i d itt an I ati Weather Warmer G I VOL. LIl, No. 30-S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, AUG. 7, 1943 PRICE FIVE CENTS -I_______ _________ I azis Try To Stem Evacuation of .Berlin Kharkov Is Threatened in Soviet Drive Russians Outflank Key German Base, Take Zolochev in Northwest By The Associated Press LONDON, Saturday, Aug. 7-Rus- siafl armies breaking into the Uk- raine on a 43-mile front outflanked the big German base of Kharkov yes- terday by capturing Zolochev, 25 miles to the northwest, in a continu- ing summer campaign that already has cost the Germans 120,000 killed + nd 12,418 prisoners. Gains up to 37 miles were scored in the smash west of Belgorod which cut the Kharkov-Bryansk railway at Zolochev, and the Russians also drove onward through Orel farther north in, the surge toward Bryansk, said a special victory bulletin. Dneper Offensive Indicated In the southeast other Russian units were reported on the move in the Donets Basin, capturing several German-held heights southwest of Voroshilovgrad. This indicated a gen- eral Soviet offensive aimed at hurling the Germans far back to the Dnieper River. - The Russians killed 2,000 Germans during the day in the drive that toppled. Zolochev and straddled the enemy's communication lines above Kharkov, the midnight communique said. This seizure posed a pincer threat to the great industrial center because the Germans said another Russian army was massed for action near Chuguev, 24 miles southeast of Kharkov. Kharkov, Bryansk Bombed Soviet bombers pounded both Kharkov and Bryansk ahead of the Red armies that had taken Orel and Belgorod on Thursday. The drive carried into the Ukraine -or r of Kharkov aid ent ereden to earlier Moscow reports that the whole German front in Russia was threatened with collapse and that the Nazis might be forced back to the Dneiper, 270 miles west of Belgo- rod. Bryansk itself to the north was threatened by Soviet armies rushing through Orel, those troops gained up to six miles today beyond fallen Orel, the bulletin said, and captured 70 more hamlets, including Kromi, 26 miles southwest of Orel. RFeed Elected Engine Head Karl Reed of Erie, Pa., was elected president of the October graduating class of the engineering college today. Secretary. of the class is Howard J. Howerth of Detroit, while James Ilitz Gerald of Muskegon is the new treasurer. Reed, a mechanical engineer, is treasurer of the Engineering Council, chairman of the Engineering Honor Council, a member of Vulcans and former president of Trigon frater- nity. Engine Council President Howerth, a mechanical engineer, is a member of Interfraternity Council, Triangles, Men's Judiciary Committee and of Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity. Fitz Gerald is a chemical engineer. OPA Urges 'U' Students To Protest Food Prices Local Official Requests Action on Ceiling Violations; Week of April 4-10 Is Base Period Have you paid more for your meals this week than you did during the week of April through April 10? If so, the Office of Price Administration urges you to lodge a complaint against the offending restaurant, Mrs. Anita Branson, price clerk of the local board, said yesterday. Offenders Are Not Known "Students should realize that they are entitled to register a complaint. We cannot act unless we know who the offenders are. "The students eating out every day are in a better position to judge price changes than the general public," she said. "We have on file the This Is a Giant Task for a Lowly Jeep .; _Q Reds Clean Up 'Orel °'im~Lodoga LJ~~eningrad Loxe "tfi ~tafaya VyitebaI5 MC SOVIET RUSSIA 0 200 STATUTE MIS \ Lo/ 190 OSCOW ~..Smolensk Kharkovwo ~Voroshilov Od ssa oronezh ' "' vrtsvoopsi * '* " Russian troops were reported cleaning out the last pockets of resistance in Orel (arrow) as they directed their drive in the direc- tion of Kiev. Black line indicates battlefront. Shaded area was once held by the Germans and satellites. their Yanks Smash Fleein Ja ps At Munda.Base By The Associated Press ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN THE SOUTHWEST PACIFIC, Sat- urday, Aug. 7.-The United States jungle fighters who captured the Munda air base and crushed all or- ganized resistance of the Japanese now have chased fleeing remnants into nearby mangrove swamps where they are being annihilated. The bloody mopping up operations were related in a communique from Gen. Douglas MacArthur issued to- day on the first anniversary of the American offensive in the Solomons. The jungle troops pushed north and northeast of yesterday's bomb and shell battered scene of victory to hunt down what few Japanese have not been slain. Meager reports from the South Pacific indicate that the 1,671 enemy dead mentioned in a special com- munique recording the fall of Munda, on New Georgia, may represent only a partial count of the enemy losses inflicted as American infantrymen drove across the airdrome behind the withering fire of tanks and flame throwers. Rekata Bay is on the coast of Santa Isabel Island lying 100 miles northeast of Munda. t> menus of every restaurant in Ann Arbor for the base period. Mrs. Branson pointed out that stu- dents should be sure of their charge, and in order that they know their, rights under the price-holding law she clarified the following points: If servings are cut, then the price should also be cut. If during the base week the particular restaurant included dessert and soup with their meal they must continue to serve the various courses now. When a restaurant owner strikes one of his cheaper meals from the menu he is violating the law and can be prosecuted. For instance, if the lowest price meal formerly on the menu was 65 cents and it now is 75 cents i guilty of a law viola- tion. A restaurant owner is entitled to charge higher prices on Sundays, providing the prices charged on Sun- day, April 4, were higher than the rest of the week. Sherbets and ice creams should cost approximately the same; and the consumer should not be charged more for'ice cream rather than sher- bet in a sundae. However, the pro- prietor has the right of substituting sherbet for ice cream since the con- sumption of the latter is cut. Portion Variations Clarified A restaurant owner cannot escape the letter of the law by adding a word "large" to the menu. For in- stance,. if .on .April 4 French fried potatoes sold for 15 cents, the addi- tion of "large" does not make a 20 cent price legal. To register a complaint any stu- dent may call 3545 and speak to the price clerk Mrs. Branson. "However, it is preferable to make the com- plaint in person, being sure that it is valid." Molly Pitcher Tag Drive To Close Today One hundred representatives of the women's division of the War Bond and Stamp Committee will be sta- tioned on street corners, in building entrances, and other public places today in the final day of the Molly Pitcher tag drive to promote the sale of war bonds and stamps. The women, under the direction of Mrs. Charles Noble, will present to each purchaser of a war bond or stamp a red, white, and blue tag in the shape of a pitcher. Molly Pitcher, long a symbol of the heroism of American women, was chosen as honory figure for the tag drive' for her action in the Revolu- tionary War. For her heroism, Gen- eral George Washington made her the first woman sergeant in the Army by brevet. An American Jeep weighing less than a ton pulls freight cars weighing many tons each as the U.S. Army handles supplies on a railroad siding in India. This is an official OWI photo. PLANES HIT MESSINA:- Yanks Take Cagliano in Drive on Escape Route By The Associated Press ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AFRICA, Aug. 6.- British and Canadian forces were reported tonight to be only several thousand yards from Adrano, key point in the last enemy defense lines around Mt. Etna and 20 miles northwest of captured Catania. The U.S. Seventh -rmy was besieging Troina to the northwest where an American officer said 'both Axis supply roads leading to the town were under American artiller fire. "They - will have to give up ur fall backi soon," he said. O M T ed PlanesHit Messina Flying Fortresses-heavy artilleryr of the air-blasted at Messina toY disrupt evacuation of German troops, e indicating that the battle for SicilyAicf t a o was nearing its climax.. Americans on the north coast, WASHINGTON, Aug. 6.-(AP)- stronaly sunnrted by sea and air, bombardments, and British van- guards on the east both were fight- ing about 50 miles from Messina. Other British Eighth Army units were beating northwest around Mt. Etna, from Paterno toward Adrano. Troops Make Progress Canadians and British in a cen- tral push are making "steady prog- ress" toward Adrano astride the Mt. Etna base road, today's Allied com- munique announced. Axis resistance here continued strong. Troina is a main shield for with- drawal of Axis forces from the south and central sectors of the bridgehead following the fall of Catania. The Germans have thrown every type of weapon into defense of Tro- ina, using mortars abundantly to carpet surrounding hills and valleys with shells. Troina Is Taken (Field dispatches reaching head- quarters three days ago said Troina had been taken, and Prime Minister Churchill earlier had said the Ameri- cans had entered the town, but ap- parently the Germans counterat- tacked before the entry could be con- solidated.) American artillery helped the ad- vance of doughboys up the steep rocky slopes to win positions in the hills near Troina after crack combat teams had been unable to smash down the town's defenses. Concerned that airplane production goals may not be met, the Office of War Mobilization is heading up a survey by government production and manpower agencies of the aircraft industry's difficulty in maintaining needed working forces. Bernard Baruch, special adviser to War Mobilization Director James F. Byrnes, said today that the survey has been underway for several weeks. He emphasiped that "it is entirely a question of manpo\ver." Baruch did not go into details of the problem. Managers of some air- plane plants, however, have ex- pressed concern over losses of work- ers both to other war plants and to the armed forces. Robert E. Gross, president of the Lockheed Aircraft Corporation, told a house committee this week that the government must decide "whether airplanes or soldiers are needed from aircraft plants." The committee, in- vestigating the effect of the draft on war plants, has been holding hearings on the west Coast. Convocations Will Be Aug. 15 Summer Session graduates will be honored at a convocation program at 8 p.m. Aug. 15 in Hill Auditorium, Dr. Louis A. Hopkins, director of the Summer Session, announced yester - day. An address will be given by E. Blythe Stason, dean of the law school, and special music will be ar- ranged by Prof. Palmer Christian of the music school. Most of the 550 students who will go throughgthe convocation cere- mnony are high school teachers whol will receive advanced degrees. This year's ceremony replaces the Summer Session breakfast which was held in former years. Lt. Recknagel, '41, Is KilledI.in Action Lt. Arnold H. Recknagel, a former University student from Detroit, was reported killed in action in the South Pacific by the War Department yes- Hamburg Blitz Is First Full Use of Planes Pattern of Devastation Will Be Extended to Other German Cities By WILLIAM F. FRYE Associated Press Correspondent WASHINGTON, Aug. 6.-()--The smashing of Hamburg, in the view of American experts, is the war's first example of the complete use of air poweriand the pattern of the devas- tation to be extended to other Ger- man cities. It was not, as has been suggested in some quarters, a "terror" opera- tion, nor was it simply a ruthless lab- oratory test. . On the contrary, it was an attack on a prime military target-the next and center of German submarine production-and fortuitous circum- stances made it the first completely successful strategic bombing opera- tion. Day, Night Bombing Combined Here, for the first time, daylight precision bombing and night area bombing were teamed to perfection, with enough planes to keep the oper- ation moving day after day, and with weather which allowed the U.S. 8th Air Force and the Royal Air Force to carry the attack through to com- pletion-the absolute smashing of a city the size of Philadelphia, the greatest port of continental Europe, and a key point in the communica- tions system which is vital to Ger- many's prosecution of the war. The Flying Fortresses of the 8th Air Force picked off the vital cen- ters, the factories, power houses, key junctions, while the R.A.F. moved in at night and leveled the city. Civilian Bombing Necessary Ruthless as this destruction of res- idential quarters of a great city may seem to the distant observer, it is an integral part of the nmilitary attack. Experience has shown that in other area-bombed cities, the Germans have been able to repair the factories, and move the bulk of civilian pop- ulation out. This latter, however, was done not out of humanitarian interest in the comfort and safety of the civilians, but merely as the quickest and cheapest way of providing new hous- ing for the essential workers in the war industries. To prevent that, the wrecking of all housing facilities became nec- essary. That the R.A.F. has found it nec- essary to return time after time to such cities as Cologne, Essen and Duesseldorf, the experts explain, is due to two facts-area bombing of the ,type done by the R.A.F. is not sufficient to wreck the production facilities because there is no guar- antee of desroying the key points, and in a large industrial concentra- tion, precision plus area bombing will wreck the productive capacity of the factories only if weather permits con- tinuing the attack until the target is shambles beyond hope of repair. Poll Is Not Tabulated amburg Fate Snaps Frayed Nerves of City Terrified Population Flees from Expected RAF Bombing Attacks By The Associated Press LONDON, Aug. 7, Satu'rday Ger- man authorities were reported today frantically trying "to control a mass stampede" from panic-stricken Ber- lin where bomb-shocked Hamburg refugees have spread horror stories snapping the already frayed nerves of Berliners expecting imminent RAF mass air attacks. Spanish correspondents hinted that non-military developments of unusual import were going on in Berlin, and Nazi propaganda Minis- ter Goebbels acknowledged a "partial evacuation" of the capital because of fears of attacks on the devastating Hamburg scale. Strikes Are Reported Strikes and other troubles also were reported brewing in Germany at a time of sagging morale caused by German reverses in the air and afield. Reuters, British News Agency, quoted arrivals in Zurich from Berlin as reporting that thousands of refu- gees from bomb-smashed Hamburg were spreading tales in Berlin of fantastic casualties in the Allied raids, and that these persons have been arrested in feverish efforts to slow the growing panic. Reuters also said reports were cir- culating "in German circles at Istan- bul, Turkey," that the Germans were preparing to proclaim Berlin an open city and evacuate the ministries and other services to Dresden, Leipzig, Munich and Prague. Leaflets Warn Berlin of Bombing Swedish dispatches at the same time related that the RAF yesterday had showered leaflets over the Reich capital, warning the people that Ber- lin would serve as a sequel to the fite of Hamburg, which has become the world's most-bombed city recently. In the recent week-long series of air attacks on Hamburg, 200,000 cas-, ualties were suffered, it has been estimated. (A CBS correspondent at Bern, Switzerland, quoted the Nazi news- paper in Bern, Das Volker, as report- ing a wave of strikes in German war plants where "the workers refused to return to their benches even after they were offered additional food ra- tions . . . the benches now had been occupied by troops of the Gestapo.") Correspondents Report Censorship During the past week Spanish cor- respondents in Berlin have all ended their dispatches with mysterious ref- erences to news they could report if Nazi censorship permitted. For ex- ample, a dispatch to Informaciones in Madrid today ended: "Obliged by circumstances to limit ourselves to military events, we must leave for another day subjects by no means less interesting." Even Goebbels acknowledged that Berlin's population was thinning out, but he said it was not a mass exacua- tion as yet. Railroad Heads F ail T'o Reach Wage Decisions WASHINGTON, Aug. 6.- ()- Chiefs of 15 non-operating railroad unions and railroad management of- ficials held two inconclusive meet- ings today on the union's wage pro- posals and agreed to reconvene'again tomorrow. Neither side would discuss devel- opments, but the unions were re- ported to have asked for a contract increasing wages 8 cents an hour as recommended by an emergency board. Stabilization director Fred M. Vinson set aside the board's rec- ommendation on the grounds it vio- lated the government's anti-inflation policy. The union representatives, however, are confident they can get government approval if management goes along. Italy's Minister Meets Ribbentrop BERN, Switzerland, Aug. 7, Satur- day-- ()- The new Italian foreign AP CORRESPONDENT REPORTS ON BALKAN FRONT: Allies Eye Dardanelles as Supply Route By WILLIAM E. KING Associated Press Correspondent ANKARA, Turkey.-The Darda- nelles, famed as the scene of ro- mantic swims as well as the stra- tegically important gateway be- tween the Black Sea and the Med- iterranean, once again are the cynosure of covetor 3eyes as a pos- sible prize of war. The western half of the Turkish stfaits, swum by the love-stricken Leander of the Hellenistic love- storyland by the poet Byron 133 years ago, could become an impor- tant supply route for the embat- tied Russian Army. Attempted in War I Twenty-eight years ago, during The vital waterway would mean to Russia roughly what the strait of Gibraltar and the Panama Canal mean to the Allies. However, it cannot become an alternative to the overland supply route through Iraq until Russia has won back the Crimea and the Allies conquer the southern end of the Balkan penin- sula and the Aegean Sea. Agreement Signed in '36 On paper, the straits cannot be used by commercial vessels assist- ing at war. This was decreed by a treaty signed in 1936 by Turkey on one hand and Great Britain, France, Russia, Japan, Rumania, Yugoslavia, Bulgaria and Greece supply ship - even with full Turkish cooperation-mostly a matter of luck. The recapture of Crete and a landing in Greece would not free. Allied shipping on the Aegean side of the Dardanelles. The German- held key to the straits is the oddly- shaped little island of Lemnos. Its capture can hardly be expected before Salonika is taken, which in turn implies a well advanced Bal- kan campaign. Axis Controls Western Sea Once through the Bosphorus, Russia-bound Allied shipping now would have to run the gauntlet of A vic ur nr c,. alc .r'inh a lfb.h l . mouthed Russians give out little information on its strength and disposition. The Germans, in their land cam- paign which captured the impor- tant Russian naval bases of Se- bastopol and Novorossisk, never claimed to have stifled Russia's Black Sea fleet, now based mainly at Batum at the easternmost tip of the sea. When the Russians begin push- ing the Germans from their soil they might with success launch a sea offensive to sweep Axis raider craft from the Black Sea. That the Allies may almost any momdent begin swarming up the