Weather Cooler. .4itt A it Editorial Chislers, Cheats, Crooks, Riders Sabotage American War Effort 1 VOL. LII. No. 16-S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 1942 2:15 A.M. FINAL _ -_ _ i FBI Launches National Drive Against Nazi Bund Leaders Convict Kuhn, Successor Under Fire As U.S. Moves To Wipe Out Un-American Group Members Accused Of Draft Evasion NEW YORK, July 7.-W)-Federal agents launched a coast-to-coast drive today to put the German- Ameri an und "out of business." A 1. gal attack was aimed at 54 of the Bund's highest officers, including Fritz Kuhn, foriner National Bund leader nowin prison and his succes- sor, Wilhelm Kunze, arrested in Mex-' ico and returned to the United States yesterday. It reached into the states of ?ew York, New Jersy, Pennsylvania, Illi- nos, Minnesota, Indiana, Washing- ton and California, Twenty-six men were named in in- dictmernss charging conspiracy to evade the Selective Service Act and conspiracy to counsel Bund members to resist "service in the armed -forces of the United States, and conspiracy to conceal Bund affiliations in filling out alien registration forms. Three . more were acused of only the Se- lective Service violation. All 29 were In Feleral custody, P. E. Foxworth, assistant FBI chief, said. Kunze Indicted Guarded by 25 FBI agents, eight of those indicted or both counts (in- cluding Kunze) pleaded innocent when arraigned before Federal Judge George C. Sweeney, who fixed bail aggregating $95,000. He named July 28 for the trial. The remainder-among them na- tional an sectional officials and principal leaders of the Bund-were the object of denaturalization pro- ceedings. U.S. Attorney Mathias F. Correa said that althwiuh the Bund was nominally defunct since, the out- break of war, numerous singing so- cieties in the Yorkvlle section of New York and- elsewhere had taken over Bund activities and continued to fos- ter Nazi beliefs. Such organizations' would be investigated further, he1 said. Advance Reih Aims The U.S. Attorney aid that under the name of "a 'militant organiza- tlon of free Americans" the Bund sought to advance the political and propaganda aims of the German Reich. The government move struck1 Kuhn, who is serving a termfor larceny, through denaturalization proceedings. Kunze, arraigned yesterday on a charge of violating the Selective Service Act for failure to report his address, pleaded innocent today an was held in bail of $50,000 by Federal Judge George C.\Sweeney. Prof. Pollock Will Consider1 OrSoviet PlightE our'attitude towards Russia and her place in the world to come will be discussed by Prof. James K. Pol- lock of the political science depart- ment at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow in the Rackham Amphitheatre. In his' University lecture, "On Un- derstanding )Russia," Prof. Pollock will emphasize the necessity for our acceptance of the Soviet Union as a vitally important force in the world adjustment to the present situation. Main point of the talk will be the fact that now that Russia is our ally, and now that we have recognized that country's vitality and impor- tance, there is no reason why we can-E not cooperate to form a better world, despite ideological differences.- Tomorrow's lecture will be the fourth in the University summer lec- ture series. Post-War .Council ' Will Hear Brumm Prof. John L. Brumm of the jour-3 nalism department and William1 FDR Warns Of Possible Requisition Of All Tires Hopes That Extreme Measures May Be Avoided But Remains Determined To Save Nation ' Nazis Sustain Enormous Losses' But Drive Deeper Into Don Basin; Battle Rages Over VitalRailroad By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, July 7.-President Roosevelt said today it might become necessary to requisition .all the auto- mobile tires in the country, if war- time conditions grow more acute, but made it clear that he was hope- ful that such exertene action could be avoided. Scrap rubber collections had im- proved, he said, but it was still too early to estimate their effect upon the situation. The drive teas enab- ling officials to find out more def- initely just what rubber stocks they could count upon, he added, and it was already apparent that scrap was not a cure-all. Mr. Roosevelt spoke at hiis first press conference. since June 16, be- fore Winston Churchill's recent visit. He seemed rested and refreshed de- spite the heavy burdens of the Presi- dency in war time, and in high and amiable'spirits. He leaned back in his chair, tipped his cigaret holder to its characteristic jaunty tilt and ex- Annual Foreign Students' Fete Set For Todav International Center Plans For Summer Reception; Dr. Liu To Be Honored The International Center's annual Summer Reception will be held from 8 p.m.-to 10:30 p.m. today at the Center, it was announced by Robert Klinger, acting counselor to foreign students. Honored guest at this year's Re- ception is Dr. B. A.. Liu, research as- sociate and assistant to the Director of the China Institute in America, the foundation interested in Chinese students in America which has re- cently been granted a large endow- ment by the Chinese and United States governments for scholarships and fellowships for Chinese students. Given in honor of foreign students, the Reception is the only social event of the summer in which a large num- ber of foreign students have the op- portunity to meet members of the faculty, American students and townspeople. The occasion is of particular in- terest this year because the percent- age of the students born outside con- tinental United States in relation to the total sumhner enrollment is greater than in any other term in the past. Race Committee To Meet In Union The Race Relations Committee will hold an organizational meeting at 8 p.m. today in the Union for the purpose of electing officers, deciding on publicity methods and planning the summer program. Arrangements will also be under- taken for an address by Rev. Horace White of Detroit on "Fifth Column Activities Against the Negro" to be delivered next Wednesday. changed banter with the correspond- ents. This buoyant mood left him at one point, however, when the reporters questioned hir closely on the rubber and gasoline problem and he 'an- swered, with unconcealed sharpness, that he was trying to save the na- tion, not gasoline and rubber. It was at this point that he added a statement' that if the war should grow worse it might be necessary for the Government to commandeer pri- vately owned tires. The Nation, he said, was ready to make any sacrifice in this emergency period. There was no discussion as to what provision might be made for the motorist whose car would become virtually worthless at present if his tires were removed, or of other prob- lems which would arise from such a program. The President repyrted that no decision has yet been reached on the question of nationwide gasoline ra- tioning as a tire conservation meas- ure and said he still was hopeful that it might be possible to separate, the gasoline problem from the rub- ber problem. As for gasoline rationing, he re- marked that if he lived near an oil well and had a car with good tires and needed it for his business, he would not be able to see why he should be forbidden the use of the readily available gasoline. At the War Production Board, officials who have cohsistntly fav- ored gasoline rationing as a rubber saving device would make no com- ment on Mr. Roosevelt's remarks. Belated Farm Move Passed By_Congress By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, July 7.-Congress belatedly passed and sent to the White House today stop-gap legisla- tion giving the Agriculture Depart- mentabout $56,000,00 for July oper- ations and permitting the sale of government-controlled grain at sub- parity prices this month pending the enactment of a fixed policy on this controversial issue in the regular ap- propriation bill. The Department technically had been without funds since the.new fis- cal year started last Wednesday but quick Presidential approval of the stop-gap was expected in time to en- able the Department to meet pay- rolls due tomorrow for 9,000 odd em- ployes here. The House passed the legislation first and the Senate, before acting on it, passed another measure to authorize government loans on six majors farm crops at full parity. If the loan bill becomes law, farmers could borrow 38 cents more on a bushel . of wheat than the present market price of about95.7 cents, and 15 cents more on corn, which aver- aged 81.9 cents June 15. The Sen- ate's vote on this bill was 28 to 24. House farm bloc spokesmen pre- dicted it woud be vetoed if finally -passed by thr House. In any event, they said, it would not affect the de- partmental supply bill. Funeral Services To Be Held Today For Professor Reeves <±)--- } r _ Funeral services for Jesse S. Reeves, the University of Michigan's former chairman of the political sci- ence department and a distinguished scholar in internatibnal law, will be held at 2:30 p.n'. foday at St. An- drews Episcopal Church. Dr. Reeves died a 2 a.m. yesterday at his home following an illness of two yeats. He had resigned his post on the University faculty last Febru- ary. He was 70 years old. Born in Indiana in 1872, Dr. Reeves attended college i Indiana, Ohio and Massachusetts, receiving his un- dergraduate degree from Amherst College. He began teaching in 1891 at Johns Hopkins University in Maryland where he received his doc- torate degree three years later. In 1897 Dr. Reeves wa admitted to the Indiana bar and practiced law in his home town until he returned to Johns Hopkins as a lecturer in 1905. He joined the faculty of Dart- mouth College in 1907 as an associate professor and served there until he was called by the University of Mich- igan to fill the chairman's post of the political science department in 1910. Dr. Reeves held an American mem- bership to the Pan-American Com- mission of Jurists in 1925. In 1930 he was made technical adviser to the American delegation to The Hague Conference for the todifica- tion of international law. Dr. Reeves was first initiated to international law as it worked in action when, in 1920, he srved as a member of the board of advisers to Spaatz Named For Command 'Flying General' To Head Airmen In Europe By The Associated Press LONDON, July 7.-Major General Carl (Toughie) Spaatz, a flying gen-, eral who was a hero of the fledgling American Air Force in the World War and who piloted the"Question Mark" to its historic endurance rec- ord in 1929, has been appointed Com- mander In Chief of the United States Army Air Forces in the Euro- pean theatre of war. General Spaatz, a Pennsylvania redhead who has been an Army ca- reer man for 32 of his 51 years, has been in charge here since June. His appointment was announced only to- day as he conferred Distinguished Flying Crosses on three of the Amer- ican airmen who participated in the Fourth of July bombing of German- held Holland. Those he decorated for the war's first American raid on German-held Western Europe were Second Lieut. Randall M. Dorton, Jr., of Long Beach, Calif., and Sergeants Robert L. Golay of Fredonia, Kan., and Ben- nie C. Cunningham of Tupelo, Miss. They were the crew of the, Douglas Boston bomber piloted by Capt. Charles C. Kegelman of El Reno, Okla., who already has been awarded the Distinguished Service Cross for bringing his plane home despite damage from German anti-aircraft fire so heavy that the machine actu- ally fell to the ground. General Spaatz' headquarters to- day also announced the names of the 20 other participants in the raid, eight of them missing since two of the six American-manned planes were shot down. No 'Daily' On Monday, T uesday-Believe Us Contrary to the stated beliefs of some 500 million needle-voiced complainants, The Daily does not publish on either Monday or Tuesday. There is no intentional slight on the part of the carrier who does not deliver a Daily to the Kappa German Tanks, Infantry Hurl Russian Forces Back To Defensive Positions Near Staryi Oskol, Moscow Reports By HEI14RY. C. CASSIDY Associated Press Correspondent MOSCOW, Wednesday, July 8.-The German army, despite stubborn Russian resistance, has driven still deeper into the Don Basin southwest of Staryi Oskol, the Soviet midnight communique said today. Red Army forces in this sector "retired to previously prepared defense lines" after a smashing attack by 200 German tanks and a large infantry force, the communique acknowledged. Another violent battle was said to be continuing west of Voronezh, on ,the vital Moscow-Rostov railway, , * JESSE S. REEVES the Institute of Politics. Delegates from all parts of the world met at Williamstown, Mass., during 4that year. A former lecturer at the Academy of International Law at The Hague, Turn 'To Page 3, Col. 4 Sheridan Play Opens Theatre SeriesToday The Michigan Repertory Players will ring up the Lydia Mendelssohn curtain at 8:30 p.m. today on the, initial offering of their 14th season, "The Rivals," nearly a century and a half after its author, 24-year-old R. B. Sheridan, penned his first and perennially popular play. Sheridan's witty satire on English society contains a whole gallery of characters which 'have become house- hold words. Cast as the tangle-/ tongued Mrs. Malaprop, whose "de- rangement of epithets" is a never failing source of amusement, is Clar- ibel Baird, professor of speech in the Oklahoma College for Women, ap- pearing with the R epertory Players for her sixth seson. Mrs. Baird, slated to direct "Letters to Lucerne, fourth play of th* 1942 season, was star of last year's "George Washing-, ton Slept Here." William Altman, '42, fresh from successes in "The Contrast," "Under the Gaslight" and "Jim Dandy," and William Kinzer, Grad., lauded for performances in Margin for Error," "The Critic" and "What a Life," ap- pear as the irate parent Anthony and the blockhead Bob Acres, respective- ly. Jim Bob Stephenson, '43, star of "The Bluebird," plays the hero, Capt. Turn To Page 3, Col. 2 British Force Southern Flank Back In Egypt Rommel's Move Changes Qattara - Mediterranean Front To Huge Curve CAIRO, July 7. -(AP)- The Axis front in the Qattara-Mediterranean corridor was bent back on the south- ern, flank under Allied pressure to- day while the weary ground forces left it to the cannoneers to keep the; battle aliye in the 120-degree desert heat anf to Allied Air Forces strik- ing deep on the enemy supply lines. The tactical nature of the new Axis position was not entirely clear, but it was surmised that the wily Marshal Erwin Rommel had pulled, his harried southern forces back to the westward to form a great are of defense extending from his left flank on the seashore. The net result was that the front facing squarely to the east had been somewhat shortened and curved to prevent British tanks from cutting into Rommel's rear as they did in saving El Alamein last week in the first phase of the battle to save Alex- andria, some 70 miles distant. The battle of El Alamein had died down and the ground forces were en- gaged only sporadically. Personnel Needs To Be Discussed Norbert A. McKenna, assistant pro- curement director of the Army Quar- termaster Corps Motor Transport Service, will speak at 7:15 p.m. today in the Rackham Lecture Hall,-giving information about the civilian per- sonnel needs of the Motor Service and the opportunities for employ- ment in government work. The talk is sponsored by the Uni- versity Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information, which is helping the government to recruit employes necessary for the war ef- fort. northeast of Staryi Oskol. There was no indication in the communique that the Germans had advanced in the Voronezh sector, but a supplement issued by the Soviet Information Bureau said "our artil- lery and infantry for two days de- fended one village against superior enemy forces." This appeared to in- dicate the village had been given up. 1,0Q0 Germans Killed At the approaches of this village, the supplementary communique said, the Germans lst more than 1,000 men in killed alone and in another sectorsof the Voronezh front 700Ger- mans were killed in a combined tank and infantry attac. Commenting on the violence of the fighting in the Staryi Oskol sec- tor, the communique said: "Eighty German tanks were dis- abled. Enormous losses were likewise sustained by enemy infantry. Our nen mowed down the Hitlerites by point-blank machine gun, automatic rifle and rifle fire." Nazis Claim Voronezh" (The German High Command said the city of Voronezh had fallen in a drive 130 miles east of Kursk and 60 miles beyond the high-water inark of Germany's 1941 advance. From Voronezh, the German command said, the advance was continuing ioward Povorino on a secondary Moscow-to-Caucasus railway con- nection 140 miles farther east. (The official French News Agency reported in Vichy that the Red Army had launched a violent counterattack against the ,southern flank of the- Nazi wedge, striking toward Kharkov from Izyum and Kupyansk, and pushing the Germans back across the Krasnaya River.) Bloody Fighting The Russians announced officially that their Don River defense line had been rolled back west of Voro- nezh by sheer weight of Nazi men and metal in some of the bloodiest fighting of the war. "Our troops evacuated a number of populated places," a communique said. Grad Cournil Opens Social kSeason Toda y- A joint graduate student-faculty coffee hour at 4:30 p.m. today in the Rackham Building will open the summer social program of the Grad- duate Student Council.- 'Open to all grduate students and. faculty in both Summer Term and Summer 'Session, the weekly coffee hours are planned to acquaint grad- uate students with the faculty and students from other departments. .No admission fee is charged. First in a series of bi-weekly dances will be the Graduate Student Mixer, to be held in the Rackham Ballroom and Terrace, 9 to 12 p.m. Saturday. Refreshments will be provided and game rooms will be available to stu- dents who do not wish to dance. Students are urged to come ,singly or in couples. Admission will be 25c per person, with a special discount rate of 40c a couple. Noted Scenic Artist To Discuss Design Howard Bay, newly-inaugurated president of the Scenic Artists Union of America and a Summer Session faculty member in the speech depart- Good News On The Diamond: Wolverine Nine Cops Summer Season Opener With 5-0 Victory Fetch Me My Garand! American Leaguers Smother Service Stars In 5-0 Victory By DES HOWARTH Michigan's baseball nine, summer version, inaugurated their new sched- ule a as they trounced a fast- stepping King-Seeley nine of the lo- cal hardball league by a 5-0 count. Coach Ray Fisher's lads left little to be desired in their opener, consid- ering the short time in which the old Vermont Wizard and his aide-de- camp Chief Andrews had to work. Once more, however, Fisher has pro- duced a snappy ball club which should develop with experience. , Spotlight honors of the evening went to pitcher Jack Retinger, who by Fisher's own admission is not yet in shape. Retinger, a graduate student, not only shut out King- Seeley, but he set the hard-hitting industrialists, down with only five hits, four of which were of the scratch Rossbach for seven hits and five runs. The Maize and Blue salted the game away in the first inning with a three run rally as Schupe walked the first three men to face him. A double by Bob Chappius, who played a bangup game behind the bat, and a long fly by Bob Vernier drove in three tallies. In the second frame Michigan added another marker on a walk, an error, and a fly. In the sixth Tommy Higgins, John Mikul- ich, and Howard Wikel successively singled off Rossbach to produce the Varsity's final score. On offense the big guns in the Varsity attack were Mikulich with two hits in two trips as well as a pair of passes and Higgins who had two bingles in three tries. Defensive- ly the Wolverines performed excep- tionally well as the team, inexperi- MUNICIPAL STADIUM, Cleveland, July 7.-(P)-The American League's mighty All-Stars refused to be awed even by the Army and Navy tonight and smothered the baseball stars of the two services 5 to 0 before a crowd of more than 62,094. Jim Bagby, Feller's former team- mate with the I1ldians, was Manager Joe McCarthy's selection to open for the American League and he received credit for the victory. The American League's first blast NOTICES The meeting of all advanced ROTC members will be held in the Natural Science Auditortym instead of the Union as originally announced. All freshmen and sophomores interested in working on the ad- ministrative staff of the Student Senate are requested to attend the against Feller came with one out in the opening frame. Tom Henrich singled, Ted Williams waited out a walk and then Joe DiMaggio, after receiving a mixed chorus of boos and cheers, cracked a hot single on the ground into center to score Hen- rich and send Williams loping to third. Rudy York hit a great arching fly to Grace in deep right and Wil- liams hurried home after the catch. Feller, wno looked gaunt and ten pounds under his weight before he enlisted in the Navy, squeezed ott of the jam by getting Bobby Doerr to pop a foul to Andres. But his respite was brief because Ken Keltner boomed the first pitch in the second inning over Pat Mul- lin's head in deep center for a triple and Warren (Buddy) Rosar, the Yankee catcher, singled to left. Rigney then came in, put out the fire, held the American Leaguers to three hits in five innings Firann vr