4P tQMI 4)ti Weather Cooler VOL. LHI No. 15- ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 21, 1942 1|| 1 || | ||| 'U PRICE FIVE CENTS Ma npower Corps Head Picks Seven Student Assistants Selected University Men Surrender All Extra - Curricular Positions To Accept Leadenship Of Michigan War Effort Seven University men relinquished all extra-curricular posts yesterday to accept positions on the Manpower Mobilization Corps Executive Board, a group created to assist director Marv Borman in harnessing and directing campus workers. The seven men, who will soon be assigned to the directing positions in specific divisions of the Manpower Corps, are Robert Allen, '44, of Alpha Tau Omega; Allan Anderson, '44, Phi Eta Sigma, ex-Union staff man; Clarence Carlson, '44, Phi Eta Sigma, staff assistant of the West Quad- rangle. Other newly appointed executives are Richard Dick, '44, Theta Delta Chi; Robert Erickson, '44, Delta Tau Delta, formerly of the Union staff; Roosevelt To Sign Huge Taxing Measure Today Morgenthau Labels As 'Inadequate' Record Measure To Pare 'Incomes, Raise Many Excises Robert Johnson, '43, also from Union staff, and Haskell Kelnar, Zeta Beta Tau, ^and ex-member The Daily business staff. According to Director Bormi "These men have been chosen cause they will get their jobs d They are not all big names on ca pus, but interviews and an investi tion of their records show that t will work hard, and do their* thoroughly." Meeting Today There will be a meeting of the ex utives at 7:15 p. m. today at which members will take definite contro certain phases of the work, such farm labor, CDVO, scrap collect and at which general policies will determined. Each executive will pick five M power Corps members to assist h and these members will make up administrative division of the age Borman has also appointed Rich Cole, '43, of The Daily business s to a special position in the Corps. will act as public relations agent, is not a member of the execu board. ..,a Fraternity frive Progresses 'The fraternity drive is really go to be a great success, Borman asse ed. "We have no definite figures, it looks like just about every ma volunteering, and many of the ho are enrolling en masse." In the meantime, the Corps mo to fulfill its first task, the supply of students for work on the S farm. 12 men were requested to p apples, and the first 12 memb called agreed to fill the positions. The Corps offices are in Room 1 Angell' Hall, and suggestions, cr cisms, requests for help and en ments are to be handled through t office. Chilean Cabine Group_ Resig Move To Give Preside 'Freedom Of Action' SANTIAGO, Chile, Oct. 20.-(P)-I Chilean cabinet resigned tonight give President Antonio Rios freed of action in replacing Foreign Min ter Ernesto Barros Jarpa, advoc of continuing relations with the A An official announcement said R had accepted the resignations, asked the ministers to continue their posts until a new cabinet named. It said the president wo "solve the crisis within the next hours." "It is considered unanimously," announcement said, "that it is nec sary to leave the president of republic the most absolute freedom action so he can resolve the pres political crisis in the manner m convenient for the country." The statement was issued by Md ister of the Interior Raul Mor Beltrami. The joint resignation merely s the ministers were stepping out give the president a chance to na a new cabinet "in the presence of delicate political situation." Rios thanked the ministers told them he understood their a tude. He said he would try to "fin solution most convenient for the g eral interests," Michigan's Blood Pledg Filled For First Mon Michigan's pledge of 125 pints blood per month donated to the '44, of Old Soldiers ian, be- ay Be Sent one. iga- Q* Q $ a To War ,jobs ;hey job Roosevelt Discloses Plan ec- Of Granting Furloughs the To 3540 Year-Olds 1 of as By The Associated Press ion, WASHINGTON, Oct. 20.- Presi- I be dent Roosevelt disclosed today that an- a number of soldiers 35 to 40 years old tim, would probably be furloughed to take the jobs in munitions factories and that ncy production of luxury goods might be lard ard cut more drastically to help solve He vital manpower problems. but On his recent inspection tour of tive war plants and military establish- xnents Xall over the country, Mr. ing Roosevelt told a press conference, he ert- had seen uniformed men who would but have been much better off ,in muni- n is tions factories than they were march- uses ing 25 miles a day- with full equip- ved -et. ring He added that he imagined some of offe them who would be useful in war pro- ick duction and have the necessary train- bers ing for it would be furloughed instead of retained in combat units. 009 Gen. George C. Marshall, chief' of iti- staff of the Army, previously had said ist- the Army was studying such a plan. hat With regard to luxury goods, Mr. Roosevelt remarked that he had been on a drive and had been held up in a t small town near Washington, where he had time to stare into store win- dows. Three quarters of them, he said, is were filled with luxury goods which we could do without. One reason, he said, is that people began stocking up ,nt their stores some time ago. We have got to face the question, the President declared, of wiether we are going to allow production of lux- The ury goods to continue. to M eate eAgaist Uo. News papers Dios but Se in In U.S. was uld 48 NEW YORK, Oct. 20.- (P)- Dean Carl W. Ackerman of Columbia Uni- the versity said tonight that newspapers es- of the U.S. were being subjected to a the "freezing process" by the government 'of and that the justice department's ent recent lawsuit against the Associated ost Press was simply a further move to "freeze the press into a new mold." [in- The head of Columbia's Graduate ales School of Journalism and former war correspondent told the. fourth Ac- aid counting Institute banquet in a pre- to pared speech that "under the cloak of me war emergency, the American way of the life is being profoundly changed by law and directives" which strike and directly at a free press and the Bill of tti- Rights. d a "Today the authority of the gov- en- ernment to control the press is abso- lute - although tcalled voluntary," Ackerman said. e "Because the situation has a pro- th found and portentous bearing on the freedom of public opinion, every of newspaper reader must be concerned, the because he is directly involved." By RICHARD L. TURNER Associated Press Correspondent WASHINGTON, Oct. 20.-Congress sent, its biggest tax bill in history to the White House today and President Roosevelt said he would sign it to- morrow to make higher excise levies on a long list of items effective Nov. 1. Unprecedented individual income taxes will be levied on this year's in- comes and payments will start Jan. 1 with payroll deductions for the "vi- tory tax". Drafted to increase federal reve- nues by $6,881,000,000 at a minimum but disputed estimate, the measure nevertheless went to the White House labelled "inadequate" by the treasury. Secretary Morgenthau recently called for another tax bill to yield an additional. $6,000,000,000. Congress leaders were uncertain when a start would be made orf the new, bill but it was generally thought that action would be deferred until after Jan. 1. Final Approval Today The present bill, molded to com- promise form by conferees of the House and Senate, received its final Congressional approval today in short order. The House discussed the meas- ure briefly and approved it by a standing vote of 130 to 2. The Senate talked the measure over for an hour, heard some sharp criti- cism of the three per cent tax on freight bills, and then approved the bill by a voice vote which sounded unanimous. The measure raises income tax rates to their highest level yet. The normal individual income tax rate is increased from four to six per cent. To that is added a graduated surtax starting at 13 per cent and increasing to 82. At present the surtax ranges British Bolster NavalStrength Admiralty Reveals Adding Two NewBattleships sy The Associated Press LONDON, (Wednesday), Oct. 21.- Two new 35,000-ton battleships, the Anson and the Howe, are now at sea with the British Fleet, the Admiralty disclosed today, and the Anson al- ready has been in action with her high-angle guns against German air- craft in the Arctic convoy route to Russia. It is this route that the great Ger- man battleship Tirpitz occasionally threatens by venturing from her Nor- wegian berth, and it was understood that the commanders of both the Anson and Howe are engaged in friendly rivalry to see which first can engage this pride of the German Navy. The : disclosure that Britain has thus finally restored her fleet to its original pre-war strength of 15 battleships and battle cruisers with completion of the five great battle- ships of the King George V class, came at a time when it is vital for the Allies to maintain their convoys and control the sea if they are to open a second front. A few hours earlier, A. V. Alexan- der, First Lord of the Admiralty, mentioned both these phases when he announced that at least 530 Axis submarines - German, Italian and Japanese--have been destroyed or damaged by British and American forces since the war began. from six to 77 per cnt. Personal exemptions have been lowered. The result is that the taxpayer will pay 19 per cent on his first dollar of taxable income, with the total per- centage to be paid rising sharply as income increases. New Victory Tax In addition, the bill levies the new victory tax, called by some a gross income tax. Under its terms, all indi- viduals will be taxed a flat five per cent of income in exc ss of $12 a week, or $624 a year. ome deduc- tions are, permitted f debt pay- ments, insurance prem ms and war bond purchases, or a rtion of the tax may be recovered ter the war. A nine per cent ta increase for corporations was provi , raising the levy from 31 to 40 per c t by a com- bination of normal an surtax rates. Excess profits will be t ed at 90 per cent, after a $5,000 ex Iption. The present excess profits t is a gadu- ated scale runn'n 35 to 60 per cent. Two Rege tnts Are Delegated To Atten Meet Dr. Ruthven Wil Address Minnesota Conference Of Wartime Education In line with the new Regential war policy, Regents Alfred B. Connable and J. Joseph Herbert will attend the conference on wartime education of the Association of Governing Bodies of State Universities and Allied Insti- tutions Oct. 29-31 in Minneapolis. President Alexander '. Ruthven will speak on Oct.-31 before the con- ference which Connable and Herbert will attend as delegates of the Board of Regents. Has Added Significance Connable, chairman of the recently formed War Policies Committee, said that "this meeting will have added significance to the University in view of the Regents' recent action to take direct part in University activities." "All subjects to be discussed will have direct bearing on the war and the adjustment of higher education to war needs," Connable said. Connable stated that "a faculty man may be sent to other Universities to provide an opportunity to see what others are doing." This plan would give the University a roving observer of other schools' war programs for the guidance of the War Policies Committee, he said. Give 'U' Roving Observer Meanwhile, reports reached The Daily that a petition expressing "con- fidence in President Ruthven's poli- cies" had been presented to faculty men for their signatures. No copies or signers of the statement could be located. The first faculty statement, critical of University policy, continued circu- lation in University offices, picking up additional signatures. The number of signers was yet undetermined. In a totally unexpected move, Pres- ident Alexander G. Ruthven signed the petition of criticism Monday. First appearance of the statement followed closely on the heels of the formation of the Board of Regents' War Policy Committee. Russians Repulse Assaults On Stat U.S. Planes Pour American Fliers Shower Ge Enemy Supply Dumps D With Constant Air Raids Long reer Japanese Thrust Of Dr. Stock A Is StillExpectedr WASHINGTON, Oct. 20.- (')- In a . strenuous effort to disorganize M Japan's big Solomon Island offensive before it can get really started, Amer- ()- ican fliers are showering enemy that troops and supply. dumps with bombs repu i a non-stop series of raids, it was sp revealed tonight. yest Throghout Oct. 18 and 19, a navy yest communique said, Army, Navy and as s Marine Corps aircraft hammered at per the enemy on Guadalcanal, and the'few great Japanese thrust which has been A expected for days has yet to get start- A ed. cons Effects Of Raids Unknown fens However, there was no means of Red telling on the basis of the communi- rc que whether the air raids had altered farce Japanese plans, or whether the enemy Riv was following a pre-arranged sched- * a ule of getting set and fully prepared-area before launching a land offensive - designed to wrest the vital Guadal-mn canal airfield from the American DR. FREDERICK STOCK men Marines and Army men. * * * by 4 Hovering in nearby waters was a The death yesterday of Dr. Freder- the large enemy fleet of warships and ick Stock, director of the Chicago ique auxiliaries, although the Navy com- Symphony Orchestra, closed a chap- bac munique said there had been no fur- ter in the musical history of the Uni- 30'n ther landings on Guadalcanal. versity of Michigan. bull Besides the raids on the Japanese Dr. Stock, known as the "dean of was on Guadalcanal, Army Flying Fort- American music," conducted May ene resses returned to the attack on Oct. Festival concerts here from 1905 to of ti 19 on Rekata Bay, Santa Isabel Is- 1935. Although it was not publicly posi land, 150 miles northwest of Guadal- known, he was to have conducted the . canal. Fires were started by bombs Philadelphia Orchestra at the Golden ene from the big planes. : . Jubilee May Festival this coming the+ (Far to the north, in the Aleutians, spring. stat the communique added, Army Liber- Long associated with the Univers- part ator bombers struck again at shore ity, Dr. Stock was given the honorary past installations and a beached ship in degree of Doctor of Music here in thei the harbor at Kiska, starting fires in 1924. When the news of his death S( the Japanese camp area.) reached Dr. Charles A. Sink, president said Jap Main Force Unused of the University Musical Society, his tion Concerning the struggle in the Sol- only comment was: flan omons, Secretary of the Navy Knox "I am deeply grieved to hear of the wip told reporters that "In my judgment, death of a great man." com the Japanese have by no means as yet kno exercised their main force."L Knox did not elaborate, but he said, L va rgesIn "It is still a good stiff fight," and Irthem news from the battle area is being Aid To Nazis ture made public as quickly as received in nu Washington. in All branches of American armedsi forces now have joined in the struggle Conscription Is Hinted Naz for control of the archipelago which In Leader's Speech 50" can command shipping lanes to Aus- sect tralia. Warships of the United States VICHY, Oct. 20.-(A')-Pierre Laval me fleet were the latest to move into the renewed his appeal for Frenchmen to said fight. They have hurled heavy shells go to work for Hitler in a radio speech of f onto Japanese short installations and tonight in which he announced an iou munition dumps in a thundering sea agreement for a levy upon each fa- s bombardment. tory "which will be obliged to furnish Bla a certain number of workmen." tha The chief of government said this em new levy was agreed upon by his gov- in ernment "ut of apprehension lest ma M lan To Cover measures of constraint be applied to France." j*(An hour after Laval completed -his Fleet Activities speech General Charles De Gaulle, ._Fighting French leader, told the Clinton (Pat) Conger, former city French people in a London broadcast editor of The Daily and graduate of they were proving by their resistance the Class of '38, has been chosen by that they were "engaged, in a revolt lot to be the first American corre- against the treasonable leaders of -spondent to cover the first-hand ac- Vichy." De Gaulle urged still greater tivities of the British home fleet-a resistance to Laval and his collabora- C post coveted by all American news- tion clique. Sta papermen in England. (Although Laval left open the tech- nig Conger will be a one-man reporter nical question of whether he would Axi for, the whole American press, and as ord r forced' labor conscription, sea- ase planned by the U.S. Navy, will dis- soned 'French observers in Bern, off( patch his reports to the Associated Switzerland, considered his speech as US Press, United Press, and Interna- preparation for conscription since his T tional News Service, appeal was not expected to yield the Conger had his first journalistic 150,000 volunteer workers demanded lea. experience with The Daily and rose by Hitler.) yes to fame with the Detroit Free Press int and the United Press. He is the son Germans Thrate fly of Mrs. Seymour Beach Conger who ers is executive secretary of the alumnae R e risals IfHeS council of the Alumnae Association. J I Hess Mr. Conger's last trip to Ann Arbor Is Placed On Trial e was last June when he returned from s___Bo Germany with other newspapermen Br who had been detained by the Nazi LONDON, Oct. 20.-(lP)-The Ger- sin government. man Radio broadcast a thret.t to- the night that the Nazi government Lor would take "extreme and drastic" re- left Romul Tprisal measures if the British fol- sch lowed the official Russian suggestion ene ILecture that Rudolph Hess be put on trial im. mediately. Se As the opening speaker in the 1942- The radio did not name Hess spe- Fierce in rad; id Japs rman Prisoners Admit Iuge Losses; Soviets, Strengthen Garrisons tumnal Storms Sweep Battlefront By HENRY C. CASSIDY OSCOW, Wednesday, Oct. 21.- The Russians announced today their" Stalingrad garrison had lsed two furious German attacks orted by 70 tanks inside the city erday, and quoted Nazi captives aying their divisions had lost 70 cent of their effectives in the last days. midnight communique told of the inuing successful Russian de- e, now in its ninth week, after t dispatches disclosed that the Army was strengthened by rein- iements ferried across the Volga r and intermittently relieved by autumnal storms sweeping the Enemy Flung Back he Germans first hurled a regi- t of motorized troops suppgrted 0' tanks against Russian lines in workers' settlement, the cmmun- said, but "The enemy was flung k to its initial position." mater in the day the Germans sent nore tanks into the attack," the tin continued. "This attack also repelled with heavy losses to the ny in men and tanks. At the end he day our troops firmly held their Lons. DO troops likewise repulsed all my attacks in the area of one of factories. German war prisoners ed the German divisions which icipated in the attack during the days have lost 70 per cent of r effectives." oviet troops above Stalingrad were to have strengthened their posi- s in local fighting on the Nazi k with one Russian detachment ing out two Rumanian infantry panes, and anti-aircraft gunners eking down two Nazi planes. Press Back Hitlerites z the Caucasus the Russians said r counter-attacking troops cap- d a populated place and "con- ied to press back the Hitlerites" he Mozdok area which bars the is from the Grozny oil fields some miles to the east. As a result of the fighting in this or about 900 German officers and n were killed," the communique . "We captured an enemy store ood and uniforms as well as var- s arms." outheast of Novorossisk along the ck Sea coast the war bulletin said t Soviet Marines had repulsed en- y attacks, killing 100 Axis troops one sector and dispersing a Ru- nian infantry company in another. J.S, British Planes Strike At Axis Ships AIRO, Oct. 20. -- () - United tes and British planes, in day and ht aerial partnership against the s, have struck heavy blows ashore, a and aloft in a new, stepped-up ensive, communiques from the AAF and the RAF disclosed today. 'wo Axis ships were sunk and at st two others hit Sunday night and sterday in these combined attacks which the Allied forces brought o action the whole range of their ing fleets, including fighter-bomb- and torpedo planes. At least two enemy merchantmen re hit by heavy United States Imbers in an attack on Tobruk. itish torpedo planes leftz another king, with hits in her stern,, off e Italian island of Pantellaria. rng-range British fighter-bombers t a fourth yessel, a two-masted ooner, aflame and sinking off the tmy held Greek isle of Crete. crap-Collecting Scouts W I Vr r ' '39- _'I It's The Feminine Approach:- Sororities Outsell Fraternities In Six-Day Stamp, Bond Drive It was $29,500 "over the top" for Michigan's 53 hustling fraternities and sororities yesterday when the Interfraternity Council revealed the final results of a fast and furious six- day Homecoming Stamp and Bond Sale Contest. Despite over-confident fraternities' advance predictions of triumph, bond- buying sorority girls copped the first place trophy by out-doing their opponents to the tune of $16,500 to $13,000. This cup was awarded to Alpha Ganma Delta whose members bought and sold $8,124 worth of bonds and stamps. process percentages were figured on which awards were granted. Frances Vyn, '43, of Gamma Phi Beta, chair- maned Pan-Hel's part of the drIve. The contest began last Wednesday following a Pan-Hellenic Council-IFC decree banning the colorful but ex- travagant Homecoming display con- test ordinarily held. The drive's total of $29,000 was hailed as "astounding" by all except the fraternity and sorority members who knew "they could do it all the time", an unofficial fraternity spokes- man said yesterday. Phi Kappa Psi, Psi Upsilon and Alnha Delta Phi were the only three