irt qrni 4ati Weather Little Change. VOL. LIII, No. 32-5 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, AUG. 11, 1943- PRICE FIVE CENTS Churchill Arrives in *" Canada for 1 Post-War World Transportation Dream -Daily Photo by George R. Clark Pictured above is Karl Schakel, beside the helicopter which he and Corwin Denney designed and built at the Ann Arbor Citty Airport. Sehakel and Denney hope to have "all the bugs out" within a month. The youthful engineers are planning to begin production of the heli- copters by the beginning of the year. HEAD IN THE CLOUDS: Local Engineers Build Helicopter for War Use 0~ -By BUD BRIMMER Two youthful Ann Arbor aero- nautical engineers, both fresh from college, are singing a new tune today. Instead of promising to "fill the air with bombers," they're planning to do it with helicopters. After working three months in their small machine shop at the Ann Arbor airport, Corwin Denny, who graduated from the University engineering college last January, and Karl Schakel, a 1941 gradu- ate of Purdue, have produced a helicopter, new and original in its design, which actually flies. Neither of them had ever seen a helicopter before their own was built, bt proceeding on theories and de- Sgns which Denney developed while a sophomore in college, they built a cabin-type, two-seater flying model, complete with three "wind-mill" ro- tors, a torque-compensating rear prbpeller, and a tricycle landing gear. Their plane is slightly longer than an ordinary light airplane. S)0der Web in Aluminum Right now the Schakel-Denney, helicopter is a spider-web of alumi- num tubing-it still lacks those or- naments of design which soon will niake it as modern-looking as any engineer's "dream-ship." But, recent performance tests indicate that this m'ay be one of the best helicopters yet produced. The tests proved that he plane can easily lift itself from he ground using less than half the {horsepower of its single engine. Ul- timately, Schakel and Denney esti- mate, it will carry either four per- sons or two and a cargo. It is ex- pected to have a cruising speed of 100 miles per hour-40 miles an hour fater than the known speed of any other helicopter. In talking about their plane, Den- ney, who just turned 22 last month, and Schakel, who is now 21, are quick to point out its unique features of design. Its "safety-angles" are numer- ous, but the most important one, they claim, is that the passengers are seated directly under the ro- tor-hub and the engine has been placed in the nose of the fuselage. Thus, in case of a blade failure, Music School o Give Opera Repertory Group Also To Participate Tonight The final offering of the summer drama season, "Hansel and Gretel" will be presented at 8:30 p.m. today :in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre by the Michigan Repertory Players of the speech department and the School of Music. Appearing in the leading roles will be Jacqueline Behr and Charlotte Mullin as Gretel, Barbara Pierson as ,Hansel, Dorothy Feldman as the the pilot will run no risk of being struck by unattached rotors. Also, the placement of the engine and passengers gives their helicopter a variable passenger capacity. Since the latter are seated under the rotor-hub at the center of gravity, no compensating weights need be added to the tail to make the ship balance when an extra passenger steps in Yet another unique feature of their plane is its method of synchronizing the torque-compensating propeller with the main rotor, so that in or- dinary forward flight it is not nec- essary to adjust the pitch of the rear propeller to any operating rotor blade speed.I Their pilot's control system, too, is super-simplified, so that accord- ing to their own estimate "practi- cally anyone can learn to fly it in an hour while it is tethered to the ground." Visibility is better than in the averageautomobile, they claim, and since propeller noise is at a minimum in any helicopter, in this particular model an ordinary conversation may be held while flying. Their 1 exact technical improve- ments, however, are a military se- cret-to-be, since Denney and Schakel expect an Army Air Corps contract. One of the biggest and darkest se- crets concerns the rotors and their hub, which Denney said "have an unusually favorable combination of structural and aero-dynamic prop- erties." Built Small Scale Models After conceiving his idea for the plane while working with Prof. Ed- ward A. Stalker, formerly of the University's aeronautical engineering department, Denney built small scale-models of it and then last summer attempted to construct a full-size model at his home in Wash- ington Court House, O. The at- tempt, however, was halted by finan- cial difficulties. Upon graduating from Michigan last January, Denney worked in an Ohio aircraft plant and there met Schakel, who had done extensive work in amateur glider construc- tion and flying. Mutually inter- esteo in helicopters, they began to look for financial "backers" and their revolutionary designs finally secured them the financial assis- tance of Aeronautical Products, Inc. Denney and Scbakel took the job April 8, and got actual construction rolling a week later. Their biggest handicap was finding skilled or ex- perienced shop-labor. In McNeil Smith, an Ann Arbor mechanic, they found a capable shop foreman, but they had to resort to high school students and college draftsmen for other laborers. Dissemble Plane for Alterations At present they've dissembled the plane to make minor alterations, or "to get the bugs out of it," as Denney cevnlriined ~it T Nouruhe.nice Allies Close On Nazis for Messina Kill Yanks Smash on to Randazzo, Italian Troops Withdrawn By The Associated Press ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AFRICA, Aug. 10.-Allied forces, smashing the center of the German line northwest of Mount Et- na, drove today to within 7 miles of battered Randazzo, one of the last of the enemy's hedge hog defenses on the road to Messina from Central Sicily. Harold V. Boyle, Associated Press Correspondent with American troops fighting toward Randazzo, reported that American soldiers have smashed their way to within seven miles of the city "in mule pack, mountain war- fare." The Americans also have taken the western terminus of a long sought, hidden German supply road that had helped the Nazis bring up heavy artillery, 'ammunition and troops in the rugged terrain between Cesaro in the hills and Sant' Agata Di Militello on the north coast, he said. Make Relentless Progress (A Reuthers report said the Ameri- cans, advancing from Cesaro, were only two miles from Randazzo. As the Sicilian campaign entered its second month, American, Cana- dian and British troops were official- ly reported to be making relentless though unspectacular progress in forcing the fiercely resisting Ger- mans back into the Sicilian funnel at Messina. Report All Troops Withdrawn It was reported that the Rome radio announced that all Italian troops had been withdrawn from the Sicilian front because of the over- whelming superiority of Allied Forces. The radio asserted that "if the Americans pay a proportionate price for Italy as they have paid for Sicily, they will be in a state of utter exhaustion at the end of the war." Randazzo was still ablaze from ceaseless air raids some of which continued without a break through- out entire days. The full power of the Allied Air Forces, which are in complete command of the skies over Sicily and Southern Italy, has torn against this highway keypoint. May Proposes Drafting Limit For Fathers WASHINGTON, Aug. 10. -(P)- Legislation prohibiting the drafting of fathers and setting a definite limit on the size of the armed forces- probably at 10,000,000-was proposed today by Chairman May (Dem.-Ky.) of the House Military Committee. May announced he would intro- duce such agmeasure on Sept. 14, bhe day Congress returns from its summer recess, and said it might also provide for the discharge of fathers already in the armed serv- ices. The announcement followed a statement by Paul V. McNutt, War Manpower Director, that fathers be- tween 18 years and 38 years old would be reclassified and made avail- able for induction beginning in Oc- tober. "I think when Congress meets," May told newspapermen, "they are going to pass legislation prohibiting outright the induction of fathers. I think they will determine that the Army is big enough with the 80,000 18-year-olds being inducted monthly keeping it current. We now have under arms approximately 10,000,000 men." AFL C hinese .Ban Continues CHICAGO, Aug. 10.- ()- The American Federation of Labor went on record today against any relaxa- tion of the ban on Chinese immigra- tion. Meanwhile action on the ap- plication of the United Mine Work- ers for' re-affiliation was deferred for at least another day, after the -Associated Press Photo ON TO KHARKOV: Red Army Tightens Grip 12 Miles from Nazi Stronghold By The Associated Press LONDON, Aug. 11, Wednesday- The Red Army battered its way into the northeast Ukraine Tuesday to within 14 miles of Sumy, tightened its flanking grip around Kharkov where Russian forces were barely 12 miles from the city and smashed into a railway town 45 miles east of Bryansk, Moscow announced today. The Russians made general advances along the entire 300-mile active front. Seventy towns and villages were taken in the Kharkov advance and 30 in the Bryansk drive rolling ups the main rail line from Orel. One Soviet column, striking west toward Sumy, made a significant penetration to 14 miles southeast of the town. Their last reported posi- tions were 21 miles away. The attack toward Sumy was made at night when a Soviet unit struck to capture Bolshoi Bobrik and Borom- lya. They killed about 1,500 Ger- mans, captured 42 guns, 300 carts and other war material in the sur- prise dash. At one railroad station 250 trucks fully loaded were seized by the Russians. Sumy is 190 miles due east of Kiev and the Dnieper River, and the last important defense line in Russia, to which the Germans may now be fall- ing back. It is about 75 miles west of a line through Kharkov and may be the hub for a Russian pivot to the southwest. The Germans, falling back from Kharkov, were expected to retire to the winding river which bends around to the southeast in this area. Northwest and west of Kharkov the Red troops were "grinding down enemy reserves which have been brought up," said the Moscow mid- night communique, recorded by the Soviet monitor.i Navy TO Sing At Convocations,, 550 Students Will Be Graduated Sunday Seventy-three sailors and nine marines, forming the personnel of a new Navy-Marine chorus, will ap- pear on the Honors Convocation pro- gram for summer session graduates at 8 p.m. Sunday in Hill Auditorium. The training unit chorus, organ- ized and supervised by Prof Hardin Van Deursen, conductor of the Uni- versity Musical Society, will sing the Navy hymn "Eternal Father", by John D. Dykes. The First Methodist Choir, also under the direction of Prof. Van Deursen, will present the other musi- cal part of the program. E. Blythe Stason, dean of the law school, will address the 550 students to go through the convocation cere- monies. Most of the students to be honored Saturday are high school teachers who will receive advanced degrees. This year's ceremony replaces the Prime Minister Winston Churchill and President Roosevelt are pictured above during the war par- ley held in Washington in May of this year. The Allied chiefs will confer again soon on the war prob- lems before the United Nations. At the present ti me, Churchill is in Quebec discussing the world situ- ation with Prime Minister W. L. Mackenzie King. T op advisors of Churchill's staff made the Atlantic crossing with him. FDR, Churchill To Meet Again Soon in New War Parley Large RAF Forces Batter Germany Again LONDON, Wednesday, Aug. 11- (AP)-The RAF, sweeping across the channel in waves that coastal ob- servers said indicated a raid in great force, battered Germany last night for the second successive night, the British announced to- day. From the roar of the engines of the heavy bombers it sounded like one of the biggest forces to leave England in some time. With thundering attacks on the Ruhr and Rhineland Monday night, Britain had served notice that the bombing lull was over even while the Nazis continued their anxious evacuation of unessential civilians from Berlin. RAF heavy bombers in such num- bers that channel coast residents who saw them heading eastward just be- fore midnight said the moonlit sky "seemed full of them" droned back to the big twin Rhineland industrial cities of Mannheim and Ludwigshaf- en and bombed them for the 57th time, after, a four months' respite. Allies Tig~hten Grip on Jap's Bairoko Harbor Amnericans Advance From Captured Munda 'T o Enemy Garrison ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN THE SOUTHWEST PACIFIC, Aug. 11, Wednesday- (IP)- American ground forces tightened their grip Tuesday on the only point where the Japanese are holding out on New Georgia Island at Bairoko Harbor. The left flank swept aside enemy resistance to register a substantial advance and the right flank pene- trated to a point only two miles southeast of Bairoko Harbor. Pushing north from the captured Munda airfield, where there are from 30 to 40 wrecked enemy planes and a graveyard of still uncounted Japan- ese dead, American columns deployed around a mangrove swamp north of the 'drome. The column pushing along the western fringe of the swamps met enemy resistance but official reports made no mention of enemy attempts to block the advance on the right flank which reached the Bairoko River. There it joined pa- trols from the American force which has been hemming in the Bairoko garrison from the northeast since landing near Enogai July 5. The Japanese sent a force of 50 bombers and fighters Tuesday after- noon over Rendova Island, eight miles below Munda, on which the Americans landed June 30 to set up artillery positions against the air- field. Fourteen American fighter planes -Airacobras, Kittyhawks and War- hawks- waded into the raiders, shooting down two and losing one of our own planes, whose pilot was saved. arley lied War Plans Will Be Discussed Prime Minister Talks With MacKenzie King; FDR Meeting Later By The Associated Press QUEBEC, Canada, Aug. 10.-Win- ;ton Spencer Churchill completed another venturesome Atlantic cross- ing today to perfect a pattern for global offensives in conferences with President Roosevelt and Prime Min- ister W. L. MacKenzie King of Can- ada. Britain's Doughty Prime Minis- ter arrived here in Canada's oldest city to talk first with his Canadian ally. He will see Mr. Roosevelt later, for separate Anglo-Amer- can war talks, at a time and place which cannot now be disclosed. Into these strategic conferences, carrying obviously ominous conno- tations to Axis nations wondering where the next momentous blows will fall, the three United Nations leaders are bringing their top naval, air and military advisers. Russia Not Represented Russia, intent on pressing every advantage of her victories on the entral front, will not be represented at any of the parleys. Mr. Roosevelt :isclosed that much at a press con- ference in Washington, adding that this did not mean he would not be awfully glad to have the Russians sit in. The biggest question mark hanging over the strategy parleys is where and when the invasions of the Euro- pean continent, which Churchill and the American President repeatedly have promised, will be initiated. And the answer can come, of course, only when the khaki-clad troops of the Allies pour ashore to hammer the foe with hot and cold steel. War Is Primary Interest Churchill came to Quebec as the guest of the Canadian government, but as a guest who came to concen- trate only on war. A statement issued by his office in the Chateau Fronte- nac, high above the picturesque city and the St. Lawrence River, said merely: "The Prime Minister of Great Britain has arrived in Canada ac- companied by Lord Leathers, the Minister of War Transport for the United Kingdom, and the British chiefs of staff: Mr. Churchill was received on arrival by Mr. Mac- Kenzie King and during his stay in Canada will be the guest of the Canadian government. Mr. Churchill will have discussions with Mr. MacKenzie King and later on will attend a conference with President Roosevelt and the combined chiefs of staff of the United States and the United Kingdom. FDR Confers With Officials WASHINGTON, Aug. 10. - () - President Roosevelt met with high military and State Department ad- visers today in conferences possibly preliminary to his forthcoming new war talks with Prime Minister Churchill. Gathering at the White House for one conference were Secretary of State Hull, Undersecretary Welles, Chairman Norman Davis of the Red Cross, Dr. Isaiah Bowman of Johns Hopkins University, and Dr. Leo Pas- volsky, special assistant Secretary of State in charge of post-war plan- ning. This was followed later by a meet- ing of the President with Admiral William D. Leahy, his personal Chief of Staff; Admiral Ernest J. King, Chief of Naval Operations; General George T. Marshall, Army Chief of Staff, and General Henry H. Arnold, Commander of the Army Air Forces. Algiers Reports on Frecl Committee ALGIERS, Aug. 10. - (A) - The United States and Britain were re- ported tonight to have agreed to rec- ognize the French Committee of Na- tional Liberation as the de facto gov- SPEECH ASSEMBL Y: Dr. Lwbaik "o Talk Of Iy on TPers ntasion or Propaganda?' The final speech assembly of the summer session will be held at 3 p.m. today when Dr. Henry L. Etwbank, professor of speech at the University of Wisconsin, speaks on "Persuasion or Propaganda?" in the Rackham Amphitheatre. Prof. Ewbank, who was the former president of the National Association of Teachers of Speech and of Delta Sigma Rho, national honorary fra- ternity, has recently become interes- ted in radio education. "The Wisconsin Project," a book compiled by a committe headed by