Weather 'The Wind and the Rain in Your Hair' Y 4FD40 *ati4 MEditorial Obstructionist Lewis At Work Againp. VOL LIt. No. 141 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 1942 Z-323 PRICE FIVE CENTS I British, Indian Leaders Said To Be Agreed On Final Plan Japs Sink Two Cruisers; Open India To Invasion Planes Blast British Warships Dorsetshire, Cornwall As Enemy Fleet Dominates Bay Of Bengal Gallant Bataan Defense Collapses Under Terrific Sustained Assault Compromise Is Reported To Inchule Dominion Status; U.S. Influence Was Important Factor Moslei Question Is Still Unsettled NEW DELHI, India. April 9.-()- Britain and the Hindu leaders of India were generally reported tonight to have come to terms on the delicate, danger-fraught question of independ- ence for India. The influence of the United States appeared to have weighed heavily in the final bargain- ing. Apart from the still open question of adherence to the compromise plan by the Moslem League, there appeared to be lacking little more than the for- malities of signature and promul- gation to give India a national gov- ernment now, guarantee her domin- ion status after the war, with a do- minion's right of secession, and place her in the front as an Asiatic bul- wark of the United Nations. Johnson Helpful Influence The successful formula compound- ed by Britain's negotiator-in-chief, Sir Stafford Cripps, and leadersof the dominant All-India Congress Party, with the helpful influence of President Roosevelt's personal emis- sary to India, Louis Johnson, was re- ported to provide for a clear division of functions under the projected na- tional government for India. Gen. Sir, Archibald P. Wavell, Brit- ish Commander for India, it is said, would be supreme- commander for conduct of the war under an Indian war cabinet whose defense minister would be an Indian. Both Cripps and Johnson were be- lieved to be eager that Pandit Jawa-1 harlal Nehru, past President of the Congress Party and one of its rank-o ing leaders, take the defense port- folio. Plan Composes Differences The consolidation of Indian andi British direction of India's war ef-i fort, as envisaged, was believed to have composed the sharpest differ- ence between the Congress Party and, the British. The original plan car- ried by Cripps to New Delhi last month provided that responsibility for the Indian defense remain in British hands. Late last week, amid signs of a breakdown over the British plan and the Congress Party's rejection, John- son arrived at New Delhi. TonightI Indian commentators were callingr him the hero of the hour. Although the precise part he played in the ne- gotiations was not known, a national- ist newspaper, the Bombay Sentinel,I dubbed him a "super Cripps." Cecil Brown k To Talk Here' 'Repulse' Sinking Survivor To Discuss Pacific War CBS Far Eastern correspondent Cecil Brown-whose reporting of the sinking of the British battleship "Re- pulse" and of the true state of affairs in Singapore aroused world-wide comment-will deliver the final lec- ture of the Oratorical Series at 8:15 p.m. Monday, April 27, in Hill Audi- torium. Brown will replace Quentin Rey-' nolds, foreign correspondent and author of "London Can Take It," who was unable to fulfill his en- gagement in the series. Patrons holding season tickets can use the{ Quentin Reynolds stub for ad- mittance to Brown's lecture.- Brown, who will discuss "The War in the Pacific," joined the CBS staffc in 1940. He covered Yugoslavia at; the time of the Nazi invasion, Syria, and Cairo, from which he broadcast his account of the German conquest of Greece.; Thatcher Elected AIChE President The American Institute of Chemi-i cal Engineers yesterday announced the election of its officers for the cominL' veax_ LONDON, April 9.-tom)-JapaneseJ planes have blasted the British heavy cruisers Dorsetshire and Cornwall to the bottom of the Indian Ocean, thus virtually opening the way for an in- vasion of India. The Ganges Basin now is left un- defended at sea save for light forces, well-informed observers declared as the Admiralty announced the loss of the two heavier warships. Ceylon Naval Base Bombed Other British communiques re- ported that the Japanese bombed the Ceylon naval base of Trincomalee this morning and that several Allied Tanky.Columns Parry Thrust Below Tobruk London Reveals Sinking Of Big Italian Cruiser By British Submarine (By The Associated Press) CAIRO, April 9.-A British column of all types of arms including tanks was testing strength tonight with Axis armored forces at Sidi Bregisch, 60 miles southwest of Tobruk, in a fight for control of the wide Libyan desert no man's land. As Both sides jockeyed for posi- tion in the North African sands, the Admiralty announced the sinking of a 10,000-ton Italian cruiser by a British submarine in the central Mediterranean on the Axis' vital sup- ply lane to the battlefront. Naval observers said in London that loss of the ship, which sank eight minutes after the torpedo ex- plosions, left Italy with only two of the seven 10,000-ton cruisers she had at the outset of the war. Despite the flare-up of fighting in the desert, with the Germans and Italians throwing in "quite strong forces," informed sources saw no tan- gible evidence that a large scale of- fensive was taking form. British military observers said the Axis units might be trying to set up strong forward points to guard their badly battered airport at Martuba, or simply were feeling out the lineup of British troops oppostie their posi- tions. A communique announced that "the enemy did not attempt to ad- vance further" during the day after having struck forward suddenly last Tuesday. The war bulletin reported the cap- ture of a number of Axis troops "trying to establish a strong point between Tmimi and El Gazala," some 20 miles apart. This was taken as an indication that Axis detachments were trying to dig in at several points ahead of their Tmimi-El Mechili line. Every fraternity is requested to send a sophomore representative, ; including the present sophomore staff to the IFC meeting at 5 p.m. Monday in the Union. merchant ships had been destroyed by combined naval and air attacks in the Indian Ocean, thus making ominously apparent the scope and strength of the Japanese thrust across the Bay of Bengal. The 9,975-ton Dorsetshire-whose torpedoes supplied the coup de grace to the German battleship Bismarck in the Atlantic last May-and the 10,000-ton Cornwall apparently were seeking the Japanese naval squad- ron whose carriers launched planes against Colombo on Sunday. Attacked By Carrier Planes "Aircraft from those very carriers found them and destroyed them be- fore they were able to close to gun- nery range," declared one London source. The date and the place of the sink- ings were not given, but a Japanese radio announcement said the cruis- ers were destroyed in operations up to April 7. The broadcast Japanese communi- que also claimed destruction of 21 Allied merchantmen and severe dam- age to 23 others in the Bay of Bengal. An announcement from New Delhi said only that several ships had been sunk and that 400 to 500 survivors had been landed on the coast of Orissa, Indian province. Japs In Bay Of Bengal Aircraft alone were mentioned in destruction of the cruisers, but it was apparent that a strong Japanese naval force including aircraft car- riers was on the prowl in the Bay of Bengal. It wa; assumed to be op- erating from the Japanese-occupied Andaman Islands, about 800 miles east of Madras. Seniors Vote For Open Air Ceremonies Over two hundred seniors took an overdose of Ann Arbor spring yester- day to register their opinions in a Student War Board poll of com- mencement plans. The cross-section thus gained showed 195 seniors intending to at- tend the ceremonies against 10 up- perclassmen who will not be present.+ On the poll's second question, 149 seniors stated their objection to hold- ing commencement ceremonies at Yost Field House instead of Ferry Field. Only 32 approved the change. The survey on number of guest+ tickets needed by each individual showed 47 seniors preferring four tickets. This was the highest vote on any number, as only 35 would need more than six tickets and only two isolated instances wanted one. Results of the war board poll will be turned over to the University Committee on Commencement Ar- rangement. Robert Wallace, '42E, president ofI the war board, also stressed the need for all organizations to turn in re- ports of their war activities. Only 30 organizations have report- ed on their activities, up-to-date,+ Wallace declared. Organizations un- reported will be considered inactive as far as the war effort is concerned. By Reinforced Japanese Hordes Rayburn Declares United States Makes 3,300 Planes A Month Speaker From For r Of House War Fact Continuous e Calls [ories Flow SULPHUR SPRINGS, Tex., April 9. -(A')-Speaker of the House Sam Rayburn said today the United States now is making more than 3,300 planes a month and that it already has on worldwide fighting fronts six times as many soldiers as General Pershing had with the AEF after 10 months of the first World War. "We and our Allies can and will House Claims Senate Profits BillInjurious Committee Says Passage Would Slow Production; Prefers Tax Scheme WASHINGTON, April 9. - (A') - House Ways and Means committee- men contended today that the Sen- ate-approved profit limitation bill would "slow down" the war effort because of contract difficulties. They argued that excessive war profits should be recaptured through existing tax formulae rather than through the scheme approved by the Senate Tuesday giving the War and Navy departments and the Maritime Commission broadasuthority to re- negotiate questfi'iable contracts and to require certain repayments. Senate's Formula Complicated Voicing the sentiments of some of the committee members, who are now studying stiffer excess profits taxes for war-contract industries as part of a new $7,000,000,000 tax bill, Rep. Disney (Dm.-Okla.) said: "The Senate's formula is so com- plicated that contractors could not* safely make a contract with the gov- ernment because of the very nature of it and the risk that they might lose virtually all of their profits. "Then, after that, the Internal Revenue Bureau might come along and claim that the War Depart- ment's arbitrary computations of ex- cess profits were not in accord with the tax laws. Then the Treasury would take another slice of income. "Like the Administration, I am for profit limitations, but the whole Ad- ministration is against this plan and all the Administration heads have testified against it." House Must Impose Taxes From other Congressional sources came an expression that the Consti- tution would not permit Congress to divert from the House to government departments and agencies the right to impose taxes. Meanwhile, Representative Case, (Rep.-S.D.), author of the flat 6 per cent profit limitation attached as a rider to an $18,000,000,000 bill for the War Department, said he would be willing to abandon a def- inite percentage in favor of more general language. He took that posi- tion originally when the big appro- priation was being debated, but par- liamentary rules defeated his purpose and he had to shift to a definite amendment. p J1diciary Council Positions Are Open Second semester juniors in any of the undergraduate schools are eligi- ble to petition for the positions of president and secretary of the Men's Judiciary Council for the coming school year, it was announced by William Slocum, '42, present head of the Council. Under the reorganized constitution of the Judiciary Council, only the two above-mentioned positions will be open. Due at the student offices of the Union by noon, Saturday, April 18, the petitions should contain the ap- nlicant's school his activities on cam- build two and one-half times as manyrplanes as all our enemies put together," he said, speaking at a Texas unity rally. "Without divulging military secrets I can say that one factory alone is turning out each day an entire train- load of tanks." Every element of the nation's war production effort "right now is either up to or ahead of the program that has been outlined." Rayburn characterized the build- ing of the nation's munitions indus- try as "the most remarkable ac- complishment in all history." Other figures he said he could not give because of their military nature, but said "it is not true that our men are training with broomsticks." There must be an uninterrupted flow of war production, Rayburn said in discussing labor. "There must be no strikes, no lock- outs, no stoppages. I believe we should have a 48-hour week in war production, without overtime or double time, and that will come. "This is no time for capital to be greedy and labor to be unreasonable. Production must be uninterrupted in every quarter." Present production rates "indicate 125,000 planes in 1943, 100,000 of which will be combat planes," Ray- burn said. "Your son is .not being sent to battle until he is the best trained and equipped soldier that ever went to war. We will not let them down- we will not let you down. "Trust your leadership. Whether you love or hate President Roosevelt, he is the leader and the Commander- in-Chief, and he will be until Janu- ary 20, 1945." Employes' Savings Plan Inaugurated University employes are finding out today that the cashier's office has instituted a convenient voluntary savings plan for the systematic pur- chase of war bonds through payroll deductions. Any employe of the University- from president to janitor-may avail himself of the opportunity of invest- ing a portion of his salary in Series "E" war bonds, according to Prof. C. L. Jamison, chairman of the Uni- versity Committee on War Bonds and Stamps. "Many employes who have been purchasing bonds by making deduc- tions from savings accounts in local banks will now find it more conveni- ent to secure bonds by authorizing payroll deductions through the busi- ness office," Professor Jamison said. In an attempt to duplicate the large scale payroll bond-buying rec- ord of many industries, the Regents recently authorized the investment department of the business office to make payroll deductions for the pur- chase of bonds. Staff members who desire to allo- cate portions of their salary to buy war bonds should secure an alloca- tion blank from the Cashier's Office, the Office of the Superintendentiof Buildings and Grounds or at the busi- ness office of the University Hospital. Payroll deductions will be made in amounts of $3.75 or multiples there- of. ThehUniversity's 5,000 employes can purchase, through the payroll de- ductions, Series "E" non-transfer- able bonds in denominations of $25, $50, $100, $500, and $1,000. Dr. Morris Fishbein To Give Lecture Here Widely-known editor and medical authority, Dr. Morris Fishbein will discuss "American Medicine and the War" in a public lecture at 8:30 p.m. Monday in the Rackham Lecture Hall. Dr. Fishbein, editor of the Journal of the American Medical Association, will speak here under the auspices of Aloha Omega Alpha. honorary 36,000 American, Filipino Forces Are Slain Or Facing Capture; Exhausted Troops Fail In Final Bitter Counter-Attack- Corregidor, Island Fortresses Endangered, Stimson Declares WASHINGTON, April 9.-(AP)-The heroic epic of Bataan Peninsula ended today, with the Japanese victorious through the sheer overwhelming weight of hordes of fresh troops,-and with most of the 36,853 American and Filipino soldiers slain or facing captivity. Cut off from reinforcement, outnumbered by five, six, seven or even eight to one, tragically deficient in air power, and exhausted by short ra- tions, disease and constant battle, a courageous band of fighting men was forced to a bitter but inevitable defeat. For days, the Japs had been attacking in waves, sending rank upon rank of fresh troops against sleepless and fatigue-ridden men. Enemy Envelops Eastern Flank Today, Lieut.-Gen. Jonathan Wainwright, who took command when General Douglas MacArthur was transferred to Australia, reported that the enemy had enveloped his eastern flank manned by his second corps. To relieve the situation he ordered the first corps to counter-attack. It did, but the "complete physical exhaustion" of the troops made it unsuc- cessful. In view of these developments the War Department concluded and announced that "this situation indicates the probability that the defenses on Bataan have been overcome." And to this, Secretary of War Stimson added at a press conference: "Our troops, outnumbered and worn down by successive attacks by fresh troops, exhausted by insufficient rations and disease prevalent on Sthat peninsula, finally had their lines Tulaoi Raided By Jap Planes; .Allies Counter Stab At Australian Supply Route Feared; Bombers Strike Back At Rabaul MELBOURNE, April 9.-('P)-A Japanese air raid on the Florida Is- land capital of Tulagi, administrative center of the Solomon chain across the Coral Sea from northeastern Aus- tralia, stirred fears anew tonight that the Japanese might be clearing the way for a stab closer to the vital supply lane from the United States. Reports from Port Moresby said Allied bombers countered quickly with an attack of their own this af- ternoon on Rabaul, Japanese-held --BULLETIN COLOMBO, Ceylon, Friday, April 10. -(A)- Allied Indian forces straddled a Japanese aircraft car- rier with high explosives yesterday and shot down at least 10 Japanese planes and perhaps 16, it was offi- cially announced today. Japanese bombers, apparently based on the aircraft carrier sought by the Allied force, first attacked the Brit- ish naval base at Trincomalee on this island. base on New Britain which serves the invaders as a stepping stone from their foothold on New Guinea to the Solomons. Many Japanese aircraft, caught on the ground in the surprise blow at the Rabaul base, were said to have been destroyed. Casualties were reported inflicted by strafing of enemy personnel. Heavy bombers struck at shipping in Rabaul harbor and airdrome in- tallations and hangars. The raiders dived to low levels to get at their targets, Port Moresby dispatches said. The exchange of air blows came on a day when the defenders of Aus- tralia learned of a further spread of the Japanese grip on the scattered islands to the north. A communique said aerial recon- naissance revealed that the Japanese, probably landing some time ago, had occupied Lorengau on the mountain- ous Manus Island, largest of the Ad- miralty group 350 miles north of Lae, Japanese-seized capital of northeast New Guinea. Prime Minister John Curtin an- nounced that five Japanese planes took part in the raid on Tulagi, sweeping over at 5,000 feet and drop- ping 30 to 40 bombs. The imperative need for safeguard- ing the sea lane to the United States was underscored by Ronald H. Cross, Rrf.rhM ahmCs mmicci ,. r ,.rA,- broken and enveloped by the enemy. "A long but gallant defense has been worn down and overthrown. "We have nothing but praise and admiration for the commanders and the men who have conducted this epic chapter in American history." And he spoke the views of a visibly distressed capital, when he added: "This is only a temporary loss. We shall not stop until we drive the in- vaders from the islands," Efforts To Get Reinforcements With the battle ended, he was able to announce for the first time, that urgent efforts had been made to get reinforcements to MacArthur and Wainwright, despite Japanese control of sea and air. Brig.-Gen. Patrick J. Hurley, now Minister to New Zealand, had been given the special mission of sending in supplies. Several shiploads ar- rived, but for every supply ship that reached Corregidor, an average of nearly two was lost. Because of those which ran the gauntlet successfully, however, the army of Bataan never lacked ammunition, although it had been on short rations for weeks. The end was foreseen yesterday, apparently, for Stimson said that President Roosevelt then sent a mes- sage to Wainwright, praising him and his men without limit, and authoriz- ing him to make any decision neces- sary to meet the developing situation. Filipino Soldiers Numerous Filipino soldiers made up the bulk of the 36,853 fighting men on Bataan, Stimson explained. The American contingent comprised the 3,1st In- fantry regiment, the crews of two tank battalions, units of self-propel- led artillery, air force ground crews and sailors and marines from the abandoned Cavite Naval Base. Air force personnel numbered 5,000 men at the start, but there was a heavy loss of aircraft at the opening of the campaign, and in its later stages some 2,000 air corps men fought as infantrymen. Corregidor, and the other rocky island fortresses at, the entrance to Manila Bay, were still in American r ---BULLETIN- SAN FRANCISCO, April 9-(IP)- An intensive earthquake rocked the whole Bataan Peninsula during fin- al stages of the battle, a Japanese news dispatch from Bataan, inter- cepted by the CBS short wave lis- tening station, declared tonight, The dispatch, transmitted in code, was from a Domei (Japanese news service) correspondent, and was dated "with the Japanese on Bataan, April 9." "The main force of the temblor," said the dispatch, "lasted five min- utes, causing Filipino buts to crum- ble and several landslides." hands, Stimson declared, but how long they could hold out was ques- tionable. This, aside from the fact that more than half of the islands in the arnlin -a-(Na a stil -11 A 1V A a Bright Spot In Day's News: Red Troops Make Successful Counter-Attack On Kalinin Front LONDON, April 9-(P#)-Red Army troops were reported tonight to have broken two German divisions on one sector of the northwestern Kalinin front after the Nazis had attempted a surprise counter-attack. The Moscow radio said the Ger- mans suffered heavily, and then re- treated. A supplementary Rusian communi- que also said that 900 Nazis were slain on this front, but it was not clear whether this referred to the same engagement. In the western sector toward Smolensk, the Russians said their troops had occupied 40 more Nazi dugouts. The regular midnight Soviet com- munique said no substantial changes occurred on the front today, but that the Soviets scored a 25-to-6 aerial victory Wednesday over the Ger- mans. Junkers bombers fresh from the factories of Germany are being rush- ed o th h Eastern Front and nut into continued, "anti-aircraft gunners of the same battalion shot down three more planes released from the fac- tory in March, 1942." The appearance of these brand new Nazi planes seemed to be another in- dication that Hitler is concentrating all the strength he can possibly spare on the Eastern Front in preparation for the spring offensive. Bits of information here and there in the Russian reports from the front indicate that the Russians are fight- ing bitterly in every sector, either to keep the Germans on the defensive or to prevent even the smallest Nazi offensive operation. Today's Russian communique told of fighting for one populated place on the front west of Moscow after which "the approaches to the village were littered with the bodies of the Hitler- ite soldiers." In another sector more than 300