it14W i t Weatther Moderate Showers VOL. LM No. 24 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, OCT. 31, 1942 Marines Retain Solomons Area; Jap Fleet R PRICE FIVE CENTS etires * * * * * * 9 * * * 9 9 * * Wolverines Face Once-Beaten Illini Here Today L' U. S. Pilots Down 22 Campus Scrap-Hunters Get 42 Tons Of Salvage In Egypt American Fighters Lauded By Middle East Chief ; Have 22-2_Victory Ratio British Offensive Gains On Desert By The Associated Press CAIRO, Oct. 30.-American pilots have shot down 22 enemy planes and lost but two in the renewed Allied.of- fensive in the western Egyptian des- ert. In just five days, the United States desert task force has destroyed 14 Messerschmitt 109's, four Macchi 202's and four Fiat CR42s. Many thought the Americans might be too green for the more ex- perienced German and Italian fliers. 22-2 Victory Ratio This idea, however, has been dis- pelled swiftly by:22-2hvictory ratio and today the chief of the U.S. Fighter Command in the Middle East, Brig.-Gen. A. C. Strickland, said this of his boys: . "They, have ,the stuff. They know the advantages and limitations of the airplanes they fly. They don't try to fight Messershmtts at the altitudes where. the Messerschmitts are super- ior,, but lure them down to our best altitude and fly rings inside them and shoot them to pieces." General Praises Valor Genera.Strlckland said ,the Ameri- can successes in support of the Brit- ish, South African and Australian pits was due' to "courage, adapts-" blity and flying technique. d , lieut. Lyman Middleditch of High- lands, N.J., who ran his string to four with three victories in a single combat, is the leading American pilot in the desert. It took him three years to pass the stiff medical examination and 'get into the Air Corps. British Infantry Seizes More Desert Battleground CAIRO, Oct. 30.-()-Infantry of the British Eighth Army was credited 'officially today with seizure of ad- ditional desert battleground at the end of a week of Allied offensive, while small battle groups of British and Axis tanks fought sharp local skirmishes. &btill there was no real test of the opposing armor,, although the enemy ws known to have deployed as many as 200 tanks in various formations, "apping in" at several points along the Allied front and firing at long ranlge. British tank crews took quick ad- vntage of the proximity of these Panzers and, as the result, one day's losses for the Germans ran into dou- ble figures. One corporal tank gun- ner scored eight hits on enemy tanks. Higins Gets Contract For ArmyPlanes WASHINGTON, Oct. 30.-- (F')- Andrew J. Higgins disclosed today that he had obtained a contract to build 1,200 Army cargo planes in the New Orleans shipyard where he was to have built the 200 freighters whose cancellation last July caused a wide furore. At the time the Maritime Commis- sion cancelled the liberty ship con- tract on the ground of insufficient steel supplies, Higgins said his ship- yard was designed to construct flying boats as well as freighters. The type of planes to be built under the Army contract was not disclosed except that they would be large and of a type already in production. This ap1eared to rule out participation by Higgins, at least for the present, in the project of Henry J. Kaiser, west coast shipbuilder, to construct a new type of cargo plane larger than those The pranks of play-minded fresh- men forced the,Manpower Corps to tear down its scrap-o-meter-but the campus scrap hunters still turned in the best day's work of the huge cam- paign yesterday. Edward Pardon, head of the Uni- versity Building and Grounds depart- ment, reported that 42 tons of iron, copper, brass, zinc and aluminum have already been salvaged from Uni- versity scrap piles. Yesterday 20 members of the NROTC and 20 students from the East Quadrangle smashed tin cans at the University dump, tore open fat cushions and removed copper from boxes all afternoon. NROTC Enthusiastic The NROTC men complained af- terwards tat "they didn't get a chane; to warm up" and enthusiastically promised "to come back whenever the Manpower Corps wants us." Meanwhile, returns from the scrap campaign revealed hat the fratni- ties are by far the best job on campus of piling up the scrap. Sororities, dor- mitories, co-op houses,. and rooming houses haven't started to roll yet and the drive is fast drawing to a close. Lambda Chi Sur Winner Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity looks like a sure winner in the fraternity bracket, Dick Dick, Manpower scrap man, said last night after a personal survey of the local scene.' - Lambda Chi has rented trailers to bring in the scrap from outying farms and has the largest pile on ci011pus 'to date. But the Betas haven't given up yet. They've carried all of the dilapidated beds and cuspidors they could find War Work Survey Shows Lax Attitude University student are not doing ,enough war work, according to an overwhelmingly large share of the answers in the recent campus poll conducted by two sociology classes. More than half of the 269 engi- neers polled answered the question, "Are Michigan students doing too much, too little, or the right amount of war work," with the statement that the campus war ef- fort is not great enough. Of the answers from the engi- neers, 150 said that we were doing too little war work,13 that we were doing too much, 61 that we were doing the right amount of work and 20 expressed no opinion. Of the 233 men in the literary school who were questioned, 140 thought we should increase our ef- forts, 8 thought that less war work would be better, 49 thought we were putting in as much time as'we should on war projects, and 36 had no opinion. Of the 230 women in the literary school who were polled, 147 thought, that we should devote more time to war work, 2 thought we should spend less time on war projects, 61 thought our effort to date has been all right, and 20 had no opinion. and have stacked them on the front lawn. Another serious contender is the Theta Delta Chi boys who yesterday canvassed the neighborhood for iron1 fences. They found plenty-and car- ried them by hand to the growing scrap pile beside their front door. Manpower head Marv Borman pointedout last night that there is still plenty of time for some dark horses "to win this race yet" and urged faster work on the part of dorms, co-ops and rooming houses in order to fill the prescribed quotas. Tornado Rips Ozark Town; 28 Are Killed BERRYVILLE, Ark., Oct. 30.-(P)- Rescue workers, methodically search- ing ruins left by a devastating tor- nado that ripped through this Ozark mountain town, counted 28 known dead tonight and estimated the in- jured at 200. The storm struck about 10 p. m., last night, levelling business houses and homes in a half-mile wide path through the northern and western sections of the town, one of the -oldest coinmunities in the Ozark region of northwestern Arkansas. More than 200 homes were de- stroyed or damaged. Although nearly every' business house was damaged, most of them, including three drug stores were able to open for business. The town's population is 1,485. Shortly, after the tornado roared through the community, doctors and nurses hurried here from Harrison and Eureka Springs to aid the- town's three doctors in caring for the in- jured. Berryville was without hospital facilities and many of the more ser- iously hurt were taken to neighbor- ing communities. Later, emergency hospitals were set up in the city hall, court house and Methodist Church. Russia Will Get Ford Tire Plant WASHINGTON, Oct. 30. - () - William M. Jeffers, the government's rubber director, disclosed today that the tire manufacturing plant with which Henry Ford once sought to make his Ford Motor Co. a completely self-contained industry would be dis- mantled and shipped to Russia. Officials said the transaction had nothing to do with efforts to obtain from Russia secrets of synthetic rub- ber manufacture, but was in fulfill- ment of a long-standing lend-lease agreement. Cost of the plant and methods of shipment were not disclosed. Jeffers would say only that the cooperation of the company in making available its equipment, unused for some time, would make it possible to fulfill the commitment to Russia, "now, instead of months from now." Varsity Must Win To Stay In Title Race Expect Crowd Of 30,000 To See Franks, Agase Match Guard Prowess Robinson, Wiese Doubtful Starters By BUD HENDEL Daily Sports Editor Twice-defeated Michigan will try to regain its victory spark against the wonder team of the Western Con- ference, Illinois, in Michigan Stadium today. Kickoff time is 3 p.m. and a crowd of 30,000 fans is expected to witness the Wolverines make their bid to' re- main a contender for Conference championship honors. A loss today would remove virtually every hope for the elusive title that Michigan hasn't been able to garner since 1932. Michigan Twice Defeated' Beaten by the Iowa Seahawks and Minnesota, Michigan sports 4 id- season record of three victories and two defeats. If Illinois should ,win today, it will likely mean-the end .of' the glory trail for what seemed to be one of the greatest Wolverine teams in history. The Illini, bolstered by a season high-water mark of four wins against only one setback, invade. the Wol- verine lair with what is admittedly their best squad since 1934. Only Notre Dame has been able to van- quish' the upsurging"Iidians, and it took the Irish until the final minutes of a bitterly-fought battle last week to eke out a one touchdown victory. Under its new head coach, Ray El- iot, Illinois boasts of an undefeated Conference record. Before Notre Vital Cogs In Today's.Tough Grid Battle JULIUS FRANKS MYRON PFEIFER Pictured above are two of the opposing gridders in today's 28th renewal of Michigan-Illinois hostilities. Julie Franks, outstanding Wol- verine, guard, will be booming for All-Amercan honors, and lined up opposite him will be Alex Agase, his most dangerous contender from the Midwest. Myron Pfeifer, Illinois star, was the regular Illini fullback last fall but has been shifted over to quarterback for this game olly in the, place of the injured Ray Florek. Dame stopped them, the Illini had turned' back four opponents on suc- cessive Saturdays, with their sweet- est triumph being, a 20-13 decision over the Golden Gophers of Minne- sota. Yet, the true ability of this Illinois team is shrouded in mystery. Its sea- son recorsi entitles it to an even money chance'today, and it wilf enter the game with the backing of more than one expert- for the first time in almost a decade. Th e Illini whipped Minnesota, but Gopher partisans say it was because Minnesota wasn't at full strength after its grueling but losing fight with the Seahawks the week previous. 'In the Notre Dame struggle, the surprising nlini held a 14-7 halftime lead but their line couldn't stand up to the furious last' half assaults of the 'South Bend machine. There are those who claim, however, that they pressed the Irish so closely only be- cause Notre Dame had exhausted it- self while beating the Seahawks the week before. ' Three years ago, Illinois provided the major upset of the football whirl when it walloped an undefeated Michigan team by the score of 16-7. The last two years Michigan has paid back that loss with interest, battering helpless Indian elevens to the tune Turn To Page 3, Col. 4 Excise Taxes To Be Passed To Consumer Smokers Will Pay More For Cigarettes, Cigars. BeginningNext Month WASHINGTON, Oct. 30.- (P)- Cigarettes and cigars will cost the consumer more beginning November 1 to absorb new federal excise taxes, the Office of Price Administration announced today. OPA announced that the new taxes on cigarettes and cigars, as well as beer, wines, liquors and camera films, would be passed on to the consumer. In the case of cigarettes, the new excise tax will add V2 cent a package to the price smokers will pay. If the customer buys only one pack at a time, he will pay an additional cent, but the retailer must allow a customer to buy two packs at a time to make the tax come out even. OPA said it shortly would issue a new regulation on cigars which would result in an increase to the consumer of about 20 per cent. U.S.-Canadian 'Paper Output To Be Frozen WASHINGTON, Oct. 30.-- (IP)- Concerted action by the United States and Canadian governments today froze output of paper, paperboard and newsprint at the average produc- tion rate of the past six months, a move preliminary. to an international concentration of production. The' freeze, meant a 5.15 per cent reduction under the present domestic rate of newsprint output, a WPB spokesman estimated, and a cutof something over 6 per cent in Canada, source of three-fourths of the news- print used by United States newspa- pers. For the American paper industry as a whole, the stabilization jells pro- duction at about 87 per cent of the- oretical capacity, trade sources in Washington said. Canadian output of newsprint, however, has been running at only, about 65 per cent capacity. Cavporting Badger Students Arrested MADISON, Wis., Oct. 30.- (A')- Twenty-six persons, many of them University of Wisconsin students, were taken into custody by police tonight following a homecoming demonstration which veteran offi- cers described as the wildest in many years. Those arrested were charged with disorderly conduct and malicious destruction of property, according to police. Officers said they laid down 33 tear gas barrages in vain attempts to disperse the celebrants who marched from the lower University campus up to the capitol square. "This was the most unreasonable mob I can recall in the last seven years," said Police Lieut. T. R. Hau- gen. "And, what's more unusual, there seemed to be more University students involved than in previous U.S. Holds Vital Base in Pacific Enemies' Drive To Wrest Guadalcanal Airfield From Americans Fails Second Allied Air Assault Reported WASHINGTON, Oct. 30.- ()- With pride in his voice, Navy Secre- tary Knox declared today that the Japanese fleet has "retired from the scene". of the Solomons battle and that the first round of the struggle has' ended with American forces on Guadalcanal "occupying evercy inch ofx ground we ever controlled" Som" e of the ,apanese warships, which nave been supporting the foe's, alloikt, drive to wrest the vital airfield pn Quadalcanal' from American Ma- rines and Army troops, have gone ba~k t,their bases, Knox said. He did not.'divlge where the others have gone:,. ,. "We are in as complete control of the, sitiation in Guadalcanal as we ever ,have been," he said at a press I§iscourages Optimism Knox stressed, however, that he did not Want to disseminate too much optimism. It was obvious that despite the withdrawal of Japanese warships, there was no telling when they might be back to support a renewed drive. In view,. Of this 'uncertainty, the task of supplying the'" fighting troops on Guadalcanal was a problem still re- celVtng major attention in unofficial discusiions here. After warning against over-opti- mism, Knox added: "Bnt I do have a great feeling of pride Iii the way our men have met the onslaught in the TulagiGuadal: canal area and the skill with which these 'orces have been handled. They have' done a superb job." Before Knox spoke, the Navy de- partnient disclosed that American de- fenders of Guadalcanal had destroyed 17 Japanese tanks since the foe began his lig push. The communique also revealed that swift American torpedo boats scored a hit on a Japanese de- stroyer trying to land reinforcements or A40ppies on the island. The de- stroyer was "stopped when last seen." Army-Navy Cooperation Knox supported Secretary of War Stinison's previous assertion that there is complete cooperation between the Army and Navy in the Solomons area.'' " ewant to say, quite as emphati- cally as I can," Knox asserted, "that the Army in every possible way is cooperating." To back up that statement, he quo- ted' a remark by Undersecretary of the Navy James V. Forrestal-The closer 'to the front you get the closer the cooperation becomes." "The Army air arm," he said, "is carrying on a vigorous offensive against the enemy." Allied Air Raids Damage Ships Near Bougainville By The Associated Press HEAPQUAXtTRS OF GENERAL MACARTHUR, Australia, Oct. 31. (Sat.)-' ('P)- Allied bombers prob- ably damaged ' a Japanese aircraft carrier, scored two hits on a warship described as either a cruiser or a battleship, probably damaged still an- other cruiser and left an unidentified ship ablaze in a raid on Buin, the high command announced today. The raid was the second in as many days on the Japanese held harbor on the southern tip of Bougainville Is- land in the northern Solomons. Itwas by far the most damaging aerial blow announced recently in attempts to checkmate an all-out assault of the Japanese on Guadalcanal to the southeast of Buin. Allied medium and heavy bombers delivered three attacks last night on shipping concentrations at Buin. "The first wave of heavy bombers scored two hits on a heavy cruiser or battleship," the communique said. Soviet Troops T1 . 1 Thrown Back In Caucasians Defenders Of Georgian Pass Withdraw Again Under Nazi Pressure MOSCOW, Oct. 31. (Saturday)-- (P)- Russian troops defending the1 approaches to the Georgian militaryj pass through the Caucasus Mountains have been forced to retreat again m the Nalchik area, but the Red Army1 defending Stalingrad killed 1,100 more Nazis in a successful stand yes- terday in the ruins of that Volga River city. The midnight Soviet communique stressed the numerical superiority: of the enemy forces attacking on the Nalchik plains toward Ordzhonikidze, gateway to the high snow-banked military pass. It was the third con- secutive Russian retreat there. German Forces Shift, Dispatches said a formidable mass of German forces, including a bomb- ing squadron shifted from Stalingrad, was employed in the plateau area leading upward into the Caucasus Mountain range. Before retreating to a new defense line, the Russians said, their troops exterminated one Nazi infantry com- pany and disabled two tanks. In the west along the Black Sea coast the Russians reported the Red Army had "advanced slowly" after a two-day exhausting fight in which 1,100 Axis troops were slain northeast of Tuapse. The Germans now have gone over to the defense in this area, the communique said. Inside Stalingrad, Inside Stalingrad the Red Army was said to have destroyed or disabled eight Nazi tanks, 14 mortar and artil-' lery batteries and 18 planes in addi- tion to killing 1,100 Germans. No fur- Nation-Wide Registration OfWomen For War Work Is Considered By FDR By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Oct. 30.- The government is considering a nation- wide registration of women, President Roosevelt disclosed today, to locate those who could work in war plants and learn what jobs they could do. The registration, as outlined by the President at his press conference, would require all women to answer a set of questions about themselves but would not compel them to take a par- ticular job. It would give the govern- ment information about the country's womanhood like that obtained on subcommittee during the day that a census be taken of women 18 to 65 to list their experience and training, saying that "we must look to the homemakers" to man the industrial plants. Green and Philip Murray, president October Gargoyle Gone In Unprecedented Sale "We're all sold out," the Garg staff is announcing proudly today. of the CIO, opposed any legislation to draft workers or to freeze them in their jobs and called instead for bet- ter coordination of the various agen- cies dealing with manpower to elimi- nate confusion. Earlier Murray had recommended unification of federal functions under a "conference committee of the na- tion., No Decision Yet Mr. Roosevelt reported that nation- al service legislation was still in the