tit gan I ati WPeather Warmer VOL. LIII No. 4 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN THURSDAY, OCT. 8, 1942 PRICE FIVE CENTS FDR Completes THE TIME IS NOW: Economy Board To Assist Byrnes Tell Them About .It! In a front page editorial yesterday The Daily pointed out that our University has thus far fallen short of its potential contribution to the nation s war effort. We believe that the failure lies not so much with the general student body as with those who are supposed to be the campus leaders. For this reason it is now up to the students themselves to demand action from the head of every organization on this campus. They should demand that every organization justify its existence by what it does to aid the war effort and by that alone. Below is a list of the men and women from whom action should come. They are the leaders of the major campus organizations. If they are not doing their part, TELL THEM ABOUT IT. If you have any ideas of your own, TELL THEM ABOUT IT. Enemy Grip On Aleutians Weakens As Japs Desert Bases;Still Holding Kiska Former Justice Is Chief Over Wartime Group To Handle Stabilization Anti-Inflation Law Sets Crop 'Floor' WASHINGTON, Oct. 7-(A)-With the appointment of two representa- tives each from labor, agriculture and management, President Roose- velt completed today the membership of a board which will assist, James F. Byrnes in controlling the wartime economy of the nation. Byrnes announced the appoint- ments at a White House press con-. ference. Immediately afterward he took the oath of office as Director of Economic Stabilization. With a salary of $15,000, a fourth less than he made as an associate justice of the. Supreme Court, Byrnes will draw as much pay as a cabinet member. He is expected to sit in on cabinet meetings. Labor Represented These were the additions to the economic stabilization board: Labor representatives, William Green, president of the American Federation of Labor, and Phillip Mur- ray, President of the CIO. F ar m representatives, President James 0. Patton, of the Farmers' Co- operative Union, and Edward O'Neal, president, American Farm . Bureau Federation. Representing management, Eric A. Johnston, president of the Chamber of 'Commerce of the United States, and Ralph E. Flanders, president, Jones & Lamson Machine Company,' Springfield, Vt. In an executive order putting into effect the new anti-inflation law, Mr. Roosevelt had already placed on the board the secretaries of the treasury, agriculture, commerce' and labor, the Federal Reserve Board chairman, the budget director, price administrator, and War Labor Board chairman. Directors' First Act One of the director's first acts after taking his oath was to direct Secre- tary of Agriculture Wickard, who had recommended the step, to maintain the loan rate on the 1942 corn and wheat crops at 85 per cent of their parity prices, as of the beginning of the marketing year. This was done to "prevent any increase in the cost of livestock and poultry and to aid in the prosecution of the war" by hold- ing down feed costs. The recently enacted anti-inflation bill calls for loans designed to place a 90 per cent parity "floor" under the price of major crops, but provides that the rate may be held down to 85 per cent if necessary to faciliate pro- duction of livestock. N.. Nazis Protest Eish Raid Japs' Moves Pushed Back ByApussies GENERAL MAC ARTHUR'S HEADQUARTERS, Australia, Oct. 71 (P)- The latest Japanese threat to Port Moresby had collapsed tonight, with the invaders pushed back to the northeast downslope of the Owen Stanley range and steadily pursuing Australian advance forces in firm control of the mountain pass. There was no indication where the. Japanese would muster strength for a stand. Dispatches from the New Guinea battle zone said that since the initial stages of the repulse, when the invad- ers were turned back only 32 air-line miles from Port Moresby by frontal attack and flanking tactics, their rear guard resistance lightened until now the cautious advance of the Austral- ians was unopposed. One of the mysteries of the Japan- ese withdrawal was the finding of a number of enemy dead whose bodies bore no wounds, as though they had died of illnes. A correspondent of the Melbourne Herald said the Australians, who yes- terday pushed on up the range be- yond Kagi, within four miles of the Port Moresby entrance to the gap, had advanced early today to within two miles of the far end of the pass-- headed for the downslope toward Ko- koda, the main Japanese inland base. Allied airplanes virtually ruled the sky over the line of advance and they repeatedly bombed Japanese supply line back to tlge Gonabuna region on the northeast coast of the island. The official war bulletin fiom southwest Pacific headquarters ex- plained the slackening pace of the ten-day advance with the comment: "This incredibly difficult range of mountains presents almost insuper- able complications in maintenance of supply lines for troop units .of any size." College Students Swarm In Fields To Help Farmers BISMARCK, N. D.- (P)- Because Mother Nature won't wait any longer for Washington to act, North Dakota dug up its own solution today for the farm labor crisis. Into its fields to harvest the most bountiful crops in years, the state ij sending its college men and women, high school boys and girls, to toil alongside the hard-pressed farmers. By the end of the week, about 4,000 college students will have turned har- vest hands in addition to thousands of high school students. In fact, most of the state's higher educational sys- tem is at a standstill and in many towns, that applies to local business as well as the city goes out to the country to give it an emergency lift. Soviet Drive On German Flank Continues; City Repels Attack Assembly .. .......................... . Betty Newman, Congress.............................. . Norton Norris, Daily ............................ . . Homer Swander, Daily Women's Editor ............:........Barbara de Fries, Inter-Cooperative Council ..................Harold Ehlers, Inter-Fraternity Council ...................John Fauver, League ..............................Charlotte Thompson, League Defense Committee ................ Margaret Ihling, Men's Judiciary Council ................. Robert Matthews, Pan-Hellenic Council ...................... Virginia Morse, Student War Board ............ .. Robert Matthews, Union . .Don West, 2-3251 2-4431 2-3241 2-3241 2-4431 2-4431 2-3251 2-3251 2-4431 2-3251 2-4431 2-4431 r g 1 r c l . University War Board...........Mr. Clark Tibbitts, 4121, Ex. 331, ask for the War Board Office Women's Athletic Association .........Nancy Filsttup, 4121, Ex. 702 Women's Judiciary Council ................ Lorraine Judson, 2-3251 Mine Workers Vote To Drop Ties With CIO Lewis Gives- Convention Ultimatum To Choose Him Or National Union CINCINNATI, 0., Oct. 7- (A)-The United Mine Workers of America late today voted almost,. unanimously to withdraw from the Congress of In- dustrial Organizations to complete. a two-year, steadily widening breach.. John L. Lewis, UMW chieftain and former CIO president, virtually told the miners in a 56-minute speech to decide between him and the CIO. Although most speakers, previous to Lewis, asked delegates to vote against the split, only a scattering of men stood after the majority had shouted their approval of Lewis' stand. "I think this convention in honor to itself and in honor to its officers should adopt this report (committee on officers' report which recommend- ed withdrawal)," Lewis declared, end- ing the debate. "If you do not adopt this report, then you do not want a man like me as your president. You want a man with more rabbit in him than I've got," he added to set off a roof-shak- ing demonstration in Music Hall. Willkie's Opinions His Own, He States With United States Forces in Chi- na, Oct. 7- ()- Wendell L. Willkie traded information with officers and men at an American Army air base today after winding up his Chungking visit with a declaration that he was speaking for himself, when he made statements such as his Moscow call for a second front. Replying to questions at a press conference, he said he had been com- missioned by the President to do cer- tain things and that in anything con- nected with them he was the Presi- dent's representative and acted ac- cordingly. Nazis Execute Fifteen Morea In Trondheim Two Others Sentenced To 10 Years Of Labor As Terrorism Reigns J LONDON; Oct. 7.-(P)-Adolf Hit-' ler's executioners took the lives of 151 more persons today at Trondheim, Norway, the Oslo radio announced, as° Nazi administrators bore down' with a reign of terror-in ruthless de-.l termination to mold the country into "new order" subservience. Along with 10 lawyers, editors, a shipowner and other prominent citi- zens who were executed yesterday, the total thus was brought to 25 as the result of'a state o emergency im- posed upon Trondheim and a coastal strip of 400 miles. Two others today were sentenced to 10 years at hard labor, while one of a total of 18 brought before a court martial was acquitted, the ra- dio said. All were charged vaguely with 'criminal offenses. A thorough checkup of everyone livingeinythe area of the state of emergency was started by the Ges- tapo which broadcast orders for per- sons normally living in the district but now residing elsewhere to register at the nearest police station imme- diately. "They seem to have come down and haphazardly picked out promi- nent citizens and shot them as a form of intimidation of the popula- tion," said the Norwegian telegraph agency here in commenting on the first ten executed. Noneof the men was under arrest, accused of a specific crime or even held as a hostage, it was said. Roosevelt Asks Tr ial, Penalty, For Axis Head WASHINGTON, Oct. 7.-(k)-A post-war trial of Adolf Hitler for high cries against humanity was ap- parently foreshadowed today when President Roosevelt said the terms of United Nations victory would call for punishment of "ringleaders" re- sponsible for "organized murder" and other "atrocities." Without mentioning Hitler by name, the President disclosed that the United Nations were already mov- ing to set up a commission to gather evidence for use at post-war trials. Drawing a sharp line between Axis leaders and the people under them, Mr. Roosevelt said in a statement: "It is not the intention of this gov- ernment or of the governments asso- ciated with us to resort to mass re- prisals. It is our intention that just and sure punishment shall be meted out to the ringleaders responsible for the organized murder of thousands of innocent persons and the commis- sion of atrocities which have violated every tenet of the Christian faith." Later, Sumner Welles, Acting Sec- retary of State, was asked by re- porters whether Hitler was one of those who would be placed on trial. He said he would leave the answer to the excellent judgment of those who raised the question. Nazi 'Tank Forts' Ripped By Timoshenko's Men; Rumanians Wiped Out' MOSCOW, Thursday, Oct. 8-(P)- The Red Army continued its drive against the German left flank north- west of Stalingrad yesterday and held all positions inside the battle-scarred city against the huge mass of men and tanks the Germans have thrown into the battle, the Soviet midnight communique said today. Earlier reports said Marshal Tim- oshenko's relief offensive northwest of Stalingrad had ripped into a line of hundreds of Nazi "tank forts" and overrun a stronghold, wiping out 1,200 Rumanian troops. Battle Rages In City The communique's reference to this action said simply that "northwest of Stalingrad our troops have been con- ducting operations for the improve- ment of their positions." Inside the rubble-strewn city, the battle raged on fiercely, but the Sov- iet communique indicated the Red Army had not withdrawn at any point. "All attacks of enemy tanks and infantry have been repelled with hea- vy losses," it said. "Our troops are holding their positions." During this fighting, it was stated officially, the Russians killed about 500 Germans and destroyed 19 tanks. Italian Radio Quoted (In London the British News Agen- cy Reuters quoted an Italian radio report as saying Russian forces at- tacking the German flank above Sta- lingrad had thrown pontoon bridges across the Don and sent troops to the west bank of that stream.) In the Mozdok area, in the Cau- casus, the Russians retired to new positions at one point after a fierce engagement. At another point, the communique said, 12 German tanks managed to penetrate to the rear of a Soviet detachment, but 11 of the tanks were put out of action and about a company of German troops were wiped out. Meanwhile, fresh enemy reinforce-1 ments were thrown into the Caucasus battle. The communique said a new' Rumanian division had arrived in the- area southeast of Novorossisk, Ger- man-held Black Sea base, and had been fighting for two days. Dfaily Standby Hale Champion Enters Army, Today The Daily lost one of its most reliable veterans. Hale Champion, night editor, left early this morning for Fort Sheridan, Illinois, where he will enter Uncle Sam's growing Army as a buck pri- vate. During Champion's three-year stayt with The Daily, he has handled jobs; ranging from special feature assign-4 ments to writing sports copy "outside of his department." And he did every job given him with a thoroughness,3 'accuracy and versatility that stamps, him as one of the up-and-coming young journalists. 'I'm happy I'm going," Champion said, "because I'm breaking a shroud of apathy that held me from Septem- ber, 1940, to September, 1942. The apathy kept me from doing what I knew I should do." In leaving for the Army, Champion broke off his education one year shy of a degree. A member of the special- ly-created Army Enlisted Reserves on campus, he asked permission for active duty in order to enlist. As long as he was in that organization, he could have continued his schooling. The Daily wishes luck to Hale Champion on his new job. Gen. Cramer Reviews Judge Advocate, Unit Maj. Gen. Myron C. Cramer, The Judge Advocate General of the United States Army, was in Ann Arbor yes- terday to review the 64 officer mem- bers of the Judge Advocate General's school, now housed in the Law Quad- rangle. The review was held on the drilling grounds just east of the Law Library. Col. Edward H. Young, commandant of the school, accompanied Gen. Cra- mer in the inspection. Gen. Cramer will address a special meeting of the Judge Advocate Gen- eral's school at 10 a. m. today. Bombs Hit Attu Buildings; Guadalcanal Reinforced By AxisPlanning Drive Defenses Threatened In Solomon Outposts WASHINGTON, Oct. 7- 0P)- Ja- pan's hold on America's western Aleutian Islands-appeared tonight to be weakening rapidly. The Navy announced there was no trace of the enemy on either Attu, the westernmost island and first seized by the Japs, or on nearby Agattu, where the enemy also had placed small forces. The Japs were still in possession of Kiska Island, their most important base of operations in the area, but so far as was known that was the only island they held, and it was under repeated and heavy attack by air. Navy Makes No Claims This information was .given out in a Navy communique which cautiously refrained from claiming that the en- emy actually had withdrawn from Attu and Agattu. From the an- nounced fact that considerable aerial reconaissance had failed to produce any sign of occupancy "for several weeks," it seemed clear, however, that a withdrawal had been effected. Moreover, American bombers have now destroyed most of the buildings on Attu. Regarding Kiska, the com- munique said that "attacks by 'our aircraft continue," and reported spe- cifically that on Monday army liber- ator bombers, with fighter escorts, dropped many demolition and incen- diary bombs on the camp area, and scored hits on the seaplane hangar. Six enemy seaplane fighters which rose to the counter-attack were shot down at that time. The Japs also put up light anti-aircraft opposition but all the American Aircraft returned to their base. Japs Reinforce Guadalcanal The communique did not mention the situation in the south Pacific where at last reports, yesterday, the Japanese were reinforcing their troopson Guadalcanal Island in the Solomons in: preparation for a re- newed attempt to capture the Amer- ican defense positions and airfield. The base from which the Ameridan aircraft made their latest attack on the Japs in the Aleutians undoubted- ly is the newly developed operations center in the Andreanof Islands, which at one point lie only 125 nau- tical miles from Kiska. Its occupation by Army troops and air forces was announced by the Navy only last Saturday, . although it had been ef- fecteddseveral weeks earlier. German Exile Speaks Today Senate Passes Tax Measure Corporation Rates To Be 40 Per Cent Of Income WASHINGTON, Oct. 7- (P)- By an overwhelming vote, the Senate to- day approved a 40 per cent tax on corporation incomes above $50,000, after rejecting, 75 to 9, a proposal by Senator LaFollette (P-Wis.) to in- crease that rate to 50 per cent. Then, in a day of rapid action, it voted to reduce the credit for depen- dent children and others from $400 to $300 and turned to a discussion of the problem of taxing income from state and municipal securities histor- ically exempt from federal assess- ments. Both votes on corporation rates found the Senate following the ad- vice of its finance committee and dis- regarding the recommendations of the treasury. The latter had recom- mended a rate of 55 per cent on cor- poration incomes over $50,000. By comparison, the House approved a rate of 45 per cent. Attack Stirs On Sark Island Handcuff Fight LONDON, Oct. 7- (P)- A ten-man commando raid last Saturday night on Sark, smallest of the German-oc- cupied channel islands, gave rise to- day to an exchange of nearly 800 sharp and.. hostile words in official British and German communiques as to whether the British are handcuf- fing their prisoners. By all 4ccounts it was a very small affair-just another of the little night operations which seldom receiveany publicity at all-with the 10 com- mandos slipping ashore to get some information about how the Germans were treating the people on the is- land, and capturing five prisoners, four of whom were shot while getting away. But apparently the German High Command saw something particularly inhuman in putting handcuffs on a man and was determined to'raise the issue. it waxed indignant, threatened re- prisals, and devoted 400 of the 650 words of its communique, which also told of the Battle of Stalingrad, to the raid and its repercussions. The Germans said there were 16 raiders who captured five prisoners, bound them in fetters and then shot and stabbed two dead and wounded' a third. The British War Office, in a spe- cial announcement, denied any pris- onnersof war had been so treated. and A Woman Takes The Reins:, Dorothy A. Johnson Appointed Editor Of '43_Michiganensian Reserve Programs Described At War Rally; Interviews Today v, First Woman in the university to hold such a post, Dorothy A. Johnson, '43, of Farmington, has been appoint- ed managing editor of the 1943 Mich- iganensian. At a meeting yesterday the Board in Control of Student Publications also announced the appointment of Bob Sundquist, '43SM as associate editor and Stu Gildart, '43A, as art director. Miss Johnson was a member of the junior editorial staff last year and has taken an active part in Soph Cab- aret central committee, in Wyvern, Mortar Board and Senior Society, and as a member of the Marriage Rela- tions Board Executive Committee. She is recipient of the 1942 Ethel Mc- Cormick Scholarship and a four-year Alumni Undergraduate Scholarship. A=i.e _nncn r~fn n8from anv reach the $4.50 level and in the spring, 'Ensians will cost $5.00 per copy. A third member of the senior staff is Ruth Wood, '43. On the junior edi- torial staff are Mel Englehardt, '44, Carson Grunewald, '44, Robert Schultze, '44, Suzanne Sims, '44 (schools and colleges), Betty Ann Kranich, '44 (house group), Phyllis Levine, '44, Jean Whittimore, '44 (wo- men's activities), Griffith Young, '44A layouts) and A. A. Agree, '44A (sports). Junior members of the business staff include Martin Feferman, '44, salesman; Buck Dalton, '44, Dick Bieneman, '44E, Lois Fromm, '44, June Gustafson, '44, Eleanor Howe, '44, and Mary Keppel, '44. Announcement of the managing editor's annointment came late be- With a stern warning to "decide and decide quick," officials of the Advisory Board for the Sixth Service Command gave 900 students, who massed at Hill Auditorium last night,' a picture of the reserve programs this University can offer. Led by Marine Captain Paul B. Rickard who predicted every reserve program would close at the end of this semester to all but incoming freshmen, the program presented speakers from the Army Reserves, Army Air Corps Reserves, Naval Re- serves, Naval Air Corps Reserves and the Marine Reserves. President Ruthven, who introduced the speakers, held himself one "who believes college students are taking the war seriously." He lauded the re- serve programs as "deliberate expert will explain the program in Room 3191 while Capt. John H. Peterson and Lieut. Francis A. Wilgus of the Army Air Corps Enlisted Reserve will be available in Room 321. Interviews concerning Navy V-1 and V-7 will be given by Lieut. John Howard in Room 323 while explan- ations of Navy V-5, flight program, will be given by Lieuts. D. L. Griffith and R. G. Gibbs in Room 325. Capt. Paul B. Rickard, chairman of the, Board, will interview those interested in 'the Marine Corps Reserve in Room 308. The officers will not accept enlist- ments but only advise students and explain the details of the particular reserves they represent. Enlistments may be made through the Univer- sity War Board, 1009 Angell Hall. Dr. Schairer To Discuss Nazis And The Peace Dr. Reinhold Schairer, voluntary exile from Nazi Germany and visit- ing professor at New York University, will discuss "Germany, Before the Peace and After" at 4:15 p. m. today in the Rackham Amphitheater. Dr. Schairer is being brought to Ann Arbor under the auspices of the University Committee on Interna- tional Studies and Administration, and his lecture is open to the public. During the last world war he was organizing, at the German Legation in Copenhagen, a close cooperation between Russia, Britain, America and Germany to better the position of prisoners of war. Later, he was ap- pointed by the German Republic as head of a Central Bureau of German Universities. When Hitler came into power, Dr. Schairer immediately left Germany and fled to England. He has since de- voted his energies to bringing about a new educational policy in all coun- tries of Europe. Soldier Rights Assured WASHINGTON, Oct. 7- The bill to protect the civil rights of men in the armed forces was signed by Pres- ident Roosevelt today. PHOTOGRvAPHERS All ,iihlo a ,,Aw.+c 4OdigterA ei