igt 4at Weather warmer VOL. LIII No. 5 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, OCT. 9, 1942 PRICE FIVE CENTS Nazis House Passes Huge War Bill; Senate Rejects Securities Tax Six-Billion-Dollar Measure Boosts U.S. War Costs; Goes To Finance Naval Air Expansion Program Tax On Securities Jolted By Senate By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Oct. 8.-A $6,236,- 956,621 appropriation measure, boost- ing this nation's cost-of-war bill to $220,000,000,000, was passed swiftly by the House today to finance a naval aviation expansion program and a variety of other war-born pro- jects. The new appropriations encount- ered no opposition on the floor, win- ning final approval by a voice vote. Members of the House AppropriatioiA Committee informed the House that the United States soon would be spending at the rate of $6,000,000,000 monthly for arms. Nearly 90 per cent of the new omnibus deficiency bill was ear- marked for the Navy, with $2,862,- 000,000-the measure's largest single allocation-set apart for 14,611 naval planes to give Uncle Sam's growing fleet of aircraft carriers its sting. In addition to the direct appropria- tions to a dozendifferent govern- ment agencies, the measure formally granted the Navy Department auth- ority to enter into contract obliga- tions for the previously- authorized 1,900,000-ton fleet expansion esti- mated to cost $9,510.000,000. On top of $5,595,388,308 for the Navy, the measure bundled up $500,- 000,000 for war housing, $3,800,000 for the Office of War Information, $19,000,000 for a guayule rubber pro- ject, $25,000,000 for the Office of De- fense Transportation, and $10,303,680 for the War Manpower Commission. Wartime Bill Voted Down By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Oct. 8.-The Sen- ate, voting 52 to 34, refused to tax the income from future issues of state and municipal securities today after an extended debate which stressed assertions that such an impost would violate state rights and produce in- significant revenues. In making its decision, the Senate for the first time in its consideration of the new war-time tax bill disre- garded the recommendation of its Finance Committee. - The vote, however, brought it to the point of discussing one of the ils major controversies, the commttee's proposal for a five per cent victory tax on all individual incomes in ex- cess of $624, with Additional credits for insurance premiums, debt pay- ments and other fixed obligations. The tax would be levied in addition to the usual normal tax and surtax. A decision' on this issue went over until tomorrow, with members of the Finance Committee predicting that the Senate would approve. Gen. Cramer Speaks Before ArmyJudges, Preservation of the rule of law must be maintained, Maj.-Gen. M. C. Cramer, Judge Advocate General, told the 64.officers of the Judge-Ad- vocate General's School yesterday a. he pointed out the military's duty to constitutionally defend the nation. General Cramer reviewed the his- tory of the Judge-Advocates' func- tions from one of the first cases in Prep aring To Give Up Stalingrad r C THE TIME IS NOW: Scrap Starts To Roll MR. GABLER LEVINE SWANDER CH AMPION PERLBERG DANN The '30' Is Explained Below ... *. * * * The Michigan Daily's two-ton press car has gone to war. Dean Rea never knew about it- maybe-but we've been chasing stories in that big old 1929 Stutz since July. But yesterday it went to war as the- biggest, heaviest, gaudiest sin- gle contribution to the Washtenaw County scrap salvage drive. Managing Editor Homer D. Swander, one-sixth owner of the over-size jalopy, officially turned the title over to Mr. George H. Gab- ler, scrap drive chairman. With it went six 7 x 20 tires, each big enough for an airplane, we figure. It's been in a backyard over on Benjamin street ever since the time we started down to check the police station one night last August. Something snapped then. Hale Champion insisted that it was the carburetor, but there was also some talk about "rods" or something. We even had to push it 100 feet to get the picture above. Left to right: Mr. Gabler, Harry Levine, Swander, Champion, Ed Perlberg and Mike Dann. The other one- sixth was Allen Axelrod who would not cut his 11 o'clock to have his picture taken. And in case you can't decipher that painting on the side of the car, it says Scrap The Axis. And in case you don't know, that "30" is a reporter's sign for the end of a story. The government needs 5,999,- 999 more cars like our Stutz to keep the steel mills going. Can we hear from you soon? Our telephone number is 2- 3241. If you see an old jalopy rusting in a field, call and tell us about it. We'll see that it does its part in scrapping the Axis! Fake Liberty Of Denmark On Way Out Reports Say Compulsory Nazification Of Puppet Government Is Planned Nine Norwegians Executed By Axis By The Associated Press LONDON, Oct. 8.- Evidence was accumulating tonight that Germany is about to make Denmark a com- pletely subjugated state. German-occupied for two years and a half, yet nominally self-governed and maintained as a show-piece of Nazi influence at its "best", Denmark' was believed marked down now for forced nazification for these pur- poses: 1.-Suppression of rising rebellion against so-called German benevo- lence; 2.-Tight defense against Allied in- vasion; 3.-Crystallization of a "Germanic federation" project which is to be used for Nazi home propaganda this winter. It was reported that the Germans will insist that Denmark also declare war against Russia, re-arm and hand over to the Germans control of what Danish ships remain in Danish wat- ers. Across the Skagerrak in Norway, the Germans executed nine more pa- triots, making a three-day total of 34. The Oslo radio said the death sen-; tence of a tenth person was com-j muted to 15 years at hardlabor. The reason for the latest executions was not given. The Germans arrested 70 other Norwegians, mostly youths, in the Turn To Page 2 Col. 3 British Reply To Nazi Threats Reprisals Due For Chains Of DieppePrisoners LONDON, Oct. 8.- ()- The Brit- ish threatened today to shackle a Nazie for every British prisoner the Germans put in chains ostensibly in retaliation for alleged, but denied and unproved, maltreatment of Nazis tak- en at Dieppe last Aug. 19 and on the channel isle of Sark last Saturday night. The Germans announced- they had manacled their Dieppe prisoners- mostly Canadians-as scheduled at noon and the British War Office, not- ing that Berlin ignored a suggestion to have the neutraft Swiss make an impartial investigation, declared an equal number of Nazi prisoners would be treated in like manner beginning at noon Saturday-unless the Ger- mans released the chained British prisoners. Carrier Force Hits Jap Ships WASHINGTON, Oct. 8. -(P)- An aircraft carrier task force, striking violently into the heart of Japan's defense area in the North Solomon Islands, has damaged an enemy hea- vy cruiser and four other ships, de- stroyed eight aircraft and blasted an airfield, the Navy announced tonight. The operation, conducted in un- favorable weather, apparently caught the Japanese completely by surprise at one of their most vulnerable points. It was carried through without the loss of a man or plane and without damage to any ship. A Navy communique, reporting the action, said that the ships attacked were in the Shortland Island area, just south of the Island of Bougain- ville, which is the main Japanese base in the Solomons. The airfield at- tacked was Kieta, on the northern coast of Bougainville, 45 miles north Berlin Radio Sets Stage For Retreat Soviet Communique Reports Victories Against German Tanks, Infantry By The Associated Press NEW YORK, Oct. 8.-The German propaganda machine laid a founda- tion tonight for a possible retreat from Stalingrad, where the Red Army's staunch defenses have consumed Nazi troops and machines by the thousands for 45 days of flaming siege. "The fight for Stalingrad has changed," said a broadcast by DNB, the official news agency, quoting "military quarters." "The strategic objective at Stalingrad already has been achieved," DNB continued. "It is no longer necessary to send German infantry and assault Sengineers into the battle. The finish- ing touches will now be entrusted to heavy artillery units and Stukas (dive bombers.)" Brought Back A Russian counter-offensive has been pressing heavily against the German left flank from the north on the Steppes between the Volga and Don, and was even before Hitler's speech of eight days ago when the NEW YORK, Oct. 8.- - )-Waxey German Chancellor boasted unequiv- Gordon, big-shot of Broadway when ocally that Stalingrad would be cap- beer and whisky flowed from speak- tured-"you may rest assured." The very fact that "military quar- easies, turned up on the great white ters" in Berlin were quoted as indi- way two years ago after serving seven cating that the siege of Stalingrad years of a 10-year hitch in Leaven- might be lifted was a faint indication worth-and said he was a new man, that the military had taken over the situation, despite Hitler's latest prom- no more racketeering. Ise. But the government thinks he must have been kidding. e Today Gordon (real name IrvingSeatter l l 'U' Gives 130 Tons ...Nice Going!j v - The Scotch in Edward C. Pardon, the University of Michigan's super- intendent of Buildings and Grounds, added to his desire to crush the Axis has given Uncle Sam the terrifice total of 130 tons of scrap in the last three months. Since last December, Superinten- dent Pardon and his men have been turning in copper, zinc and tin as fast as they could collect it. But it took them about nine months to really warm up. During the last three months, the University's Building and Grounds Department has almost shattered a mark established last year when it collected 77 tons of scrap iron alone. Sixteen more tons will do the trick. In the fiscal year ending last July 1st, the University salvaged and sold as scrap 77 tons of steel and iron, one ton of copper and more than 156 tons of paper. To make things more complete, the University's official caretaker -the Yehudi you always hear about but never see-sorted out of the University dump and sold about 100 tons of paper, corrugated board and rags brought from the hospital and dorms. Besides that, the B and G re- covered between 55 and 75 tons of old tin cans from the dump. These were not so useful for their tin (which was mostly burned off) but for the steel under the tin. All this up to July 1. Now wait till you hear what happened after that: 62 tons of scrap iron. ... Almost two and one-half tons of copper, zinc and tin. ... Two to three tons of rags and paper salvaged weekly at the dump. . . . The old campus chimes, weighing two and one-half tons. Translated into vital war mater- ials, the scrap iron from the cam- pus alone last year might already have turned. into 600 500-pound bombs and a naval mine. And after July, the scrap might resemble something like 15 four- inch naval guns and a mine. Congratulations from The Daily! Wexler) was right back behind Uncle Sam's eight ball accused in a Federal indictment of trying to cash in on the wartime sugar shortage. Specifically, he and a pal, Simon Hirshberg, were charged with con- spiracy to violate an Office. of Price Administration regulation governing the sale of sugar. The government said they used a soft drink firm- Vita Cola-as a "blind" for a black market in sugar. "The old-time bootleggers are sad- ly mistaken if they think that the ra- tioning laws afford a new happy hunting grounds for profitable crime," said U.S. Attorney Mathias Correa. "They will find that aiding the enemy is neither popular nor profitable." Veteran Legalist Plays One From Close To His Vest Circuit Court Judge George W. Sample yesterday played his legal cards from close to his vest to stay within the limits of state laws and at the same time to mete out as severe a penalty as possible to E. Jay Snay, 21, who pleaded guilty to a charge of beating and kicking his 14-month-old stepson, Robert. One Michigan statute states that upon pronouncing a sentence a judge must give both the maximum and minimum term a prisoner must serve in a state institution. Another law holds that child beating can be pun- ishable with a maximum of only four years imprisonment. Confronted with these statutes,' Judge Sample sentenced Snay to from 47 to 48 months in the Southern Michigan prison at Jackson, explain- ing that the legal maximum was "not stern enough to compensate for the horror of your felony.". Invading Army By The Associated Press MOSCOW, Oct. 9 (Friday).-(JP)- German tanks and infantry broke into two streets in a factory suburb of Stalingrad yesterday while the Red Army attacking the Nazi flank above the city held newly-won posi- tions by beating off several small assaults. A midnight Soviet communique said 16 of the 50 German tanks hurled against the Red lines in the battered northwestern outskirts of Stalingrad were destroyed and four battalions (about 2,000 men) of in- fantry were wiped out. "Only in one place the enemy suc- ceeded in occupying two streets of a populated place," the communique said of this fight. Field dispatches said one quarter of the workers' settlement now was in ruins from German bombs, shells and mortar fire, but said the Red Army thus far has held the Germans back from the Volga River banks and the heart of Stalingrad in a siege now entering its 46th day. The Soviet dispatches said that Russian tanks had torn gaps in the German left flank above the city, forcing the Nazi command to divert elite Prussian troops to meet the threat. The late communique did not credit the Red Army, however, with any further advances in the north- west, saying merely that "our troops exchanged fire with the enemy and in some sectors repulsed attacks launched by small groups of Hitler- ites." Soviet artillery and mortar gunners of one unit were said to have anni- hilated one company of German in- fantry northwest of Stalingrad, and also to have destroyed two guns, eight machineguns, and ammunition dump and 11 blockhouses. But Here Is Lots More Scrap! The above article shows that the University has done a conscientious job of collecting scrap. Yet we be- lieve that a more thorough and imaginative effort can be made. Yesterday eight Daily reporters spent less than an hour apiece searching for metal objects on the campus which could and should be converted to war uses. Perhaps it will prove impractical to convert a few of the suggested items, but the majority can well be turned into planes, tanks, guns and ships. Here is what the reporters found: t-large iron stairways on both sides of the now unused auditor- ium in University Hall. They are of solid iron or steel and are flanked by two iron balconies which are no longer of any use. Great amounts of wires, pipes, cans, metal sheets, two long lengths of railroad tracks and other ac- gate and frame between Barbour and Waterman gymnasiums on the southern side. Innumerable fences and railings: two at South Ferry Field (one a wire and the other a solid sheet metal); one around the grounds at the Martha Cook dorm; a hidden pipe rail at the basement entrance of the Pharmacology Building; a wire fence strung in the bushes near Helen Newberry; large wire backstops around the little-used tennis courts at Betsy Barbour; fences at each end of the lawyers' play field; iron railing on the Ob- servatory steps; cable fences around the staff parking lot at the hospital; etc. A big coal car which has been standing on tracks near the Uni- versity power plant for at least three years. It is full of tin cans and other refuse and should be con- verted to war uses. Three pipes approximately fif- serves no useful purpose on the top of Adelia Cheever House. Several metal flagpoles scattered around the campus which could be done away with entirely or be re- placed by wooden ones. Rubber and metal doormats in several University buildings, includ- ing the Publications Building. We will take care of ours immediately and hope that everyone else does likewise. And one reporter came back with a suggestion about which he was none too sure-that some of the interesting but seemingly unneces- sary exhibits in the various engin- eering buildings could perhaps be converted to war uses. If so, we be- lieve it should be done immediate- ly. Hundreds of metal signs which Schairer Stresses Problems Of Post -War Reconstruction Emphasizing that victory over Hit- lerism is essential Dr. Reinhold Schairer, (British) visiting professor, said yesterday that military victory is only half the battle, and the ten years after the armistice are the most cru- cial ones for the democracies to gain world leadership. (Under the sponsorship of the United States Committee on Interna- tional Studies and Administration, and financed by a Rockefeller schol- arship, Dr. Schairer has traveled throughout the country in a series of extensive lecture tours. He is now conducting a seminar on Post-War world unity and should learn the three R's of peacemaking-Relief, Reconstruction and Rehabilitation- before they can make any progress in world liberation. He predicted that the promotion of coming world unity inside every edu- cational system will come about only by the feeling of responsibility of the strong nations for the weaker ones. He maintained that "without educational reconstruction, without establishment of freedom, tolerance and equality in highly effective school systems the world round, the Decade of Destiny will be lost for our side