C, I t* it t r 4pt WVIEATHER Clear Today with Continued Heat VOL. LIV No. 27-7SANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN THURSDAY, AUG. 10, 1944 PRICE FIVE CENTS Yanks Americans Surge Complet Unchecked e Conquest of ( Toward Paris Juam <">2 Island Freed After Three Year Slavery Japanese on Pati Point Surrounded WAR NEWS AT A GLANCE By The Associated Press FRANCE,-St. Malo, Brttany port, falls. Yanks within 90 miles of Paris. Canadians crack Caen front. Aerial warfare heavy. Shut- tle bombing continues. RUSSIA- Germans counterat- tack strongly, but Reds continue to advance on East Prussian bor- der. ITALY-Florence faces shortage of water and food. Little change on fighting front. PACIFIC-Cleanup on Guam virtually completed. Thousands of Japs killed. Stilwell's forces con- tinue advances in Burma. PEARL HARBOR, Aug. 9.-Amer- lcan forces completed their conquest of Guam Tuesday except for a small inland area near Pati Point, where surviving Japanese were surrounded, Adm. Chester W. Nimitz announced today. Pati Point is at the northeast cor- ner of Guam, the first American in- sular possession seized by Japan. The campaign to retake Guam began with the invasion of the island on July 20 by the Third and Fourth Marine divisions and the 77th Infan- try division. Troops Land at Two Points The assault troops landed at two points on the western, coast, _rapidly, overran the lower half of the island and pushed north to virtually com- plete reconquest of the island on the 20th day of the campaign. The remaining pocket of enemy resistance was expected to be blotted out shortly as the American forces were exerting heavy pressure on the remnants of the Japanese garrison. which had no hope of escape. Warships Block Jap Flight Any attempt by the surviving Nip- ponese to flee by water was blocked by American warships that kept up a constant patrol of the island's coastline. Marine Maj.-Gen. Roy S. Geiger conimanded the ground forces that conquered Guam, the third island in the strategic Marianas group to be captured. The others, Tinian and Saipan, about 125 miles to the north, were taken in July. Important Airfields Captured There are several important air- fields on the three islands, all within Superfortress bombing range of Ja- pan, the Philippines and the China coast. Some of them have been used for some time by fighter planes. Orote Peninsula is the site of an excellent airfield, already in use, and of the Sumay naval base. There is no major naval base on Guam, nor in the Marianas, suitable for fleet operations. 1,072 Japanese Killed at Aitape GENERAL HEADQUARTERS, Southwest Pacific, Aug. 10, Thurs- day-(R)- Additional 1,072 Japa- nese have been killed in the Aitape sector of British New Guinea, head- quarters announced today. This is one of the heaviest battle tolls yet taken in that area. Americans have encircled Japa- nese front lines on the Driniumor River. Remnants of the Japanese 18th Army trapped in the Wewak area who had attempted to break west- ward through American lines now are on the defensive some 20 miles east of Aitape. Other Allied bombers raided Hal- mahera Island between New Guinea and Mindanao, Yap Island in the Western Carolines, and Sorong and Manokwari, weakened Japanese bas- es in Dutch New Guinea west and east of the American beachhead at Sansapor. "- - U' I w.11 Reds Gain In Spite of Resistance Offensive on East Front Intensified By The Associated Press LONDON, Aug. 10, Thursday- Slowed but not stopped by desperate German counterattacks all along the eastern front, powerful Russian arm- ies yesterday ground out nine to 12- mile gains in the battle of Latvia, renewed the offensive northeast of Warsaw, and climbed higher into the Carpathians toward Czechoslovakia. In telling of the day's furious fighting and hard-won advances, the Soviet midnight communique and an early-morning supplement over and over again used the phrases "stub- born resistance" and "repeated coun- terattacks," but said that in no case had these Nazi efforts succeeded. Dig Trenches in East Prussia Thoroughly alarmed, the Germans drafted every able-bodied man and woman from 15 to 65 to dig trenches against the imminent entry of the Red Army onto the "holy" soil of East Prussia. Up and down the 1,000-mile front the counterattacking Germans lost more than 3,800 killed yesterday, said the Soviet War Bulletin, while BULLETIN ANKARA, Aug. 9.-(P)-Uncon- firmed reports, subsequently de- nied by the Berlin radio, circulated here today that Bulgaria has asked 'the Allies for peace terms through the medium of the Turkish gov- ernment. another 120 enemy tanks were de- stroyed or knocked out. It was the ninth consecutive day that the Rus- sians had recorded loss of more than 100 tanks by the Nazis. Russians Gain 280 Towns In the north, the Russians report- ed capture of more than 280 towns in twin drives northwestward within 64 miles of Riga, Latvia, along both sides of the Daugava River. Best gains recorded there were 15 kilom- eters (about nine miles). In the corridor across Latvia to the seaha score of miles west of Riga, which has trapped two German arm- ies of possibly 250,000 men, the Rus- sians reported they took 200 towns in westward advances of about 12 miles. Memel, one of Hitler's early pieces of bloodless loot, lay but 80 miles to the southwest. Pressure Grows near Warsaw East of Warsaw and northwest of Siedlce the Russians reported that they had "renewed their offensive after powerful artillery and air prep- aration," taking the key road junc- tions of Wengrow and Sokolow, 20 and 22 miles northwest and north of Siedlce. These were paving the way for eventual all-out assault on War- saw, already besieged for ten days. More than 130 miles southeast of Warsaw, they reported continued widening of their bridgeheads across the Vistula west of Sandomierz. Wilson' Banned By Army Order WASHINGTON, Aug. 9.-(P)-The motion picture "Wilson" dramatiz- ing the career of the first World War President has been banned by the Army for distribution to troops, as has the picture "Heavenly Days," starring Fibber McGee and Molly. The War Department said today both pictures had been banned by a board of the morale services division as containing material which might be construed as violating provisions of the soldier voting act. That act prohibits the distribution by the armed forces of books, maga- zines or other material containing matters calculated to influence the results of national elections. Colombian, 75 Years Old, Is Father of Quadruplets Troops Are 100 Miles From City U. S. Forces Sweep Through Le Mans, Take Brittany's Fortress, St. Maloe By The Associated Press SHAEF, Aug. 9-Lt. Gen. Omar N. Bradley's whirlwind wedges rushed without check on the last 100 miles toward Paris tonight after sweeping through Le Mans and forcing the die-hard defenders of Brittany's sea fortress of St. Malo to knuckle under in surrender. The capture of St. Malo, whose defenders had been ordered to fight to the last man, was reported in field dispatches. Never before had it been taken, though it had been the scene of many sieges in the middle ages. . The historic fishing village and resort on the north coast was perched on an island connected with the mainland by a defended causeway. YANKS ENTER MAYENNE ON WAY TO PARIS-American infantry marches through bomb-deva- stated Mayenne in pursuit of fleeing Germans as th ey drive toward Paris, about 140 miles away to the northeast. Yanks have travelled to within 100 miles of the French capitol according to most recent dispatches. RAPID TREATMENT: Michigan Opens Center for, New Venereal Disease Therapy Michigan's new Rapid Treatment Center for venereal diseases wil for- mally open at 2:30 p. m. today with an open house and assembly for doc- tors and health officers. Housed in the old University Hospital building, the Center is the only one of its kind in Michigan Grand ,JuryTo P robe Cause of Transit Strike Judge Doesn't Believe Race Issue Is Cause PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 9-(P)- Federal Judge George A. Welsh charged a Special Grand Jury of 11 men and 9 women today to search out any political motive that may have been involved in the calling of Phila- delphia's wildcat transit strike, de- claring he could not believe that the strikers were actuated solely "by the thought that eight Negroes were go- ing to be upgraded." "I hope it (racial prejudice) was not the real reason," he said. Serious Disruption Caused The strike, the judge said, "caused serious disruption of wartime prep- arations," "caused chaos and con- fusion in a community that was do- ing its best in a crisis in the nation's history," and "struck a blow at a sacred cause," for which thousands of American boys are fighting. "You are to determine the identity of the men who engineered such a strike," he said. "They should have made a declaration of any grievance. "It came, however, as a bolt from the blue. The reason given for it was one of intolerance and racial hatred. I hope it was not the real reason. Leaders May Be Punished "If race hatred was the real reason, we cannot take it lying down. We must punish the men who called such a strike." Four of the strike leaders are free on bonds awaiting hearing next Mon- day. The eight Negroes resumed their training for trolley operating jobs today under protection of the Army which took over the strike-bound transportation company Thursday night. They were ordered upgrad- ed by the Fair Employment Practices Committee. operated solely for the intensive treatment of venereal disease. Operation and purposes of the Center will be expiained by Dr. William DeKleine, state health com- missioner, at the assembly. From 100 to 125 patients can be accommo- dated in the Center, which does not take out patients. The syphilis treatment requires two weeks, and the method in use for gonorrhea treatment takes from seven to ten days. The Center is state owned and will operate in cooperation with the Unit- ed States Public Health Service. Only indigent patients, referred by physi- cians or health departments, will be accepted. In charge of the work are Dr. Nel- son Ryan, medical officer, F. D. Bea- dle, superintendent; and Col. Udo J. Wile, consultant. Dr. Wile, on leave from the University, is in charge of all venereal disease work for the United States Public Health Service. Federal, Union Officials Move To End Strikes DETROIT, Aug. 9.--VP)-Federal conciliation agencies and union of- ficials moved tonight ' to end two major strikes which have made more than 10,000 war workers idle in the Detroit area. The national War Labor Board summoned high officials of the Unit- ed Automobile Workers (CIO) to a hearing in Washington tomorrow to explain why a strike of 7,000 em- ployes in five Chevrolet gear and axle division plants of General Motors Corp. was continuing despite a back- to-work order of the regional WLB. On the heels of the new Chevrolet walkout, came a dispute today in the Briggs Manufacturing Co.'s outer drive plant, which manufactures ball turrets for Army aircraft. A spokesman for the UAW-CIO local with which the Briggs employes are affiliated said the walkout re- sulted when cutter grinders were asked to perform precision grinding, an operation he said demanded a wage differential of 20 cents an hour, and refused to do the work without an increase in pay. Jess Ferrazza, president of the local, said union officers were doing all in their power to persuade the strikers to return to work. Allies Drive 54 Miles South of Imphal in India Last of Jap Forces Near Burma Border SOUTHEAST ASIA COMMAND HEADQUARTERS, KANDY, CEY- LON, Aug. 9-(P)-The Allied drive to push the last Japanese invaders out of northeast India penetrated to- day to a point 54 miles south of Im- phal, where Japanese rear guards were encountered. It appeared likely that the last of the beaten 33rd Japanese Division would be chased over the Burma frontier toward Tiddim within an- other week. Strike in Mogaung Valley In the Mogaung Valley campaign in northern Burma Allied troops striking down upon the Mogaung- Mandalay railway in the Taungni area encountered heavy opposition at Tigyaingu, five miles northeast of Taungni and about 10 miles south- west of Mogaung, air line. In Burma's Kabaw Valley east of Tamu Allied forces found evidence of Japanese panic in the abandon- ment of 200 motor vehicles on one five-mile stretch of road, along with guns of all calibers and thousands of rounds of ammunition. Headquarters permitted today the disclosure that the Allies are using a canine corps to advantage in Bur- ma. One dog killed a Japanese un- assisted. Another spotted a straggler who was killed by the dog's master. The Japanese also are using dogs to help locate jungle positions. Report From China From Chungking, China, came word that die-hard Chinese forces headed by five generals apparently were making good today their vow to fight to the death in battered Hengyang, opposing a Japanese as- sault to the last. The Chinese high command said broken radio contact made the situa- tion obscure inside the city, where street fighting last was reported. Youth for Democratic Action To Hold Meeting Michigan Youth for Democratic Action, campus youth organization will hold its first meeting of the Summer Term at 8 p.m. today in the League. Mort Rosenthal, president, urged that all old and new members attend to help set up activities for the rest of the summer. The program will center around the idea of backing the boys on the front lines. 87 Miles From Paris The official announcement of the complete occupation of the auto manufacturing city 85 miles east of Rennes made it clear that American tanks were well beyond the city, and German news agencies reported the fast spearheads were only 87 miles from the French capital. There was no Allied confirmation that Bradley's juggernaut had scor- ed this further advance of 23 miles from Le Mans-but it might be pos- sible as the Americans had not yet run into anything like solid resist- ance. Open Assault on Brest There still was no indication where, short of Paris, the Germans might be able to check the storm of American steel which in a little more than two weeks had swept over an arc of 200 miles from St. Lo, through Avran- ches, Rennes, Laval and Le Mans. Behind the streams of machines plunging eastward, the American bat- tering ram opened an assault on Brest at the western tip of Brittany, beginning a rear door attack on the outer defenses when the garrison of the French naval base rejected an offer by the American commander to accept its surrender. Canadians Advance Seventy miles north of Le Mans the Canadian First Army in a great dual thrust steadily pried open a second doorway barely 100 miles from Paris, breaking cleanly through the Ger- mans' first and second lines of de- fense and advancing to a point 16 miles below Caen. Veterans To le Given Dance at Local USO Club Afm Arbor servicemen will play host to 200 discharged veterans at a dance to be held at 8:30 p.m. Satur- day, at the USO Club on East Huron. Entertainment will be supplied by the servicemen and will feature "Doc" Fielding as master of cere- monies. Several numbers from the Company D show, "Rumor Has It" will be presented. Numbers from the show will in-. clude songs by the quartet consisting of Pfc. Paul Brazda, Harry Clarke, Philip Brancucci and Jerry McCros- key. Staff Sergeant Henry Schnei- dewind, who played the male lead in the show, will also sing. Pfc. Dick Thomas of Company A, a featured pianist at several New York night clubs, will be at the piano. Arty Fischer of Company D will dir- ect the entertainment. Mrs. Robert Burton, director of the USO, said that one of the functions of the dance will be to introduce the ex-servicemen to the USO. "The idea was offered by a ser- vicemen," she said, "and all the men have taken the lead in arranging this affair. There is much in com- mon between both servicemen and ex - servicemen," and she added "they can benefit from association *ith each other." Junior hostesses from Company Z will be on hand to help the men enjoy themselves at dancing and games. Yank Bombs Blast Europe Factories, V-Pens Hit By Big Raiders By The Associated Press ' LONDQN, Aug. 9.- More than 2,000dAmerican heavy bombers thun- dered from British and Italian bases against Hitler's battered war plants and oil facilities in Germany, Hun- gary and Yugoslavia today, while RAF Lancasters packing 12,000- pound bombs smashed at submarine pens in'the U-boat base of La Pallice on the west French coast. While tactical forces streamed over enemy lines in France in a bridge-busting campaign, jamming Nazi communications, up to 750 British-based U.S. Eighth Air Force Liberators and Fortresses, with equal fighter escort, ploughed through murky weather against Stuttgart, "the Detroit of Germany," and other targets in southern Germany. A rail yard was among these. U.S. Shoots Down 33 The escorting Lightnings, Thun- derbolts and Mustangs reported 33 enemy planes shot down in aerial combat. Eighteen bombers andrtwo fighters were missing from the Brit- ish-based attacks on Germany. A communique said none of the Ger- man interceptors was able to pene- trate the fighter screen around the bombers. Fighter escorts of both heavy bomber fleets said German air oppo- sition was not intense and contra- dicted German radio reports of fierce battles in the air. France, Hungary Hit The weather over the French front was favorable for the aerial blows at the Germans' communication sys- tem. More than 500 heavies of the 15th Air Force struck from Italy at Nazi aircraft and oil resources, ipcluding the Almas Fuzito refinery on the Danube 30 miles west of Budapest, a Messerschmitt assembly plant at Gyor and airdromes at Veches and Tokol in Hungary as well as rail yards at Brod in Yugoslavia. Florence Faces Serious Water, Food Shortage By EDWARD KENNEDY ROME, Aug. 9-0P)-The City of Florence, tightly locked in a deadly vise formed by the British and Ger- man armies, was reported facing a series of food and water shortages and beset by looting and outbursts of ',ivil strife today. While military operations in and around Florence were limited to pa- trol forays, machinegun positions lin- ed both banks of the Arno River along its course through the city. The battle lines had cut the city off from food supply from the sur- rounding countryside, one of Italy's richest agricultural regions, and no food had been distributed on the German side of the city since last Friday. German destruction of the power plant had deprived the city of light and caused an alarming water sup- ply situation, with black marketeers demanding 20 lire (20 cents) for a bottle of water. Looting in some sections, both by German soldiers and Italian hood- , lums, also was reported, causing the FINLAND READY FOR PEACE WITH RUSSIA: Experts on Soviet Replace Collaborationists in Cabinet By JOHN COLBURN (EDITOR'S NOTE: John Colburn, who analyzes the significance of the latest Finnish cabinet reorganization, returned recently from an assignment in Stock- hom, during which he spent some time in Helsinki making a close study of through Swedish intermediaries. Sev- enty-seven year old Marshal Carl Gustav Mannerheim, who took over the presidency a week ago and reor- ganized the cabinet, was understood for the first time since Finland en- tered the war alongside Germany in 1941 definite evidence that Fin- land was anxious to make peace. Previously, there had been peace complicated by an inherent dislike for Russia, a desire for revenge after the Russian victory in the winter war of 1930-40 and the pres-