W eathier :d> itt aii41 lEditorWa Income Limitation; is Too Lenient.. Continued Warm VOL. LII. No. 157 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 29, 1942 Z-323 PRICE FIVE CENTS May 8 Named Election Date Of University Control Bodies Matthews Sets Regulations For Selection Of Student Publications, Congress,j Athletics, Union Boardsi Friday Is Last Day For DailyPetitions . All-campus elections for three stu- dent members of the Board in Con- trol of Student Publications, six' Union vice-presidents, a member of the Board in Control of Intercolle- giate Athletics and representatives to' Independent Me's Congress will be 1 held May 8. . In his first official act of office, Robert Matthews, '43, incoming pres- ident of the Men's Judiciary Council, which supervises elections, an- nounced the date of election and methods of nomination for the sev- eral candidacies. Nominations of at least nine can- didates for the Board in Control of Student Publications will be made by a committee composed of retiring editors and business managers of publications and retiring student members of the Board who will not be candidates for reelection. Experience Unnecessary Seniors or graduate students will be eligible for the nominations to the Board in Control of Student Pub- lications. Preference will be given to' students with experience with publi- cations, but lack of experience will' not be a disqualifying factor. Petitions signed by 100 students I and filed with the secretary of the Board at the Student Publications Building on or before Friday will nominate additional candidates for the Board. Candidates for the six Union vice- presidencies will be selected by a committee appointed for that pur- pose by the Board of Directors of the1 Union. Nominations may be madea by petitions bearing the signatures of 200 Union members. Petitions, avail-1 able until Monday at the Student Of- fices of the Union, must be returned before 9 a.m, Tuesday. Petitions with the proper number of names will constitute automatic nominations. Petitions with less than 200 signatures may be accepted at the discretion of the Board of Direc- tors. Basis Of Election Vice-presidents will be elected on the following basis: one from the lit- erary and graduate schools together; one from the engineering and archi- tecture schools; one each from the law, medical and dental schools; one from the remaining schools together. Two nominees for the Board in Control of Intercollegiate Athletics will be named by the Board of Direc- tors of Intercollegiate Athletics. No petition nominations will be made and the elected candidate will serve for two years. Details of nomination for Congress have not yet been announced. Their election will take place with other campus elections. Juniors Named To New Congress Committee Posts Appointees to the junior staff of Congress, men's independent associa- tion, were announced yesterday by Norton Norris, '43, new Congress president. The chairman of the organization committee will be John MacKinnon, '44, and the secretary, Richard M. Orlikoff, '44; personnel committee: chairman, Fred Hoffman, '44; sec- retary, Richard L. Rosenman, '44; social committee: chairman, Edmund Merz, '44E; secretary, John R. Bur- ton, '44; student welfare committee: chairman, Robert W. Sharp, '44; sec- retary, William V. Millman, '44E; and recording secretary for Congress, Edgar J. Vaughan, '45. It was announced by MacKinnon that the annual Congress banquet will be held in the Founders Room of the Union Sunday. Besides the out- going and incoming officers of Con- gress, the managing editor of The Daily and the presidents of the IFC and the Union will be guests. Students Must Register Local Firm, CIO To Sift Charge Of Output Drop UAW Representative Declares Anti-Union Activities Have Cut Production 50 Per Cent At Broach Chief Executive Says Economic Sacrifices Needed For Victory; Price Ceilings Are Set By OPA -. ? By ROBERT PREISKEL (COPYRIGHT, 1942 By THE MICHIGAN DAILY) Friction between the CIO and one Ann Arbor industry became a matter for national concern as Undersecre- tary of War Patterson called a Wash- ington conference for early today to determine reasons for an alleged 50 per cent drop in war production at the American Broach and Machine Company. Representatives of 'management. the CIO and the American Broach Protective Association-independent union representing plant workers- will be present at the conference, according to information received here. Blaming the decrease in output on the anti-CIO activities of the com- pany, James Morgan, international Trapped Allies Fi'ht In Losing Burmese Battle German Bases In France, Norway Receive Heavy British Air Force Attack CHUNGKING, China, April 28.- (I)-The battle of Burma became tonight a desperate melee of demo- lition, evacuation, last-stand defense and reckless counter-attack by trap- ped or menaced Chinese and British defenders, fighting in the first gales and showers of the approaching mon- soon to hold open the door to free China. The Chinese and British armies shortened their thin line of tired in- fantrymen and shell-scarred tanks defending Mandalay while the Japa- nese armored spearheads from the Shan states advanced on Hsipaw and Lashio on the all-important Manda- lay-Lashio railway, 130-mile steel ar- tery in the supply system to China from the United Nations. Maymyo, 40 miles east of Manda- lay on the railroad, was evacuated by the Burma civil government; the Chinese were moving essential sup- plies from bombed, blazing Lashio, treminus of the true mountainous Burma Road to Kunming, China. German Bases In France, Norway Battered By RAF LONDON, April 28.-UP)-British bombers and fighters in uncounted hundreds-a single attacking unit covered a square mile of sky- smashed with unprecedented violence today at German bases in France in the wake of tremendous overnight raids spread from the Nazi battleship nest at Trondheim, Norway, to the war plants of the Rhineland. As the day wore on, one great British formation after another swept out over the channel coast in what had become a grand, unhalted of fen- sive with at least three main objec- tives: 1. To break the already weakened German air power on Hitler's western flank. 2. To further disrupt the restricted flow of German war supplies to the Russian front. 3. To clear away the German threat to the Allied sea routes to the north- ern Russian ports by blows upon the key to German sea power in the north. representative of the UAW-CIO and CIO spokesman at the conference, declared that ". . . the discharging of highly skilled and irreplacable em- ploycs in the American Broach Com- pany for union (C>O) membership has resulted in a 50 per cent cut in production at that plant." Francis J. Lapointe president of the company and its representative at the Washington meeting declined to comment on the accusation. Number one war industry in Ann Arbor, American Broach makes the machines that make the weapons of war. Its chief project is the manu- facturing of broaching machines, in- valuable in the preparation of gun barrels, shells and tank gears. Company Blamed Three plant workers were emphat- ic yesterday in blaming the slowdown on company opposition to the organ- izational; drive being staged in Ann Arbor. Al Eckerle, 25 year old surface grinder, asserted that "they are def- initely discharging people for wear- ing union buttons." Fired once but returned to his job at the joint demand of WPB offi- cials and the Michigan State Media- tion Board, Eckerle said that he had been warned against having his name appear in any publication discussing the CIO organization of the plant. "They said that this would cost me my job," Eckerle declared, "but I'm telling you that the number of men in my department decreased from 63 to a low of 40, because of discharges Turn to Page 6, Col. 1 Ace Flyer Says 0 0 New U.S. Spirit Need ed To Win CHICAGO, April 28.-(.P)-Capt Edward V. Rickenbacker asserted to- night that the United States was los- ing the war and that Americans would have to develop "a new combat spirit" if they hoped to win it. The World War flying ace, in an address prepared for delivery at the 30th annual meeting of the Chamber of Commerce of the United States, contended that since Dec. 7 America has been losing the war "every day, every week, and every month." "In five months our military fail- ures have already prolonged the war two years beyond what it should have been," he asserted. "Whether we like it or not-the next six months will tell the story, whether we are to remain free men and women or are to become slaves." Rickenbacker, president and gen- eral manager of Eastern Air Lines, Inc., recently returned from a 15,000- mile tour of Army Air Force estab- lishments. He reported that the young pilots he saw had "morale of the fighting kind," but added that could not be said of the people back home. "We've got to do more than buy bonds-or ride in the bus instead of the Buick." he said. "In my opinion, we must have, as a nation, a new combat spirit to win this war." Notre Dame University's base- ball team will play the Wolverines at 4 p.m. today at Ferry Field. Mickey Fishman and Paul Gold- smith will handle the pitching for Michigan.. Admission by identifi- cation cards. Army Air Corps To Hold RallyToday, Recent Deferred Service Plan For 'U' Students Will Enable Graduation When a squadron of Army Air Force planes thunders over Ann Arbor at noon today it will be a dra- matic reminder that that same Air Force is staging a mass recruiting rally at 8 p.m. today in Rackham Lecture Hall. Held to inform students of oppor~- tunities in'the Air Force under the new deferred service plan, the meet- ing will consist of a program headed by Lieut.-Col. Joseph H. Carr and Lieutenant Rowan, a pilot who has just returned from service in the Far Eastern theatre. Others on the program will be Prof. Harry C. Carver, recently returned from training atCKelly Field, and Lieut. Rondel C. Cox. Carr, Cox Head Program Lieutenant Colonel Carr and Lieu- tenant Cox have been sent from Mitchell Field by Gen. Henry H. Ar- nold, Chief of Air Force, to take charge of the new Air Force recruit- ing program in this area. Selection of the University of Michigan as one of the 31 focal points in the country for such a program will bring repre- sentatives from all other schools in this district to learn of the opportun- ities presented by the Air Force de- ferred service plan. This plan calls for: 1) New simplified requirements both mental and physical. 2) Enlistment now and deferment until graduation. Between 18 And 26 Under such a plan any person be- tween 18 and 26 now enrolled in an accredited college may sign as an Air Force enlisted reservist for ap- pointment as Aviation Cadet. Such enlistment will mean calling for active service only after graduation unless an urgent emergency requires earlier training. At the mass rally students will be given the chance to ask all questions concerning the program that inter- est them. In an interview yesterday, Lieu- .Dr. Freyberg Given Annual Russel award tenant-Colonel Carr declared "It is in the interests of every college man to be.completely informed of the new Air Force Deferment Plan, for through this knowledge each man can learn his true place in a total war effort which will bring ultimate vic- tory." This campaign to secure 100,000 aviation cadets was devised by Gen- eral Arnold who in a telegram to the presidents of focal point universi- ties and colleges stated: "The successful prosecution of this war demands the creation of an air force second to none, and this in turn requires the eventual enlistment as an Aviation Cadet of every young1 man who can qualify for service in, the U.S. Army Air Forces." Student Labor,' Union's Staf f Reach Terms' Independent Committee Votes Wage Increase For Cafeteria Workers Final settlement of requests by' student help employed in the Union cafeteria for a wage increase has been announced. Frank Keunzel,' Union manager, and a committee' representing employes have agreed on a plan suggested by an indepen- dent committee composed of Col. William Ganoe, ROTC Commandant, Prof. John Riegel, of the school of business administration and Prof. Carl G. Brandt, chairman of the Eng- lish department. Designed to answer claims that increases in food prices had caused a decrease in the food income of the help, the main feature of the pro- gram is a 10 per cent reduction in food cost to all workers who put in theirfull shift of 37 2 hours in every 15 day period. The agreement, which will cover the 200 students doing any work in connection with the preparation of food, will last until June 1. Other features of the agreement provide that each student must eat fifteen dollars wo1rth of food in every fifteen-day period, and the five-cent an hour bonus for all hours worked in excess of 37% will be maintained. Newspaper Delivery Restriction To Start WASHINGTON, April 28. -()- Deliveries of newspapers will be re- stricted to once a day at any one point beginning May 15, an Office of Defense Transportation official said today in an informal explanation of the ODT's April 20 order to elim- inate special trips and reduce local trucking mileage. Under present practice, newspapers deliver each edition to sales points or redistribution points, such deliveries running as high as 25 a day in one instance, the official said.-, The order to local delivery car- riers applies to every type of commer- cial enterprise and to governmental agencies, including those of the fed- eral government. It defines a vehicle as "any rubber-tired vehicle propelled or drawn by mechanical power or by horses." Engineer Loses Pants In Blaze Four engineering students re- ceived minor hand and arm burns, but one of them lost his shirt and another his pants in a small fire which was accidentally started at 3:45 p.m. yesterday in a chemical engineering laboratory of the East Engineering Building. Caused when a pan of remelted phosphorus was dropped to the floor, the blaze burned briefly, fill- ing the halls with the white, irri- Must Forfeit 'Creature Comforts,' States President; Announces Seven-Point Plan To Combat Nation-Wide Rise In Costs WASHINGTON, April 28.-R)-President Roosevelt discussed the war and its economic impact on every American tonight and declared that the price of preserving civilization must be paid in "hard work and sorrow and blood." The price, he said is not too high. He told his radio audience if they doubted it, to ask millions who live under the tyranny of Hitlerism. The Chief Executive summarized the seven point program for combating an upward suiral in living costs. which he outlined in a message to Congress yesterday, and declared that each par the whole. Again he warned that) the American people must abandon luxuries and "creature comforts." Apparently cognizant of criticism which arose in numerous quarters against portions of his anti-inflation plan, the Chief Executive declared firmly he would use all of the execu- tive power at his command to carry out the policy he laid down. As for the conduct of the war it- self, the Commander-in-Chief of the armed forces declared that for every advance the Japanesedhad made since they began a "frenzied career of con- quest," they had had to pay "a very heavy toll in warships, in transports, in planes and in men." The war, Mr. Roosevelt said, has become what Hitler originally pro- claimed it to be, a total war. Not All Can Fight Not all can fight our enemies in distant segments of the world; he said. Not all can work in munitions factories or in shipyards or in other war industries. "But there is one front and one battle," he went on, "where every- one in the United States-every man, every woman and child is in action, and will be privileged to remain in action throughout this war.' ."That front is right here at home. Here at home everyone will have the privilege of making whatever self denial is necessary, not only to sup- ply our fighting men, but to keep the economic structure of our country fortified and secure during the war and after the war." Every person in the country, the Chief Executive declared, is going to be affected by the Administration's seven-point program intended to keep down the cost of living. Business- men or holders of corporation stock, he said, would find their profits would be cut by taxation to a "reas- onably low level." Higher Income Taxes Noting that incomes would be sub- jected to higher taxes, he reiterated the suggestion he advanced in yes- terday's message to Congress that, after payment of taxes, individual in- comes be ilmited to $25,000 a year. Retailers, wholesalers, manufactur- ers, farmers, landlords, the President said, will find ceilings on the prices at which they can market their goods or rent their property. Persons work- ing for wages, he added, will have to forego higher pay for their particu- lar jobs for the war's duration. t of it was essential to the success of Rents Frozen In 302 Areas ByHenderson Administrator Says Control Of War Vital Sections Anti-Inflation Need WASHINGTON, April 28. -(- Areas housing 76,000,000 persons- more than half the nation's popu- lation-were put on notice today to reduce inflated rents or have the gov- ernment do it for them. A total of 302 war-swollen sections were designated defense rental areas, as "an essential part" of the overall freeze of prices announced by Price Administrator Leon Henderson, and maximum rents were recommended for each. In four-fifths of the areas, rents were ordered cut back to the levels of March 1, 1942, thereby eliminating increases made during spring moving and leasing. In 64 of the areas, 1941 dates were chosen, Jan. 1, April f or July 1. Rent Control Required "Next to food, this is the largest single item in the family budget," Henderson said. "Effective price control requires rent control." Under the Emergency Price Con- trol Act, local authorities are given 60 days to stabilize rents as ordered by Henderson. If this is not done, OPA may enforce the maximums. Violators of the ceilings then would be subject to a maximum penalty of $5,000 fine and a year in prison. Rents in some instances have soar- ed 100 per cent above pre-boom levels, Henderson declared, while vacancy rates in the areas for which 1941 maximum rent dates were set ranged between 0.5 per cent and 2.8 per cent. The rent problem, confined in the early part of last year to the com- munities where the first big canton- ments, shipyards, aircraft and ord- nance plants were built, now has "become general through the coun- try," the OPA administrator ex- plained. Important; Essential Part Henderson said the war-time con- trol of rentals was "an important and essential part of the overall ceiling on prices," adding that American families spend from $5,000,000,0g00 to $6,000,000,000 a year on rent. "In some sections of the country, rents have gone beyond reasonable bounds, doubling and tripling in many individual cases," he continued. "Thousands of tenants who could not pay these increases have been forced out of homes without knowing where to find shelter. These conditions have slowed the recruitment of war labor. Student Senate Names Leader The revitalized student senate got under way yesterday when it elected as president pro tem William F. Ager, '43, of Ann Arbor. Ager is affiliated with Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity and with Alpha Phi Omega, service society. Announcement was also made that an organizational meeting will be held at 4 p.m. Thursday in the Union for the newly set-up administrative branch of the senate. All interested in working on the administrative staff are urged to attend. Under the revamped organization of the student senate, the policy- Nine Noses Out Spartans, 2-1; Netmen At East Lansing Today ________. Baseball . . By BOB SHOPOFF Michigan's baseball team continued its winning way yesterday afternoon as they downed Michigan State, 2-1, but the victory was purely a gift from the Spartans. Four costly errors by the boys from East Lansing gave the Wolverines two unearned runs and spoiled the six hit pitching performance turned in by rangy Joe Skrocki. The win brought the Wolverines' total to eight for the season against two defeats. Played before a good-sized mid- week crowd at Ferry Field, the game marked the 42nd time that the two schools have met on the diamond. Yesterday's victory was the 28th for Michigan while State has won 13. Tennis . . By BART JENKS Back from a three day tour of points west and south, Michigan's netmen get back into action today with a second match against Michi- gan State at East Lansing. Although the Wolverines have only a loss to Notre Dame on the debit side of the ledger, Coach Weir makes no bones of the fact that he expects a tough tussle tomorrow. In their previous meeting the Wol- verines downed the Spartans 7-2, but were forced 'to go three sets in nearly every match. More important than this, however, is the tough time they had in winning their matches. Hammett Downs Beeman Co-Captain Lawton Hammett, DR. RICHARD H. FREYBERG Dr. Richard Harold Freyberg, As- sistant Professor of Medicine, was anounced yesterday as recipient of the 1941-42 Henry Russel Award in recognition of distinguished scholarly achievement in medical research. The announcement was made by President Alexander G. Ruthven on the occasion of the annual Henry Russel Lecture in the Rackham Am- phitheatre. Freyberg, fulfilling an engagement to address the Ohio State Medical Society, was unable to be present to receive the award. The Henry Russel Award, made possible through the bequest of Henry Russel, '73, is an annual distinction OPA Fixes Wartime Maximum Prices WASHINGTON, April 28. -(')- With one broad, inclusive order, the Office of Price Administration to- night fixed war-time maximum prices for "virtually everything Americans eat, wear and use" at the levels pre- valent during the month of March. After May 18, under "the general maximum price regulation," no re- tailer may charge more for an article than the highest price at which he sold it in March. The same restric- tions will apply, after May 11, to manufacturers' and wholesalers' prices and, after July 1, to a long list of service establishments, such as laundries, tailors, auto repair shops, radio repair men, etc. Simultaneously, the price agency in effect froze rents in 302 centers of war effort or war production. Mostly, they were fixed at the rents paid on March 1, of this year. In 64 of the areashthe stabilization was as of the rent paid on Jan. 1, April 1, or July 1, 1941. The actions, taken together repre- sented an essential segment of Presi- dent Roosevelt's over-all plan for stabilizing the cost of living, and pre- venting an inflationary price rise. Along with these orders, go pro- posed heavy taxation of profits, sta- bilization of most wages at present I