" ' it: a111O weather Not Much Change VOL. LIII, No. 25-S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, JULY 31, 1943 U - ~ ~-~~-----------.------------.--------.------- Hamburg Burns After Continued PRICE FIVE CENTS Raids British Milan Rioters Shoot Nazis, Fascists Alike Germans Take Over Fiume, Trieste, Pola; Fear Balkan Invasion LONDON, Saturday, July 31.- (0)-,Clamoring to be sent home, Italian workers in Germany have gone on a general strike, the Mos- cow radio, quoting a dispatch from Geneva, said today. Stormy outbreak among the Ital- ian workers took place in Cologne, Klagenfurt, Dresden, and Munich, it was said. The Soviet monitor here recorded the broadcast. Cabinet, Military Await Italian Surrender Reported Slain 'I By The Associated Press LONDON, July 31, Saturday-Brit- ish cabinet members and heads of the fighting services have been or- dered to stand by over the weekend for war developments apparently in connection with riot-torn Italy, it was learned early today. One London newspaper the Daily Mirror, carried a banner headline saying "Italy May Be Out of the War Tomorrow." Churchill Calls Counciil Prime Minister Churchill's official family was called into a hurried con- sultation just after midnight yester- day, generating conjecture that Italy had approached the Allies with a white flag. However it was understood late last + night that nothing was known in the capital of any Italian approach for an armistice. (Marshal Badoglio, urging the peace-hungry Italian people to be patient, said tonight: ("Italy cannot now get out of the war honestly and safely without the exercise of great wisdom and cun- ning:. This requires time." (The Marshal's broadcast to the Italian people was quoted by BBC whose broadcast was recorded by ,NBC.) - The Algiers radio, recorded by the Daily Maill bluntly told Italians: "The sands are fast running out. Marshal Badoglio cannot think he can temporize by delicately balan- eing between the Allied and the Nazi war machines. If he forgets his duty it will be up to the Italian people to see that those things are done which their honor and their right to live demand." ' No. 10 Downing Street kept silent, except for the bare disclosure that Churchill summoned the war cabinet members for one meeting and then conducted a second session by day. * * * As One Superman To Another, Benny- LONDON, July 30.-()-The Ber- lin radio announced today that Adolf :Hitler had sent Benito Mussolini the complete works of Nietzsche, specially printed and with a "cordial dedica- tion by Hitler" as a 60th birthday present. The broadcast, recorded by the As- sociated Press, said the books were delivered by Nazi Field Marshal Al- bert Kesserling. Presumably Musso- lini was in custody when the present was delivered. It was from Nietzsche, German philosopher who preached the creed of a super race, that Mussolini bor- rowed his motto "Live dangerously." Russians Seize T wenty Villages In Orel Trap LONDON, July 31, Saturday- (P) -The Red Army, plunging through muddy fields and forests, gained six miles yesterday and captured 20 vil- lages rimming the Orel death trap where savagely resisting German forces have been bolstered by fresh troops just ferried in by air trans- port from Germany, it was an- nnincd early today in Moew. VIRGINIO GAYDA .. . former editor of Il Giovnale D' Italia and long Mussolini's spokesman, has been reported slain during "revenge hunts" which flared in Italy after Mussolini's downfall. The report was not cori- firmed and BBC reported that Gayda and three other Fascist edi- tors had been arrested by the Ba- doglio regime and charged with high treason. Presidential Cornmittee Urges Plan 'Dynamic' Economy Explained in Report By Committee of 12 WASHINGTON, July 30.-()- Government sponsorship of a "dy- namic" expansionary economy to prove full employment when peace comes, coupled with plans for "order- ly" demobilization of the armed forces and war industry workers- but no lump sum bonus-was urged in a report today by a 12-member Presidential committee- FDR told his press-radio confer- ence that the recommendations fol- lowed in general his own six-point program for war veterans contained in his Wednesday radioaddress. The committee foresaw possible temporary unemployment of eight or nine million persons after demobili- zation, but said this should not be accepted as an argument "against the possibility of attaining a high level of employment under long-term stabilization plans." Briefly, it recommended for mem- bers of armed services three months' furlough or mustering-out pay or not more than $100 a month, unem- ployment insurance benefits for 26 weeks for those not working inside of three months, readjustment counsel to help find new jobs, free tuition and allowances for education and 'training, old-age insurance benefit credits for time spent in uniform, and opportunities for agricultural employment and purchase of farms. Evidently opposed to a bonus such as that voted veterans of World War I, the committee said the furlough or mustering-out pay-to visit home, to sustain the men while seeking a job or more education, and to acquire civilian clothes-are explicity made in lieu of any other grants for such purposes to avoid making large pay- ments at any one time. U.S. Troops Close on Munda Menace Jap Airdrome As Counterattack Fails ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN THE SOUTHWEST PACIFIC, July 31, Saturday.-WP)-Aided by tanks and flame throwers, American troops yesterday pressed closer to the vital Japanese airdrome at Munda, New Georgia, after hurling back a coun- terattack by the hard-pressed de- fenders. It was the first time the use of fin +f..hn.arc i-n +tin srn. hadna kan V-12 May Get Commissions WASHINGTON, July 30.-()- Apprentice seamen studying under the Navy's student training pro- gram (V-12) may apply for Naval Reserve Officers' Training Corps Training which will qualify them for commissions, the Navy an- nounced today. At present the only training lead- ing to commissions in the regular Navy is that offered by the Naval ROTC and at the U.S. Naval Academy. FDR Asks No Asylum To Dictators Roosevelt Calls on All Neutral Nations for Comiplete Cooperation LONDON, Saturday, July 31.- (IP) - The Russian government backed up President'Roosevelt to- day in wairning neutrals not to give asylum to "Mussolini, prominent Fascists or other war criminals" in notes being presented to Turkey and Sweden. WASHINGTON, July 30.- ()-- President Roosevelt, with the back- ing of Britain and Russia, today called on the neutral nations of the world to grant no asylum to Hitler, Mussolini, Tojo or any other "war criminals" who may seek "to escape their just deserts." The President's request was made in the form of a statement issued at a news conference. In London, the British Government promptly asso- ciated itself with the President's views, and it was stated officially in that capital that Soviet Russia also approved. Mr. Roosevelt served notice on the neutrals that granting refuge to "Axis leaders or their tools" would be considered "inconsistent with the principles for which the United Na- tions are fighting." Thus he reaf- firmed Allied intentions to bring the "war criminals" to trial. Discussing the Italian situation, Mr. Roosevelt said he does not care with whom the government deals in that country as long as it is not a definite member of the Fascist Party. When the time arrives, he made plain, the government is willing to treat with a king, prime minister or even a mayor. 9 Asked whether Marshal Badoglio could be considered a Fasuist, the President said he was not dealing with personalities. Two things are needed when a victorious army enters a country, he said. First, an end of armed oppo- sition, and second, an avoidance of anarchy because a lot of .troops are needed to deal with anarchy. Mr. Roosevelt also made public some details of the help being given the population in Sicily, including food, medical supplies and oil. Dis- cussing the food situation on the Italian peninsula, he pointedly ex- pressed hope that this year the peo- ple will be able to keep the crops they harvest, and not be forced to turn them over to the Germans. Discussing the question of asylum for Axis leaders, an authority on international law said it was discre- tionary with a country whether it gave refuge to a fugitive. He re- called that in the last war Kaiser Wilhelm II of Germany took refuge in Holland, that the Versailles Trea- ty called on the Netherlands govern- ment to deliver him for trial and that Holland refused. Lady Astor Is Ration Violator LONDON; July 30.-(RP)-Lady As- tor, a familiar figure in the House of Commons but not in police court, paid $240 in fine and costs in her first appearance in famed Bow Street tnda. nn a chareo nf vioatin- ra- Montgomery Looks Over His Captive Italian Generals Gen. Sir Bernard Law Montgomery (right), commander of the British Eighth Army, is shown talking with two unidentified Italian generals after their sur render in Sicily. The conqueror of the desert took on the toughest part of the defense in Sicily and is driving ahead just as he did in Africa where he cap- tured several Italian generals. UNTIL MIGHT ISN'T RIGHT: We Must Fight Japanese, Tsang States in Discussion "We must fight and fight and fight the Japanese-until people no longer believe that might is right," C. M. Tsang, Grad., emphatically de- clared yesterday in a panel discus- sion on "China as Interpreted by the Chinese." Tracing relations between China and Japan from the 1890's, Mr. Tsang, who had studied in Japan for three years, pointed out that through the years there have been two defi- nite periods-the borrowing period and the returning period. Japan at first borrowed everything from China, from her culture and learning to her industry, he said. But when we entered the returning period, Japan returned all she had borrowed with a savageness unprece- dented in history. "In just the same way she returned your aid in the Tokyo earthquake, and your trade of scrap metal and the steel with Pearl Harbor," Mr. Tsang said. "However, we must not enslave the Japanese people. We must instead free them from their war lords; we must change their education, we must disarm them completely, and mete out a severe punishment to the Japanese military leaders," he said. "If we let them know that they are not little sons of heaven, and that we intend to live friendship with all na- tions of the world, we shall be ac- complishing a good deal in their re- education," Mr. Tsang concluded. Gerald Tien, a staff member of the Oriental Department, who was chairman of the panel said, "We do not believe that our people will relish 2 Privates Flee From Custer Police Capture after Twenty Hour Search FORT CUSTER, July 30.- (A)- Two Army privates who fled yester- day from the Sixth Service Com- mand Rehabilitation Center here have been apprehended, military au- thorities announced at 2:30 p.m. to- day. The men had fled after overpower- ing two guards and escaping with shotguns and a staff car. Fifty State Police officers and 170 members of a military police escort guard com- nnrv in A en thinmano r mo +efan Asia for the Asiatics; we know that peace is indivisible, and isolation is impossible." P. C. Hu, a member of the engin- eering school staff, in commenting on Chinese history, pointed out that the present conflict between China and Japan was not, started by the government, but by Japan, and it was the Chinese people who urged retaliation on Japan, and not the government. "That is why we have been able to endure so much," he- said. Miss C. I. Kao, a Barbour scholar, discussed the women's role in China, and Uho Tsao, chairman of the Chi- nese Student Club, commented on China's industrial development. $75,321.75 in Gifts Accepted By University The Board of. Regents met yester- day to accept gifts of $75,321.75, make 14 appointments, grant 14 leaves of absence, extend other leaves and to set up a new fund. The largest of 29 gifts was $25,860, received from the National Founda- tion for Infantile Paralysis, Inc., for the payment of virology laboratory salaries. Another gift from the foundation for laboratory expense totaled $14,140. A gift of $7,500 from the Rocke- feller Foundation to be used by the public health school for teaching public health and medical econom- ics was accepted. A pediatrics re- search fund under direction of Dr. Charles McKhann will be established with $4,000 granted by M. and R. Dietetics Laboratory. Prof. Frederick R. Blicke will con- duct research in pharmaceutical chemistry with $3,600 donated by William S. Merrell Co. Dr. Theo- dora Nelson gave an automobile to the Biological Station. Other gifts were made to various funds and research projects and were of smaller amounts. The following appointments were announced : Dr. Frederick E. Shideman, in- structor in pharmacology in medical Turn to Page 4, Col. 4 Oxford Professor To Sm ml 1r, U i mu I 3White Youths Confess Part in Recent Riots Detroit Negro Killed In Unprovoked Attack By Vicious Hoodlums DETROIT, July 30.- (P)-Prose- cutor William E. Dowling said today that three white youths, two of them teen-aged, had confessed to the mur- der of a 58-year-old Negro during the Detroit race riots June 21. Dowling said the youths told him a "story of cold-blooded murder" in the death of Moses Kiska, shot down during the evening of June 21 as he waited for a street car at Mack and Chene. The confessions of Aldo Trani, 16, Armendo Mastantuono, 20, and An- thony Saraceno, 18. solved the slay- ing of Kiska, Dowling said. A fourth youth is being questioned in connec- tion with the slaying, which was one of 13 deaths listed as unsolved dur- ing the riots. Formal Charges Withheld Formal charges were withheld, Dowling said, until questioning of the fourth youth is completed. Dowling also said that police are holding Leo Tipton, Negro whom =the prosecutor described as a "key fig-' ure" in the riots. According to Dow- ling, Tipton seized a loudspeaker microphone at a gathering of 500 Negroes in a social club late the eve- ning of Ju~ne 20 and shouted, "Every- body come on, there is a riot at Belle Isle and they have killed a colored lady and her baby." Police have said that spread of this rumor through the Negro district was largely responsible for swelling the riot to serious proportions. Dowling Tells Men's Story Dowling said Trani and 'Mastan- tuono told him the following story of the Kiska slaying: "Trani and Mastantuono were out driving and stopped at one of their favorite hangouts, a pool room at Superior and Moran. They saw the two other youths, whom they said they knew as 'Bob' a'nd 'Blackie.' The four of them got into the car and decided to 'go and get us some niggers.' "Mastantuono had a rifle. At Mack and Chene they saw Kiska waiting in the street car zone. Trani Turn to Page 3, Col. 5 Legality of Guerrilla Groups Denied ST.N.nTCr Tiilx rn - o\r> ..a f Nazi Plane Factory Is Bombarded American Fortresses - Add Explosive Epilogue To Week of Invasion By The Associated Press LONDON, July 30.-Flying For- tresses in strong force battered a. German plane factory at Kassel to-. day while lesser American and Allied" planes swept northern France and the Low Countries in force in an ex- plosive epilogue to a 2,300-ton bomb- ing of burning Hamburg in its sev- enth attack in a week. The Fortresses shot down 27 of the 52 or more German fighters destroy, ed in the daylight sweeps, among the heaviest of the Allied aerial offen-. sive. Eleven Fortresses, one medium bomber, three light bombers and se' en fighters were lost in a 61-22 vie- tory score. Bombers Head Back Again Massive formations of Allied bomb'.. ers headed for the continent again late tonight, after the day-raiditnr. Americans returned, in this unprec edented hammering of Germany. -- The Hamburg raid was "in very great strength" and was part of a sustained Allied effort to blot Ger- many's second city off the map with its great submarine works and other war plants. It was the third raid in the series of seven in which 2,300 long tons of explosives had plum meted on the city. of 1,600000 and the blockbusters were showering 'down at the rate of 50 tons a minute for three quarters of an hour. Fortress crews at a U. S. bomber station in England said Nazi fight- er opposition was slackening steadi- ly Testation's unmanding officer estimated that in the current aerial offensive Fortresses alone have knocked out plants producing be- tween 50 and 75 per cent of the Nazis' vaunted Focke Wulf 190 fighters. He said "we have demonstrated this week we can go anywhere we want to go in Germany." "Never before in the history of war- fare has an attack of such weight and persistence been made against a single industrial target," the Air Ministry news service said. "No other target in Germany has had more than a 2,000-ton attack." Fires Burn Six Days Fires have been licking at Ham- burg's widening wounds without halt for six days and nights. U. S. medium bombers raided ene- my airfields at Woendsdrecht in Hol- land, destroying six enemy planes. They were covered by British and Dominion Spitfires. RAF Boston bombers, escorted by Spitfires and Typhoons, attacked the Schipol Air- field at Amsterdam, destroying three Nazi craft. The British also pounded the Courtrai and Coxyde fields in Belgium. An idea of the scale of the day- light raids was suggested in an Air Ministry statement that 500 British fighters alone participated. Kassel Raid Is Sixth U.S. Raid The U. S. raid' on Kassel was the sixth American assault on Germans' in seven days and brought to 10 the total made by U. S. big bombers this month. An American-British communique said it was highly successful. Heavy concentrations of bombs were seen exploding all over the huge Fieseler Aircraft plant at Kassel, said to turn out 500 engines monthly for Messer- schmitts and Focke Wulf fighters and other vital plane parts. Crews said smoke billowed up from the area as high as 10,000 feet. Hookup Sells For 8 Million NEW YORK, July 30.- ()- The Blue Network Company, Inc., first coast to coast hookup in the history of radio to be offered to the highest bidder, was purchased for $8,000,000 cash late today by Edward J. Noble, business man and owner of a New York local station, from the Radio Corporation of America. A brief statement from RCA said: li oTil Q v-* - - 3- . - -