included spokesmen for both parties from both Houses, pre- ceded a highly important session of the Pacific War Council, attended by the President, the Prime Minister, and W. L. Mackenzie King, Prime Minister of Canada. Trie Congressional group spent forty minutes with Mr. Churchill and Mr. Roosevelt, and half of that time was devoted to receiving an uninter- rupted report of war developments and prospects from the British statesman. According to some of the conferees, he told them that: Theavictories of American Army, Navy and. Air Forces in the Pacific have made it easier to defend the military supply routes to India and the Middle East. Mistakes In Africa Mistakes were made in the AfrP can campaign, but the British never- theless would be able to keep Egypt and the Suez Canal out of Axis hands. The Congressmen left the White House unanimously saying that the report given them was pleasing. Much of the information given them, they said, had to be regarded as a mili- tary secret. "It was a review of the world situ- ation by the. President and Prime "Minister," said Speaker Rayburn, the principal spokesman for the group. "And it was made in a fashion that was very pleasing to all of us." Representative Martin of Massa- chusetts, House Republican leader, said Churchill had indicated that Egypt and the Suez Canal were not in too great danger. Situation Not So Bad After the Pacific War Council meeting, Walter Nash, New Zealand minister, said the African situation was not so bad as it might look, add- ing that there are things in Egypt that "might make it awkward" for the enemy. "I don't think they'll get to Cairo." he asserted. "Both the President and Prime German Hammer Blows Stun Russians Along Kharkov Front MOSCOW, Fridays June 26.--(0)- Falling back again before the ham- mer blows of what appears to be a full-fledged German offensive in the Ukraine, the Russians early today acknowledged the loss of the railway junction city of Kupyansk, 60 miles southeast of Kharkov. The Soviet Bureau of Irfformation announced that while the defenders of Sevastopol beat off continuing, heavy enemy attacks yesterday, the hard-fighting soldiers of the Ukraine struggled against "advancing Ger- man Fascist troops." The German drive in the Kharkov sector thus went into 'its fifth day with the Russians announcing for the first time'in weeks the loss of an important town to the Nazis. Kupyansk is 40 miles north of Izy- um, the northern end of the Izyum- Barvenkova line, the area in which the Russians this spring thwarted a German push toward Rostov by launching their own surprise offen- sive. This German drive toward the cov- eted, oil-filled Caucasus now may have started, with the Germans ap- parently trying to swing around north of Russian positions in the Izyum area. Kupyansk also is on the Oskol Riv- er, which flows into the Donets. (The German High Command on Thursd y mentioned for the first time that it had launched an offen- sive in the Kharkov area, agreeing with Soviet reports that it was launched Monday. (Frequently in the past such an- War Housing To Speed Up Dormitories To Be Built, Nelson Tells Congress. WASHINGTON, June 25. -(AP)- War housing construction, stripped to bare essentials by shortages of materials, may be concentrated be- fore the end of this year largely on barracks and dormitories, Donald M. Nelson told Congress today'' In a special report to the Senate Defense Investigating Committee, the war productian chief also de- clared that materials problems were principal factors in decisions to cur- tail building of new war plants and substitute wood for steel in construc- tion of small warships. As to war housing, Nelson said: "We have been stripping the spe- cifications just as far as we possibly can to eliminate the most vital ma- terials, but even lumber is now short in view of the many d'emands for it." "Before the year is out," he con- tinued, "the use of barracks and dormitories to a much larger extent than now is the case which may be necessary. In that way, limited sup- plies of materials can provide hous- ing for more workers than by build- ing individual units." nouncements of new drives have been withheld until they had scored at least an initial success, and thus Ber- lin's taking notice of this sector may, indicate the German leaders now ex- pect the effort to be successful.) The Russians have acknowledged loss of ground consistently since they announced early Tuesday that the Germans had taken the initiative on the Kharkov front. . The communiques issued early Wednesday said the Red soldiers had fallen back to new positions and yes- terday's report said the Germans had driven a wedge into the Red defenses. The Soviets said there were no ma- terial changes on other sectors but told of successes by Red forces in unidentified areas, including the' sinking of two transports by field artillery and the partial annihilation of two battalions of enemy infantry. Church ill Gets QuickSuppor t In Parliament Prime Minister's Arrival Is Awaited For Debate On, EnglishWar Aims LONDON, June. 25.-(/P)-Govern- ment supporters rallied 'quickly be- hind Winston Churchill tonight after 20 critics of the'Prime - Ministers war direction had intrdduced a no, confidence motion and the support- ers pledged "unqualified support" to Churchill while predicting the gov- ernment would beat down the con- demnatory motion after bitter de- bate. The insurgents, however, were con- fident that the vote would show many Conservative abstentions and a grow- ing lack of faith in the Prime Mifi- ister's. strategical judgment, particu- larly in consequence of the British defeat in Africa. The debate will take place after Churchill returns from America. It may be preceded by a general shake- up in the fighting services which will disarm many critics. One suggestion heard now is that Churchill will ap- point a chief of combined general staff to direct all British strategy. The chief charge of Churchill's critics is that his present strategic planning, as Minister of Defense, em- phasizes aims and disregards the difficulty of finding means for a, series of widely diversified operations in which there is no truly coordinat- ed staff work. The debate also is expected to re- flect lost confidence in cooperation of the three fighting services, in sup- ply arrangements and in Whitehall's selection of general officers for field operations. Matruh Is Expected Center Of Allied Defense Lines; Nazis Continue Advance Axis Penetration Is Greatest Of War CAIRO, June 25.--(P)-The Axis armored columns were deep in Egypt tonight, penetrating desert terrain never before contested and advanc- ing with all the force that Marshal Erwin Rommel could muster for a major attack on Matruh, 130 miles east of the Libyan border. At the cost of severe losses in- flicted by British mobile columns and aircraft which covered a swift re- treat of the main elements of the British eighth army, the invaders by last nightfall were approximately halfway from the frontier to Ma- truh, having passed southeast of Sidi Barrani, 60 miles inside Egypt. Abandons Frontiers General Neil M. Ritchie aban- doned Ms fixed frontier positions of Salum and Sidi Omar to fall far back to battle territory of his own choosing, and it appeared the first great fight for the valley of the Nile wouldhbe pitched somewhere about Matruh. Marshal Rommel in his swift drive is using recently captured British and American tanks, quickly turn- ing to his own use these weapons originally made to stop him. The invading Axis column also includes ,a number of French tanks. Much other war booty also is be- ing used.' The Germans are using captured trucks after making no al- teration except to paint a swastika on the tops. Anticipate Attack The British fully anticipate that as soon as Rommel's main force comes in contact with the Eighth Army, there will be an airdromesat- tack from Crete by German para- chute and glider trops. The objec- tive of such an attack may well be the great naval station at Alexan- dria. In large measure, therefore, Brit- ish hopes of holding the enemy short of Alexandria and the Nile Basin were pinned on getting substantial air reinforcements. Enemy communiques, said he al- ready was in possession of Sidi 'Bar- rani, easternmost city attained4 by the Italians in 1940 and from which they were ejected by General Wa- vell's small Imperial army in Decem- ber of that year. Mines Bureau i;o Flying Tigers Sink Four Ships In Raid On Main Japanese Port Prof. Bromage States Approval Of Home Rule In Wayne County CHUNGKING, June 25.-(P)-The 1 American Flying Tigers, launching. offensive action in central China with a bombardment of Japan's principal inland base of Hankow, have sunk one Japanese warship and three transports at that Yangtze River port. The airmen, formally known as the American Volunteer Group and . whose service for China predates Pearl Harbor, will become the nuc- leus of the United States Air Force in China by their induction into the Army on July 4. Today's AVG communique, re- porting on the Hankow attack of Tuesday, said it was the work of fighters converted into bombers and added that besides the four ships have been reported in action at two places in Huanan Province and now in Hupeh, of which Hankow is the capital. The influence of the AVG on air war in China is most noticeable here at Chungking. The Chinese provi- sional capital, heretofore one of the most bombed spots on earth, has been free of the usual air attacks this "bombing season," which now is six weeks old. Coupled with official reports of an AVG-Japanese duel near Hengyang, Hunan Province, on Monday in which three Japanese planes were shot down and three more probably destroyed; the severe damaging of a Japanese gunboat on the same day on Tung- ting Lake, also in Hunan, and air Expressing full approval for the proposed amendment to the State Constitution to give Wayne County home rule, Prof. Arthur W. Bromage of the political science department declared yesterday that it "is point- ed directly at prevailing practices not now productive of good government." Penetrating criticisms of Wayne County's antiauated form of county government, set up under inflexible rules in the State Constitution writ- ten in 1908, were voiced by Profes- sor Bromage, an expert on the prob- lems of state and city government. Professor Bromage enunciated sev- en glaring faults in the county's sys- tem: scattering authority over a plural executive. 5) There is no civil service system to select suitable employes on their merits. 6) There is an absolute absence of coordination between auxiliary tech- nical services and operating agencies. 7) The Board of County Auditors must assume over-all financial direc- tion functions that properly belong in a responsible appointive agency. The result of these faults is that "Wayne County is one of many American metropolitan counties which are wheeling along with a mode of administration designed in the good old days for a friendly, personalized administrative process in an agricul- tural county of 5,000 population," Professor Bromage pointed out. Reorganizatihon IsrAnounced WASHINGTON, June 25. -( P)- Reorganization of the Bureau of Mines Was announced today by In- terior Secretary Ickes, "to speed the expanded program of providing stra- tegic and critical minerals for the nation's war needs." The reorganization calls for des- ignation of three regional offices- at Salt Lake City, Utah, for the Western-states, Rolla, Mo., for the Central States, and College Park, Md., for Eastern red Southern states. Bumtau Director R. R. Sayers said the regional offices would be super- vised by Dr. R. S. Dean, Assistant Director, formerly of Salt Lake City. Each office will bei headed by a regional engineer and an assistant regional engineer, to be appointed soon. Ickes said the objectives were an increased output of ores from dom- estic deposits together with enlarged production of processed minerals and greater use of substitutes for metals deficient in the United States. - "To win this war we must get more American metals and other minerals out of the ground and into the na- tion's factories. Olander Urges Obediense ,' A -. WI , ,