Weather Warm and Humid it A 4 t Editorial "Workers Must Stop Wildcat Strikes .. VOL. L No. 25-S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, JULY 19, 1942 2:15 A.M. FINAL The Aleutian Truth: Chicagoan Describes t Roving Sea Struggle (Editor's Note: This is the first in a series of stories by staff correspondent Keith Wheeler of The Chicago Times on action in the Aleutian Islands. Wheeler, attached to the U.S. Pacific Fleet since shortly after Pearl Harbor, arrived in Alaska with a fleet unit shortly after the initial Japanese attack on Dutch Harbor and was the first accredited correspondent to reach Alaska. The Times supplied the stories to the Associated Press for use by newspapers outside of Chicago.) By KEITH WHEELER (Copyright, 1942, Chicago Times, Inc.) AT SEA WITH THE U.S. PACIFIC FLEET, June 18 (Delayed)- The Japs are dying in Kiska Harbor today as the war of the Aleutian mists begins again after three days of storms and glue-thick fogs. United States bombers sank a Jap transport with a direct hit and six near misses. It was the first contact since June 14 when the fog broke long enough for eight of this command's Catalina flying boats to drop through the clouds over Kiska and dump six tons of dynamite on the Jap ships lying there. One 500-pound crump fell square on a light cruiser and started a gaudy fire. Another dropped alongside a transport close enough, the bombardier felt, to make serious underwater damage a certainty. As usual, the Japs had their guns trained on the cloud breaks and five Catalinas came away as full of holes as shirts back from the ship's laundry. Hit Square In Nose By Ack-Ack One established a record of sorts by colling with a three-inch anti- aircraft projectile in flight. It is unorthodox enough for a plane to be hit square by ack-ack. But the Catalina concerned violated all etiquette of such encounters by getting away with it. The projectile tore a neat hole through the hull but failed to explode. According to my information, the day's endeavors brought the box score in this odd 15-day-old campaign to this: Two Jap submarines and one transport certainly destroyed; one heavy cruiser torpedoed and probably sunk; three cruisers set afire of six hit by bombs; one destroyer set afire; two transports hit; several four-engine patrol seaplanes destroyed; one cruiser plane, one Mitsu- bishi bomber and several Zero fighters shot down. And so this strange war proceeds on its eerie course in the latitudes of the midnight sun. The contest has developed into as grim a game of blindman's buff as was ever contrived by man for the destruction of his fellows. Through the unending fogs it ranges up and down the bleak Aleutian rocks, from Dutch Harbor 800 miles past Kiska and Attu, where the Japs are getting set for what may become a major push against continental America. Back home, where the radios nightly boil down this war and explain it to us, they appear to feel this is a remote business, of little moment either to us or to the Japs. Unfortunately that is not wholly true. Japs Moving In Mean Business The Japs are moving into these waters with as heavy a concentration of combat ships, transports and aircraft as they've assembled anywhere but Midway. Their cruisers and destroyers and two or more aircraft carriers provided for this show grope about in the eternal fogs waiting for the time to shoot the works. Through the same waters, but as shut off as though we occupied another ocean, the ship on which I am an observer proceeds about its mysterious affairs, to the further consternation of his bedeviled majesty, Hirohito. It is a slow and painful business, for though daylight runs 20 hours a day and the nights are never really dark, the fog is always here. It lies like a tattered blanket over sea and land everywhere north of 45 degrees. There has been no contact between surface ships since June 1, when at sunset this ship raised the elusive sticks of three military masts against the last westerning light. We lost them in the dark. Battle Is Not Over Yet The battle is not over yet. This is no final summary. The climax may come before these wandering dispatches wend their painfully uncertain way to Chicago-or it may take all sumer. The battle began June 3, when "Honorable Enemy" sent 15 fighters and 13 Mitsubishi bombers across misnamed Cape Cheerful to bomb Dutch Harbor in two waves several hours apart. Before the day was out, Navy Catalinas located an enemy carrier and its attendant ships off the south coast of Unalaska. They put a shadow on the invader and in the next 48 hours established a record of endurance and courage unlike- ly to be equalled in this war. On the second day, the Catalina led army bombers through the fog to two carriers hanging out 250 miles south of Umnak Island. That day a torpedo-carrying B-26 bomber established contact long enough to attack. He bored in at the carrier's looming hulk, one of Japan's largest, and cut loose his tin fish. Instead of going into the water, where it could arm itself, the torpedo dropped on the carrier's flight deck, and worked as much destruction as a 2,000-pound weight can workanywhere it happens to fall. It did not explode. Jap Ships, Subs, Planes Pop Up Meanwhile Jap ships, submarines and airplanes popped up with bewild- ering frequency all along the chain, as far eastward as Unimak Pass and the Shumagin Islands. (The Shumagins lie under the Alaskan Peninsula, 200 miles toward the mainland from the tip.) Numerous one-sided dogfights developed between the lumbering Cata- linas and nimble Zero fighters off the carriers. One Catalina was shot down in flames and many suffered damage. The Cats accounted for at least one attacking Zero. The Japs attacked Dutch Harbor again, inflicting some damage and a few casualties but making no real progress toward blasting that base. The weather was too bad for a full-scale attack and those bombers that came found their job increasingly difficult. Our first sizable lick at the enemy was the accomplishment of two B-26 bombers that suddenly found themselves out of the mist and sitting over a 10-gun heavy cruiser, one of Japan's best. They attacked and hit her bow and stern with two torpedoes. It appeared, they report- ed laconically, as though "destruction seemed certain." All that day the weather was bad and, in the aerographer's words, "get- ting progressively worse." If a quick cleanup of the invading force had been planned by us, that first day was enough to establish the error of our plan. Some Bomber Flights Never Got Off Some bomber flights were never able to get off, others hunted for hours through mists - probably passing within splitting distance of the Jap ships Conference On Religion Will Be Held Principal Speaker To Be Henry Nelson Wieman Of ChicagoFaculty Opening Meeting Will BeTuesday By JIM WIENNER Two addresses by Henry Nelson Wieman, Ph.D., The Divinity Fac- ulty, University of Chicago will high- light the first day of the Eighth An- nual Conference on Religion here starting Tuesday. Professor Wieman will speak at a luncheon to be held at 12:15 p.m. in the Union and again at 8:15 p.m. in the Amphitheatre of the Rackham Building. The general topic of both talks will be "Achieving Personal and Social Stability." The social as- pect of this problem will be empha- sized at the noon lecture while the personal aspect will receive more thorough attention during his eve- ning talk. Professor Wieman is the author of many highly regarded books on his field of study. Prominent among these are "The Issues of Life," "Re- ligious Experience and the Scien- tific Method," "American Philoso- phies of Religion," and "The Growth of Religion." Marital Relations "The Religious Factors in Marital Relations" will be the topic of the initial forum at 2 p.m. Tuesday in the East Conference Room of the Rackham Building. Taking part in this discussion will be Prof. J. Howard Howson of Vas- sar College; Father Frank J. Mc- Phillips of St. Mary's Chapel Uni- versity of Michigan; Rabbi Morris Adler of Congregation Shaarey Ze- dek, Detroit; Prof. Leonard E. Him- ler, Associate Psychiatrist at the University Health Service; The Rev. Rollin Fairbanks, Episcopal Rector, Grosse Ile; and Mrs. Howard Bige- low, a mother and teacher from Kalamazoo. Other plans for the three day meeting include a lecture on "Relig- ion in Our Era-The Present Situ- ation" to be given by Professor How- son at the Thursday noon luncheon to be held at the Union. Additional Forums Additional forums will be held on Wednesday and Thursday from 2:30 p.m. at the Rackham Building. The questions under discussion will be "Religious Phases of Family Security in the Willow Run Area" and "School-Church Relations in the Normal Michigan Community." Also included in the conference program is a consideration of Re- ligious Counseling from 10 to 12 daily at the Rackham Building. Dr. Ed- ward W. Blakeman, Counselor in Religious Education here at the Uni- versity, will lead these classes. Tickets for the luncheons at the Union may, be had at the College of Education or may be reserved by calling University 303. Marx Brothers Hit To Be Shown Here Hell Hath No I feel likeg4 reporter on assign- ment in a Turkish bath. I" like every other feature- writer in the 48 states, was or- dered to dig up a new angle on the old weather yarn. Thinking in traditional chan- nels I went out to fry eggs on the sidewalk, but it was so hot that trying to do them sunny-side-up I burned the yolks. That started me wondering. After all, people have talked, blabbed, joked, argued, simpered, and sweated over the weather sincec a good many years A.D., and here am I-a presumptous report- er trying to dig up a new angle. I admit it was 940 Fahrenheit yesterday and that's hot enough for an Indian fire-eater. It's even hot when you reduce it to Centi- grade, but that's not the point. The point is this: If someone- a city editor, for instance- insists upon hearing something new about an apparently exhaustibly inexhaustible subject, all you can do is tell him to go to hell. E. R. Townsley Dies Suddenly On PEM Field Death Cones To Physical Education Faculty Man While Leading Group Physical education instructor Dr. Elmer R. Townsley died at 2 p.m. yesterday of a sudden heart attack brought on by sweltering heat and strenuous exercise while conducting a physical hardening class at Ferry Field. "He gave up his life for physical education," said Dr. Warren E. For- sythe, Director of the Health Service. "He knew that he had a bad heart, but refused to give up his work. He loved that more than anything." Exercised Strenuously Before the PEM class had begun, Dr. Townsley went through some very strenuous side-horse exercises in the sun, reported intramural offi- cials. When the attack came he was leading the class in calisthenics. Suddenly ordering the students to sit down, he did so himself. He then laid down on his back and remained motionless. Other instructors, realiz- ing that something was wrong, rushed forward and attempted to re- vive him, but not even the eventual assistance of Dr. T. D. Fitzgerald of the Health Service was successful. Dr. Townsley had been very active in organizing and carrying out the physical hardening program. While his work was usually carried on in Waterman Gymnasium, he always led PEM calisthenics on Saturdays. Slated To Succeed May He was slated to suceed Dr. May as head of the physical education de- partment upon Dr. May's retirement this fall. Both Athletic Director Fritz Cris- ler and Women's Athletic Director Margaret Bell characterized his loss as irreparable. Crisler said of Dr. Townsley, "I don't know of anyone who can replace him." Surviving him will be his wife. Mrs. Jean Townsley and three children. He was 34 and had obtained his M.D. from the University in 1938. His body will rest in the Muehlig Funeral Home until 11 a.m. Tuesday morning at which time it will be tak- en to the Gear Funeral Home in Ypsilanti for funeral services at 2:30 p.m. the same day. Ford Iron Mountain Plant Workers End Two-Day Shutdown By The Associated Press The Ford Motor Company plant at Iron Mountain went back into pro- duction yesterday after a two-day shutdown caused by what union leaders said was a "work cessation, not a strike." The last of about 700 men who left their machines asking cancellation of a "stagger system" of employment and weekly instead of bi-weekly pay- ments returned to their jobs. Offi- cials of the CIO United Automobile Workers said the "work cessation" had not been authorized by the union. Unimpressed By Hitler, Teacher Joins WAAC End Of 220 -Mile Front, Reporter's Mirage Russians Gain At North Hold Back Nazis In South Fury British Bombers Leave Axis Base Flaming In Libyan Raid 4.-I By LARRY ALLEN Associated Press Correspondent WITH THE BRITISH NAVAL AIR SERVICE IN EGYPT, July 18-Brit- ish naval dive-bombers attacking the Axis' foremost desert sea base at Matruh last night and early today turned the jetties into sheets of flames that could be seen for 20 miles and planted heavy explosives in the heart of a concentration of 1,500 Axis tanks and vehicles. "Those oil drums on the docks ex- ploded like firecrackers," one return- ing pilot said. "We got several direct hits right in the heart of the massed transport where tanks burst into flames," said another who dive-bombed the inland' concentration. Axis laborers had unloaded thou- sands of gasoline and oil drums on the Matruh docks to feed Marshal Rommel's tank and motorized in- fantry. These drums erupted like a volcano after the first British bomb hits. Succeeding waves of British airmen dived toward this roaring inferno to feed their bombs into the cauldron which immediately illuminated the small supply ships in the harbor. Other units then concentrated on the ships, and their bombs sent great geysers of water over the stricken vessels, one of which immediately went down by the stern. The attack on Matruh was the sec- Chinese. Claim MajorVictory CHUNGKING, July 18.-(P--The Japanese have been blasted out of Wenchow after holding that south- ern Chekiang Province seaport less than a week and additional setbacks have been inflicted upon the enemy on three other active fronts, the Chinese announced tonight. The official Central News Agency said the Japanese were retreating southward from Wenchow toward Juian, 13 miles away, and that Gen- eralissimo Chiang Kai-Shek's forces were reentering the city which thus becomes one of two of the larger seaports still in Chinese hands. the combined air-naval action which shot up the port recently. It began at dusk yesterday and ond big one in a week and followed continued into the early hours today, and the returning airmen did not be- little the Nazi shore defenses. Every plane diving onto the port was framed with exploding anti-aircraft shells - and yet every pilot returned to his base here safely. As the airmen climbed out of their cockpits with that satisfied feeling of a job well done, they saw another reassuring sight - truckloads of Italian prisoners being taken to the rear after their capture in the ground fighting west of El Alamein. House Debate On Major Tax Bill Concludes Administration Adherents Rally Forces For Vote On Corporation Rates By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, July 18 - The House concluded three days of speeches on the $6,143,900,000 tax bill today while, meantime, admin- istration leaders checked to make sure all their supporters would be on hand for a vote tomorrow on the question of changing the corporation rates. Rep. Knutson (R.-Minn.) already has served notice he will demand that the House send the bill back to the Ways and Means Committee with instructions to raise the excess prof- its rate from 871/2 per cent to 90 per cent and lower the combined normal and surtax on corporations from 45 to 40 per cent. If his motion is de- feated, a final vote on the bill is ex,. pected to follow. The leaders' energetic rallying of their forces indicated they anticipat- ed the vote on the Minnesotan's mo- tion might be close. Knutson said "We have a chance, depending on whether we can pick about 50 Democratic votes." Opening the attack on the pro- posal, Rep. Cooper (D.-Tenn.) told the House that it would reduce the estimated yield of the bill by about $390,000,000. British Score Successes In Fierce Egyptian Strife West Of Alexandria Possibility Is Seen For Second Front By RICHARD McMURRAY Associated Press war Editor Soviet soldiers smashing at the northern end of the blazing 220- mile front in Southern Russia were reported today to have advanced and captured a number of "populated places" while to the South Germany's million men pressed against stubborn Russian resistance in a drive toward Rostov and Stalingrad. The midnight Russian communi- que said that the Red Army over- came stiff resistance by the Germans to score advances on various sectors of the Voronezh front, where the Russians have claimed their troops seized the initiative from the Ger- mans and are counter-attacking. In the sharpening naval warfare in the Baltic, the Russians said their ships had sunk an 8,000-ton enemy transport. The midnight communique, re- porting that fighting still is under way to the south of Millerovo, lower end of the long front running down from Voronezh, indicated that the Soviet forces had yielded little if any ground yesterday. They were withstanding terrific pressure from the all-out German drive toward Rostov and Stalingrad, guardian cities of the Caucasus oil fields and the Russians were forcing the Germans to pay a huge price in lives and machines. The Germans claimed they had reached the lower Don "on a broad front" east of the Donets, indicating their tanks and men were threaten- ing to outflank Rostov, 65 miles to the west at the mouth of the Don. English Hold Rommel's Army In Full Check On the other world front of crisis -the Egyptian desert 75 to 80 miles west of Alexandria - the British not only were meeting and repulsing the full Axis might, but scoring successes of their own. All the front held firm, and a growing toll of Marshal Rom- mel's armor was taken. The U.S. Air Commander for In- dia, Maj.-Gen. Lewis H. Brereton, took charge of American fliers fight- ing wing to wing with the British in Egypt in a shift that suggested that America's mounting air strength had been reinforced greatly. - - Clip Here And Mail To A U..M. Man In The Armed Forces - -- - - - - As Series Opener Pledging part of the proceeds to a scholarship fund for needy students, the Art Cinema League will open its new series July 24 with the hilarious Marx Brothers comedy "Duck Soup." A repeat favorite with Art Cinema fans this film is almost universally recognized as the best of the many Marx Brothers' comedy hits. Following "Duck Soup" on the pro- gram will be the Alfred Hitchcock thriller "The Lady Vanishes." It will be shown July 31 and contains such stars as Michael Redgrave and Dame May Whitty. Third on the program lined up for the summer cinema season is "The Childhood of Maxim Gorky," one of the greatest Russian movies ever filmed; it is scheduled for August 2. Last in the current series of class- ic cinema is Eugene O'Neill's "Anna Christie." It marks the famous co- appearance of Greta Garbo and Marie Dressler and will be shown Aug. 9. All films will receive two per- formances on the evening they are scheduled to appear and will be shown in the Rackham Lecture Hall. Single and series tickets are obtain- able at the Michigan League. Inside SERVICE E DIT ION VOL 1. No. 4 Deferments President Ruthven has commended a bulletin re- leased this week by selec- tive service headBrig- Gen. Lewis B. Hershey which recommended defer- ments for students who have completed two years of study in vital scientific fields or have already be- gun graduate work . . . Students in the physical sciences andin some social sciences-such as person- nel administration-are on the recommended defer- mentlist. The bulletin also suggested an additional 60-day deferment beyond graduation in order that students "may have an op- portunity to engage in a critical occupation All five University ROTC units have been accorded a rating of "excellent as a result of the annual Fed- eral Inspection held in the spring, according to Maj.- Gen. George Grunert, com- manding general of the Sixth Corps Area. Jack W. Dumond, 19-year-old ser- Ear fair4toatt-:43attp JULY 19, 194~ ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN JUL'Y 19, 1942 Ann Arbor got its biggest 1942 dose of heat and hu- midity starting Thursday, and by Saturday the tem- perature was up to 93 . the mugginess drove hun- dreds of U. of M. students out to Loch Alpine, Barton Pond and other swimming spots around town ... the tennis courts were empty, Blackout a Success ... Ann Arbor's Thursday night 15-minute test black- out was "very successful" in the words of Police Chief Sherman Mortenson and visiting officials who came to observe the black- out. Arnold Renner, state fire marshal, called it "the best blackout I've ever seen." The night was nearly perfect with just a slit of a new moon in the sky as was the cooperation of the 60,000 persons in the area affected. Everything but the four war plants blacked out . . . a Michi- gan Central freight train passed through town dur- ing the dark period-with- out a light showing. No- body was hurt during the blackout although a few accidents occured just be- fore the sirens sounded At 10:28 p.m. The Jackson, Mich., chief of police had a blackout of his own when his elevator in the First National Bank Building was caught between floors when a CD official pulled the master switch . . . he terms of a surprise black- out ... officials are work- ing now trying to figure out how to step up the power of the sirens ... the south- eastern part of town didn't even hear the whistles but blacked out by the clock. Suits Is C.O. Daniel B. Suits, a teach- ing fellow in the econom- ics department, has de- clared himself a conscien- tious objector and is now in a civilian public service camp in Northern Michi- gan. In a statement sub- mitted to his St. Louis, Mo., draftboard, Suits cited "basic economic malad- justments" as the blame for the present interna- tional chao, but empha- sized that he holds his po- sition as a conscientious objector on a religious, not economic, basis. Regents Mee# The Board of Regents held its July meeting Fri- day in their Angell Hall rooms which Dr. Ruthven's secretary Miss Ruth Rouse L -ea