i t 43rn i4 Weather Fair LIV No. 1-S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JULY 4, 1944 PRICE FIVE C U. S. Makes New Dutch Guinea Landing -4 ;is Retreat As Red Army T kes Minsk Russians Recapture 1,150 Places Siweepingt Westward in Drive By The Associated Press LONDON, July 4, Tuesday-Red troops captured the White Russian capital of Minsk yesterday, blasting{ the Germans out of their last majort city on Soviet soil, and took morez than 1,150 other places as the mighty1 summer offensive swept westward, Moscow announced last night. The fall ¢f Minsk to the stormingt advance of the first and third White Russian armies was the most spec- tacular coup of the 11-day old drive which already has carried as much as 150 miles on a 350-mile battle- front. Street Fighting in Polotsk But even as the great German1 bastion fell the broadcast Russian communique said other Soviet forces already had broken into Polotsk, 120 miles northeast of Minsk, and were fighting in the streets, and had reached the outskirts of Molodeczno, the stratogic railway junction in old Poland 40 miles northwest of Minsk and 110 miles southwest of Polotsk. Premier-Marshal Stalin personally1 announced the capture of Minsk, at city of nearly a quarter-million popu- lation.in peacetime. No mention was made of the fate of the remnants of 17 German divi-1 sions-possibly as many as 200,0001 me,.including axliares and service units-who were reported defending the city, but the Russian communi- que said the first and third White Russian armies had captured 23,658 prisoners in the fighting Saturday and Sunday alone. German Generals Taken Prisoner This- brought to approximately 225,000 the number of German troops officially announced by the Russians as killed or captured since the gigan- tic offensive in White Russia began June 23. Among the captives taken over the week-end were two more German major-generals, commanders of the 36th and 95th infantry divisions, said the bulletin recorded by the Soviet Monitor. The Russians announced that be- sides taking Minsk their troops had advanced to the Molodeczno-Polotsk railway practically along its entire distance north of Wilejka, which was captured Sunday. The district center of Kurinets, five miles north of Wil- ejka, was one of the railway stations occupied on this line. rench, Yanks Capture Siena, Near Florence ROM, Joly 3-(AP)-American and French forces occupied the me- dieval city of Siena, 31 airline miles from Florence, early today without damage to its famous art and archi- tectcral treasures, while Yank troops on the west coast evicted the Nazis from Cecina in bitter house-to-house fighting and thrust on within 15 miles of the prize port of Livorno (Leghorn). The quick and virtually uncon- tested capture of Siena by French Infantry and American artilleryeand tank units followed weeks of hard fighting on its mountainous ap- proaches. A special announcement of the city's fall came immediately after a communique said the French had fought to within two miles of its ancient walls. Siena is rivalled only by Florence in the wealth of its renaissance art. Its black and white marble Gothic cathedral is regarded as one of the world's most beautiful structures. z American units stormed past Ce- cina despite some of the most stub- born resistance since the fall of Rome. Americans Open Drive On CherbourgPeninsula New Delivery, Distribution To Start for Daily Yanik Attack On Noemfoor Made Sun By The Associated Press SUPREME hEADQUARTERS, Al- lied Expeditionary Force, Tuesday, July 4-U. S. Troops exploded an offensive yesterday along a 40-mile front on the lower Cherbourg penin- sula and in rain and mud drove as far as three miles into stout German ,defenses which Field Marshal Erwin Rommel had inspected himself two months ago and considered adequate. An artillery barrage plowed the German lines, and then the dough- boys went over the top in a scene reminiscent of the first World War, pushing through mire that bogged down their tanks to withinbthree miles of La Haye Du Puits, highway hub six miles inland from the Atlan- tic coast. Doughboys fought from hedge to Dewey Will Stay Home Cows, Chickens To Hear GOP Oratory By The Associated Press ALBANY, July 3-A "down-on-the farm" summer campaign, with politi- cal and state business carried on in Albany and speech-writing done on week-ends at his 486-acre Pawling farm, was outlined tentatively today by Gov. Thomas E. 0ewey. Strengthening reports that his strategists want to keep the Repub- lican presidential nominee "under wraps" until after labor day, Dewey told a news conference in his execu- tive office today that he planned no major speeches in the next tWo months but "may have to travel in the next month," apparently to a zampaign conference with other Re- publican governors. Dewey declined to answer ques- aions about national policies. He gave correspondents, instead, a detailed account of the historical background >f the Quaker Hill community at Pawling (Pop... 1,446). Neighbors expect to hold a reception for him there Friday afternoon when he leaves Albany for a week-end. Although Dewey at first said all he knew about a prospective huddle with other Republican governors was what he read in the newspapers, he later conceded that he had discussed the possibility of such a meeting with Gov. Earl Warren of California. Warren has promised to head an intensive campaign in California for Dewey and Gov. John W. Bricker of Ohio, the vice-presidential nominee. Dewey declined to answer questions about Warren's refusal to be "draft- ed" by last week's convention for the second place nomination. Chicago has been suggested as a possible meeting place for the gov- ernors. If the conference material- izes, that probably will be Dewey's first trip out of New York since his flight to accept the nomination. The nominee insisted, 'however, that his plans were not definite be- yond this week. hedge against machine-gun, sniper and mortar fire, and in the first surge captured more than 100 prison- ers, front line dispatches said. St. Jones Falls to Yanks They pressed ahead 2, miles at one point and captured St. Tones, five miles east of La Haye, poisinn an outfianking threat to that com- munications center. While some Poles, probably forced to fight for the Germans, were among the first captives to come back from the front, the troops of Lt. Gen. Omar N. Bradley before long had struck a tough line of all-German resistance. Some of the Germans were from the Russian front. The Americans fought through some enemy positions which, French patriots said, had been inspected by Rommel, the German field command- er, who expressed pleasure at their strength and strategic locations. Little Action Around Caen The Supreme Headquarters com- munique reported that while Allied forces wre gaining ground in this sector, patrols on the currently static Caen front to the east had penetrated deep into enemy positions. It re- ported only local clashes around Caen. For once the Americans going over to the offensive were deprived of heavy air support, supreme Head- quarters saying bad weather had re- duced aerial operations. Nazi Military Machine Slowed By Fuel Lack By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, July 3-German aircraft and gasoline production both have been cut at least two-thirds by Allied bombing, General H. H. Arn- old reported today, virtually elimi- nating the Luftwaffe and forcing the Nazi high command to ration the military use of fuel. Arnold, commanding general of the army air forces and recent visitor to the battle fronts in Normandy and Italy, said there is evidence the Ger- mans now are using their reserve gasoline supplies. The Allies in France, he said, have found tanks and other vehicles abandoned for lack of fuel. The clearest proof of the effective- ness of the bomber offensive against Germany, said Arnold, was the Luft- waffe's failure to muster enough bomber or fighter strength to hit the congested English ports, the thou- sands of ships in the channel, and the swarming beachheads at the time of the invasion. "Here was a target the like of which no aviator had ever seen be- fore," he said. "It was an aviator's dream." In a press conference discussion, Arnold made these points: All of Germany's 55 synthetic and natural oil refineries have been hit, with production at each reduced to not more than one-third normal. Enemy plane production has been cut tot one-third the planned out- put, ball bearing production almost that much. To The Daily will be delivered to all registered students with the compli- ments of the University through te Summer Session. Within the delivery area, the boundaries of which will be an- nounced soon, Dailies will be dis- tributed to all dormitories and stu- dent residences, with one paper for approximately every five students. There will be three Dailies delivered to every five men in the Army and Navy. Due to the -shortage of carriers those students who live outside of the delivery area will be able to re- ceive their Dailies by presenting their cashier's receipt at The Daily office in the Student Publications Bldg. and getting a card entitling them to pick up their paper each morning between 7:45 and 10:10 in front of the Main Library at least for the first week of the Summer Session. Single copies of The Daily will be on sale each morning outside the Main Library on the Diagonal. Private subscriptions may be had, although the University hopes to present every student with an oppor- turity to read the campus paper without a personal subscription. Sub- scribers within the delivery area will get their Daily delivered, and those who are farther from campus can get mail subscriptions. These sub- scriptions can be obtained in the. Student Publications Bldg. Yanks Among Victims.,of Nazi Robot Bombs By The Associated Press LONDON, July 3-(AP)-Another deadly parade of flying bombs dron- ed over southern England tonight and an undisclosed number of Ameri- can soldiers were among the day's victims of the Nazi spite weapon. Fighter pilots chasing the robots vices were getting workouts reminis- a "high proportion" of them but nevertheless a number got through. Two pilots in the same squadron each shot down three in a single patrol. In some places civil defense ser- vices were getting workouts deminis- cent of the days-of the heavy German bombings of England and there were long hours on "alert." American soldiers everywhere have been winning British tribute for the way they have pitched in and helped whenever an "incident" occurs near them. Victims of the flying rockets were disclosed today to have included Maj. Gen. Sir Arthur Scott, retired, his wife, Aimee Byng, a novelist, and Sir Percy Alden, lecturer and social worker. There is much about the flying rocket campaign that can't yet be told but many hope Prime Minister Winston Churchill will disclose at least some of it tomorrow in a report to commons. A speaker on a German radio claimed the flying bombs were as accurate as the orthodox bomb drop- ped from a height of five miles. In the tird week of this cam- paign the people of southern England are adjusting themselves more and more to its consequences. International Bank Discussed By The Associated Press BRETTON WOODS, N. H., July 3 -The proposed international bank for reconstruction today was charac- terized as a "contribution of fun- damental value and importance" to the "overwhelming tasks" ahead by Lord Keynes, head of the British delegation to the United .Ttions monetary conference. Lord Keynes, author of the mone- tary plan which was one of the fore- runners of the monetary stabiliza- tion proposal now before the con- -Daily Photo by John Horeth , Top positions on The Daily for the summer session will be held by two women, Jane Farrant, '44, of Grand Rapids, (right); and Lee Amer, '45, of New York City, (left). Miss. Farrant has been appointed managing editor, and Miss Amer business manager by the Board in Control of Student Publications. Daily Offers Opportunities For Newspaper Experience 4 e: a C c ' tl t l A r i t p a s I r, c 'I f x : s 1 r t k t c k t ti C To Give One Paper Each Five Students _0/ Ten times winner of the Associated College Press All-American Pace- maker award, The Michigan Daily, University student newspaper, now is in its 54th year of continuous pub- lication. The Daily is run completely by students, under the Board in Control of Student Publications. Work is di- vided into four staffs, editorial, which handles all general news, wo- men's sports and business. Anyone eligible to work on The Daily may try out for any staff in which he is interested. Tryouts for the editorial staff are placed on the freshman staff, where they are given a beat to cover and are taught the fundamentals of news- the approval of the Board in Control There will be a meeting of all stu- dents interested in trying out for The Daily editorial staff at 4:30 Thursday, July 6, in the Student Publications Building on Maynard Street. Any student with a C average or better is elgible to tryout. Anyone interested in becoming Daily dramat- ic critic should see Betty Koffman, editorial director, tomorrow or Thursday afternoon at the Student Publications Building. of Student Publications. Junior staff members act as night editors, putting out The Daily once a week with the as3istance of the lower staffs. They write more editorials and the more important news stories. Appointments to a senior staff of from three to five editors is made from the junior staff by the Board in Control of Student Publications. The senior editors assume the chief re- sponsibilities of The Daily. Sports and women's staffs work on (See TRYOUTS Page 8) University Auto' Ban Will Nvot Bombardment by Navy, Air Force Opens Drive; One Airport Captured ADVANCED ALLIED HEADQUAR- TERS, NEW GUINEA, Tuesday, July 4.-(P)-American troops under Gen- eral Douglas MacArthur have landed at Noemfoor Island off Dutch New Guinea. In a surprise attack Sunday Ameri- cans captured Kamiri airdrome a- gainst slight opposition. Landing craft threaded their way through dangerous reefs and caught the Japanese by surprise on the is- land's west coast. Allies Closer to Philippines Kamiri, one of three dromes on Noemfoor is 800 miles from the Phil- ippines, closest approach to that sec- tor yet made by the Allies. Heavy navaland air bombardment preceded the Noemfoor landing. Thirty partially damaged Japanese airplanes were captured on Kamiri strip without a struggle, MacArthur's Independence Day communique an- nounced today. Maffin Airdrome Falls The communique also disclosed the capture of Maffin airdrome on the Dutch New Guinea mainland last Friday, thus expanding the Allied perimeter which has been 'established in the Sarmi-Maffin Bay area for several weeks. Noemfoor Island, 15 miles long and 12 across, has been bombed recur- rently during recent weeks, and over the week-end was shelled by P-T boats and given the heaviest bombing this sector has seen for some time. One hundred and fifty airplanes dropped 230 tons of bombs there Saturday. 'Jap Defenses Are Shaken' MacArthur declared that the new landing "will further dislocate enemy south sea defenses already seriously shaken." Southwest Pacific bombers mean- while attacked Monokwari on the Dutch New Guinea mainland 50 miles west of Noemfoor, and other Japanese installations on Timor Is- land in the Dutch East Indies, Palau and Yap in the Carolines, Wewak, British New Guinea, and at Rabaui, New Britain, and Kavieng, New Ire- land. UNDERGROUND': Guerrilla War, Strikes and Sabotage Spread in Europe and editorial writing and coverage, headline writing and proof reading. In addition, tryouts work on night desk once a week, learning the prac- tical aspects of putting out a news- paper. Freshmen are advanced to the Sophomore staff when they have learned these fundamentals, and are given more opportunity for news and editorial writing, as well as training in page make-up and the technique of putting out a newspaper. Members of the sophomore staff who show ability and industry are promoted to the junior staff, with County Fails To Reah Bond Drive Quota Washtenaw county had only 10 per cent to go to fill its quota of nine million dollars for the Fifth War Loan campaign as the auditor re- ported a total sales figure of $8,238,- 849.75. Army personnel on campus have bought more than $30,000 Bonds in the drive and hope to raise that amount to $50,000. Men are also signing up now for the series E "G. L" Bond with Lt. Melvin Flegal, Bond officer. This type sells for $7.50 with a maturity value of $10 and is available only to persons in the armed forces. The University' did not have a quota this time as a large part of the drive occurred during exam and vacation days. Series E Bonds in the county, cor- porations and banks and non-E Bonds have 90 to 102 per cent of their quotas filled while the E Bonds in the city have lagged behind with $707,962.50 or 54 per cent of the B e Lifted Today Driving regulations will not be lifted for the Fourth, holidays, or for any other reason until the end of the summer term, according to Assistant Dean of Students W. B. Rea. The official automobile regula- tions for the 1944 summer term and summer session became effective yes- terday, after which time any unau- thorized driving will be considered a violation of the rules. Students in the summer term and summer ses- sion who, during the preceding aca- demic year were not enrolled as sti- dents here or elsewhere, but were engaged in professional pursuits will be granted the unrestricted use of their cars. Exemptions May Be Gotten Regular students who are twenty- six or over or who take part-time work during thee summer are re- quired to apply for exemption at the Office of the Dean of Students. Those students who secured driv- ing permits during the fall or spring terms need not renew their permits for the summer term. Driving per- mits now in effect will remain effec- tive until the close of the Summer Term on Saturday, Oct. 21. The holders of such permits will auto- matically be granted the use of their cars for outdoor athletic recreation. Rules Regarding Passengers Passengers may be carried in con- nection with outdoor athletic activi- ties, but mixed company in a car after 9 p.m. will represent a social, rather than a recreational use of the car, and will be interpreted as a violation. Dean Rea emphasized that this privilege applies only to outdoor athletic recreation and does not in- clude driving for social or - other personal purposes. Students who do not now have driving permits and who wish to apply for summer recreational priv- ileges may do so by calling at the Office of the Dean of Students. Such See AUTO BAN, Page 8 17 Year Olds To Form Co. C A new Co. C is now being formed here from the 210 17 year old boys, some of whom arrived here yester- JAG Graduates To Hear Talk By Patterson Undersecretary of War Robert P. Patterson will be the principal speaker at the graduation of the Sixth Officer Candidate class and the 17th Officer class of the Judge Advocate General's School, Tuesday, July 11, in the auditorium of the Rackham Auditorium. Candidate Buster Cole, Sixth OC, will be awarded the Soldier's Medal at the review parade to honor visit- ing dignitaries Monday. The medal is given Cole for his "courage, pres- ence of mind and high degree of leadership" while a passenger on a foreign vessel attacked by enemy bombers on June 16, 1943. 175 Men To Be Graduated Nearly 175 men graduate making the largest graduating class in the school's two-year history. Also par- ticipating in the ceremonies will be Maj. Gen Myron C. Gramer, Judge Advocate General of the Army. Patterson, made Undersecretary of War when the office was created in December, 1940, has practiced law for over 25 years. Admitted to the bar in 1915, he was made judge of the Southern New York District Court in 1930. He became judge of the Second United States Circuit Court of Appeals in 1939, entering the war department the next year. Patterson Earned Awards For extraordinary heroism in ac- tion on August 14, 1918, he was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross and cited in General Orders. Again cited in General Orders for gallantry in action on September 26, 1918, he was given the Silver Star. Later, when wounded in action, he received the Purple Heart. Patterson is a member of the Am- By The Associated, Press LONDON, July 3.-Spreading sab- otage and guerrilla warfare in France, uprisings in Denmark and the Partisan campaign in Yugoslavia are tying up German occupation troops sorely needed by Hitler on the fighting fronts, an authoritative French source declared today. He said there scarcely was a region in France where fighting was not in progress and estimated that the French guerrillas were pinning down about eight Nazi divisions that other- wise would be in action against the Allies in"Normandy. Maquis Strikes in South The French Maquis were said to have killed or wounded 400 Germans ness. He said the French resistance to reach their full degree of effective- forces also lacked food and medical supplies and that the members were dying from slight wounds. Reports reaching Port Bou in Spain said Gen. Georges Nadal, chief of Vichy's pro-German militia in western France, was capturedhby the Maquis Saturday night as he was en route from La Rochelle to Cognac to attend a German banquet. Scores of persons were reported to have been arrested and held as hostages for the general's safety. Riots Spread in Denmark Danish workers' demonstrations and strikes aganst the Germans Stimson To Inspect Yank Troops in Italy ROME. July 3-(AP)--Secretary