. f \j. Ak- dc 4A..Aks ait We atherP c' :;tiiiied Colid Vol. LIV No. 3 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN THURSDAY, NOV. 4, 1943 PRICE FIVE CENTS Coal Strike Settled by Wage MacArthur Attacks Nip Stronghold 3 Destroyers, 8 Vessels Downed at Rabaul in Worst Jap Sea Defeat By The Associated Press SOUTHWEST PACIFIC ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, Thursday, Nov. 4. -Gen. Douglas MacArthur's air arm inflicted the worst defeat yet admin- istered to Japan's sea borne power at the New Britain stronghold of Ra- baul Tuesday, sending three enemy destroyers and eight large merchant vessels to the bottom of Simpson Harbor. The devastating attack accounted for 94,000 tons of enemy shipping- 50,000 tons sunk outright and 44,000 severely damaged-and, in brushing off frantic enemy interference in the air, the Allied bombers shot down 67 Japanese planes. Nineteen of the raiders were lost. Marines Expand Beachheadj Only 260 miles southeast of Rabaul in the top-most Solomon Islands, U.S. Marine assault forces expanded their beachhead on the west central shore of Bougainville where landings were made at dawn Monday. The raid on Rabaul nipped a Jap- anese counterattack which was be- ing prepared to contest the Bougin- ville invasion, General MacArthur said. The Allied flyers swept across Ra- baul harbor shortly after noon. The raiders, numbering . probably' 150 planes, struck with 1,000 pound bombs at masthead height. The Japanese sent approximately an equal number of interceptors aloft and the sky was filled with enemy ack-ack. Yanks Attack Ships boring through the opposition, .Al- lied airmen swooped to masthead at- tacks on virtually every ship in Simp- son Harbor.- At Lakuna air strip, one of several defending Rabaul, seven enemy fight- ers and a large bomber were destroy- ed on the ground and two four-en- gined flying boats were sunk at an- chkorage. At least 67 enemy planes were downed for certain and probably 23 others were destroyed. Nine Allied bombers and 10 fight- ers were lost. \ The Allied victory at Rabaul came as Marines at Empress Augusta Bay See MAC ARTHUR, p. 2 Income Levy Stays at 20% WASHINGTON, Nov 3-(M)-The withholding levy on wages and salar- ies was pegged at the present 20 per cent rate today by the House Ways and Means Committee, which also removed toilet soap from the new list of items subject to excise taxes. Polishing off the new general re- venue bill, providing $2,029,000,000 in additional taxes against an Adminis- tration request for $10,500,000,000, the tax-framing group also voted: 1. That the Internal evenue Bu- reau shall publish in the Federal Reg- ister the names of corporations gain- ing refunds and the amounts under relief provisions of the excess profits tax, and the amounts. 2. Tentative approval of a $10,000 ceiling on the amount of continuing business losses that can be deducted in computing individual income taxes. 3. Special treatment for accelerat- ed production of timber, coal and iron. Fire Halts Work At Dodge Factory DETROIT, Nov. 3.--(P)-Produc- tion was halted and approximately 12,000 workers sent home today when fire broke out in a utility tunnel servicing the main plant of the Dodge Division of Chrysler Corp. in sub- urban Hamtramck. Six firemen and several plant work- ers were overcome by smoke and were hospitalized. William Stocker, one of the fire- men, said the smoke came from burn- ing insulation on high voltage elec- tric cables which thread through WOMEN TAKE OVER: Marion Ford Heads Daily's First All-Girl Senior Staff Dead Crewmen Lie on Cruiser's Deck Agreement Men Return to Pits with $1.50 Per Day Increase Ickes, UMW Announce Pact; Miners Voice Determination To Get Back to Jobs Quickly By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Nov. 3.-A back to work movement in the nation's coal fields started tonight a few hours after the United Mine Workers and Secretary Ickes agreed on a wage contract terminating the three-day gen- eral strike and giving soft coal miners a $1.50 a day boost in earnings. Miners generally hailed the agreement and voiced a determination to get back on the job as quickly as possible. Word of the settlement spread slowly in some areas, however, and full operations in the mines possibly will not be restored before the end of the * * * MARION FORD Managing Editor (Additional Pictures on P. 6) Allies Pierce Second Line Around Rome Puncture of Massico Ridge Threatens Nazis With 14-Mile Fallback ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, AL- GIERS, Nov 3-M)-The second of a. series of major German defense lines before Rome-the Massico Ridge Bastion-has been punctured at two points by Lt. Gen. Mark W. Clark's, Allied Fifth Army, headquarters an- nounced today, confronting the Nazis with the imminent necessity of fall- ing back at least 14 more miles to new mountain positions. Clark's fighters made serious breaches in the enemy's front by slugging their way onto dominating heights both of Massico Ridge and San Croce Mountain, four miles to the north. Fifth Hammers Enemy Following closely behind the gre- nade-throwing infantry, Fifth Army heavy artillery moved onto com- manding positions from which to hammer the enemy's expected with- drawel across the Gargliano River Valley toward the 4,600-foot Aurunci I mountain range. Nazi defenses sprang another leak on the Eighth Army's Adriatic front, where British and Canadian troops surged across the Trigno River an undisclosed distance inland from, the original bridgehead at San Salvo near the coast. Gen. Sir Bernard L. Montgomery's forces were being forced to fight hard for every yard they gained. Enemy resistance was stiff in all sectors. Nazis Say Attack Expected The German military commenta- tor, Capt. Ludwig Sertorius, said in a Berlin broadcast that the Allied Fifth Army had launched its "long expected" attack along the coast of the Gulf of Gaeta. Another Nazi commentator speculated that the Al- lies might attempt a landing from the sea above Terracina and make a bat- tlefield of the pontine marshes south- east of Rome. Petite feminine feet are filling the shoes of the senior editors on The Daily this fall as four girls carry on in the top positions of the paper's editorial staff. History was made as Marion Ford became managing editor; Jane Far- rant, editorial director; Claire Sher- man, city editor and Marjorie Bor- radaile, associate editor. When the Board in Control of Stu- dent Publications announced the re- cent appointments, the Daily ac- quired its first staff composed entire- ly of girls with the traditional print- ers' ink in their blood. During the summer months Miss Ford also acted as managing editor of The Daily, so the post of top man- pardon us,-top woman, is not new to her. A resident of Miami, Fla., Miss Ford, '44, is a member of Alpha Omi- cron Pi, and includes Scroll, Student Affairs Committee, and work as an orientation advisor among her activi- ties. Miss Farrant, '44, of Grand Rapids, is a member of Alpha Phi. Miss Sher- man, '44, whose home is in Detroit, is a member of Alpha Chi Omega. Miss Borradaile, '44, of Adrian, is a member of the executive board of As- sembly and was president of her house for two terms. Betty Harvey, '44, of Woodmere, N.Y., will continue fs Women's Edit- or. Russian Troops Race Toward Black Sea Port1 By The Associated Press LONDON, Nov 3-Russian troops raced today to within 21 miles of Kherson, Black Sea port at the mouth of the Dnieper iver, as they cleared the faltering Germans from the vast steppes between the Dnieper and Karkinit Bay on the Black Sea, Moscow announced tonight. More than 80 towns and hamlets fell to the Russians, who advanced more than 10 miles in the last 24 hours to sweep up the town of Bol- sho-Kapany' on the Kherson-Pere- kop railway in their most direct threat to Kherson. Don Cossacks, under plane cover and supported by tanks, were wiping out the last remains of the German army fleeing in disorder. Soviet forces to the north in the Dnieper bend captured at least seven more populated places southwest of Dnepropetrovsk, said the daily Mos- cow communique, secorded by the So- viet Monitor. {The communique for the second day made no mention of the Crimea, but German reports said the Rus- sians, by-passing the sealed-off pen- insula, were using amphibious com- bat teams of land, sea and air forces which wiped the Germans from the Caucasus to attack the Crimea. They reported a landing south of the Kerch Peninsula on the Eastern side of the Crimea, causing the Ger - man 17th army considerable diffi- culty. Berlin broadcasts admitted stubborn resistance to the Nazi coun- terattacks. Berlin claimed its forces had reduced the size of the bridge- head. The crewmen killed on the U.S. light cruiser Savannah when a German bomb pierced a gun turret, lie wrapped in blankets on the deck while other guns hurl shells into the German lines at Salerno. ADVICE TO THE COEDS: fr. Vincent Speaks to Women n Problem of War Marriage "College is a very important stage in the development of boy-girl rela- tionships, and during this time a girl should establish many' companion- ships with the opposite sex and try to find out what she is looking for in a husband," Dr. Lee Vincent, psy- chologist of the Merrill Palmer school of Detroit said in a talk yesterday. ,She spoke to the freshman- coeds in the Lydia Mendelssohn theatre and to the upperclassman women in Rackham in the evening on "Mar- riage in Wartime and Other Related Questions." Don't Go Steady Too Soon Dr. Vincent advised the freshmen that it is not wise to start going steady too soon. She said that during their first few months on campus1 they should get around a lot and meet a large number of men. Onlyj by getting to know a large variety of men will they later be able to dif- ferentiate between a temporary love affair and the real thing. The failure of many marriages Emanuele Tries To Save Throne SOMEWHERE IN SOUTHERN ITALY, Nov. 3.-(P)-King Vittorio Emanuele III today sought some means of saving his throne in the face of demands by parties of the united anti-Fascist front that he abdicate before they join the govern- ment of Premier Marshal Pietro Ba- doglio. (The Nazi-controlled Vichy radio said in a French-language broadcast recorded by the London Mirror that the King had abdicated. There was no confirmation of this in Allied quarters and the broadcast may have been a deliberate garbling of ac- counts from southern Italy of such a possibility.) could be attributed to habits estab- lished early in a girl's dating experi- ence. "I especially advise you freshman women to go to various mixers which are organized by the University au- thorities in order that you can meet a large number of men. Reputation Made Early "A girl's reputation is more or less established during. the first few months that sheis aTrapusstWhen' a girl is at college having fun, it is important that she consider her fu- ture well being," she said. The types of dating practices a girl establishes determines the boys she will go out with, the places she will go and the things she will do. Dr. Vincent also discussed the prob- lem of the girls' relationships with servicemen. She said that statistics show that the percentage of failures in marriage is greater if the couple have known each other less than a year. SNow or Never View Discouraged She said that a large percentage of the men will come back after the war and girls should not get the "now or never" attitude. The aver- age marriage will last between thirty and fifty years, and a girl should have no doubt in her mind when she is choosing a lifetime mate. "We have found that what you as a person do with college determines what, you get out of it. One of the most important things that you take out of college is what you learn about people, both men and women. It is especially important that at the present time you get eight hours of sleep a night, adequate exercise and have a good program of work bal- anced by play. If you ruin your health now, you will lessen your chances of a happy marriage," Dr. Vincent said. She said that a couple should be sure that they see eye to eye in basic life philosophies before getting mar- ried, and that six weeks to three months of USO experience didn't seem to her like a long enough peri- od for a couple to get to know each other that well. Largest AAF Force Smashes Germant Base Wilhelmshaven Hit By 500 U.S. Bombers; RAF Attacks Cologne By The Associated Press LONDON, Nov 3-The largest force of heavy bombers ever sent out by the U.S. Air Force probably 500 or more Flying Fortresses and Liberators- battered its way with Lightning and Thunderbolt protection through strong German opposition to smash the important port and naval base of Wilhelmshaven and other targets' in northwestern Germany today. Without detail, a DNB dispatch broadcast by the Berlin radio and re- corded by Reuters said the RAF at- tacked Cologne, Germany's most bombed city, after nightfall. The Rhineland industrial center previous- ly had been raided 22 times. Yanks Destroy 34 Planes . The American raiding force de- stroyed 34 German planes, 18 falling to the heavy bombers arid 16 being shot down by the escorting fighters. In other daylight operations over oc- cupied France and Holland Spitfire pilots knocked down 12 German fighters, and Marauder bombers two, bringing the total loss for the day to 48 for the Nazis. The total Allied losses for the day were five heavy bombers, two med- ium bombers and three fighters, a joint Air Ministry and U.S. Air Force communique said. The cross-channel air war con- tinued after dark with a shirt alert in London-indicatingnEngland's 13th German raid in 19 nights-and German radio stations went off the air, often a sign that the RAF is raid- ing the continent. Daily Tryouts To Meet Friday Business, womens 'and general news tryouts for The Michigan Daily will meet Friday at the Student Publications Building. The meetings originally sched- uled for yesterday were called off because of the meeting for all freshman women. The business staff tryouts will meet at 4 p.m., womens staff at 4:30 p.m., and general news at 5 p.m. Friday. All first semester freshmen are eligible for work on student pub- lications. Hull, Eden Leave, Moscow Reports LONDON, Thursday, Nov, 4-(U)- U.S. Secretary of State Cordell Hull and British Foreign Secretary An- thony Eden have left Moscow after completion of the tri-partite dis- cussions, a Soviet radio broadcast announced today. A Cairo dispatch said that Numan Menemencioglou, Turkish foreign minister, arrived at the Egyptian capital by train tonight and British Ambassador to Turkey, Sir Hughe M. there. This suggested that Hull and Eden would stop off in Cairo, as they did on the way to Moscow, and confer with Menemencioglou. Burke Resigns His Position with OPA :,,i..a. ., - T- o /O . ... week. Typical of the miners' reaction was that of Jacob Dennis, of Union- town: "I'm going back in the morning. The others will follow." Quick action also was promised by the War Labor Board which booked consideration of the agreement as the first order of business tomorrow. The $1.50 figure-amount asked by the union in the Illinois agree- ment and disallowed by the War La- bor Board-would be brought under the WLB's formula ofallowable in- creases by cutting in half the 30- minute lunch period. The agreement was announced first by the United Mine Workers policy committee which made public a telegram instructing striking min- ers to resume production of coal "at the earliest possible moment." Telegrams Announce Pact Telegrams sent to local unions said a "satisfactory wage agreement" has been executed between the govern- ment, through Secretary of Interior Ickes, and the United Mine Workers, effective immediately and continuing 'through the period of government operation of anthracite and biturn nous mines. "Let every member recognize that the nation's imperative need for coal requires the most prompt action in restoring the mines to full produc- tion," the telegramsaid.. Lunch Time Used They were signed by John L. Lew- is, John O'Leary and Thomas Ien- nedy, officers of the UMW. The Interior Department ' then made public a "memorandum of agreement." It increases the soft coal miners' earnings $1.50 as origi- nally proposed in the Illinois agree- ment. The War Labor .Board had trimmed that sum by 37% cents a day, which will be restored by using half of the lunch period in produc- tive work. The agreement is subject to War Labor Board review. Travel Time Set The agreement assumes for all areas the same amount of under- ground travel time-45 minutes- that the WLB used in the Illinois case. The board regards the amount See COAL STRIKE, p. 2 GOP Predicts 1944 Victory Recent Election Coup Encourages Leaders WASHINGTON, Nov 3-(RP--The Republican Party's sweep in yester- day's off-year elections in New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania and its close race for governor in normally Democratic Kentucky encouraged most G.O.P. leaders today to predict victory for their party in the 1944 national elections. Simultaneously, the stock of Gov. Thomas E. Dewey of New York for the Republican presidential nomina- tion appeared to turn upward despite Dewey's press conference statement that nothing had happened to change his intention not to be a candidate. Jeffries Is Named Third Term Mayor DETROIT, Nov. 3.-(AP)-In win- ning reelection in Tuesday's biennial non-partisan municipal election May- or Edward J. Jeffries became the first man to be named for a third consec- utive term as head of the city gov- ernment here in more than 25 years and the fifth to win such distinction in nearly 125 years. Jeffries was returned to office by a margin of nearly 32,000 votes over Frank FitzGerald, endorsed by the powerful United Automobile Workers TOJO'S FOLLOWERS WELL GEARED FOR WAR: Japanese Leaders Prepare for 'Last Man' Defense (Editor's Note: The first detailed story from inside Japanese East Asia to reach the Western world since the prisoner exchange cf July, 1942, was made avail- able wednesday with the arrival at Port Elizabeth, Union of South Africa. of the Swedish liner Gripsholm with 1,500 more repatriates homeward bound from Japa- nese internment. The following dis- patch, written jointly by two of these repatriates, is a consensus regarding Japan as she stands today after nearly two years of war with the West. Ray- mond P. Cronin was chief of the Asso- ciated Press bureau in Manila when the Philippines were invaded, and Russell Brines.althoug~h captured like Cronin Japan eventually will lose the war, but the masses are kept in the dark and preparations are being made for a "last man" defense of the new oriental empire with the hope that Tokyo at the peace table, by her show of strength, will be able to remain a first-class power. These are the salient points of Japan's situation as we see it, based on accounts of travelers recently in Japan, upon advices filtering through the strict Japanese censor- The best evidence indicates that the Japanese militarists are put- ting all east Asia on a total war- fare basis with a sharp eye out in anticipation of attacks by the Al- lies, constructing a series of de- fense lines and using as fully as possible the great manpower re- sources of the lands they have overrun. Japan boasts of having all the raw materials she needs, but she is sorely lacking in high octane gaso- line and high grade lubricating oil, big land smash against Burma but expect no trouble from Soviet Asia. Nevertheless large Japanese forces are kept along the borgiers of Sov- iet Siberia in a precautionary pro- tection of the rear against Russia. At home the Japanese are en- gulfed by a wartime fanaticism and jingoism which makes them an effective part of the war ma- chine, despite such hardships as a wartime doubling in living costs, meals poor even to these.normally frugal people, and scarcities of coal. clothing and other necessi-