/ Weather Warmer, Y itt Y 4ai43 3 A.M. FINAL I VOL. LII. No. 166 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, MAY 9, 1942 Z-323 PRICE FIVE CENTS * * * * * Nine Conquers Teams Finish SeriesToday Squad Game To Highlight Spring Football Season; Annual Coaches Clinic Will Be At Field House Trackmen To Run At Ohio State Today By BOB SHOPOFF Colorful Irv 'Pro' Boim had the Northwestern Wildcats eating out of his hand yesterday as Michigan won, 6-2, at Ferry Field. 'Pro' allowed only five hits as he racked up his third victory of the season. Coach Ray Fisher hopes that his pitching will continue through to- day's game as the two teams clash again in the last of the two-game series. Mickey Fishman will be on the mound for the Wolverines and will be opposed by Bob Motl. The tilt will start at 1:30 p.m. to allow the crowd to get to the intra-squad football game in time. After the first two frames, when the Wildcats scored one in both in- nings, Boim poured it on and pitched to only 25 batters in the last seven stanzas. Pro' had control yesterday -which is just what he has lacked in his two starts. He gave up only one walk and was usually ahead of the batters. He struck out seven of the opposition. Coach Maury Kent's nine took the lead in the fray in the first frame as they scored on a triple by Capt. Turn to Page 3, Col. 1 High School Coaches To Confer At Clinic * S * Scene Of 'Greatest Sea And Air Battle In U.S. History UALASKA SINKANG .,~. - LADIVOSTOK Pacific Ocean SCHINA PA TIBET HNHAA j ,b Z~jR A.. .w. _ .::. rUNGKING *MIO#A INDIAN A HONOL"LU A4ARIANAJ MANILA IS 'GA CHINAIE UA 4 * . 'MARSHALL PALMYRA / CAKOLINE IS. * . 1- :TIB.HOWLAND . ---- . yERT**--- - -..-------A.NGHAI NARU ISW~ * PHOENIX .UIEA BRITAN USOLOMQN Indian MORS ~5MO~ Ocean AsIsANI ::: MECARWEL -.. - *. * CONG -N T GA IS.- .. ... . ' IC.. CALEDONIA ..0......:...........PRIN...1 MiLEs Df es ms AT EQVATOR -ae bay ofay i.MBR IS LA * * * * Black arrow indicates the Solomon Islands, north limit of the Coral Sea which extends south to New Caledonia. In this area off the Ags- tralan coast betw ee Cardwell and Brisbane a Jap armada was repulsed in the greatest battle in U.S. history and is now fleeing northward. Military observers look for other Japanese thrusts to sever Australian supply lines In the following order: 1-a pincers action on China from the north and from Burma; 2-an attack on Russia, aiming at the port on Vladivostok; 3-an assault on northern Australian bases (of which the Coral Sea battle was a nart) to cripple U.S. offensive efforts; and 4- Soviet Army, Air Force Block Three-Way German Offensive By KEV JONES risifoconawi dAai Three major events mark today as raids in force Hawaii and Alas spring football's biggest day; the an- the _apanese hodings. nual High School Coaches Clinic, held in the Field House at 10:00 a.m.; * the announcement of the University W tck rd Irtids of Michigan Club Chicago Award rdl winner; and, what is to the players A id T Farm the high point of the spring, the annual intra-squad game between theR Blues and the Whites at 4:00 p.m. in the Stadium, Held under the sponsorship of the University Athletic Department, the WASHINGTON, May 8.--(/-, See- Coaches Clinic will feature demon- retary Wickard today threw his influ- strations by many sports luminaries ence behind demands from farm- including "Bullet" Bob Westfall, minded lawmakers that large quanti- The Chicago Award, the qualifica- ties of surplus wheat, corn, and other tions for which are improvement dur- agricultural commodities be con- ing spring practice, ability, attitude verted into synthetic rubber. and attendance, will be presented at The Agriculture Secretary told a the conclusion of the Clinic's activi- Senate agriculture sub-committee ties. Last year's award went to Merv that he now was convinced that "use Pregulman, now varsity center. of parts of our reserve stocks of corn If there is anything to choose from and wheat . . . offers the best possi- between the two outfits for the game, bility of greatly increasing our pro- the White are the favored squad. The duction of synthetic rubber as early center of the line; Pregulman at cen- as next year." ter, and guards Walt Freihofer and Virtually all the synthetic rubber to Ralph Amstutz, appear to be a little be produced under government pro- stronger than the Blue center, where grds already initiated would be Julie Franks is the only standout. grams aray1tae ol e -neamanufactured from petroleum bases. However, the Whites are weak in line reserves, which may prove to be Wickard testified that this coun- fatal, for the Blues strongest man, try's wheat supply now was the larg- "Blasting" Bob Wiese, at fullback, est in history and that not less than can be counted on to give the White 80,000,000 bushels of this should be Turn to Page 3, Col. 3 converted into rubber for tires badly needed by farmers to maintain their automobiles, trucks and other ma- Oio h L aLC tavored chinery for new wartime food and To Outrun 1ichigan production demands. ka to eliminate offensive threats to Housing Plans till Protested (Aherry Hill ('outroversy Seen Nearing (liiax Opposition to the federal govern- nent's proposed Cherry Hill Road housing project continued yesterday as representatives from Washtenaw County pleaded with federal housing authorities and other officials in Washington to abandon all plans for building the bomber plant city. Though no definite accomplish- ments have as yet been announced by the representatives, the contro- versy is seen to be nearing a climax. Among the county's spokesmen are Prosecutor George Meader and Harry Mack of the Ford Motor Company. Ever since the Federal Public Hous- ing Authority set forth its plans to build a complete new city between Cherry Hill Road, Michigan Avenue, Prospect Road and the Wayne-Wash- tenaw line, bitter opposition has arisen from several quarters and ac- tion has been sought to discourage building of the city. Groups protesting the measure in- clude the city councils of Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti. Drive Through Karelian Sector Stopped As Nazis Reireat, Russins (Jaiii MOSCOW, May 8._ /f'-The Red Army and Air Force were reported in official dispatches tonight to have wrecked a three-way German spring offensive aimed from Finland into Soviet Karelia and to have driven large numbers of Nazi bombing plan es from forward bases near Rus- Union, Board Offices Filled In Heavy Vote, 'Yesterday's all-campus elections for six Union vice-presidents and one member of the Board in Control of Intercollegiate Athletics called forth 1735 votes, an increase of more than 200 over last year's total according to Robert Matthews, '43, president of Men's Judiciary Council. The new Union vice-president arc Robert Templin, '43, literary school; Roy Bradley, '43E, representing the engineering and architecture schools; George Brooks, '43M, medical sch1ool; John Golden ,'43D, dental school; Forest Hainline, '43L, Law school,' and John Murray, '43BAd., elected by the business administration and forestry schools. Donald Robinson, '44, defeated William MacConnachiie, '44, for the p)ositionl on the Board in Control of Athletics. Robinson, tailback and shortstop, will serve for two years, re- p~lacing the graduating Norm Call, Incumbent is George Ceithaml, '43. Because six of the nine candidates nominated for the Board in Control of Student Publications declined to run in favor of the other three, their election, scheduled for yesterday was rendered unnecessary. The three new members of thne Publications Board, authorized as elected by the Men's Judiciary Coun- cil, are James Allen, '43L, Holbrooke Seltezer, '42, and Karl Kessler, Grad. sia's vital water and rail communica- tions in the Arctic. German troops encharged with stabbing across the Kerelian Fron- tier at three points were driven from Russian soil with heavy losses, said frontier dispatches to the Communist newspaper Pravda. From the Arctic front, the army newspaper Red Star reported that German bombing fleets, after a futile six weeks' offensive against the northern sea lanes and Russian rail lines over which increasing American and British supplies are moving vi& Murmansk and Archangel, had been forced to withdraw to more remote stations in Norway and Finland. Still other dispatches, dealing with recent weeks of heavy fighting from Leningrad southwest to Staraya Rus- sa, estimated 30,000 Germans had been lost in counter-attacks which failed to take the initiative from the Red Army. The Karelian fighting represented the second attempt by Russia's en- emies to invade this sector, for at the outbreak of the war a Finnish battal- ion of 1,200 men, supported by two German companies, were driven back after crossing the frontier. Chinese Hit, Stop Jags Attacking Vital Burma Road CHUNGKING, China, May 8.--P) -Falling with savage fury upon two Japanese columns thrusting into China along the Burma Road, coun- ter-attacking Chinese wiped out one invading force of 1,000 men, killed 500 out of another of equal strength and trapped the remainder, Gener- alissimo Chiang Kai-Shek's high command announced tonight. An official announcement said this triumph converted into disaster a Japanese attempt to flank Chinese troops of Lieut.-Gen. Joseph W. Stil- well in the sector near Chefang, 25 miles inside the Yunnan Province from Burma. The Flying Tigers of the American Volunteer Group protected Chinese bombers which battered Japanese troops and trucks in western Yunnan yesterday, an AVG communique said. The Japanese aerial offensive in eastern China, aimed at destroying' All ies Blast Fleet In Epic Struggle U.S., British Warships Pursue Nipponese After Heavy Fighting Off Australia; 11 Enemy Vessels Are Reported Sunk By C. YATES McDANIEL ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, Australia, Saturday, May 9.-(A'- Allied Naval and Air Forces fighting with "marked skill, courage, and tenacity" have repulsed a Japanese invasion fleet off northeastern Aus. tralia in one of history's most fateful struggles, General MacArthur's Headquarters announced today. With 11 or more of its warships sunk and six or more damaged-and presumably thousands of its finest warriors at the bottom of the Coral Sea-the battered Japanese enemy was reported limping northward with United States and British Imperial units in hot pursuit on the sixth day of the epic engagement. "Our attacks will continue," the Allied communique said in reporting that the battle had ceased "temporarily." The repulse of the Japanese occurred after Allied air units discovered the enemy fleet streaming southward six or more days ago, and the com- munique concluded with these words: "Our Naval Forces then attacked in interceptions. They were handled with marked skill, fought with admirable courage and tenacity, and the enemy has been repulsed." The latest communique made no claims of additional casualties other than those already reported yesterday both here and in Washington. Presumably a complete summary of the battle losses on both sides will be forthcoming shortly. Of the two Japanese aircraft carriers reported hit, one was sunk and the other damaged. And a government spokesman said there was no confirmation of a report that the second subsequently had been sunk. The attitude of General MacArthur's Headquarters was that it was too early to say whether the result of the huge naval-air engagement was conclusive, and it was not yet clear whether the Japanese could reform and reinforce their units for another southward thrust. Because of the lack of news on the exact losses on either side and their original strength, observers were unable to assess the total battle results. But the tone of the Allied High Command Headquarters appeared to be that the Allies had won the first grim round and at least had tempor- arily thwarted Japanese aims. It also was pointed out that the general practice with the U.S. Navy WASHINGTON, May 9.-G)-The Navy warned tonight against giving credence to Japanese claims on the battle off Aus- tralia and announced that the engagement had cost the enemy 11 ships, including nine warships. Department when American ships are sunk is to make the announcement officially from Washington instead of here. The battle was fought in the shadow of Australia and involved the safety of the continent and control of much of the southern seas. First eyewitness accounts reaching an advanced Allied base said hun- dreds of Japanese crewmen had to dive overboard amid smoke and flame from two aircraft carriers sunk or damaged by aerial bombs in the first blow of the Allied assault. The reports said Japanese personnel losses may run into the thous- ands. Japanese destroyers tried desperately but vainly t? save the car- riers, blasted into torn and blazing hulks by American bombing planes which pressed home their attack in a hell of anti-aircraft fire and chal- lenging hordes of Japanese zero fighters. "We might have been blasted out of our beds last night if this hadn't happened," commented one Naval spokesman ashore on the results thus far of the still-raging battle. .But we got in there and did the job," he asserted, adding that tone Japanese carrier was seen sinking and the other was hit from stem to stern." (According to the British news agency Reuters, the second carrier also sank.) Late yesterday, a communique from this headquarters disclosed that 10 Japanese ships had been sunk and six badly damaged and stated only as to the Allied side: Our own losses are not reported." A communique of the Imperial Japanese Command broadcast by the Tokyo radio claimed that a U.S. battleship of the California type and two U.S. aircraft carriers of the Saratoga and Yorktown types had been sunk and that a British (Australian) cruiser of the Canberra type and a British battleship of the Warspite type had been heavily damaged. There was no immediate comment here upon these claims but the British Admiralty in London at once announced flatly: ... . There is no Truth whatever in the Japanese suggestion that HMS Warspite or any other British battleship had been sunk or damaged in the action which now is reported to be proceeding in the Coral Sea." Allied successes newly reported Friday-the thunderous action had started on Monday-included the sinking of a Japanese aircraft carrier and a heavy cruiser and severe damage to another enemy aircraft carrier and another heavy cruiser. This, together with previously announced results, thus formed 'the known score against the enemy as of tonight: Sunk: an aircraft carrier, a heavy cruiser, a light cruiser, two destroy. ers, four gunboats and a supply ship. Damaged and believed a total loss: another aircraft carrier. Heavily damaged: a heavy cruiser, a light cruiser, a 9,000-ton seaplane Special to Tie Daily COLUMBUS, 0., May 8.~ -Eyes of Midwest track fars will be focused here tomorrow where the cream of the Conference's cinder squads,! Michigan and Ohio State, do battleI in the Big Ten's outstanding dual meet of the current outdoor season. Not only does the duel loom as a preview of the potential strength of both teams for the all-important Conference meet at Evanston May 15 and 16, but it brings together some of the Midwest's top individual stars. Outstripping all other events for color and interest is the battle in the 440-yard dash between "Bullet" Bob Ujfer, the Wolverines' national in- door quarter-mile champ, and Russ Owen, Buckeye ace. Both Ufer and Rachmaniroff, Choral Group To Close May Festival lodayl The 1942 May Festival will come to a sweeping close today with the appearance of Sergei Rachmaninoff, great Russian composer-pianist, in an afternoon program devoted ex- clusively to his own works, and an evening concert featuring the Uni- versity Choral Union in the mighty "Ninth" Symphony of Beethoven. At 2:30 p.im Eugene Ormandy will conduct the Philadelphia Orchestra in the all--Rachmaninoff program. Beginning with the symphonic poem, Mr. Ormandy, vocalists Jan Peerce, Mack Harrell, Judith Hellwig and Enid Szantho and the University Choral Union will join in a presen- tation of the Ninth Symphony. Today will be the first time that. Rachmaninoff has ever played with a symphony orchestra in Ann Arbor. le has, of course, appeared in the past as a solo recitalist. .Jan Peerce, tenor star with the Metropolitan Opera, has been chosen three times by Rachmaninoff to appear in chor-