I r sl it431fl /a111 W eather ittle Change i VOL. LIII, No. 17-S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1943- PRICE FIVE CENTS U.S. Sinks Three Jap Ships ff Ul nda C® Spearhead Pushes into South Sicily Italian Troops Mutiny Against Nazis; British Shatter German Tanks By The Associated Press ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AFRICA, July 20.- With some Italian troops reported in mu- tinies against German officers and surrendering in great batches, Amer- ican forces are spearing deeper in- land in a mighty drive to chop Sicily in two and are fanning swiftly along the southern coast, Allied headquar- ters announced today. British Shatter Tanks In the East near strategic Catania, British troops shattered German tank attacks with bloody losses and Gen. Sir Bernard L. Montgomery was gathering strength for a blow to topple that seaport and perhaps car- ry the offensive fully sustained to Messina to seal off Sicily from the mainland. The situation clearly was critical for-the Axis. "There are many indications of mutinies among Italian troops com- manded by German officers," today's war bulletin declared. Italians Rise Against Nazis German officers have been threat- ened or killed by Italians seeking to surrender, official reports said, and the cleavage between the bitterly- resisting' Nazis and war-weary Fas- cists has become an inter-Axis strug- gle. Germany's manpower shortage in- duced the Axis high command to make what now appears to have been the mistake of using Italian troops under German officers and non- comS without.sufficient Gernman pri- vates in the same units to dominate their morale, observers said. Over-All Picture Given, This was the over-all picture of invasion. Western, (American) sector: U.S. Seventh Army troops have dashed 10 miles west along the coast from Agrigento, front dispatches said. Other units already about 30 miles inland bore a more dangerous threat, aiming at Sicily's central lifelines. From captured Caltanissetta, U.S. troops with Canadian forces are throwing a pincers upon Enna, key of the island's inner defensenastride main highways and railroads east and west. The Americans also may be thrusting northwest, toward Pa- lermo only 60 airline miles distant on the northwest coast. U.S. Continue Push "United States troops continue to push forward in the central and western sectors," headquarters said, taking prisoners by the hundreds and meeting "almost total lack of resistance." Hitler Flies To See Mussolini LONDON, July 20. -UP)- Adolph Hitler flew into Italy Monday for a conference :with Premier Mussolini, the Axis announced tonight, indi- cating the Nazis ares gravely con- cerned over the fate of their junior partner, trembling under Allied at- tack. London sources said the con- ference, held at an unnamed town in northern Italy, apparently was a last-minute attempt to whip up the flagging spirits of Italy, whose em- pire has been lost, her European soil invaded and her capital bombed. Choice of yesterday as the meeting day was a curious one for Mussolini. While the dictators were discussing "military questions," Rome was being pounded by more than 500 bombers in the biggest raid to come Il Duce's way. The meeting-first since the dic- tators conferred at Salzburg April 7-10 while the position of Tunisia was becoming serious-was not un- expected in view of recent Allied suc- cesses. The fact that Hitler went into Italy was interpreted in some quarters here as an indication that Mussolini is holding the whip hand at the mo- ment-and the only whip Mussolini UMW-AFL Take Steps To Unite Again Lewis Confers with Tobin in Three-Hour Session; Outlook Better By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, July 20.-Reaffili- ation of the United Mine Workers of America with the American Federa- tion of Labor appeared a step nearer today following a three-hour confer- ence between John L. Lewis and ex- ecutives of the AFL. UMW Left AFL 5 Years Ago Lewis and his United Mine Work- ers left the AFL more than five years ago, when the mine union leader started the CIO. His recently-filed application for reaffiliation is to be acted on by the AFL executive coun- cil when it meets next month in Chicago. Daniel J. Tobin, AFL vice-president who heads a three-man committee studying the Lewis application, told reporters the outlook for reaffiliation "looks somewhat better" after today's meeting. Accepts AFL Asked what he thought about the outlook, Lewis handed reporters a brief statement asserting that "in the interest of unifying the policies of organized labor" the UMW "has pro- posed reaffiliation" and "in doing so it accepts the American Federation of Labor as it now exists, and ex- pects the' American Federation of Labor to accspt the United Mine Workers of America as it no exists." Neither Lewis nor Tobin would say whether jurisdictional obstacles had been settled, or even discussed, or whether another meeting would be necessary before the Chicago session. War Is Run by Business Men Ickes Charges Faults Are Not New Dealers' NEW YORK, July 20.-(P)-Inter- ior Secretary Ickes said today that drafted businessmen were running the war and "if the war program has broken down at any point, it hasn't been chargeable to the 'Brain Trust- ers,' to the 'New Dealers' or to the Bureaucrats.'" "It isn't the New Dealers who have been running this war," he said in an address before the sales executive club. "I challenge anyone to ngme names and fix responsibilities. If I know anything about Washington it is that business men who have been drafted have been running the war- men like Knudsen, Nelson, Stettinius, and many others whom I might men- tion. And while you are pondering this fact, consider also that many of the most influential and busiest executives in this Administration were never New Dealers. Nor are they now." Ickes said the "toughest job" of converting to war purposes fell to the Federal government Allied Bombers Hit Rome Rail Yards LS ATUT MILES - Mian Venice ° *Turn _ Bologna Plrs Genoa . Nice Leghorn ~flrence °Ancona "-Split *- -"'4 Cai -- TITALY Adriatic CORSICA _Sea Ajaccio AjcME Barletta Olbia Aghero Naples - aranto Afgher SARDINIA Oristano-. 4 Ciari tyrrh enedn Cosenza.' Sea; Palermo Messina °' ' "Cal ai BizerteC Marsala6 " ; Catania 1~) - S(CILY P.ANTELL ERIA Allied light and heavy bombers (arrow) bombed railroad marshall- ing yards in Rome, capitol of Fascist Italy which thus far escaped Allied attacks, according to a War Department announcement. Mean- while, Allied invasion of Sicily has placed one-third (black area) under control and London heard that Axis headquarters in Sicily has been transferred to Reggio Calabria (1) on the Italian mainland. * *~ * * * * ita lian ToopRevolt in Sicily Raise U.S. Hopes Collapse of West, Central Defenses May Be Near; Allied Raid on Rome Kills 166 People LONDON, July 20.-- UP-- Official news of mutinies among Italian troops in Sicily raised hopes in American quarters in London today for collapse of the defense in at least the western and central portions of the island. Meanwhile the Italian communique, admitting "very great damage," said the Allied raid on Rome yesterday had killed 166 persons, injured 1,659, and hit "11 buildings sacred to faith and science," and a Rome broad- cast termed the bombing a "psychological error" that would boost Italian fighting spirit. A Rome broadcast recorded by the Associated Press said King Vittorio Emanuele of Italy had placed 1,000,000 lire (nominally $52,600) at'the dis- a posal of Rome's governor for the aid Reds Extend Offensive to Mies River Russian Troops Break Through Nazi Lines In Front of Taganrog By The Associated Press LONDON, July 20.- The great Russian summer offensive broke out over a 450-mile front Tuesday, ex- tending from the Orel sector, where that vital Axis-held "hinge" city was threatened with encirclement, to the Mius River, where Red army troops breached German defenses in front of Taganrog, it was announced in a special Soviet communique tonight. Troops Break Across Mius The Russians said their troops had broken across the Mius River and also the northern Donets River south of Izyum and southwest of Voroshi- lovgrad, in an area about 300 miles south of Rel, apparently aiming at the heart of the Donets basin. Here strong German forces had thrust back deep into the rich industrial territory last spring to recapture Slavyansk and other steel and rail centers as part of that offensive that reclaimed Kharkov. 50 Towns Recaptured At least 50 more towns were recap- tured by the Soviet forces driving on Orel, including Mtsensk, 31 milesl northeast of Orel on the railroad to Moscow, and Bolkhov, 32 miles north1 of Orel, the Soviet special war bulle- tin declared. It was broadcast by the Moscow radio and recorded by the Soviet radio Monitor here. The Soviet midnight communique, broadcast by the Moscow radio sev- eral hours after the special war bul- letin detailed the new successes, saidT the offensive about Orel was con- tinuing without let-up despite spir- ited German resistance which was costing the enemy heavily. Germans Hit South of Orel Another Moscow broadcast dis- closed that in a prelude to Tuesday's smashing land offensive, large forces of Russian heavy bombers smashed at German concentrations and air- dromes southeast of Orel late Mon- day night, destroying a "considerable; number" of Nazi air force planes, caught on the ground. Moscow's midnight communique listed more than 4,700 of the enemy killed in engagements about Orel and Belgorod, with another 1,000 declared to have been killed or wounded and 140 tanks disabled or destroyed, in addition to 53 artillery, mortar and self-propelling gun bat- teries put out of action. Rev. White To Speak Today Inter-Racial Society Is Sponsoring Lecture Interpreting tge nation-wide race riots in a speech on "Recent Trends in Racial Relationships" the Rev. Horace White of the Plymouth Con- gregational Church, Detroit, will speak at the first meeting of the Inter-Racial Association at 8:30 p.m. today in the Union. A speaker before University aud- iences in the past, the Rev. White is a former member of the state legis- lature and of the Detroit Housing Commission. He was one of the leaders in Detroit who distributed leaflets asking his people not to be- come involved in the recent riots. Navy Projects 6 More Years Of Jap War Liberator Bombers Strike Paramushiro, Key Tokyo Outpost By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, July 20. - The Navy publicly projected six more years of war against Japan today, and within the hour announced that great Liberator bombers striking far beyond their Aleutians base on the short route to Tokyo had damaged heavily the strategic enemy outpost of Paramushiro. U.S. Planes Attack Jap Side This bastion is on the northern- most of the Kurile Islands which stretch south 700 mileselike a dagger pointing to the Japanese mainland. To raid Paramushiro, American planes of the North Pacific Command made their first announced attack mission over the enemy side of the Pacific. Issuance of the' battle report so soon after a press conference set up by Secretary Knox to knock down false optimism in this country sug- gested that if there are to be six more years of Pacific fighting, as Vice Admiral Frederick J. Horne intimated to the conference, they will be spent largely in Japan's own waters. Navy Will Cover Escape Horne, stressing this prospect, said that from here on the American Nayy would be working all over the ocean while Japan would be fighting on steadilyashortening interior lines. Moreover the Admiral, who is Vice- Chief of Naval gperations, said the United States must build island bases from the ground up as it advances, and it must be prepared for the heavy fleet losses always expected in offensive operations. - Horne was one of four persons who discussed the war situation and its relation to munitions production at Secretary Knox's press conference. The others were Charles E. Wilson, executive vice chairman of War Pro- duction Board; James V. Forrestal. Undersecretary of the Navy; and Knox. 'We Are Over Optimistic' Knox himself declared that we are "already feeling the effects" of over- optimism about the war's end. He said that these effects are apparent in a drop in production. Wilson reported that the aircraft industry should produce 8,500 planes in July because it had the facilities, materials and manpower to reach that scheduled peak. However, he said, there is every prospect that it will fail to achieve the goal. Knox blamed this on complacency which he said robbed workers of their "will to produce." ous and difficult. A slow but con- stant deterioration of his beleaguered garrison can be expected unless our blockade ring can be broken." Total Losses Listed Repulse of the fourth Japanese naval attempt to run the steadily- tightening American sea and air gauntlet into Munda brought the official toll of enemy military ship- ping losses in Solomons waters to: Sunk-three cruisers, 13.destroy- ers, one submarine chaser, five cargo vessels and one tanker. Probably sunk-five destroyers. Damaged-five destroyers and five cargo vessels. Catalina flying boats picked up the Japanese force of three light cruis- ers, six destroyers and two trans- ports in the gulf between Vella La- vella and Kolombangara islands shortly after midnight yesterday and shadowed the enemy convoy until strong formations of Avengers, Mit- chells and Liberators arrived on the scene. Transports Head for Vila Apparently realizing that the darkness failed to conceal their movements, two ,transports with the protection of three destroyers headed for Vila, Japanese, base across Kula Gulf from -the main island of New Georgia, while the cruisers and re- maining destroyers steamed farther offshore to give a flanking cover. Board To Ask InvestigationU By Grand Jury DETROIT, July 20.- (P)- Mayor Edward J. Jeffries' Inter - Racial Board has decided to ask a grand jury investigation into the causes and circumstances of the race riots here last month which claimed 34 lives. William J. Norton, chairman of the 12-man board, said tonight the members had adopted unanimously a resolution askingrWayne County (Detroit) Prosecutor William E. Dowling for a one-man grand jury investigation of unsolved crimes growing out of the rioting. The resolution also asked that the grand jury apprehend participants in the riots, probe rumors, find insti- gators and study any other available material. A three-man subcommittee was chosen to present the matter to Dow- ling, Norton said. If appointed, the grand jury also would be charged with attempting to fix responsibility for the deaths of 13 of the riot victims. These 13, in- cluding six white victims, are listed by the police as unsolved deaths. Meanwhile, incidental phases of the rioting were still under inquiry by the police department. Land, Air, Sea Forces Decide Enemy's Doom Fourth Naval Attempt To Send Reinforcements To Beleaguered Men Repulsed by Blockade By The Associated Press ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN THE SOUTHWEST PACIFIC, July 21, Wednesday- Three more Japanese warships sank to a coral-fringed grave- yard in waters around New Georgia in the Solomons early yesterday morn- ing-victims of American bombs--as air, land and sea forces maintained overwhelming pressure to seal the doom of the beleaguered enemy at Munda. American Liberators, Mitchell and Avenger bombers thus beat off the latest attempt by the Japanes Navy to fight assistance through their hard- pressed comrades on Munda, and General Douglas MacArthur said in to- day's communique: "The tightening investment of Munda has now rendered supply or <' reinforcement of the enemy danger- Germans Execute 50 French Citizens AT THE GERMAN FRONTIER, July 20.-UP)-Fifty French citizens were executed in Paris last week in retaliation for the shooting of a Ger- man lieutenant, trustworthy infor- mation reaching this Swiss area from the former French capital revealed today. One of the 50 escaped while march- ing to the shooting-ground. He im- mediately was replaced by a man picked from the crowd of specta- tors, it was reported. Hostage executions were said to have been carried out at regular in- tervals in an effort to offset sabo- tage, but since the Axis occupation of the entire country they rarely are announced. RELIGIOUS CONFERENCE: Dr, Bernard Heller Tells of Suffering of EuropeanJews of impoverishedsfamilies "that have remained victims of the enemy's air raid." While no informed source in Lon- don was willing to make an unquali- fied prediction that the Sicilian cam- paign was heading for a swift close- within a week or so-great interest: was aroused by the Allied communi- que's statement that "there are many indications of mutinies among Ital- ians commanded by German offi- cers." ."That's most unusual language tor an official communique and there must be much behind it or it would- n't have been included,", one officer said. . * * * Rev. Mooney Regrets Raid, DETROIT, July 20.-(A')-Assert- ing that the war must be won in the. hearts and minds of men as well as on' land, on sea and in the air, the most Rev. Edward Mooney, Arch- bishop of Detroit, expressed "surprise and regret" today that Allied military authorities had taken the moral risk involved in the recent bombing of Rome. At the same time, the Archbishop who is chairman of the Administra- tive Board of the National Catholic Welfare Conference, said the Italian government could have prevented the danger to Rome's "priceless monu- ments of religion and culture" had it declared Rome an open city and acted "in sincere conformity with that declaration." New Nazi Brigade Moves Down Aegean IZMIR, Turkey, July 20.-(A')-A new German brigade was reported to- day moving down the Aegean 'Sea in the direction of the Dodecanese Islands. The first units of the brigade, "Trying as were the Jews' ordeals' throughout the 19 centuries of the Christian era, they appear as peace- ful meanderings through, gentle meadows when compared with what European Jewry had to endure dur- ing the last fifty years," Dr. Bernard Heller, well-known Jewish scholar and author, said yesterday in the first evening lecture of the ninth annual Summer Conference on Re- ligion held at the Rackham Building. "Indeed, the last stretch of the road which the Jews have been forced to traverse may veritably be termed their 'Via Dolorosa,' " he said. Jews Have No Status "People ask me about the present status of the Jew in Europe," he com- been shipped to the ghettos of Po- land to be exterminated and tortured there." Dr. Heller, who was formerly di- rector of Hillel Foundation for 9 years, cited seven outstanding ex- amples of persecutions of Jews through the pages of history. Includ- ed were the relation of the Dreyfuss affair, the Kistuneff massacre in Russia, the Mendel Berlis ritual ac- cusation, the pogrom at Pinsk and just last April the heroic sacrifice of the Jews in the ghetto at Warsaw. Use Underground Channel When asked about where he re- ceived his information concerning the atrocities committed against the Jews, he replied that his office in New York had contact with an un- derground channey. "If their stories .:.._ - f-.v " - - - n+.+1.nin - Y J EDUCATION THROUGH LECTURES: 250 Register for Wee k Conference More than 250 persons have regis- tered for the Education Conference Week now in progress, it was an- nounced yesterday by the School of Education which is sponsoring the Conference. Today's sessions will include an afternoon lecture on "Education and the People's Peace" to be de- livered by Dean J. B. Edmonson, of the School of Education. Morn- ing and early afternoon programs will consist of roundtable discus- cain&nc pannnr health and nhvsi - Yesterday's conference with the representatives centered around the topic, "Adjusting Instruction to War Demands." Both the audience and members of the panel agreed that one of the most valuable types of wartime instruction teaches. members of the community as well as stu- dents the importance of aiding the war effort through purchasing war stamps and bonds. Other questions, raised during the discussion were: What courses should we offer boys to prepare who go directly into the services from high school do not have an opportunity to experience life in civil- ian democracy and therefore should be given every opportunity to learn about democracy during their pre- induction tiraining. Win the War First Rawl Is Grigsby, of the United States Office of Education, reminded the panel and members of the audi- ence that education should act first and foremost to win the war, and that everything else should receive