America at war! (1941– ) (Part 1)

Tire ration plan adopted

Rules on eligibles may be altered later if situation changes

Washington (UP) –
The Office of Price Administration promised today that quick changes would be made in the automobile tire and tube rationing order to provide equipment for new “eligible” classes of motorists “should the situation change for the better.”

In the introduction to a 19-page Tire-Rationing Regulations, which is to be sent first to 50,000 state and local boards, the OPA said the present rubber shortage “will leave some of even the most vital needs unsupplied.”

If additional rubber supplies become available, it said, then adjustments in state quotas will be made to assure a larger quantity of tires and new eligible classes of motorists will be made.

OPA officials said that later taxis, delivery trucks, “and people who have to drive to work” might be affected by an adjustment in the order which becomes effective Jan. 5.

Up to local boards

Hardships on individual communities will be lessened, the pamphlet said, only to the extent that local boards use their rationing power wisely, apply the standards in the regulation fairly, and refuse applicants who can get along without new tires.

New tires and tubes were defined in the regulations as those which have been used less than 1,000 miles.

State quotas for the month of January will be announced prior to Jan. 5 and quotas for ensuing months will be announced on the 20th day.

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U.S. to boost war effort

Congressional leaders back plan to devote half of income to it

Washington (AP) –
Congressional leaders agreed enthusiastically today to President Roosevelt’s program for channeling half the national income into the war effort in the next fiscal year.

Democrats and Republicans alike declared there was not the slightest doubt that Congress would honor every qualified request for funds to build up the nation’s fighting power.

The only question that bothered any of them was whether machines and manpower were available to absorb the $50-odd-billion to be poured into the industrial military structure.

As to that, however, Senator Austin (R-VT), the assistant Republican leader, said that the President was obviously thoroughly informed on the industrial situation and knew what could be done before approving such a vast project outlay.

Question of industrial capacity

Austin told reporters:

Our expenditures are going to be limited only by our capacity in industrial facilities and in trained manpower. There will be no question about Congress appropriating the necessary funds.

The President told his press conference yesterday, that military expenditures would reach 27% of the national income by the close of this fiscal year of June 30, 1942. His present plans contemplated increasing that outlay to 50% in the ensuing year, he said.

There had been, he said, a victory program in operation up to Dec. 7, when the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor. Now it had become a war program which had twice been increased.

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U.S. women’s army plan meets favor

Sponsor of measure gets hundreds of letters

Washington (UP) –
Preliminary indications today were that enlistments in the proposed Women’s Army Auxiliary Corps would be heavy.

Women have a virtual promise from the War Department that their services will be used in the fight against the Axis. Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson has endorsed the plan of Rep. Edith Nourse Rogers (R-MA) to create a uniformed corps of women volunteers to perform non-combatant duties now handled by enlisted men and civilian volunteers.

Since the attacks on Pearl Harbor and the Philippines, hundreds of letters have poured into Mrs. Rogers’ office from women in all sections of the country, hoping to volunteer in the WAACs. The House Military Affairs Committee will probably act on her proposal next month.

Under the Rogers Bill, women from 21 to 45 who are physically fit would be permitted to volunteer. They would be subject to military discipline and would serve as hostesses, clerks, chauffeurs, mechanics, air-raid warning service plotters and technicians.

Typical of the letters received by Mrs. Rogers is one from a woman of Muncie, Indiana, who wrote:

The moment I heard of the attack on my country Dec. 7, I thought to myself that I would like to join the United States Army and do my best, if possible, to preserve our democracy.

A New York woman attorney argued against a top age limit of 45:

There are so many women over 45 who can do a fine job not only in capacities which require men’s alertness, but in many which ensures physical ability as well as that it seems wrong to deprive them of the opportunity to serve.

A Shrewsbury, Massachusetts, housewife was more emphatic:

I am 58 and can drive and work as good if not better than some men.

A high school graduate, of Fountain City, Tennessee, said:

Reading about the Marines on Wake Island makes me so terribly proud and I only wish I could be with them.

The daughter of an Indiana migrant wrote she wanted to join the corps to prove:

…not only the deep feeling and pride I have for America, but for him who chose to give up king and country for America and all America stands for.

School teacher writes

A Santa Fe, New Mexico, school teacher wrote:

I sincerely hope you can make the men see it our way.

A Newark, New Jersey, housewife wrote:

If there is any doubt of our ability, look at what women are doing in England and Russia and other European cities.

Mrs. Rogers’ original plan would have limited enlistments to 250 but Stimson urged that this restriction be removed because the size of the corps would be “dependent under military requirements.”

The corps, to be headed by a director under the Office of the Chief of Staff of the Army, would have its own officers, paid on the following sets:

Director (corresponding to an Army lieutenant colonel) $250 a month
Assistant director (major) $200
First officer (captain) $166.67
Second officer (second lieutenant) $131.25
Third officer (second lieutenant of less than three years’ service) $125
First leader (staff sergeant) $72
Second leader (corporal) $54
Junior leader (private first class) $42
Auxiliary (private) $30

The corps would be organized into companies of 250 women or more. They would not be a part of the Regular Army, but would have recognition as the only authorized girls serving with the Army, in addition to the regular nursing establishment.

Senators hope Lindy will get Army post

Washington (INS) –
Widespread hope that the War Department will accept Col. Charles A. Lindbergh’s offer to serve in the U.S. Armed Forces was voiced in the Senate today.

Both members who saw alike with Lindbergh on questions of foreign policy, and those who opposed him, applauded the prospect of his entrance into the Army as a new sign of unity. The flier offered his services in a letter to Lt. Gen. H. H. Arnold, Army Air Force Chief.

Senator Reynolds (D-NC), Chairman of the Senate Military Affairs Committee, said:

There may be diversification of opinion in a democracy without cutting off heads. Now is the time when we must all pull together.

I don’t think we should have the slightest hesitation in assigning Col. Lindbergh to a position where he could serve best.

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Welcome 1942!

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A joint declaration by the United States, the United Kingdom, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, China, Australia, Czechoslovakia, Belgium, Cuba, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Haiti, Honduras, Nicaragua, Guatemala, El Salvador, India, New Zealand, Greece, Luxembourg, Norway, Yugoslavia, Poland, the Netherlands, Panama, South Africa, Canada

The Governments signatory hereto,

Having subscribed to a common program of purposes and principles embodied in the Joint Declaration of the President of the United States of America and the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland dated August 14, 1941, known as the Atlantic Charter.

Being convinced that complete victory over their enemies is essential to defend life, liberty, independence and religious freedom, and to preserve human rights and justice in their own lands as well as in other lands, and that they are now engaged in a common struggle against savage and brutal forces seeking to subjugate the world, DECLARE:

  1. Each Government pledges itself to employ its full resources, military or economic, against those members of the Tripartite Pact :and its adherents with which such government is at war.

  2. Each Government pledges itself to cooperate with the Governments signatory hereto and not to make a separate armistice or peace with the enemies.

The foregoing declaration may be adhered to by other nations which are, or which may be, rendering material assistance and contributions in the struggle for victory over Hitlerism.

Done at Washington
January 1, 1942

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FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT
On behalf of the United States of America

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WINSTON CHURCHILL
On behalf of the United Kingdom of Great Britain & Northern Ireland

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MAXIM LITVINOV
On behalf of the Government of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics

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T. V. SOONG
On behalf of the National Government of the Republic of China

January 2, 1942

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R. G. CASEY
On behalf of the Commonwealth of Australia

1024px-Flag_of_the_Czech_Republic.svg
V. S. HURBAN
On behalf of the Czechoslovak Republic

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CTE. E. v. STRATEN
On behalf of the Kingdom of Belgium

1024px-Flag_of_Cuba_(sky_blue).svg
AURELIO F. CONCHESO
On behalf of the Republic of Cuba

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LUIS FERNÁNDEZ
On behalf of the Republic of Costa Rica

1024px-Flag_of_the_Dominican_Republic.svg
J. M. TRONCOSO
On behalf of the Dominican Republic

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FERNAND DENNIS
On behalf of the Republic of Haiti

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JULIÁN R. CÁCERES
On behalf of the Republic of Honduras

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LEON DE BAYLE
On behalf of the Republic of Nicaragua

1024px-Flag_of_Guatemala.svg
ENRIQUE LOPEZ-HERRATE
On behalf of the Republic of Guatemala

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C. A. ALFARO
On behalf of the Republic of El Salvador

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GIRIJA SHANKAR BAJPAI
On behalf of India

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FRANK LANGSTONE
On behalf of the Govt. of the Dominion of New Zealand

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CIMON P. DIAMANTOPOULOS
On behalf of the Kingdom of Greece

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HUGUES LE GALLAIS
On behalf of the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg

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W. v. MUNTHE AF MORGENSTIERNE
On behalf of the Kingdom of Norway

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CONSTANTIN A. FOTITCH
On behalf of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia

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JAN CIECHANOWSKI
On behalf of the Republic of Poland

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A. LOUDON
On behalf of the Kingdom of the Netherlands

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JAÉN GUARDIA
On behalf of the Republic of Panama

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RALPH W. CLOSE
On behalf of the Union of South Africa

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LEIGHTON McCARTHY
On behalf of Canada


U.S. War Department (January 1, 1942)

Communique No. 39

Philippine Theater.
Severe fighting continues north of Manila, where U.S. and Philippine forces have been consolidated and are continuing to resist the Japanese advance. Strong positions are now occupied by the defending troops, who are inflicting heavy losses on the invaders. A major battle is now in progress.

Hawaii.
The Commanding General, Hawaiian Department, reports that three different islands of the Hawaiian group were shelled by enemy submarines. A few shells were fired at the port of Hilo, on the island of Hawaii, causing slight damage to the wharf. The harbor of Kahului, on the island of Maui, which had been shelled by a submarine some time ago, was again attacked. Five rounds were fired with no damage. An attack likewise was made on the shore near Lihue, on the island of Kauai, when a few rounds were fired, setting fire to a sugarcane field. There were no casualties and practically no damage by any of these attacks.

There is nothing to report from other areas.


Communiqué No. 40

Philippine Theater.
Despite heavy enemy attacks attempting to break up our troop movements, the maneuver designed to regroup the two forces of U.S. and Philippine troops opposing the Japanese in the north and southeast has been successfully accomplished. All available defending forces have now been united. In addition to the land positions, the harbor defenses and island fortifications are strongly held by our troops.

Gen. Douglas MacArthur, commanding the USAFFE, has submitted a report to the War Department dealing with the internment and surveillance of enemy aliens in the Manila area.

Although our troops were fully occupied in combat operations, every requirement of international law was carefully observed in dealing with Japanese subjects residing in the Philippines. Approximately 175 Japanese civilians were placed under close guard in an internment camp near Manila. About 3,000 other subjects in other localities were placed under surveillance to protect them against possible mob violence.

This action was taken at the urgent request of the Japanese Consul General in Manila. Every consideration was shown both to those interned and to those under surveillance and every reasonable provision was made for their comfort. Police protection was extended to Japanese property.

The hope was expressed that this general treatment of Japanese subjects by American and Philippine authorities would result in reciprocal treatment by Japan of American and Philippine civilians residing in regions now occupied by Japanese troops.

There is nothing to report from other areas.


The Evening Star (January 1, 1942)

Capital leads observance of day of prayer

Roosevelt, Churchill attend services for New Year

Led by President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Winston Churchill of Great Britain, Washington joined in a National Day of Prayer this New Year’s Day, confident that the nation fights in a righteous cause, but soberly reflecting on the kind of world that should be built after the war.

Thousands thronged churches this morning, while others engaged in quiet talks in the family circle at home, discussing the grave events of today and their effect on the future.

In accordance with a suggestion by the Washington Federation of Churches, many families said special prayers at the breakfast table and the grownups explained to the children about President Roosevelt’s proclamation setting aside the day for prayers.

Churchill returns to capital

Mr. Churchill returned here from Canada this morning. It was not disclosed what church he and Mr. Roosevelt attended.

At 5:00 this afternoon ET, Angelus bells will ring in the city’s churches and over the radio in a call to silent prayer to everyone wherever they might be. Dr. John Rustin, vice president of the federation, will speak over radio station WMAL at that hour in connection with the observance.

Today’s period of prayerful reflection came after a night of revelry that was somewhat less boisterous than the usual New Year celebration because of the grim war in which the country is engaged.

A number of churches marked the arrival of 1942 with nightwatch services.

Several prayer services were being held at the Washington Cathedral today after the first New Year watch service in the 35 years of the history of the cathedral was held last night. The Rt. Rev. James E. Freeman, Bishop of Washington, conducted the prayer and sacred song service. Two gatherings for prayer today were held this morning, another at noon and the fourth is scheduled for 4:00 this afternoon.

Rites at Wilson tomb

The special services in the Bethany Chapel in the cathedral will have particular meaning. It is there that the last World War President, Woodrow Wilson, lies buried.

In that chapel, too, is the tomb of Frank B. Kellogg, one-time Secretary of State, who thought when he had won to his peace pact the signatures of Germany and Japan, among other nations, that the world would never again be at war.

Nearby is a marker that reads:

GEORGE DEWEY. It was Admiral Dewey, who as commander of the United States Asiatic Fleet, won the Philippines for the United States.

That victorious event was 41 years and five months ago to a day – and now the Lord Mayor of London is broadcasting words of cheer on New Year’s Day from the bombed city of London to the bombed city of Manila.

At the Calvary Baptist Church, Dr. W. S. Abernethy closed his 20-year pastorate with a sermon in which he declared that “to bring the full impact of the Christian message upon the problems of a world engulfed in misery is the task before us.”

Assails ‘exclusiveness’

Calling for readjustments within the church, he said:

Sectarian exclusiveness has been the curse of Protestantism, and something must be done about it or our efforts will become increasingly fruitless. One of these days the war will be over, and the churches of America will be thinking of taking up their work again in Japan, where we have had flourishing missions. Whether we do go back or not depends very largely on what happens during the next few years. But if we do return, it will not be as Baptists and Presbyterians and Methodists. It will not be as Northern Baptists and Southern Baptists. It will be the Christian church of America that will go back. And what will be true over there must be tried out here at home, and I am convinced that the exigencies of this new day will demand it.

It has been all too apparent to me that we have been spending a major portion of our time on the things that divide us as religious bodies and not enough on the things that unite us. Not how much water is necessary in baptism, not whether the Episcopal or the Presbyterian or the Congregational system of church government is correct, not how many people there are in hell or whether Christ may come before the millennium. These questions sink into insignificance beside that of making Jesus Christ regnant in the world and reclaiming lives that are maimed and broken. To bring the full impact of the Christian message upon the problems of a world engulfed in misery is the task before us.

‘No time for wailing’

The Rev. Ralph Loew, associate pastor of the Lutheran Church of the Reformation, said at services there today that “this is no time for selfish wailing or noisy doubts.”

He continued:

The ruin about us is too impressive for that. Today we confess our faith in the things that are imperishable. This year must be thought through. Believing as we do in the ultimate victory and worth of Christian principles, this New Year’s Day is a day of confession of sin and faith and dedication to the highest usefulness as Christian citizens.

The Rev. Robert E. Lee of Blacksburg, Virginia, assisted in the services. Worshipers joined in prayers for President Roosevelt and the nation and in petitioning for guidance toward a just and lasting peace.

Dr. Gerhard E. Lenski, pastor of the Grace Lutheran Church, told his congregation today that a “careless, dissolute” life is a “national liability, a specious form of treason.”

He asked:

The intemperate man, the vicious man, the woman who is a social parasite – of what earthly use are these when the people go forth to Armageddon?

They are a hindrance, a menace. They are “fifth column” workers of a more dangerous kind than those which the enemy sends.

Insofar as we partake of their faults, let us in these days – for our country’s sake – forsake wickedness and return to the Lord who now calls us. Let no man call his responsibility in this matter a negligible and unimportant thing. Who knows but what your unwillingness and mine to repent and to lay aside evil and selfish ways may not be come, in the final analysis, just that bit of added weight that tips the eternal scales – not upward to victory – but downward to defeat and to moral decay!


Major battle raging near Manila; heavy losses inflicted on enemy; Japs shell three islands of Hawaii

Stimson lauds defense by MacArthur
By the Associated Press

The War Department today reported a major battle was in progress north of Manila and Philippine defense forces were inflicting heavy losses on the invaders.

A communiqué announced at the same time that three islands of Hawaii had been shelled by enemy submarines, but there were no casualties and virtually no damage.

A communiqué reported Philippine developments up to 9:30 a.m. ET (11:30 p.m. Wednesday PHT), in fewer than 50 words, failing to disclose whether the Philippine capital still stood.

The communiqué said the points shelled in Hawaii were Hilo, on the island of Hawaii: the harbor of Kahului on the island of Maui, and the shoreline near Lihue, on the island of Kauai. At Hilo, second Hawaiian city, slight damage was caused to a wharf. The harbor at Kahului was fired on five times without damage.

At Lihue, a few rounds were fired, setting fire to a sugarcane field.

Second attack of war

The attack on Kahului was the second of the war, a submarine having fired about 10 shells there on Dec. 16.

The communiqué was read at his press conference by Secretary of War Stimson, who praised Gen. Douglas MacArthur’s defense of the islands as “masterly.”

Secretary Stimson told an inquirer the War Department had not instructed Gen. MacArthur to quit the Philippines in the event of a forced capitulation to the Japanese.

He said “we have to face the facts” of Japanese strength, and added:

I am confident we can and will defeat the enemy in the end, but we cannot by looking through rose-colored spectacles.

Heavy enemy losses

He expressed belief that the enemy had suffered heavy losses, since the fighting had been “very well-sustained” by the U.S.-Filipino forces and the Japanese had to carry the attack to capable defenders.

Mr. Stimson refused to comment on criticism of the order making Manila an open city, observing that:

When our people are fighting under a most skillful commander in a struggle which it had been recognized for 20 years would be extremely uphill when it came, there should be no criticism from us.

Nothing has occurred to indicate that Gen. MacArthur’s defense has been other than masterly, he added.

Meanwhile, Washington steeled itself against possible surrender of Manila and soberly considered the best way to redeem America’s Far Eastern outpost in the event of its fall to the Japanese.

There were compelling reasons to believe that the fall of Manila might not be long delayed. Wounded men of the American and Philippine armies had been evacuated on a ship bound for Australia. Heavy Japanese forces even earlier had been reported bearing down on the city from both north and south.

In a New Year broadcast, Premier Gen. Hideki Tōjō of Japan asserted that “it is only a question of time until Manila and Singapore meet a fate similar to that of Hong Kong.” The British crown colony fell to the Japanese on Christmas Day.

Position not made clear

The hour-to-hour position of Gen. MacArthur’s defense lines was not made clear in any of the official communiqués, although some Axis radio broadcasts declared the front was no more than 10 miles from the commonwealth capital. An Army communiqué issued late yesterday said that resistance to the Japanese invaders was continuing and described the moving of the wounded to Australia.

Yesterday, the Navy issued a communiqué, apparently interred as a denial of Tokyo’s claims that Maui, Palmyra and Johnston Islands, in or near the Hawaiian group, had been effectively bombed. The situation on those islands, the Navy said, was unchanged since the last report, which was received Dec. 24.

All indications were that Manila must soon surrender to powerful Japanese forces slashing their way steadily toward the city from two directions regardless of the fierce resistance of badly-outnumbered defending troops.

There was only scant news, phrased in most general terms, of what was going on. but its meaning was unmistakably plain.

Censorship or interrupted communications had virtually ended the receipt of press dispatches from the beleaguered city. Radio telegraph companies refused to accept messages for Manila, or took them only at the server’s risk. The Navy said, however, it was still in touch, presumably by radio.

It was considered indicative, too, that Gen. MacArthur announced a daring and dramatic effort to evacuate 300 seriously wounded soldiers from Manila by sea. They were to be placed onboard a ship flying the American flag and the Red Cross flag. Under the usual rules of warfare, the latter would give the vessel immunity from attack.

The great difficulty of reinforcing the U.S.-Filipino defenders was apparent from the outset, especially in view of the time situation. In the time that has elapsed since the war began, troops could barely have reached the island by now under normal circumstances, to say nothing of having to run the Japanese blockade.

Then, too, there was the question of overall Allied strategy, which apparently considers it more important to concentrate available fighting equipment upon holding the Nazi armies in check until industrial production provides enough fighting tools for assuming the offensive on all fronts.

Wrote off Manila

So it was that many here regretfully wrote off Manila days ago when the plight of the Philippines and the broad outline of Allied grand strategy became apparent. They wrote it off, however, for recapture later, when the material is available for the Allied drive against Japan.

The imminent fall of the Filipino capital, however, raised several questions upon which Washingtonians speculated. “Would fighting continue in the southern island of Mindanao?” was one of them, and “what about Corregidor?” was another.

Corregidor is a rock island fortress in the entrance to Manila Bay. Military experts have said it was capable of withstanding a siege of many months. Possibly, it could make things extremely difficult should the Japs attempt to bring their warships into the harbor.

Virtually the last press dispatch from Manila contained Gen. MacArthur’s abrupt summary of the situation as it existed early this morning (ET):

The enemy is driving in great force from both north and south.

His dive bombers practically control the roads from the air.

The Japanese are using great quantities of tanks and armored units.

Our lines are being pushed back.

A little later, the War Department briefly summarized the situation as it stood at 9:30 a.m. ET:

The enemy continues to exert heavy pressure on all fronts with extensive use of dive bombers and armored units. In spite of these difficulties, a further readjustment of our lines has been completed in an orderly manner. U.S. and Philippine troops continue to offer strong resistance, inflicting heavy losses on the enemy.


Tokyo’s subs may try to shell coastal cities, Nimitz warns

New Hawaii attack is also possible, admiral asserts

Pearl Harbor, Hawaii (AP) –
Adm. Chester W. Nimitz, new commander of the U.S. Pacific Fleet, warned that Japanese submarines operating off the West Coast of the United States might attempt to shell coastal cities.

Speaking to reporters aboard a big new submarine yesterday just three hours after he assumed command, Adm. Nimitz said:

It’s relatively safe and simple for a submarine to arise to the surface near a port and throw a few shells into a city.

It is not beyond the bounds of possibility that Japanese submarines operating off the West Coast of the United States may attempt to lay their shells into cities before they leave.

The ocean, he added, is “too big to prevent it entirely.”

Significance of shelling

A reporter asked the significance of submarine shelling of three points in the Hawaiian Islands the night of Dec. 30. Adm. Nimitz replied that:

Japanese captains desire to make the utmost use of their weapons when there are no targets for their torpedoes.

The setting for the admiral’s first press conference after taking over his new command was colorful and unusual in many respects. It was said to be one of the few times in the history of the fleet that a commander’s four-star flag had flown from a submarine.

Before inviting reporters’ questions on the sun-drenched deck of the underseas monster, Adm. Nimitz pinned the Navy Cross on two pilots of a flying boat which rescued nine Army fliers from the sea only last night. It was his first official act as Commander-in-Chief.

Air of confidence

The tall, affable Texan showed an air of confidence but gave no sign of overconfidence. Speaking slowly and deliberately and with quiet dignity, he volunteered this assertion at the end of the conference:

You asked several questions about the future, many of them no doubt pressing. I’m a kamaaina (old-timer in Hawaii) myself and I’d like to reply In a Hawaiian word. This word is hoomanawanui, meaning “let time take care of the situation.”

Hawaii-wise reporters also offered these other translations: “Time will tell,” “Be patient.”

Asked about the possibilities of an attack on Hawaii if Japan succeeds in taking Manila and the Philippines, Adm. Nimitz took a long pause and replied:

An attack on these islands is always possible. We will do our utmost to keep them from falling into enemy hands. The Pacific Fleet is doing and will do the utmost possible.


Five Army fliers die when bomber crashes

Mineola, New York (AP) –
A twin-engined Army bomber crashed into a gravel pit in Garden City Park on Long Island today, killing five men instantly.

Witnesses said the plane struck a high-tension wire half a mile from the pit and exploded twice after striking the ground. The bodies were not removed from the plane at once.

The explosions were heard five miles from the pit, operated by the Colonial Sand & Gravel Company.

Army officers said the plane showed signs of distress when it reached West Mineola. It was heading for an open field when it lost altitude and struck the high-tension wire.

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U.S. War Department (January 2, 1942)

Communiqué No. 41

Philippine Theater.
Advanced elements of Japanese troops entered Manila at 3:00 p.m., January 2, 1942 (Manila Time).

It is reported that these troops were limited to a size necessary for police duties and maintenance of order.

All U.S. and Philippine troops were withdrawn from the city several days ago and all defense installations were removed or destroyed. Many of the wounded U.S. and Philippine soldiers were evacuated from the Manila area on December 31, 1941, and are now en route to Australia.

The tactical situation in the vicinity of Manila necessitated a radical readjustment of the lines held by U.S. and Philippine troops and consolidation of defense forces north of Manila.

This maneuver was successfully accomplished in the face of strong enemy opposition. The consequent shortening of our lines necessarily uncovered the road to Manila and made possible the Japanese entrance into the city. As it had been previously declared an open city, no close defense within the environs of the city was possible.

The loss of Manila, while serious, has not lessened the resistance to the Japanese attacks. U.S. and Philippine troops are occupying strong positions north of the city and are holding the fortified island of Corregidor and the other defenses of Manila Bay effectively, preventing the use of this harbor by the enemy.

During the past 24 hours, there has been heavy fighting on the ground with repeated enemy attacks from the north. Japanese air activity is somewhat less in intensity than for several days.

A landing of a small enemy force was effected at Jolo in the Sulu Archipelago in the south of the Philippine group.

There is nothing to report from other areas.


Communiqué No. 42

Philippine Theater.
U.S. and Philippine troops north and northwest of Manila are continuing to resist stubborn Japanese attacks which are being pressed with increasing intensity.

There is nothing to report from other areas.


U.S. Navy Department (January 2, 1942)

Communiqué No. 23

The U.S. naval base at Cavite was evacuated before the enemy entered Manila. All records, equipment, and stores that were not destroyed by bombing were removed prior to evacuation by naval personnel. All industrial and supply facilities, including fuel, were destroyed. The personnel of the naval hospital remained at their posts at the Naval Hospital Cañacao to care for the wounded. All ships and naval personnel were removed from the Manila-Cavite area prior to enemy occupation.

There is nothing to report from other areas.

The Pittsburgh Press (January 2, 1942)

JAPANESE CAPTURE MANILA
U.S. evacuates naval base; MacArthur’s troops fight north of city

Philippine forces still hold Corregidor Fort, unite two armies
By Mack Johnson, United Press staff writer

Japs in Manila; Corregidor holds

Screenshot 2021-12-07 062451
The map shows the location of Cavite Naval Base, abandoned by U.S. forces with Manila, and Corregidor, island fortress still held by the U.S.

Washington –
The city of Manila and the U.S. naval base at nearby Cavite fell into Japanese hands today.

Valiant U.S. and Filipino defenders under Gen. Douglas MacArthur had to abandon the capital and the base, but they still held strong positions north of Manila and on fortified islands that command Manila Bay.

The fall of undefended Manila was announced in a War Department communiqué which said:

Advanced elements of Japanese troops entered Manila at 3:00 p.m., Jan. 2, 1942, Manila Time (1:00 a.m. ET).

Navy evacuates Cavite

The evacuation of Cavite was reported by the Navy in another communiqué, stating:

All ships and personnel were removed from the Manila-Cavite area prior to enemy occupation.

The loss of Manila, which had been in U.S. hands for 43 years, had been practically a foregone conclusion ever since last night’s War Department communiqué disclosing that U.S. defenders in the north and south had been united.

The approximate position of the new defense line appeared to be a semi-circle anchored on the west at the subsidiary naval base of Olongapo and at an undisclosed point in the east, north of Manila.

U.S. bases on other islands

Manila is on Luzon, the main island of the Philippine group, which comprise about 7,000 islands in all. The principal battles have been fought on Luzon although there has been scattered action on other islands, especially on Mindanao, southernmost of the group.

On Mindanao, U.S. forces are still believed to have centers of resistance beyond Davao, the port and capital of the largely undeveloped province which long ago was settled by Japanese colonists who formed an effective fifth column at the outset of the war.

There are still some secondary U.S. garrisons or bases on other islands – notably Cebu, Negros, Panay and Palawan.

Hold Corregidor fortress

Cavite was the principal U.S. naval base in the Far East. But arrangements had long since been made to base at other points.

The War Department said:

U.S. and Philippine troops are occupying strong positions north of the city and are holding the fortified island of Corregidor and other defenses of Manila Bay effectively, preventing the use of this harbor by the enemy.

It stated that the “loss of Manila, while serious, has not lessened resistance to the Japanese attacks” on the ground. And it reported that:

Japanese air activity is somewhat less in intensity than for several days.

Enemy polices Manila

The War Department said that the Japanese troops in Manila were reported to be “limited to a size necessary for police duties and maintenance of order.”

The naval base at Olongapo is on the northern end of the mountainous Bataan Peninsula which stretches down to within a few miles of Corregidor, forming one of the landlocks of Manila Harbor.

Evacuation of Cavite was accomplished before the Japanese entered the Manila area, the Navy said. All records, equipment and stores that might have been of value to the enemy were removed. Naval installations were destroyed, as was the fuel stored at the naval base.

Fleet left weeks ago

Cavite lies 10 miles southwest of Manila, on the curving shore of Manila Bay, which is the greatest landlocked bay in the world.

Adm. Thomas C. Hart’s Asiatic Fleet was understood to have left Cavite some weeks before the outbreak of war, although Adm. Hart himself was around Manila a week ago.

Dispatches from Batavia today indicated that some units of the fleet are cooperating with the Dutch defenders of the Dutch East Indies.

But even after the evacuation of Cavite, the personnel of the Cañacao Naval Hospital remained at their posts at the naval hospital, “to care for the wounded,” the Navy said.

Come from Batangas

Japanese troops, presumed to be occupying Cavite, were believed to have pushed to the base from the southwest, where landings were effected some time ago in Batangas Province.

The occupation of Manila might have been accomplished by segments of the same forces, or by Japanese contingents pushing down the broad valleys northeast of Manila, on the eastern flank of Gen. MacArthur’s united defense lines.

U.S. units escape trap

The strategy of the joining of the north and south defenders was intended to bring the southern fighters to the new line so that they would not be cut off.

In their present position, Gen. MacArthur’s lines are entrenched on a long front with withdrawals toward the Bataan Peninsula a comparatively easy task, in the event such a tactical move becomes necessary.

In Bataan’s mountains, the heroic U.S.-Filipino troops would have some advantage over the Japanese and could, if necessary, fight all the way down the peninsula. If necessary, they could join the forces on Corregidor Island.

See ‘new developments’

But there are no definite indications here what Gen. MacArthur’s plans may be. It was pointed out that if he could maintain his present lines for any considerable length of time, new developments might strengthen his position immeasurably.

Manila was declared an open city a week ago, and all U.S. defense forces and equipment were withdrawn by Gen. MacArthur, who felt that it would be impossible to stage a last-ditch fight in the capital.

Street-to-street defense of Manila would have been a virtual impossibility because much of the city is composed of rows and rows of native huts. Certain sections are built on the American and European pattern, where such fighting might have taken place, but with all means of retreat cut off.

The Japanese drives toward Manila had developed into a multi-columned offensive from the northwest, north, southwest, southeast and south. But the retreat of Gen. MacArthur’s divisions was orderly on all fronts, a fact proved by the uniting of his forces yesterday.

The communiqués from Gen. MacArthur have told repeatedly of heavy blows struck against the enemy and the Japanese casualties in reaching Manila must have been very high.

His defense has been handicapped by a lack of aerial support to stave off Japanese bombers and harry the Nipponese behind their own lines. The Japanese, for their own part, have been blasting their way with the support of dive bombers and tanks.

Stimson lauds MacArthur

Almost from the very first concerted Japanese landing at Lingayen Gulf, about 150 miles northwest of Manila, Gen. MacArthur’s forces have been overwhelmingly outnumbered. The tactical withdrawals to new and stronger positions which he has executed are considered brilliant military feats by observers here.

Only yesterday, Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson hailed Gen. MacArthur’s “masterful” handling of the situation and described him as this nation’s “best fighter.”

Corregidor, the Gibraltar-like fortress at the entrance to Manila Bay and still in American hands, is a huge mass of honeycombed rock, bristling with coastal defense guns and anti-aircraft rifles. The mountain tunnels are used as storerooms and, in some cases, living quarters for U.S. forces.

The island is believed partially impervious to ordinary aerial bombardment, but there is some uncertainty as to how long it could withstand heavy and continuous dive-bombing attacks.

The Cavite Naval Base’s primary importance was a ship repair center and as a submarine base. Connected by good roads and a railroad with Manila, the base became untenable after the Japanese occupation of Manila.

A $12-million base

In addition to the Navy yard, the base also included the Cañacao Naval Hospital, a naval prison, fuel storage facilities and a naval radio station.

With the loss of Cavite went property valued by the Navy at $12,128,469. On June 30 this year, the Navy had $413,697,895 worth of stocks and supplies on hand at the base, but the Navy communiqué made it clear that nine of these materials fell into Japanese hands in useable condition.

Included in the Cavite Naval Hospital staff that remained on duty despite the Japanese advance were medical and dental officers, female nurses of the Navy Nurse Corps and hospital corpsmen. It furnished hospitalization for the officers and men of the Asiatic Fleet and the Marine Corps stationed in Asiatic areas.

MacArthur won’t leave

Gen. MacArthur will not abandon the fight for the Philippines. He will fight it out to a finish.

That was made clear by Mr. Stimson at his New Year’s Day press conference in reply to a question whether the War Department had ordered Gen. MacArthur to leave the islands in the event Manila’s defenses collapse.

Mr. Stimson’s answer was an emphatic, “No.”

Meanwhile, Mr. Stimson added that the work of the Japanese staff officers has been of “high order” and that much of the Japanese success in China has been due to this, plus training and good technical equipment.

While cautioning against looking at the war through “rose-colored glasses,” Mr. Stimson said he was “confident that we will defeat them [the Japanese] in the end.”

Werner: MacArthur can fight on at Corregidor or in hills

By McDougald Werner, United Press staff writer

Washington –
U.S. and Filipino troops, fighting a Japanese army stronger in men and equipment, will continue the fight despite the loss of Manila, it was indicated today.

Gen. Douglas MacArthur’s dogged determination to keep on fighting even when others consider the cause lost, is legendary among soldiers who have served under him.

Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson emphatically told reporters yesterday that the War Department had not advised Gen. MacArthur to leave the Philippines when Manila fell.

There was much speculation here that Gen. MacArthur might retire to the mountains of the island of Luzon to fight guerilla warfare, or that he might retire to Corregidor Island at the entrance to Manila Bay. If Gen. MacArthur decides that further resistance in the Philippine area is not worthwhile, he might try to move his men and materials to Borneo, Dutch East Indies, or Australia.

May try ‘hit-run’ war

Should U.S. and Filipino forces retire to the mountainous country to carry on a “hit-and-run” war, there are several good places they might use. One is Baguio, summer capital of the Philippines which lies about 150 miles north of Manila and east of Lingayen Gulf. To get to Baguio, the defenders might have to cut a path through a part of the Japanese forces approaching Manila from the north.

Guerrilla warfare can be effective. Gen. Emilio Aguinaldo, who headed the native revolt against Spain in 1898 and the insurrection against the United States between 1900 and 1903, succeeded in harassing U.S. troops for two years. Aguinaldo, incidentally, has recently urged his countrymen to be loyal to the United States, and it is possible he was taken prisoner by the Japanese as they advanced northward around Kawit, at the base of the Cavite Peninsula where Aguinaldo made his home.

If U.S. and Filipino fighters should retire to Corregidor Island, they might be able to resist indefinitely. Corregidor is 27 miles across water from Manila, at the entrance to Manila Bay. It is seven miles from the mainland to the south, and two miles from the mainland to the north.

Corregidor resembles the British Crown colony of Hong Kong which the Japanese captured in 18 days of severe fighting. The island, about four miles long and a mile wide at the widest point, is of almost solid rock except on the eastern tip.

Fort Mills, the Army post which occupies the entire island, has one advantage over Hong Kong in that it has one small airfield.

Other forts may help

Whether Corregidor could withstand a strong air attack is conjectural. Many of the big gun emplacements are hewn out of almost solid rock, and the island long ago was well-equipped with anti-aircraft guns.

The barracks and usual living quarters are on top of the island but presumably could be moved into safer places in the deep rock crevices. It is reported that provisions sufficient for many months have been stored. An underground hospital and bomb shelters are part of the island.

Three outlying forts, if held by U.S. and Filipino forces, would strengthen the island. They are Caballo (site of Fort Hughes), El Fraile Island (on which Fort Drum is located), and Carabao Island (which is close to the mainland to the south and would be vulnerable to land attack). Carabao is the site of Fort Frank.

U.S. prepares for attacks on Panama Canal

Jap bombing attempt on lifeline ‘inevitable,’ authorities believe
By Nat A. Barrows

Balboa, Panama Canal Zone –
Defensive measures in the Panama Canal Zone are being established against enemy attack by leaders here who consider such an attack inevitable.

Obviously not the slightest description can be cabled in the interests of our national security. Your correspondent may give assurance, however, that the Army and Navy adaptation of defenses is being patterned on confidential reports of Japanese activities in the Philippines. Every Japanese move in the Far East is being studied for possible Panama connotations.

From what your correspondent has seen and heard, the new defenses of this Isthmian Waterway, which cuts 10,000 miles from the Atlantic-Pacific trip, the enemy is going to receive plenty of surprises if he succeeds in penetrating our distant outposts and getting through to the canal itself.

Fanaticism a factor

It is apparent even to the lowliest day laborer here that the best possible U.S. strategy is to meet attack as far away from the canal as possible. That was plain long before the Caribbean became an American lake and long before Japanese suicide dive bombers had to be reckoned with as a factor in any canal attack.

The fanaticism of the Japanese invaders is being accepted realistically here as admirals and generals discuss what they call “a situation of deadly seriousness.”

They emphasize the belief that a canal attack is coming sooner or later and they reiterate their belief in the possibility of its being attended by acts of fanaticism.

NOTE: Apparently, censors interrupted this dispatch at this point as its sequence is broken.

Overhead the roar of many planes smashed out of the hot sky as another patrol returned from far out over the Pacific. We hear that so often we are hardly aware of it. Then, somewhere in the distance, a rumble of heavy cannonading reaches us across the jungle. Big guns having a little tryout in readiness for the “inevitable day.”

‘We are ready’

The admiral resumed speaking slowly and with deliberation.

An attack on the canal, at least one attack, will be attempted, he asserted.

“When, or how, we don’t know. But we are ready,” he said. And his face was grim.


Dutch in East Indies aided by U.S. forces

Batavia, NEI (UP) –
U.S. naval and air cooperation with the Dutch defenders of the East Indies was disclosed today in a war communiqué which said a U.S. warship and two airplanes had been attacked by the Japanese.

The warship escaped serious damage during enemy aerial bombardment in a northern sector of the East Indies (possibly off Borneo or Celebes Islands), and U.S. aircraft were not damaged, according to the communiqué.


U.S. seeks Jap subs in Hawaii shelling

Honolulu, Hawaii –
Bombers and warships were believed to be searching the sea today for enemy raiders, presumably Japanese submarines, which shelled three islands Tuesday night.

The Army, without elaborating, announced that “prompt counteraction was taken by our forces.”

Adm. Chester W. Nimitz, new Commander-in-Chief of the Pacific Fleet, warned that any port may be shelled. He said:

I believe that Japanese captains desire to make utmost use of their weapons. When there is a lack of targets for torpedoes, it is relatively safe and simple to rise to the surface near a port and throw shells.

The attacks Tuesday night – on Kahului, Maui Island; Hilo, Hawaii Island, and Nawiliwili, Kauai Island – caused little damage and no casualties.

WAR BULLETINS!

Nazis say they lost 1,046 planes in 1941

Berlin, Germany –
The official DNB News Agency reported today that, in 1941, German Air Force losses in operations against Britain, including Africa and the Mediterranean, totaled 1,046 planes. British losses were placed at 3,834 planes. DNB claimed this brought RAF losses since the start of the war to 8,727 planes.

Japs seek new Russ treaty

Kuybyshev, Russia –
Japanese Ambassador Yoshitsugu Tatekawa has resumed negotiations with the Soviet government for renewal of a Russo-Japanese treaty governing Japanese fishing rights in Far Eastern waters. The act expired yesterday.

Britain expects to hold Singapore

London, England –
A statement emanating from the most responsible British quarters said today that Britain intends to hold her Far Eastern bastion of Singapore “with American and other cooperation.”

Italian general dies suddenly

Rome, Italy (UP) – (broadcast recorded in London)
The official news agency reported from Turin today that Gen. Giuseppe Motta had died suddenly of heart disease “during maneuvers.”

Jap subs blockade Hawaii, Nazis say

London, England –
Berlin radio today quoted a message from Tokyo as saying that the blockading of Hawaii had begun, mainly by submarines, preventing the arrival of supplies from the United States.

Battle rages near Corregidor, Nazis say

Berlin, Germany (UP) – (broadcast recorded in U.S.)
The Berlin radio today broadcast a report from Tokyo saying that Japanese planes were heavily attacking U.S. forces withdrawing across the water from Luzon Island to Corregidor Fortress, about 30 miles southwest of Manila. Corregidor Island guards the entrance to Manila Bay.

170 miles from Singapore, Japs say

Tokyo, Japan –
The Army Section of Imperial Headquarters today announced Japanese forces were only 170 miles from Singapore on the Malay Peninsula.

Stalin may come to U.S.

London, England (UP) – (broadcast recorded in U.S.)
A Budapest radio broadcast heard here today quoted Stockholm reports saying that Stalin had accepted an invitation from President Roosevelt to visit Washington. Winston Churchill, the reports said, would stay in Washington until Stalin’s arrival.

Chinese troops enter Burma

Chungking, China –
An announcement disclosed today that fully-equipped Chinese troops have entered Burma at the request of the British and are now under command of Gen. Sir Archibald Wavell, British Commander-in-Chief in India. The spokesman said volunteer American aviators, still under Chinese command, were continuing to patrol the Burma Road.

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Anti-Axis countries sign no separate peace pledge

United States, Britain, China, Russia first to approve agreement, it is believed – Adm. King may command Allied fleets in Pacific

Bulletin

Washington –
Twenty-six nations, including the United States, Great Britain, Russia and China, have signed an agreement pledging a finish fight against the Axis and banning any separate peace, the White House announced today.

Washington (UP) –
The United States, Great Britain, China and Russia have signed a declaration that they will fight the Axis to a finish and that none of them will accept a separate peace, it was learned today.

President Roosevelt was expected to announce the pact later this afternoon. He told his morning press conference an important statement would be forthcoming from the White House in time to be printed in late-afternoon newspapers.

It was understood that several other nations have also agreed, or will soon agree, to the anti-Axis pact. Several envoys visited the State Department during the day, including Panamanian Ambassador Ernesto Jaén Guardia, who told reporters he had signed a declaration of anti-Axis solidarity.

The declaration was said to be brief, and to contain only two points – a pledge to enter into no separate peace, and a pledge to cooperate toward victorious conclusion of the war.

The agreement is apparently the first concrete result of the talks Mr. Roosevelt and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill have been holding here with spokesmen for nations opposing the Axis. The conferences have also covered supply and command problems.

No details were available immediately, but it was pointed out the chief executives of the two great English-speaking nations are currently in the White House and presumably signed the agreement for the United States and Great Britain. Also in Washington are T. V. Soong, new Foreign Minister of the Chinese Nationalist government, and Russian Ambassador Maxim Litvinov, who is also the Soviet Vice Commissar for Foreign Affairs.

Envoys from these countries visited the State Department today and were believed to have signed the pact: Australia, Belgium, the Netherlands, Costa Rica, Honduras, El Salvador, Cuba, Haiti, Guatemala, Luxembourg, Czechoslovakia, Dominican Republic, Nicaragua and the Union of South Africa.

They called at the office of Assistant Secretary of State Adolf Berle, where the signing ceremonies were apparently taking place.

Mr. Roosevelt, at his press conference, scotched earlier reports that he and Mr. Churchill had concluded some special agreement for Allied defenses in the Pacific. The President said he knew of no plan relating only to the Pacific.

A reporter asked whether, as a London dispatch indicated, his talks with Churchill would lead to extension of the Atlantic Charter to the Pacific. The charter, which he and Mr. Churchill drew up in mid-ocean last August, applied not only to the Atlantic but to the entire world, the President replied.

He declined to comment on reports that Adm. Ernest J. King, Commander-in-Chief of the U.S. Fleet, would be selected as the supreme command of the Allied fleets, and that Gen. Archibald Wavell, Commander-in-Chief of Britain’s Indian forces, would be named supreme commander of Allied land forces in the Pacific war theater.

The pace of the British-American war-planning conversations had quickened during the past 24 hours. The presence of Adm. King yesterday at a Roosevelt-Churchill meeting inspired widespread belief that he might have an important role in operation of Allied fleets.

Mr. Churchill returned from Ottawa yesterday, attended special New Year’s prayer services with Mr. Roosevelt at Christ Church in Alexandria, Virginia, and then plunged into hours of work in the President’s White House study on the Allied plan for unity of action against Hitler.

Secretary of State Cordell Hull and Under Secretary of State Sumner Welles were called into the conference yesterday. Mr. Welles leaves shortly to represent this country at a Pan-American conference in Rio de Janeiro.

The War Council meeting also included Secretary of War Stimson, Secretary of the Navy Knox, Harry Hopkins and chiefs of the U.S. Armed Forces. Assisting Mr. Churchill were Adm. Sir Dudley Pound (First Sea Lord of the British Admiralty), Air Chf. Mshl. Sir Charles Portal and Gen. Sir John Greer Dill (recently-commissioned Governor of Bombay).

Meanwhile, the Soviet Embassy and State Department were without information on reports from London that Soviet Premier Joseph Stalin will arrive here soon for war talks with Mr. Roosevelt and Churchill. The same rumor has been heard here for more than a week.

The Churchill-Roosevelt trip to Christ Church in Alexandria yesterday was to attend special services requested by the President in his proclamation declaring New Year’s Day a day of prayer. The two leaders sat in the pew once owned by George Washington to listen to a youthful Episcopal rector criticize America’s “great sin of international irresponsibility” of pre-war days and pray for strength.

Then Mr. Roosevelt and Mr. Churchill asked God to stretch forth “thine mighty arm to strengthen and protect” the armed forces of their allied nations.

After the services, the two leaders motored to Mount Vernon, the historic Potomac River home of Washington, where Mr. Churchill laid a wreath on the tomb of the man who led American “rebels” in the Revolutionary War to overthrow the yoke of the British King.

U.S. tightens alien control

Travel of Axis subjects is limited; can’t have guns

Washington (UP) –
The United States today tightened restrictions on the activities of 1,100,000 Axis aliens who, though considered “peaceful and law-abiding,” have among them potential spies, saboteurs and fifth columnists.

In addition to restricting the travel of Japanese, German and Italian nationals domiciled in the United States, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands, Attorney General Francis Biddle yesterday ordered all enemy aliens to surrender firearms in their possession to local police authorities before 11:00 p.m. Monday ET.

Police stations are already storehouses for shortwave radios, radio transmitters and cameras, ranging from the inexpensive box type to the expensive precision equipment. Surrender of these began last weekend on the West Coast and the deadline for the rest of the nation is Monday.

Mr. Biddle cautioned police officials that “most of the persons” affected by the orders were law-abiding and loyal to the United States. For this reason, he asked them to instruct all officers assisting in the work to “use as much care as they reasonably can in helping the affected aliens to comply with the regulations.”

Axis aliens can travel beyond certain limitations only when authorized to do so by the U.S. attorney of the district in which they live. Permission for such travel, he said, would be denied in cases where it was considered “potentially dangerous to public safety.”

Permission is not required, however, for travel within the limits of the municipality in which the Axis alien resides, or between his home and place of business, churches, schools, state, local and federal agencies. This permits the alien to engage in normal activities.

Written application

Japanese, German and Italian aliens were barred from traveling by air at the outset of the war.

Under terms of the travel regulations, the alien planning such a trip must apply to the U.S. attorney of his district in writing a week in advance of the proposed journey. The application for permission must contain the alien’s name, nationality, alien registration number, purpose of the trip, destination, date of departure and return, the route to be followed and the carrier (railroad, bus, auto) used.

Willful disobedience of any of the regulations will result in arrest of the violator and internment in a concentration camp for the duration of the war.

Nearly 3,000 Japanese, German and Italian aliens considered dangerous to the peace and security of the nation were rounded up within a few hours of the Japanese attack in the Pacific. These aliens, whose activities had been scrutinized by the FBI, naval and military intelligence for more than two years, are now awaiting hearings by review boards named by the Attorney General.

To speed war production –
Auto sales stopped

OPM to convert plants after ‘freezing’ purchases till Jan. 15; tires rationed Monday

Washington (UP) –
Mr. Average Man, who has been thinking about swapping his old car for a new one but has hesitated because of the state of the world, doesn’t have to worry anymore.

He can’t do it now even if he has made up his mind and has the cash.

The Office of Production Management is rushing plans to convey every facility of the auto industry to the production of implements of war. All sales of new autos were halted as of yesterday, and production of autos will be stopped completely 30 days hence.

Representatives of labor, management and government will meet here Monday to plan for immediate utilization of all the industry’s workers and machinery in the war effort, Associate OPM Director-General Sidney Hillman said.

A rationing system will be worked out in the next few days to dispose of those cars that will be manufactured in the next month. Passenger cars and light trucks will probably be rationed in much the same manner as that to be used for distributing tires and tubes.

The tire and tube rationing system goes into effect Monday. Civilians will be able to purchase only used and retreaded tires and tubes unless they are on the government’s list of “essential” users.

The “essential” purchasers of autos will probably conform to that of tires and tubes – doctors, surgeons, visiting nurses and vehicles necessary to the public health and safety.

Alvan Macauley, president of the Automobile Manufacturers Association and chairman of the Automotive Council for War Production, said in Detroit the auto industry is “100 percent” behind the government. But he urged that additional contracts be awarded automobile manufacturers to cushion dislocations.

He said:

The government must give us work on which we can turn loose our mass production facilities. Plants will have to be shut down, but just how many and for how long, we can’t say. It will depend in part on how rapidly we can get into production on new contracts.

The OPM’s order barred the sale, delivery, purchase or lease of new passenger cars and light and heavy trucks. It is estimated that 450,000 cars now in dealer’s hand will be available for those the OPM classes as essential users.

Production of heavy trucks will be allowed to continue after that of automobile and light trucks is halted. Heavy trucks will be sold, however, only to purchasers designated by the OPM.

Vital materials used

These orders, it was said, eliminate a barrier to all-out armament production as the auto industry has been consuming large quantities of steel, aluminum, magnesium, zinc, chromium, copper, lead, tin, tungsten, nickel, rubber and other vitally-needed war materials.

Under terms of the OPM’s Priorities Division order halting sales of new cars, no dealer today can legally sell a new vehicle to a would-be purchaser. The order includes cars in show windows, warehouses or wherever they may be if they are 1942 models or models which have been run less than 1,000 miles. All of the 450,000 cars now built and the 100,000 to be built this month will be available for government rationing.

The freezing of new car and truck sales extends to Jan. 15, the Priorities Division said, “at which time it is expected that a rationing plan will have been developed.”

Experts estimate that the auto industry can convert or use approximately 80% of its present machinery and plant capacity for war work but point out that the conversion job will take a long time.

While all officials agreed that the halt in auto production would aid the war program, OPM Labor Division officials pointed out that transfer of tens of thousands of workers to war production will entail a costly time lag while facilities are in a changeover period. One plan said to be under construction would provide for government payments to displaced workers who were enrolled in training schools.

The employment situation generally, however, was characterized as only temporary as the National Labor Supply Policy Committee is anticipating an increase in present war employment of 5,000,000 to about 12,000,000 next year and to 23,500,000 by 1944.

Representatives of the auto industry will discuss with OPM officials Monday details of the halt in auto and light truck production.

OPM Priorities Director Donald M. Nelson said that an amendment to the ban on sales will be issued immediately to permit completion of conditional sales, chattel mortgages and similar auto purchase contracts when delivery was made prior to Jan. 1. Amendments would also be issued to permit repossession of cars under such contracts in accordance with existing law. Other changes may be made, he added, “to cover particular hardship situations which may develop.”


Questions, answers listed to clarify tire rationing

Washington (UP) –
The Office of Price Administration today released this compilation of questions and answers clarifying tire and tube rationing regulations:

Are seconds of new tires and tubes “new” tires or tubes?

Yes.

Are bicycle tires within the scope of rationing regulations?

No.

Can an interstate common carrier, which has delivered to and deposited with various tire service stations along its route a supply of its own tires, bearing its own brand, to be used to service its own trucks under a service contract with the local agency, obtain such tires from the local station?

This depends upon whether the release of tires amounts to a delivery or transfer within the contemplation of the order; opinion reserved for written submission of facts.

Can tires in possession of seller on which full payment has been made be delivered to the purchaser?

No.

Can tires on which a down payment has been made but which are still in the possession of the seller be delivered to the purchaser?

No.

Can tires now owned and in the possession of a fleet operator be transferred from one of his fleet garages to another? From truck to truck?

Yes.

Can tire dealers exchange white-walled tires owned by them for black-walled tires owned by automobile dealers?

No.

Have the local boards any discretion in extending the list of classes eligible to purchase or transfer tires or tubes?

No.

To whom must one apply for modification in the list?

Leon Henderson,
Office of Price Administration,
Washington, DC

Is a hearse an eligible vehicle?

No. In emergencies, ambulances, which are on the eligible list, may be used as hearses.

Is a truck used to deliver coal to both the manufacturers and private consumers entitled to tires?

Yes.

Does the exception in the section relating to deliveries to ultimate consumer prohibit the delivery of coal to an ultimate consumer?

No.

Are trucks used to repair telegraph lines eligible vehicles?

Yes.

Are passenger cars used to repair telegraph lines eligible vehicles?

No.

Are cars used to render commercial service to telegraph offices eligible vehicles?

No.

Are cars used to deliver telegrams in rural areas eligible vehicles?

No.

Are passenger cars used by traveling purchasers of scrap iron entitled to tires?

No.

Are wholesale grocers’ trucks used to make deliveries to retailers eligible?

Yes.

Are passenger cars used by wholesale grocers to make deliveries or to solicit sales eligible vehicles?

No.

Are wholesale grocers’ trucks used for sales and for solicitation of sales eligible vehicles?

Only when the deliveries and solicitations coincide. Trucks cannot be used as salesmen’s vehicles.

Are trucks used by newspapers to make delivery of newspapers in wholesale lots to newsdealers eligible vehicles?

Yes.

Are trucks used for the delivery of single papers to homes in rural areas eligible vehicles?

No.

Are trucks used for retail delivery of heavy goods like furniture eligible vehicles?

No.

Price ceiling placed on stoves, carpets

Washington (UP) –
Maximum manufacturers’ prices for household cooking and heating stoves were set today at about 2% above mid-October by Price Administrator Leon Henderson.

A 60-day emergency schedule was also issued which places ceiling prices on rugs and carpets for sale by wholesalers, jobbers, agents, brokers and importers. Both price schedules are effective Jan. 5.

Top prices charged for stoves may not exceed 112% of the lowest price quoted or charged by manufacturers between Jan. 15 and June 1, 1941.

Under terms of the rug-carpet schedule, rugs may not be sold at prices higher than those charged between Oct. 1 and Oct. 13, 1941. A permanent price schedule will be formulated after conferences with distributors.

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Roosevelt promotes aide

Washington –
President Roosevelt today nominated his naval aide, Capt. John R. Beardall, to be a temporary rear admiral.

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Russians criticized –
Simms: Red charge resented

Fact that ‘cowardice’-in-Manila taunt was printed by Kremlin mouthpiece aggravates incident
By William Philip Simms, Scripps-Howard foreign editor

Washington –
The Russian charge of “cowardice” against Gen. Douglas MacArthur and his defense force at Manila is deeply resented here as uncalled for and untrue.

The fact that the criticism was featured prominently in Pravda, one of the two principal mouthpieces of the Kremlin and of Premier Stalin, is regarded as seriously aggravating the incident.

Pravda alleged that the United States used “Pétain” tactics in its efforts to spare Manila from Japanese bombs. American leaders there, it went on, acted like “ladybugs,” which, lacking the courage to fight, roll over on their backs and stick their legs toward the sky when an enemy appears. People who act like that, it said, “are cowards.”

In the United States, where the press is free, editorials represent merely the opinions of individual editors or owners. In Russia, newspapers are owned by the government and rigidly controlled by it.

The newspapers Pravda and Izvestia are the principal organs of the Communist Party and of the Soviet government. At one time, Stalin was an editor of Pravda.

Secretary of War Stimson said he would rather not engage in a controversy on the subject, but made it quite evident that he regards the defense of the Philippines and of Manila as being in the hands of “our most skillful fighter.”

Other high officials take a similar view. The exchange of insulting remarks between Allies – even if well-founded and not, as in this case, based on snap judgment and incomplete information – simply isn’t done.

Privately, opinions are being freely expressed here. For one thing, it is said, Pravda appears to be afflicted with a short memory. It seems to have forgotten that in the first rush of the Nazis last summer, Russian-held areas, several times the size of the whole Philippine Archipelago, were quickly seized. The Russian-held half of Poland, all of Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia, part of Finland, and cities like Kiev, Odessa, Nikolaev, Bryansk and dozens of others were soon lost. Some 50 million Russians were driven from their homes and the major part of industrial Russia was occupied before the German hordes were stopped.

Outnumbered Nazis

This is not said in criticism of the Russians, though in manpower they outnumbered the Nazis by more than two to one and their mechanical equipment was at least equal to that of the enemy. They were taken by surprise – as was the United States on Dec. 7 – and it takes time to organize an adequate defense against a thoroughly-prepared aggressor. This, it is pointed out, Pravda seems to have forgotten.

Moreover, it is added, such criticism comes with exceptionally bad grace from a country which has been, and continues to be, the recipient of aid from the United States. But for the material sent across the Atlantic, it is remarked, the United States might have had more tanks, planes, guns and other munitions on hand in the Philippines.

A Senator said:

Uncle Sam is like the man in the parable. He stripped himself to clothe one more naked than himself, only to be ridiculed by the recipient for being caught without his pants.

But what has attracted attention here is not so much Pravda’s uncomplimentary accusation as what might lie behind it. As official organs, it is pointed out, Pravda and Izvestia seldom publish an article of such consequence without some specific reason, and never without official approval. The question is now, what is Russia’s reason?

Officially, the United States and Russia are not allies. They just happen to be fighting a common foe – Hitler. Russia is not fighting Japan, one explanation being that she and Nippon have signed a non-aggression pact. It is recalled, however, that Russia and Poland had a similar pact in 1939 when Russia, along with Germany, invaded that country.

Some are wondering, therefore, if Pravda’s outburst does not mean more than appears on the surface.

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Flying Fortress output stepped up by Boeing

Seattle, Washington (UP) –
The Boeing Aircraft Company announced today it had surpassed its own accelerated delivery schedule of Flying Fortress Army bombers by 70% during December.

Brig. Gen. George C. Kenney, Assistant Chief of the Air Corps Materiel Division, congratulated Boeing employees in a telegram which said the company “has responded to the emergency in an unparalleled manner.”

Boeing plants operated full shifts yesterday, maintaining a seven-day-a-week schedule.

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Hi,
Reading this excellent thread how the Allies were pushed back in the Pacific brought the old game Silent Service 2 from Microprose to mind. Where you control a sub s-boat /Gato etc. If you start in an S-boat and chose realistic (duds) Mark 14 and see the bases were you can refit and refuel suddenly go it had that crappy feeling of trying to fight a war were nothing works.

Yes it was just a game but suddenly the age-old colonies starting falling to a seemingly unstoppable force. All the Kudos to those submariners in their cramped boats.

PS I put it back on my laptop last months and still remember a lot of the keys. :slight_smile:

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U.S. War Department (January 3, 1942)

Communiqué No. 43

Corregidor Island in Manila Bay sustained a five-hour aerial bombardment yesterday. The enemy air force attacking the island was composed of at least 60 bombers. There was no material damage to installations on the island. Casualties resulting from this attack were 13 killed and 35 wounded. At least three enemy planes were shot down by anti-aircraft fire.

There was a marked lessening of enemy ground attacks. U.S. and Philippine troops were consolidated in new positions, where organized resistance to Japanese attacks will be intensified.

Enemy airplanes were active in the region occupied by our ground forces.

There is nothing to report from other areas.

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The Pittsburgh Press (January 3, 1942)

WAR BULLETINS!

German officer wounded in France

Berlin, Germany (UP) – (broadcast recorded in U.S.)
The press spokesman today said that a German officer had been wounded in an attack at Dijon, France.

Noted Jap flier dies in Malaya

Berlin, Germany (UP) – (broadcast recorded in U.S.)
German dispatches from Tokyo reported today that Air Officer Masaaki Iinuma, who established a Tokyo-London flight record in 1937, had died of wounds suffered in an air battle over northern Malaya Dec. 11. In 1937, Iinuma flew to London from Tokyo in 94 hours and 17 minutes under the auspices of the Tokyo newspaper Asahi.

Jap force retires from Burma

London, England –
A small Japanese force recently infiltrated into Bokpyin Mergui, north of Point Victoria in Burma, but retired after an attack by British patrols, a spokesman said today.

Duce demands peoples’ cooperation

Rome, Italy (UP) – (broadcast recorded in London)
Premier Benito Mussolini today demanded that Italians cooperate more closely with “our comrades of the Axis” because the future of Italy is at stake.

RAF hits Nazi bases, lays mines

London, England –
British planes attacked the German-held naval bases of Brest and Saint-Nazaire on the French coast during the night and laid mines in enemy waters, the Air Ministry said today. All planes returned.

Australians again raid Jap island

Melbourne, Australia –
The Royal Australian Air Force has struck for the second time against a Japanese base in the Jap Caroline Islands. Bombs damaged stores, installations and equipment. An enemy seaplane was set on fire and destroyed. All Australian planes returned safely.

Germans admit fall of Bardia

Berlin, Germany (UP) – (broadcast recorded in U.S.)
The German High Command admitted the fall of Bardia, Libya, in a communiqué today which said there was only “local fighting” on the southern and northern sectors of the Russian front. The High Command claimed that the German Air Force, raiding Moscow, scored hits on a railroad station.

Bardia falls, Sollum pounded, Rome admits

Rome, Italy (UP) – (broadcast recorded in London)
An Italian communiqué said today that British planes had raided Naples during the night and admitted the loss of Bardia, Axis stronghold on the Libyan coast. The communiqué said the British had bombarded Sollum, the isolated Axis fort on the Libyan-Egyptian frontier, with concentrated artillery fire.

Chinese claim 15,000 Jap casualties

Chungking, China –
Chinese troops, counterattacking in the suburbs of Changsha, embattled capital of Hunan Province, have inflicted 15,000 casualties on the Japanese, a Chinese communiqué said today. Axis reports that Changsha had fallen were denied.

Allied tanker reported sunk by Japs

Berlin, Germany (UP) – (broadcast recorded in London)
Japanese submarines were reported today to have sunk a former Dutch tanker being used by British and U.S. naval forces 80 miles off the California coast.