:weather -Warmers Y ti4t;IUU~ 4tv Editorial Congress Blunders Over Draft Age VOL LU No. 24-S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN SATURDAY, JULY 18, 1942 2:15 AM. FiNAL Roosevelt May Demand New Wage Price Control Law FDR Says Whole Problem Of Inflation Is Studied; Wants General Power To AdjustInequalities Policy Is To Keep LvigCost Down By JACK BELL Associated Press Staff Writer WASHINGTON, July 17 -(M)- A high Administration official said to- night President Roosevelt may ask Congress in a new cost of living mes- sage for broad, flexible authority to control wages and for additional power to clamp down on farm prices. The President told his press con- ference the whole problem of infla- tion and wage controls was under study, but indiciated, he was not yet ready to make definite recommenda- tions. Congressional leaders said lat- er they were informed any forth- coming message might be delayed at least 10 days. Requests Broad Powers The official, who would not be quoted by name, said the President and his advisors were discussing a request for a broad delegation of power to him by Congress to put a ceiling on wages that would hitch them definitely to the cost of living index. Beyond that, the President was re- ported to desire a reduction in the 110 per cent parity level Congress fixed as the lowest point at which ceilings could be placed on farm crops. (Parity is the price calculated to give a commodity the same rela- tive purchasing power it had in a past period, usually 1909-14.) No Specflc Methods . It was said that Mr. Roosevelt was not likely to recommend any specific methods foreontrolling wages but would want general power that could be used to adjust inequalities and to keep pay checks and prices in line with each other. The President said at, his press conference that the basis of all policy on the problem .was to keep the cost of living from going up. He gave some hint of 'the seriousness with which he regarded increased food prices indiscussion of the 44-cents -day wage increase recommended by the War Labor Board for union employees of "Little Steel" who had asked a $-raise. Inquiry Is Underway While he said an inquiry was un- derway to determine if a wage raise meant that steel prices must be boosted, the President remarked that a 5 per cent wage increase there would not force up the living cost nearly so much as would a similar raise in a canning factory. The whole thing was relative and must be kept in line as much as possible in all in- dustries, he declared. Price Administrator Leon Hender- son recently was forced to puncture the ceilings established on. canned fruits because they did not reflect 110 per cent parity returns for grow- ers and his apprehension about the effect of , this action on the whole price control structure was said to be shared by the President. F. D.R, Counts On Tax Boost Expects Bill To Be Raised Nearer Goal By Senate WASHINGTON, July 17. -(AP)- Clear-cut indications came today that the administration is counting -on the Senate to boost the $6,143,- 900,000 tax bill closer to the Treas- ury's $8,700,000,000 goal. As the merits of the various levies wrapped up in the bill were debated for the second day on the House floor, several members speculated on the possibility that President Roose- velt would comment on its "short-' comings" in a message, expected soon, dealing with inflation. General House debate on the rev- enue measure will end tomorrow and a vote Monday is expected to send the bill to the Senate unchanged from its nrnee fnrm' CIO Accepts Little Steel' Pay Decision Union Committee Agrees To WPB Ruling; FDR Asks Labor Cooperation Murray Requests Contract Renewal By The Associated Press PITTSBURGH, July 17-The 125- man Policy Committee of the CIO United Steel Workers of America, representing approximately 157,000 workers of four "Little Steel" com- panies, tonight accepted the War Labor Board's decision increasing pay of hourly workers 44 cents a day to a minimum of 78 cents an hour. The acceptance came after a three- hour closed session in which CIO President Philip Murray told of his hurried visit yesterday to the White House and read a telegram from the in the government's fight to control the threatening rise in the cost of living. Demand $1 A Day The men had demanded $1 a day and many of their leaders privately had been predicting the Board's award would be rejected. The resolution, adopted unani- mously, stated the workers embraced "the\ opportunity of being in the fore- front in carrying out the' national policy which will aid our nationin its war for total survival." "In the spirit of President Roose- velt's message, we call upon the cor- porations involved in this proceed- ing to accept the award of the Na- tional War Labor Board in the in- terests of national unity." Agreement Binds Officers Murray, who also is President of the U5iWA, said the Policy Commit- tee's action was binding on the Union's officers and that tonight they would begin notifying the War Labor Board of the action and also request the "Little Steel" group, Bethlehem, Republic, Youngstown Sheet and Tube, and Inland, to con- tinue negotiations for a contract. Tihe negotiations were broken off last January when the parties had reached an impasse on issues now -decided by the WLB Murray also moved quickly to re- open negotiations with all other steel companies to incorporate into their contracts the awards granted by the Labor Board's decision. These in- cluded a maintenance of union mem- bership clause, under which all mem- bers of the union must remain in good standing during the life of the contract, and a check-off of union dues by the companies. Chute eports At Hyde Park Found False NEW YORK, July 17.-()--The Army's Eastern Defense Command said tonight the old Yankee weak- ness for exaggeration was causing needless labor for military and ci- vilian personnel in the northeast who were kept busy all day searching for non-existent parachutists. Lieut.-Col. E. J. Glavin, Public Re- lations Officer for the Command, said more than 20 false rumors of parachute landings were received to- day while the Army investigated a report that six parachutes were seen descending last night a few miles from President Roosevelt's Hyde Park estate. "In all cases much time and effort on the part of military and defense personnel have been wasted because of these false rumors," the state- ment said. Mercury Gets Workout At Students' Expense Dime thermometers popped like so many kernels of popcorn yesterday as Ann Arbor got her biggest 1942 dose of heat and humidity. The sun seemed considerably less than 93,000,000 miles away to frantic students who fruitlessly sought es- cape from a 92* heat wave that threatened to get worse today. Some fled to tlie old swimming nhoe only to find that ten minutes Russians Smash Nazis Back Across Don But Drive Against Stalingrad Continues; BritishCrush Rommel Frontal Assaults Australian Tank, Infantry Troops Score Heavily On Germans By STEPHEN BARBER Associated Press Correspondent CAIRO, July 17-Two Axis counter-attacks on the desert front some 80 miles west of Alexandria have been beaten off with heavy losses to the forces of Marshall Erwin Rommel, it was reported tonight. The first of the two counter-strokes, delivered within the last 24 hours, came last night against the central sector, where the fighting has been extremely heavy. The second was delivered this morning as the Axis infantry attacked Indian troops holding a ridge to the south of the central fighting ground. Meanwhile, heavy and medium bombers, supporting the British land troops with aerial thrusts behind the Axis lines, attacked Tobruk and raided 0 shipping in that Mediterranean har- Regents Accept Gifts, Provide Air Protection Counterattack In Voronezb Sector 'Annihilates' Enemy Force By EDDY GILMORE Associated Press Correspondent MOSCOW, July 18 (Saturday)-Russian troops counterattacking south of Voronezh were reported today to have hurled the Germans back across the Don River, but the Nazis still were making progress toward Stalingrad at the southern end of the long Don front where the invaders are using 1,000,000 men. A savage stab into the German salient which had crossed to the east bank of the Don to menace Voronezh city several miles beyond "annihilated the 222nd Nazi regiment," an announcement said. The Russians then crossed the river and fierce fighting now is taking place on the western bank, frontline dispatches reported in the most heart- r-ening news heard here in weeks. I ii Era's Religion To Be Theme Of Conference- Wieman To Open Sessions Tuesday With Lunche"i Talk On Social Stability "Religion in Our Era" will be the general theme of the Eighth Annual Summer Conference on Religion that will be held here Tuesday through Thursday. The opening address of the session will be given by Prof. Henry Nelson Wieman, Ph.D., The Divinity Fac- ulty, University of Chicago, at a luncheon to be held at 12:15 p.m. Tuesday at the Union. Professor Wieman, author of "The Issues of Life,"mand "American Philosophies of Religion," will speak on "Achiev- ing Social Stability." Bell Lectures Wednesday At the Wednesday luncheon at the Union The Rev. John Elderkin Bell and others from the Clinic for Min- istry to the Sick will discuss "A New Theological Force in Education." The Rev. Henry H. Lewis will pre- side. "Religion in Our Era - The Present Situation" will be the topic of Prof. J. Howard Howson, Ph.D., of Vassar College, who will speak at the final luncheon on Thursday. This will be a joint meeting with mem- bers of the Educational Conference. Forums, open to all who are in- terested, will be held from 2:30 to 4 p.m. each afternoon at the East Conference Room of the Rackham Building. On Tuesday the topic will be "The Religious Factors in Marital Relations." The following day "The Religious Phases of Family Security' in the Willow Run Production Area" will be discussed. Thursday the sub- ject will be "School-Church Rela- tions in the Normal Michigan Com- munity." Special Talent To Lead In each case the Forum will be led by talent especially prepared in a particular field-clergymen, Protes- tant, Catholic, and Jewish taking part on Tuesday; social and religious leaders of the Willow Run area be- ing the panel on Wednesday; and re- ligious educators and public school men composing the panel on Thurs- day. As was true in former summer conferences, six University classes will welcome visiting clergymen as auditors. bor. New Zealand tank and infantry troops scored a number of successes against enemy tankr in the central sector of the El Alaneir front 75 to 80 miles west of Alexandria today, but the outcome of the indecisive melee which now involves the main steel might of the British and Ger- mans remained in doubt tonight. The whole hot 40-mile Egyptian aesert front was in violent eruption with the British, under Gen. Sir Claude Auchinleck, making advances' in the south near the virtually im- penetrable salt marshes of the Quat- tara Depression. Reoccupy Positions In the north, the comparatively fresh Australians reoccupied their original positions on the lower ridge of the Hill of Jesus, ten miles west of the whistle stop of El Alamein after a ding dong fight that lasted all day. On the whole tense desert battle hinged the fate of all Egypt and the Middle East. The great tank battle of the cen- ter was called the heaviest in tie last month and possibly a prelude to an Axis attempt to smash into the Nile Valley. (Axis communiques, however, indi- cated the British were on the offen- sive. Both the Germans and Italians said British attacks were repulsed by Axis counter-attacks in the El Ala- mein sector.) Major Battle Develops The vital clash for El Ruweisat ridge, most of which the British were reported to have taken Wednesday in a seven mile advance, was said by military informants to be developing into a major battle. The ridge, which parallels roughly the Mediterranean some 10 miles below the coast, com- mands the battle area in all direc- tions. The narrow ridge extends east and west for about seven miles, and has two humps. Auchinleck was said to be holding the eastern rise with Rommel on the western hump. The pale light of a new desert moon allowed the combatants to fight throughout the chilly night af- ter baking 41 the heat of the day. Both sides had received reinforce- ments since Rommel's forward mo- mentum finally was stopped June 30. The Germans were reported being flown in from Crete and Greece, and the British apparently were tapping reserves in the Middle East. The improved 28-ton General Lee tanks, fresh from United States fac- tories, were reported at the front giving the British greater staying and offensive power.________ PROF. LAWRENCE PREUSS .. .Regents grant him leave to take State Department post (Story on Page 4, Col. 4 ) * 4' * Regents of the University accepted gifts totalling ; $180,572.01 at their July meeting yesterday and decided; to spend aproximately $12,000 to pro- tect campus life and property against possible enemy air raids. The $12,000 will be used for pur- chasing fire-fighting equipment, blackout preparations, to build refu- gee areas in campus buildings, and to make necessary changes and addi- tions to buildings and property to enable University offices "to carry on work in light of the danger that may come. Regents Alfred B. Connable and J. Joseph Herbert were named dele- gates to the annual meeting of the Association of Governing Boards of Colleges and Universities to be held at Minneapolis next October. The awarding of two new degrees in the forestry school-B.S. and M.. in wood technology was approved. The Regents were informed that he W. K. Kellogg Foundation, of Battle Creek, will underwrite the expenses of 35 Chilean engineering students who *ill enroll in the University for the fall term. The largest gift, $109,459.56, came from the U.S. Office of Education for defense training purposes. A grant of $40,000 was accepted from the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis and will be used to further study in the University's virology laboratory. (Another story on the Regent's meeting is on Page 4.) Japs Move In' On Aleutians p T Install Living Facilities On Three Islands WASHINGTON, July 17. -(A)- Japanese forces have set up tempo- rary living facilities on three unde- fended islands at the tip of the Aleu- tian chain, the Navy reported today, but since early this month have failed to enlarge their holding and have been subjected to intermittent heavy attacks by American airmen. The installations are on Attu, Kis- ka and Agattu. On Kiska, where 20 tents and other structures were ob- served by aerial reconaissance June. 12, Army aircraft recently dropped 56 bombs in one of a series of attacks by U.S. planes and submarines which to date have cost the Japs five ships sunk, one believed sunk, an- nine damaged. The latest of these attacks was made July 11 when a cruiser was bombed at Kiska with undetermined results. Since that time, the Navy said, there has been no material change in the situation in the fog- shrouded islands although opera- tions against the enemy are contin- uing. Ruthven Ok's Special Type' Deferments Supports Hershey Bulletin In Case Of Specialized, Or Scientific Courses President Alexander G. Ruthven yesterday gave full support to defer- ment for students engaged in spec- ialized and scientific fields, charac- terizing such action as "of great im- portance to universities throughout the country." His statement \vas issued following the release of a bulletin from Brig.- Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, director of selective service, which recommend- ed such deferment for students who have completed two years in these fields or have begun graduate work. The bulletin suggested an addi- tional 60-day deferment beyond graduation in order that students "may have an opportunity to engage in a critical occupation in an activity necessary to war production or essen- tial to the'support of the war effort." Grad Students Eligible Graduate students are recommend- ed for deferment if, in addition to pursuing their regular studies, they are acting as "graduate assistants" or are engaged in scientific research valuable to the war effort, provided such research is supervised by a rec- ognized Federal agency. Chiefly engineering positions are listed as those recommended for de- ferment. Aeronautical, automotive, chemical, civil, electrical, heating, ventilating, refrigerating, air condi- tioning, marine, mechanical, mining and metallurgical including mineral technologists, radio, safety and transportation engineers are includ- ed. / Recommended Deferments Other positions on the recommend- ed deferment list are: Accountants, chemists, geophysicists, industrial managers, mathematicians, meterol- ogists, naval architects, personnel administrators, physicists including astronomers, psychologists and stat- isticians. Not on this new list although still eligible for deferment, are students of agriculture, bacteriology, biology, agricultural engineering, cartogra- phy, hydrology, osteopathy, pharmacy and physical education majors. It is not certain, however, how long these exemptions will exist because of their absence from the new list. . Navy Honors Seven Michigan Residents As Heroes In War WASHINGTON, July 17 - (A) - Seven residents of Michigan have been honored by the Navy for hero- ism since the United States entered the present war. A compilation by the Navy showed for the nation as a whole 231 men in the fighting service of the sea had been decorated for acts beyond the call of duty. Of these 17 were awarded the Medal of Honor, 10 the Distinguished Service Medal, 156 the Navy Cross and 48 the Distinguished Flying Two populated places were seized in the area as the qermans retreated "in disorder,"and th Russians seized the' initiative at the river, which Is several miles west of Voronezh city. (A Berlin radio summary of the fighting acknowledged severe Rus- sian counter-attacks on "German bridgeheads on the Don," but assert ed the Soviets were repulsed.) This encouraging news came, after the regular midnight communique had told merely of continuing fierce battles in the Voronezh sector at the upper end of the imperilled Don river front. Russians Withdraw South of Millergvo at the other end of the front the Russians' adnittedly were not doing so ell. Their armies still were withdrawing slowly whe rear guards fought desperately to check a steady German advance toward railway points leading east to the rich Volgar port of Stalingrad. German losses were reported run, ning into tens of thousands killd, with hundreds of Nazi tanks, planes, and guns destroyed in both areas. Soviet tanks covering . the Red Army's withdrawal in the Millergvo area were said to have killed 1,200 Germans in one sector where the Nazis were striding through the wheatland approaches of the Cau- casus. killerovo is about 125 air line miles north of Rostov, the southern anchor of the Red Army based on the Sea of Azov, and Likhaya, an interme- diate point between the two cities is a junction on the railway which branches east to Stalingrad. It is that junction toward which te Nazis are slowly progressing. Stalingrad Danger Grows Stalingrad, within 175 miles of the fighting, was in greater danger with each hour; Rostov and the armies based on the west Caucasus corner were in grave peril of envelopment by the German forces -southeast of Mil- lerovo. Only at the Russians' northern an- chor, Voronezh, at least 175 miles north of the furthermost point of Nazi penetration, were the Germans mired. There the Russian chances grew brighter with every Red Army counter-attack. (A special German communique said German infantrymen had stormed and captured Voroshilov- grad, capital of the Donets coal country, which the German tank for- mations had bypassed in their plunge to Millerovo-and beyond. Navy Measure Outlaws Fees WASHINGTON, July 17.--(P)-In a Navy-labeled step to "stop profit- eering at government expense, the House Naval Committee unanimous- ly approved today a bill outlawing commission fees on government con- tracts which have netted agents mil- lions of dollars in recent months. . Almost simultaneously, a Federal DistrictGrand Jury here returned an indictment in 12 counts against dapper, dark-haired Alexander Stone, charging him with unlawfully receiving commissions on war con- tracts while a government employe. Stone, a former $4,200-a-year Fed- eral Housing Administration em- ploye and the first of the commission agents to be questioned by the Naval committee, was alleged to have re- ceived $27,074 as a five per cent fee on $541,491 worth of business ob- Shepard, Marley Call Charges Made ByGeraldSmith Lies', Charges of playing "stooge" to the Communist party, levied against Rev. Harold P. Marley, preacher of the. Unitarian Church, and Prof. John S. Shepard of the psychology depart- ment, by Gerald K. Smith were flatly denied at "absolute lies" yesterday. The accusations, made in a radio address by Smith, candidate for the Republican nomination to the Senate from Michigan, on June 21, alleged that Reverend Marley and Professor Shepard have been working hand in hand with the Communist party to free Browder, have spread Commu- nist propaganda on the campus in professor, one John S. Shepard, now being paid out of taxpayer's money in the University of Michigan who is a man exposed as encouraging and cooperating with the most radical and communistically-inclined ele- ments in Michigan as well as in America. "Professor Shepard's comrade in this program of character assassina- tion, working in perfect harmony with the Communist party, is one Harold P. Marley of Ann Arbor. "It 'doesn't sound so good (for Marley and Shepard) when I tell you that these two gents for months and months have been addressing