1I Weather Showers we 4h4 Ifit t 4 aiI*t Editorial Fresh Air Camp Deserving Of Support .. . VOL. LII. No. 23-S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, JULY 17, 194Z 2:15 A.M. FINAL TxBill Tn fa1 t ARMY MEN, POLICE CHIEF SAY: Fast Approval. Of Committee, House Is Told' Doughton Says Measure Will Get Green Light In Three-Day -Debate; No Sales Tax Promised Committee Wants 'Safe' High Taxes WASHINGTON, July 16.-(IP)- Chairman Doughton (Dem.-N.C.) of the House Ways and Means Commit- tee, urging speedy approval of the $6,143,900,000 tax bill, told the House today that the treasury department would rather fall short of its $8,700,- 000,000 goal than have a sales tax. Opening three days of debate on the record-breaking revenue bill, he said he had asked Randolph Papl, tax adviser to Secretary Morgenthau, whether he would "rather have the bill remain short or have a sales tax." "He said he would rather have the bill stay short," Doughton added. Want High Rate He told the members that the com- mittee had approved as high taxes on all as it believed could be carried safely. He recalled that corporate and individual taxes which were on- ly about $2,200,000,000 in 1939 would be raised to $18,000,000,000 if the pending bill becomes law. "In reality this is a $24,000,000,000 tax bill," he said, explaining that he believed it would produce $7,000,000,- 000 while existing taxes are estimated to yield $17,000,000,000. The $6,143,- 900,000 figure is the treasury's esti- mate of additional revenue from the pending bill.) Doughton said "state and other taxes total about $9,000,000,000, which, with the enactment of the bill, would make the overall tax burr. den of. the American people some $33,000,000,000-"about one-third of the national income." More-To Come While Doughton said the bill would raise taxes about as high as the coun- try could stand, Rep. Treadway of Massachusetts, veteran Republican committee leader, declared that still more taxes would have to come and that a sales tax eventually, would have to be considered. Both he and Doughton called for a further reduc- tion in non-war expenditures. Chairman George (Dem.-Ga.) has called for Senate Finance Committee hearings to begin on the House bill next Thursday. He estimated his committee would require from four to six weeks for its studies. House members asserted on the floor today that the Senate undoubt- edly would revise the measure, per- haps in major particulars, raising the prospect that it would be still more weeks before the two versions could be compromised in conference committee. Panel COuncil Treats Future Of Capitalism The future of capitalism-or the lack of a future-was given a thor- ough going over last night at a panel discussion at the League sponsored by the Post-War Council. Agreeing that the promotion of the economic well-being of the people as a whole should be the goal of any system, the panel made up of Prof. Mentor Williams, Prof. Jesse Thorn- ton, Floyd Bondand Homer Swander differed primarily in their ideas as to the means best adapted to bring- ing about this increased well-being. Stating that in his opinion "capi- talism has been failing with in- creasing dismalness" Prof. Williams pointed out that the future may take .one of three courses. These are Fascism, Socialism or controlled cap- italism, or a variation of one of these types. Speaking as an exponent of a con- trolled capitalistic society, Prof. Thornton declared that "socialism is a dream--a very lovely dream"-and yet it remains a dream because the realities of life are a great deal dif- ferent. Mr. Bond, a member of the eco- nomics department, served in the role of moderator and was ready n..i~lh ,nmm.n +. n n a mft r. a,, ,.,nlvtr Blackout State Fire Marshall Calls Blackout 'Best He Has Ever Seen' By ROBERT MANTHO Ann Arbor-a city of bright lights and busy activity at 10:28 p.m. last night-turned gloomy and silent in the amazing time of two minutes after piercing whistles had first shrieked out the area's first blackout warning of the war. Police Chief Sherman Mortenson said last night that "Ann Arbor's first blackout test was very success- fu" and gave most of the credit to "the 60,000 people in the city and township who cooperated nealy 100 percent." Undersheriff Fred Sodt, stationed on the water tower, "couldn't see a light anywhere except in the war plants." Ruthven Watches City Two hundred feet in the air-on the roof of the Charles Baird Caril- lon Tower-a group of observers in- cluding Dr. Alexander Ruthven, President of the University, -also pro- nounced the -test blackout "a com- plete success." On the water tower, Arnold Ren- ner, state fire marshal, called it "the British Battle Axis On New Desert Front Armored Forces Struggle As Fate Of Egypt Hangs In Balance At Alamein By EDWARD KENNEDY Associated Press Correspondent CAIRO, Egypt, July 16.-A major battle between British and Axis ar- mored forces on which it appeared the entire fight for Egypt might turn erupted today in the central sector of the Alamein-desert front while Germans and Australians fought a ding-dong engagement for "The Hill of Jesus" on the coast. The Germans apparently were fol- lowing up an unsuccessful attempt to break into the positions won by the British Wednesday with an attack backed up by heavier armor. Detailed information was lacking on the new battle but it was indicated it was of decisive proportions. It was possible that the Germans were now attempting a final break- through toward Alexandria and the Nile. The forces of Field Marshal Erwin Rommel have been stalled in the Alamein sector some 65 to 70 miles west of Alexandria since the British on June 30 halted their long retreat from Libya and made a stand. (At that time Rommel's forces were exhausted and he was depend- ing on long communication lines hastily, extended. It was possible he now felt he had gathered sufficient strength and rest for an all-out at- tempt to smash the defenders of the strategic Nile Valley. (Reuters said in a Cairo dispatch to London that the Wednesday drive on the center pushed the British seven miles into the Axis lines.) On the northern sector along the coast, British and Australian troops counter-attacked earlier in the day, retaking the Tel El Eisa (Hill of Je- sus) ridge. Tag Day For Underprivile Fresh Air Camp For Funds 0U More than 90 suntanned young- sters. eager to provide vacations for fellow underprivileged boys, will pa- trol Ann Arbor today in the annual summer Tag Day of the University Fresh Air Camp. Since the founding of the camp 21 years ago, drives such as this and in- 4. 'Very Successful' Labor Board ays Down Wage Stabilization Plan; Soviet Roars Back Strong best blackout I've ever seen" while Major C. E. Brilhart of the 6th Corps regional office of civilian defense, told The Daily the blackout was "about as effectivehas I've ever seen in Michigan." He was surprised that there was less distraction by the war plants than in other towns. With a thin slit of a moon show- ing in the hazy sky, the only cam- pus lights which escaped detection throughout most of the blackout period came from the direction of the Arcade on State Street. Campus Goes Dark First The University of Michigan cam- pus was the first block of buildings to be plunged into total darkness. Then in rapid succession the dorms, the blazing University Hospital and the entire business and residential sections of Ann Arbor winked out. The lights which flickered during the entire period of darkness were those from the roaring local factories on the west side which are engaged in vital war production. On the hill behind the stadium overlooking Hoo- ver Ball and earing Co., a Daily re- porter described the city as a "vast park of dead silence." Sound Is Intensified From the vantage point in the Carillon Tower sound was intensi- fied and the one observation plane which flitted across the sky pounded like a huge explosion in the ears of the observers. The fountain located near the League made little noise to a person on the ground-but it carried to the Tower listeners with a roar of fall- ing water. One of the observers lik- ened the sound to that of Niagara Falls. During the fifteen-minute black- out, the airport beacon slowly cut a wide swath through the sky at regu- lar intervals as it turned back and forth on its swivel. Pinpoints of light could be seen far in the distance as Chicago-bound automobiles passed safely beyond the blackout bound- aries. The muffled flashlights of air raid wardens made a dim glow on the ground before they were turned off. Once, near the fountain by the League, the red glow of a cigarette would have made a perfect target Turn to Page 4, Cl. 5 U.S. Moves To Break Ties Finnish Consular Offices Ordered To Close WASHINGTON, July 16.-The United States moved just a step short of a break in diplomatic relations with Finland tonight by asking the one-time close friend to close all its consular offices in this country be- fore the end of the month. A State Department announcement said the Finnish government had "undermined the basis upon which American consular representation was maintained in Finland" and has denied American consular officers their treaty rights. This government's action was an- nounced shortly after Hjalmar J. Procope called at the State Depart-. ment for a lengthy talk with Acting Secretary Welles. Procope declined to discuss the developments with newspapermen. The State Department's announce- ment made no mention of Finland's participation in Germany's war against Russia, Reporter Cruises Through Blacked-Out Streets In Police Car By WILL SAPP Ann Arbor was a whispering ghost town for 15 minutes last night as we rolled through darkened streets in Police Car No. 2. Lt. Casper Enkemann was driv- ing our car which also carried three CD officials from nearby towns. Chief Sherman Mortenson was driv- ing the only other car which moved on Ann Arbor's streets during the blackout. We were high up on a bluff on the northwest side of town when the sirens sounded. Lt. Enkemann cut off his headlights and turned on his specially-prepared dimout lights. We were all handed blackout flashlights. Hundreds of people had parked their cars on the bluff to watch the city black out. It was like watching a fire works show-ladies "oh'd" and "ah'd" as the few remaining lights would flicker out. From our position we could see only the red light on the police transmitter, a green rail- way switch light and the glow of the war plants. 10 Miles Per Hour We rolled along Spring Street at about 10 miles per hour-our dimout lights wouldn't permit faster travel. The auxiliary police were remarkably efficient. At nearly every intersec- tion we were challenged by the swing- ing red flashlights of the wardens. Not until we flashed back and they saw the large "E" on the door of our car could we pass. We could hear no noise, but low whispers came from groups standing on the sidewalks. At nearly every corner we had to ask people to step back against the buildings; they al- ways obliged noiselesly We turned onto Main Street at Catherine, but had gone nearly a block before I recognized buildings. Looking south on Main I saw nothing but blackness. It was somewhat eerie because although we couldn't see a person or a cigarette we knew that several hundred people were looking at us. "Turn Out Your Lights" Students yelled at us to turn out our lights which reflected on a few beer mugs held high as we passed the Liberty Street beer taverns. A call from the emergency radio located in the basement of the police station sent us to the corner of Lib- erty and Main to pick up a drunk- ard. We dropped him at the station and turned down E. Huron where we saw the worst violation. Just west of Main a large blue neon light blazed in the darkness. It was adver- tising auto insurance. We had seen some lights on the sixth floor of the First National Bank Building, but when we looked this time they were out. Many store owners had forgotten to turn out their illuminated clocks, which shot searchlight-like beams of light into the street. A loud noise-like a firecracker- drew us into a side street where we found a man standing in the street. He said that he dropped the hood of Turn to Page 4, Col. 4 No Hope Seen In Inter-dochen Radio r00kUp INTERLOCHEN, July 16.-G)- Students at the National Music Camp here decided at a mass meeting tonight to send a plea to President Roosevelt asking his aid in restoring national radio broad- casts from Camp Interlochen, now banned through action of the AFL, musicians union. INTERLOCHEN, July 16. -(m)- Dr. Joseph E. Maddy, director of the famed Interlochen Music Camp in the woods of Northern Michigan, said tonight there was little likeli- hood that differences with the American Federation of Musicians could be adjusted in time to permit a national radio broadcast from the camp next Saturday. But even as he spoke, Reinald Werrenrath, internationally known baritone and a member of the mu- sicians union, was reported enroute to Interlochen to investigate protests of Dr. Maddy and the camp students over the banning of the broadcasts through action by James Petrillo, president of the musicians union, Russian Offensive Clicks On Voronezh Front As Nazis Are Hurled Back No Major Changes, Communique Says By EDDY GILMORE Associated Press Correspondent MOSCOW, Friday, July 17.-So- viet armies have now taken the in- itiative from the Germans on some1 sectors of the Voronezh front and] are stoutly resisting in the south in tei'rific campaigns which have cost the invaders 900,000 men and the1 Russians 399,000 in two months, the Soviets announced early today. The Russians said that the Ger- mans had been thrown back on the defensive at Voronezh, an important railroad city east of the, Don River which the Germans have besieged for days with waves of men, tanks and planes. Soviet hands "In some sectors of the Voronezh front, the initiative has passed into Soviet hands," the midnight Russian communique said "The Germans are on the defensive. The communique said there were no essential changes on other fronts, but acknowledged that the Red Army had withdrawn to new posi- tions southeast of Millerovo, where the Germans are pounding furiously toward the Caucasus and the Volga. In bloody continuation of the fighting which a special Soviet com- munique said had cost the Germans 900,000 men killed, wounded and cap- tured between May 15 and July 15, the midnight communique said 4,000 "Hitlerites" have been killed in three days of fighting in the Millerovo sec- tor. German Tanks The Red Army also destroyed 35 German tanks in that fighting, it was said. During the two months, the Rus- sian special communique announced, the Germans lost 350,000 men killed. The figures covered ,the campaigns of Kerch, Kharkov, Izypm, Barven- kova, the siege and fall of Sevastopol and the sweep acros the Don basin to the gateway of the Caucasus. Dean Lloyd In Protest Regrets Drake University Publicized Letters Dean of Women Alice C. Lloyd, a member of the advisory council of the U.S. Bureau of Navigation, last night expressed her dissatisfaction that letters written over her signa- ture and sent to universities seeking the names of coeds available for a proposed women's service in the Navy had been made public. DrakenUniversity officials said yes- terday they had received such a let- ter signed by her and written on the letterhead of the Office of Naval Officer Procurement in Chicago. "I regret that Drake University took it upon itself to make public my letter. Dean Lloyd said, for I feel that the publicity may jeopardize the passage of a bill now in Congress signed to create such a corps."' Bomber Plant Workers Stage Brief Sit J~own , x _______ I By The Associated Press DETROIT, July 16. -UP)- A sit- down strike, termed by the company a protest against the discontinuance of a telephone service for employes, halted operations at the Ford Willow Run bomber plant for more than an hour tonight.1 The strike started at 6 p.m. witht the men stopping work but remain-I ing at their machines. A few left the plant. Both company and UAW-CIOe sources said that full production wasc resumed by 7:30 p.m.c Harry H. Bennett, Ford personnel1 manager, said the demonstration wasl in protest against company action in1 stopping a telephone service the men were getting in the plant. The serv- ice, he said, had been put into effectl without "proper arrangements" with the management. Bennett said that the strike was called by "a UAW-CTO steward named Harris." "This fellow Harris just walkeda through the plant from department to department and told the men to sit down," Bennett declared. UAW-CIO officials denied any knowledge of the strike, declaring that none had been authorized. They said they could not identify Harris.; The strike apparently had no con-a nection with current hearings before a War Labor Board panel on the union's demand for a $1-a-day wage increase for all Ford workers. Religion Group Will Meet Here For Discussion The Eighth Summer Conference on Religion at the University of Michigan during the Summer Ses- sion, where students, faculty and minsters from near-by cities will discuss some of the current issues of our spiritual and cultural life, will be held on July 21, 22, and 23 at the Rackham Building. Aims of the Conference are to of- fer members of the Summer Session an introduction to certain religious topics of interest and to acquaint them with a few recognized leaders of religious thought. Prof. Henry Nelson Wieman, pro- fessor of the philosophy of religion at the University of Chicago and Prof. J. Howard Howson, head of the re- ligion department at Vassar College, are to be among the speakers and chief resource persons at the forth- coming meetings. Every afternoon a forum will be conducted. On Tuesday the topic under consideration will be "The Religious Factors in Marital Rela- tions." The following day "The Re- ligious Phases of Family Security in the Willow Run Production Area" will occupy the attention of those present. On Thursday the subject will be "School-Church Relations in the Normal Michigan Community." Little Steel' Receives Pay Increase Of 44 Cents; Based On Living Costs Board Chairman WritesOpinion By JOSEPH A. LOFTUS Associated Press staff Writer WASHINGTON, July 16.-The War Labor Board, approving a daily wage increase of 44 cents in "Little steel," laid down today a wage sta- bilization policy designed to main- tain the purchasing power of hourly wage rates as of Janury, 1941. The Board said in effect that work- ers were entitled to a 15 percent in- crease, based on increased living costs, between January, 1941, and May, 1942, and could not expect more than that from the Board except under certain specified extraordinary circumstances. The policy was based on the asumptiori that all seven points of the President's anti-infla- tion program, announced late in April, would be made operative and would stabilize the cost of. living. Dollar Increase The CIO United Steel Workers had asked for $1 a day increase. The Board, however, largely granted the union's other demands. It awarded a maintenance of membership clause, checkoff of unidn dues and the mini- mum daily wage guarantee. The Board voted the wage increase 8 to 4, the labor members dissenting. They declared the Board majority substituted "rhetoric for analysis" and went "all-out for the inflation thesis, a thesis compounded of con- jectures and prophecies, fears and hysteria." Directly affected were 157,000 em- ployes of the four so-called "Little Steel" companies: Bethlehem, Re- public, Inland and Youngstown Sheet and Tube. Indirectly, the decision is expected to affect amillion or more, including o00,000 throughout the steel indus- try generally and 400,000 automobile plant workers who are asking $1 a day increase. Created Yardstick The Board expressed the opinion it had created a yardstick for the de- termination of other disputes before it. Dr. George W. Taylor, vice chair- man of the Board, wrote the wage opinion and outlined these guiding principles on which the Board de- sided the case: For the period from January 1, 1941, to May 1942, which followed a long period of relative stability, the cost of living increased by about 15 percent. If any group of workers averaged less than a 15 percent in- crease in hourly wage rates during or immediately preceding or follow- ing this period, their established peacetime standards have been brok- en. 'Chutes Land SIn Hyde Park Six Parachutes Reported Near Roosevelt Home RHINEBECK, N.Y., July 16.-() -Army men and state police con- verged tonight in an area near Pres- ident Roosevelt's Hyde Park estate to investigate an unconfirmed report that six large parachutes had been seen descending in the vicinity. Roads throughout this region were blocked off and state troopers from nearby sections rushed to the scene, while the Eastern Defense Command announced in New York City that a military probe was under way. The state police teletype said that the parachute landings had been re- ported by Claude Swenson, superin- tendent of the estate of the late John Jacob Astor near here. An alarm went out over the nine- state police teletype network. To Hold Drive ni Campus Today sketch of a grinning, dripping boy in their drive to collect the $1,000 needed to run the camp. The money will be used to send youngsters from Ann Arbor, Jackson, Flint and Detroit away for the sec- ond four-week period. At the camp many of the boys re- ceive their first taste of an adequate diet, camping, hiking and swimming, and they come back brown nd fresh, "rehabilitated for the whole year." It is this social function which makes the camp unique. Counsellors at the camp are University students and teachers in psychology, sociology and education who are especially well equipped to understand the Stimson Says Men 18 And 19 W1ll Be Conscripted In Future WASHINGTON, July 16.-(A)-' The drafting of young married men and boys 18 and 19 years old was de- picted as an eventual certainty today by Henry L. Stirmson, the Secretary of War. Men in those groups "should not feel it necessary to alter their plans for the immediate future," he said at a. press conference. But they should, however, remember that "we have never had a great war in which we did not find it necessary to call up both classes." Under present law and practice, the 18-and 19-year-olds must regis- At that time the Army asked for congressional authority to conscript 19-year-olds, as compared with the 21-year minimum of the peacetime draft law. The proposal aroused an intense controversy in Congress. After a spirited debate, the House rejected the Army request and voted to retain the 21-year minimum. The Senate, also after a vehement dis- cussion, approved the 19-year limit. Subsequently, the two branches split the difference and reached a com- promise at 20 years. Selective Service officials estimate that there are about 1,200,000 men in t Warship To Be Named in Honor Of Lt. Cannon