4ta :4 at Weather Cold VOL. LIII No. 71 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, JAN. 9, 1943 ]PRICE FIVE CENTS Nazis Allied Planes Blast Enemy off Australia Huge Air Force Joins Battle to Thwart Jap Landing; Transports Are Reported Sunk MELBOURNE, Australia, Jan. 8.- ()-A huge force of Allied planes, ranging from light fighters to heavy flying boats, Fortresses and Libera- tors, was thrown into the battle to- day against a Japanese convoy which apparently was bent on reinforcing Japanese troops ih the Lae area of New Guinea. More than 50 sorties in less than 24 hours already had been made against the 10-ship enemy naval force which was reported officially to have lost two big transports in the furious combat. A third transport was reported hit. Thousands of troops were believed drowned in the sinking of one of the heavily loaded transports, a 14,000- ton vessel. Fighters Shot Down At least 18 enemy fighters were shot down in. fierce dogfights. The Japanese expedition appar- ently was engaged in a mission simi- lar to that of Dec. 14 and 15 when only the remnants of a landing party got ashore in the Kumusi River area northwest of Gona. In that battle, ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN AUSTRALIA, Jan. 9. (Saturday)- (J)-Another transport and 20 Zeros have been destroyed in at- tacks dn the New Guinea bound Jap convoy but some troops may have reached Lae, Gen. Douglas MacArthur announced today. Allied planes fired 150,000 rounds of ammunition and dropped 54 tons of bombs in two days and even the rem- nant of the force that got ashore was later reported exterminated. Meanwhile, the remnants of the Japanese Papuan army, once num- bering about 15,000 men including some of the elite of Japan's forces, was hemmed in at Sanananda, Point and facing "complete destruction," a dommunique from Gen. Douglas MacArthur's headquarters said. Toward Front Sir Thomas Blamey, Australian commander of ground forces, after a tour of the front, said he hoped but did not predict that the Japanese would be dug out of their positions there with less Allied losses than were suffered in the Buna fighting. "We had considerable losses, but inflicted considerable more," he said. The manner in which the Japanese fortified their Buna positions in depth and with care, and the ten- acity with which they held on showed, he said, that they had at- tached great importance to the beachhead and had intended to make permanent installations there. Edward Flynn Resigns Post Democratic Head to Be Minister to Australia NEW YORK, Jan. 8.- (A)- Ed- ward J. Flynn today announced his resignation as chairman of the Na- tional Democratic Committee to be- come ambassador and personal repre- sentative of President Roosevelt as, Minister Plenipotentiary to Austra- lia. The announcement was made at a press conference, at which Flynn also said he had called a meeting of the national committee for Jan. 18. At that time he said he would formally announce his retirement. Flynn is 51 years old. He succeeded former Postmaster General James A. Farley as national Democratic chair- man in August, 1940. Frank Walker Mentioned as Probable Successor WASHINGTON, Jan. 8.-(P)--The resignation of Edward J. Flynn as chairman of the Democratic National Committee came as no surprise in Washington today since it had been generally known for some time that he wanted to quit. ------~- '-C1 -- Q i-I Driven Fart her from Stalingrad C Convoy Escorts Defeat Attacking Nazi Force Russia-Bound Merchantmen Escape 'Strong Battleship Attack; One Destroyer Lost By E. C. DANIEL Associated Press Correspondent LONDON, Jan. 8.- Doughty Brit- ish destroyers four times fought off a superior German force, including a pocket battleship, in the Arctic dark north of Norway and then shepherded their convoy safely and intact to North Russia after a stronger squad- . ., Senate GOP Names MeNary Minority Leader Republicans Promise Minute Examination of War Expenditures WASHINGTON, Jan. 8.- (A')- The' Senate Republican conference re- elected Charles L. McNary of Oregon as minority leader today and Repub- licans on the Appropriations Commit- tee pledged a minute examination of war expenditures and efforts to slash routine government ,outlays. "There was an emphatic determi- nation on the part of all of the mem- bers to get the purse strings back in the hands of Congress," said Senator Nye (Rep.-N.D.), ranking minority member, after a two-hour session in his office. The 38 Senate Republicans unani- mously reelected McNary and re- named Senator White of Maine as conference secretary in a meeting where, McNary told reporters, "the harmony was so thick it ran down my cheeks." Conference assignments found the Republicans gaining increased repre- sentation on all committees, averag- ing two of their number to every three Democrats. Senator Davis of Pennsylvania was added to the Foreign Relations Com- mittee and Senators Reed of Kansas and Burton of Ohio went on Appro- priations. One more Republican will be added to each of these committees when a Democratic vacancy occurs. Senator Capper of Kansas elected to leave the Finance Committee for a post on the Banking Committee and Senators Thomas of Idaho, Butler of Nebraska and Millikin of Colorado were added to Finance. NO TUITION : Military Map Making Course to Be Offered The poster of the bombsight of Tokyo seen around the campus is an excellent example of the type of work to be done by the graduates of the new Military Map Making course which will be offered next semester by the United States office of educa- tion in conjunction with the School of Engineering, in response to the call for women replacements in the federal map making agencies which are losing many men to selective ser- vice. For Senior Women A tuition-free course, this training will be given to senior women and men in 4-F classification. The pre- requisites are a four-year college de- gree or status as a college senior with prospects of possessing such a degree by June, 194..Courses in mathemat- ics andscience are helpful back- ground, but are not required. Those who complete this course and have and four-year Bachelor's degree by June, 1943, will qualify under Fed- eral Civil Service as Engineering Aids, with a minimum salary of $1,800 a year. Placement in the Army map ser- vice is assured to those who success- fully complete the course. This ser- vice is centrally located in Washing- ton bit has additional offices in many other cities. Not for Credit This course will not be offered for credit but related subjects such as mathematics, geography, surveying and geology may be selected for full credit. The lectures and laboratory ron joined the defense and routed the Nazi men-o'-war, the Admiralty an- nounced today. The 1,350-ton destroyer flotilla leader Achates was lost and the new destroyer Onslow was damaged, but the merchant ships loaded with "im- portant military supplies for our Rus- sian allies" reached their destination without loss or damage, the communi- que said. A German destroyer of the Maas class was sunk, and one of the larger ships was damaged, it said. These losses were announced Dec. 31 when the battle was still raging. The Ad- miralty said then that a heavy Ger- man cruiser had been damaged so badly it retired. The fact that the announcement today said "one of the larger ships" was damaged suggested that it might have been the 10,000- ton pocket battleship. However, British officers who took part in the fight said on their return to a northern British naval base that they felt certain that one ship was the 10,000-ton heavy cruiser Admiral Hipper and the other probably the 10,000-ton pocket battleship Lutzow or possibly the 6,000-ton cruiser Nurnberg. The enemy also was said to have had destroyers of the Narvik or Maas type in the action. The Germans acknowledged the loss of a destroyer on Jan. 2 and said an Allied destroyer was sunk, several cruisers and destroyers were damaged by gunfire and that torpedo hits were scored on four merchant ships. They placed the action off Bear Island, about midway between Spitzbergen and Norway. Government Seizes Ration Books in East Motorists Lose Gas for Disobeying Ban on Pleasure Driving NEW YORK, Jan. 8.- (A)- Gaso- line ration books were seized and thousands of license numbers jotted down for possible investigation as the government sought rigid enforcement today of its ban on pleasure motoring in 17 Atlantic seaboard states. Nine ration books were taken up by Office of Price Administration agents here, and police announced that 46,- 237 license numbers had been listed. Russell H. Potter, acting OPA dis- trict manager, said that owners of an additional 50 automobiles will be called in to explain why their cars were parked last night in the mid- town Manhattan theatrical and night club district. Potter said ration books were seized from: A man whose car was parked out- side a restaurant in which he was dining with two companions. , A chauffeur waiting for his woman employer who was attending a con- cert in Carnegie Hall. A youth who said he was a student at a military school in Virginia and had stopped to visit friends. A patron of a night club who had left his car parked outside. A man who said he had stopped in a restaurant to visit his sales mana- ger. A man who said he was entertain- ing a member of the armed forces. SIEGE EXISTS IN BUCHAREST LONDON, Jan. 8.-()-Reuters reported the Lisbon radio said to- night that a state of siege had been proclaimed in Bucharest, Rumania, following an unsuccessful Iron Guard plot against the Antonescu government. Higher Taxes, Forced Loans Seen for '43 President to Submit Budget Plans Monday; Record Expenditures May Reach 100 Billion By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Jan. 8.-The sub- ject of increased taxes or compulsory loans, or both, was under renewed discussion, tonight as ;President Roosevelt prepared to submit on Monday his record-shattering budget for the next fiscal year. Expenditures in the year are ex- pected to approximate $100,000,000,- 000. A highly placed government of- ficial, who cannot be quoted by nanme, said Mr. Roosevelt might recommend that Congress, through legislation, take steps to increase Treasury re- ceipts to $50,000,000,000. Increase Taxes This might entail, the official said, not only an increase in present taxes but some form of compulsory loans by individuals. However, there was no definite word that Mr. Roosevelt actually had decided to support com- pulsory loans. .1 Some statisticians have estimated that the present tax laws might raise $35,000,000,000 in the fiscal year be- ginning next July 1. This.is $10,000,- 000,000 more than previous official estimates of annual returns and is based on a Department of Commerce forecast that national income might go as high as $135,000,000,000 an- nually. Gap to Be Met Thus a $15,000,000,000 gap, to be met either by increased taxes or com- pulsory loans, would exist between receipts under the present law and the proposed new goal. The remain- ing $50,000,000,000 would have to be raised by voluntary purchases of bonds and other securities. The President was understood to be planning only general financing rec- ommendations, leaving it up to Con- gress to write its own tax ticket. In this connection, he gave qualified ap- proval today to a pay-as-you-go plan for collection of taxes from individ- uals. Mr. Roosevelt told his press confer- ence that everybody was in favor of getting on a pay-as-you-go basis, but that there were problems attached to the so-called Ruml plan which could not be overlooked. Admiral Stark Still Confident WASHINGTON, Jan. 8.-- )-The cautious hope which President Roose- velt held out that 1944 might be the year of victory was paralleled to a large extent by a summary of war progress given by Admiral Harold R. Stark, Commander of American naval forces in European waters, who is home for consultations. While saying he had not revised his view expressed many times in the past that this war will be "long and tough," the Admiral recalled at a press conference that many months ago he had made the following pre- dictions and clearly implied that they still accurately reflected his opinion: That 1942 would be a tough year in which the United States could not afford to suffer undue losses and would have to restrict itself to hitting where it could without risking such losses. That 1943 would see this country's strength increased and "I hope" the enemy's strength diminishing. That in 1944 "we will be coming along with such power that we can afford to smash in anywhere." Statement to Come President Alexander G. Ruthven is expected to issue a statement to- day on the report of the University senate advisory committee rela- tive to the case of Associate Pro- fessors Carl E. Dahlstrom and Christian F. Wenger, who were re- lieved of teaching engineering English I on Dec. 30, The Daily learned last night. The senate advisory committee submitted its report to President Ruthven at 6:30 p.m. yesterday. He was believed studying it last night preparatory to issuing a statement. Soviet Offensive Picks Up SpeAed Communiques Report Score of Villages Recaptured after 'Stubborn Resistance Camel Corps Pushes Italians in Desert Drive Axis Forces Facing Encirclemnent on All North African Sides By WES GALLAGHER Associated Press Correspondent ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AFRICA, Jan. 8.- ()- The capture by a French and American Camel Corps of Tanout Maller, a set- tlement 14 miles from Tiaret in the southern Tunisian desert near the Libyan frontier about 200 miles southwest of Tripoli, was announced today by a French military spokesman as bad weather again limited Allied ground operations in the northern Tunisian sector. Heavy Odds The Desert Corps, thrusting to the south of the main enemy line through northeastern Tunisia, attacked against heavy odds, the spokesman said, but put Tanout Maler's 400 Italian defenders to flight, killing about250 of them. It now is apparent that the Ger- mans and Italians are being squeezed from all sides-by the British Eighth Army in Libya, by the French in the south, and by the Allied Forces in Tunisia-and they now control only a comparatively narrow strip along the coast from Tripoli south, then leading northwest toward Tunis and Bizerte. Planes Strike Transport (British.Headquarters in Cairo an- nounced during the day that Allied planes attacking Field Marshal Rom- mel's Libyan army in its retreat to the west had machine-gunned his transport along a stretch of coastal road only 40 miles short of Tripoli. (This indicated to some British ob-. servers that Rommel was preparing to abandon his previous line around Buerat El Hsun, well to the east of Tripoli, and was on the march to the west again. (The British in Cairo also an- nounced that Tunis and Sousse, on the Tunisian coast, had again been heavily bombed. A railway station at Tunis was hit; big fires were set off at Sousse, where an enemy ship was reported to have been hit.) Dexter Man to Go on Trial Will Be Arraigned for Negligent Homicide Bernard B. Balch of Dexter will be arraigned this week in Justice Court on a charge of negligent homicide in the death of Carl Hudkins, of Stock- bridge, whose body was found this morning on Dexter Road west of Ann Arbor, County Prosecutor George Meader reported last night. Balch, who has admitted speeding at 45 miles per hour, was involved nine hours before in an accident with the driverless car of Hudkins, accord- ing to Meader. Dr. Edward C. Ganzhorn, coroner, said an autopsy yesterday afternoon revealed death from skull fracture almost immediately after Hudkin was hit. The dead man probably wa flung from the car to the spot 125 feet from the scene of the accident where his body was found, Ganzhorn believes. Investigating Sheriff's deputie found Hudkins' damaged car, empty in the middle of the road with light By The Associated( Press LONDON, Jan. 9. (Saturday)- Russian troops smashing along the Lower Don river and rolling up the vulnerable Nazi salient deep in the Caucasus captured more than' a score of villages and railway points yester- day, including Zimovniki, 125 miles southwest of Stalingrad, two Soviet communiques announced early today. A special bulletin broadcast by Moscow and heard by the Soviet Monitor said Zimovniki, 30 miles be- yond Kotelnikovski on the Stalin- grad-Tikhoretsk railway, fell after a stubborn fight. The regular midnight communique that followed said 20 settlements and railway stations had fallen to other Russian troops pushing westward along the Don River valley, and northward from the Caucasian Moun- tain foothills.. Nearer Rostov The Russians now were believed to be less than 60 miles short of Rostov at the mouth of the Don River after capturing Strakhov and pushing di- rectly westward toward the Nazi com- munications hub whose capture would cut off huge Nazi forces retreating in the Caucasus approximately 300 miles to the south. Ten more populated places fell to, the advancing Russians in the Lower Don Valley yesterday, the midnight communique said, and an equal num- ber of points were taken in the Cau- casus. Among the latter points were the railway station of Zolsky, only 10 n ti s: 9 1 t7 u r; R f; a t: b o: q S n p ,a c f T ti .Z al n °tl r: t. tl t r SNAPPY SERVICE: iTailor Shops' Prepare U.S. Combat lanes WASHINGTON, Jan. 8.-(P)-Air- craft "tailoring shops" are readying America's combat planes for action on far - flung battlefronts without. slowing down mass production assem- bly lines. Known officially as "modification centers," and until recently a closely guarded military secret, they are lo- cated on direct routes between air- craft factories and battlefront desti- nations. They add or subtract parts, or otherwise change planes to prepare them for duty in any theatre from the Arctic to the desert. For example, range can be increased, or bomb loads built up. Telling today of the work of these centers, the Office of War Informa- tion said they were operated by air- lines and aircraft factories under su- pervision of the Army Air Forces ma- teriel command, or directly by the air forces at air depots. A spokesman for the air forces ex- plained them this way: "Suppose you make kitchen stoves. Your factory is tooled up for one model on a mass production basis and you are turning out a thousand of them. Then your salesmen tell you that we've got to add another gadget or your competitors are going to put you out of business. Which is easier- retooling your plant or adding an- other little shop where the gadget can be installed on.the mass produc- tion stoves before they meet the com- petition?" Stunt Show Leaders Hit Athletic Snag The IFC-Panhel stunt show direc- tors yesterday came to grips with the, athletic department over a conflict zin events next Friday night, but a compromise was effected when the s "Victory Vanities" curtain time was s set back to 9 o'clock and the start of the Michigan-Wisconsin basket- t ballgame was moved up to 7 pm. However, the "Vanities" will still be held in Hill Auditorium as orig- s inally scheduled, Bud Brown, Inter- fraternity Council spokesman said, s and the five fraternity and sorority miles short of Georgievsk, a large town on the Baku-Rostov line. Niko- skoye, 45 miles northeast of Geor- gievsk also was taken, representing an 18-mile advance since Thursday in that sector when one Red Army col- umn occupied Stepnoye. Russian Caucasian troops were har- rying the retreating Germans relent- lessly, sending tanks and mobile in- fantrymen around the Nazi flanks to attack from the rear. In one such at- ack 400 Germans were wiped out yes- terday, and 50 mortars and a number of trucks were seized, the communi- que said. Soviets Chide Berlin Nineteen Nazi tanks, 110 trucks, 26 machine guns and three supply de- pots were captured by another Soviet unit that occupied one inhabited lo- ality, the Russians said. The Soviets officially chided Berlin for the German radio's admission on T'hursday night that Nazi troops in the Caucasus were now withdrawing and "shortening" their lines. The communique saia it was "com- non knowledge" that in a few days in hat sector the Red Army "advanced between 68 and 88 miles," capturing arge quantities of equipment and nany prisoners. The "Hitlerite organ grinders" used the same belated "shortening of line" announcement a year ago during the .irst Russian winter offensive, the .ommunique said, and now are doing it again in an effort to conceal from the German people the true status of their armies in Russia. Determined Resistance German troops along the Lower Don valley were admitted by the Rus- dians to be putting up a much oe determined resistance in an effort o keep the Red Army from Rostov. But lespite frequent counter-attacks the :ommunique said the Red Army still was gaining ground. The Red Army column that took 3imovniki apparently had crossed te Sal River in its steady drive toward Salsk, a junction point about 85 miles farther on where a spur connects with Rostov. Zimovniki itself is about 140 miles east of Rostov. On the central front northwest of Moscow the communique said the Russians still were using part of their 3ffectives to consolidate positions in she captured Velikie Luki area, while others were beating off strong enemy counter-attacks. FIRST FORUMS: IGirl s' Dorms Will Discuss Wear Problems. The women of four University dor- mitories will forget about dates and zlothes tomorrow night when they lather to talk over war-caused prob- lems confronting them and the col- lege women's contribution to. the world of the future. Their forums will be the first in a series of campus-wide discussions of war and post-war issues, that have been planned by the Post-War Coun- cil. Carol Miller, Council spokesman, said that similar evening programs are being prepared for all sororities, fraternities, cooperatives and men's dormitories. The girls will deal with questions iuch as: am I justified in remaining in school and continuing a Liberal Education during the war period, and, if I do remain in school, to what ex- tent should I sacrifice my studies to participate in aiding the war effort? Leading the discussion at Stockwell Hall will be Prof. Preston Slosson of the History department. Miss Marie Hartwig of the Women's Physical Education department will serve 'in the same capacity at Mosher-Jordan while Dean of Women Alice Lloyd will do the moderating at Betsy Bar- bour. The program at Helen Newberry will be directed by Dr. Kenneth Hance of the Speech department. COLD TURKEY TALK: Jeffers Warns of Catastrophe in Synthetic Rubber Program 0' WASHINGTON, Jan. 8.-(I)-"Ca- tastrophe" confronts the synthetic rubber program - already set back expected soon, kept strictly mum on that point. But he asserted, in an interview,