Weather Continued Cool t 431W 43ti Editorial Long Islanders Fight Negro Discrimination . VOL. LI No. 26-S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, JULY 22, 1942 2:15 A.M. FINAL Rostov, Stalingrad Goals Of Massing Nazi Tank Armies Savage Russian counterattacks Imperil German Left Flank Near Voronezh By EDDY GILMORE Associated Press Correspondent MOSCOW, July 22 (Wednesday).-German tanks and motorized in- fantry were reported concentrating in the southern Don-Donets Basin for a smash at Rostov and Stalingrad early today, but the Russians said the Nazi left flank near Voronezh to the north was "in deadly peril" under savage Russian counterattacks. The midnight communique said merely that the southern Red Army still was "fighting stubborn defensive actions" southeast of Voroshilovgrad, which itself is 100 miles' above Rostov. The exact German deployment was not given. In the Voronezh sector however the Russians said their troops had captured additional populated points, killed more than 10,000 Nazis in one week, and knocked out several dozen tanks and scores of other vehicles. A Moscow radio announcement said the Russians had widened a wedge in Nazi positions northwest of Voron- ezh, and the Germans were suffering "unprecedented losses." But the gravity of the situation in the south was still acute. The area of most immediate peril was the battlefield southeast of Voro- shilovgrad, where the invaders' arm- ored shock forces pushed ahead toward Rostov, some 85 miles distant, through rich coal fields wrecked or set afire by the retreating Russians. But the snag in all the German plans remained the daring Russian counter-assault across the upper Don before besieged Voronezh, 250 miles north of the southernmost battle BERLIN (from German broad- casts), July 21.-(P)-The German High Conmmnand reported today that Rostov is in flames and under concentric attack from three di- rections, and that German troops "are smartly advancing" to the east despite difficult terrain and strong mine barrages. cauldron. There the invaders now find themselves in danger of having the forces which already have crossed the Don isolated from their rein- forcements and supplies on the west bank. Tass dispatches said the Germans were losing from 3,000 to 4,000 men daily on the Voronezh front alone, and that in the southern battle sec- tor south of Millerovo 3,000 Germans had been killed or wounded in two days. Smash Tanks Soviet artillerymen on two south- ern sectors were credited with smash- ing 122 tanks in one day. Russian dispatches said the Ger- mans had lost the principal bridge- head across the river at Voronezh, to- gether with others up and down the crossing area, and that they had failed in a new effort to encircle the city by a swing to the south, using fresh German and Rumanian troops. Now fignting hand to hand on both banks of the Don, the Red Army was reported holding its advantage over the isolated Nazi units between the city limits and a populated com- munication point on the highway be- tween city and river. Rostov Attacked (Tuesday's German communique said Rostov was being attacked from west, north and east; that the city was in flames and its Don bridges destroyed, presumably by dive-bomb- ing, and that farther north another column had pushed eastward along the upper course of the Don for 50 miles in the direction of Stalingrad.) Southeast of Voroshilovgrad, the industrial city newly occupied by the Germans, the Russian left flank was withdrawn again to escape encircle- ment and to reachha line for effec- tive defense of the west Caucasus corner. lb> -- Social Aspects of Willow Run To lBeStudied Conference Is Scheduled To Discuss Theological- Education Theories The vital issue of Willow Run fam- ily security will be thoroughly treated at a forum today that will feature the second day of the Eighth Annual Conference on Religion being held here. Also promising to figure promi- nently in the day's activities will be a discussion by the Rev. John Elder- kin Bell, D.Ed., and others from the Clinic for the Ministry to the Sick on "A New Force in Theological Edu- cation." This talk will be given at a luncheon to be held at 12:15 p.m. in the Union. The religious phases of the Willow Run problem will receive particular attention at the Forum which will be held at 2:15 p.m. in the East Confer- ence Room of the Rackham Build- ing. James Stermer, field sociologist of the Michigan Child Guidance In- stitute, and possessor of a thorough understanding of the involved issues, will be a member of the panel. Others who will contribute their knowledge of the situation include Rabbi Jehudah Cohen, Director of the Hillel Foundation here at the University, Father Erwin Lefebvre of St. John's Church, Ypsilanti, the Rev. William Shaw, First Baptist Church, Ypsilanti (chairman of the Family Security Committee at Wil- low Run), and Mr. Wallace Watt, a youth leader in the area and a mem- ber of the Michigan Child Guidance Institute. The Rev. Chester Loucks will preside. H-igins Tells Of Progress In Ship Plan By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, July 21.-Andrew Jackson Higgins, who proposes to build ships by unusual methods in a reclaimed Louisiana swamp, came to town today to persuade the gov- ernment to change its mind2about cancelling his contract for 200 ves- sels. At the close of a day of many conferences, he reported progress. His contract had been annulled be- cause officials came to the conclusion that there was not enough steel available for the job. But, he said, he had shown them that their esti- mates were wrong, and he was con- fident that the contract would be re- instated. With no help from the Govern- ment at all, he said, he could turn up enough steel for the job in eight months. His press conference was interrupted for a telephone call, after which he returned from the next room to announce that a combine of Southern businessmen had agreed to develop abandoned iron mines in Tennessee and Alabama. They were willing, he said, "to put up the money and develop the prop- erties provided they are guaranteed r,.- - in , frm hie a-lo n .tfh 3 Destroyers Sunk By U.S. Near Aleutian Island Bases Submarines Press Home War Of Attrition Against Japanese Forces; Army Bombers Make Raids Other Heartening Action Disclosed By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER Associated Press Correspondent WASHINGTON, July 21.-Ameri- can submarines, grimly pressing home their war of attrition against the Japanese forces in the Aleutian Islands, have sunk three more de- stroyers in the vicinity of Kiska, the Navy announced today. The announcement was made in a communique which also reported that long-range Army bombers re- cently made several attacks on both the enemy's encampment and his ships in the harbor of Kiska but that it was "impossible to observe and ap- praise" the results of these raids. "U.S. Army and Navy aircraft are continuing joint operations against the enemy forces occupying islands in the western Aleutions," the com- munique added. Today's report raised substantially the total of damage inflicted on the Japs' invasion and occupation forces since they first moved into the west- ern end of the United States island chain in early June. For their occu- pation of at least three islands-Kis- ka, Attu and Agattu, all more than 585 nautical miles west of Dutch Harbor-they have suffered: Six destroyers, one transport and one cruiser sunk; one destroyer prob- ably sunk; and four cruisers, two de- stroyers, one aircraft carrier, one gunboat and one transport damaged -18 ships in all. American losses have been reported as consisting only of "a number" of aircraft and of the damage to shore installations caused by enemy air raids on Dutch Harbor, Fort Mears, and Fort Glenn July 3 and 4. Ship Losses Hit New High Sinkings 'Greatly Exceed' Allied Construction WASHINGTON, July 21. -t)- The War Shipping Administration reported today that shipping losses during "the week of July 12" were the highest since the war began and that sinkings of United Nations ves- sels "have greatly exceeded new con- struction." To counteract the effects of "en- emy action and marine casualties," the Administration announced that shipping space in future would be re- served entirely for import and export cargoes "essential to the prosecution of the war." The Administration added that en- forcement of its cargo space order would mean a substantial increase in movement of military supplies. The three sinkings announced to- day raised the total of American sub successes in the Pacific, as reported by the Navy here since the start of the war, to 50 ships sunk, 14 prob- ably sunk and 13 damaged. Selected Chief Of - Staff Will Supervise Land, Sea And AirOperations May Head United Nations Command By RICHARD L. TURNER Associated Press Correspondent WASHINGTON, July 21-In an unprecedented move, President Ro- osevelt today selected Admiral Wil- liam D. Leahy sailor-diplomat, to be his right-hand man in prosecuting the global war on the land and sea and in the air. Leahy was given the newly created title of Chief of Staff to the Com- mander-In-Chief of the armed forces -that is, to the President. Immedi- ately, there was a surge of specula- tion that Leahy's counsel would have great effect on such questions as the possible opening of a second Euro- pean front. Some suggested that Leahy might even be slated eventu- ally to become top man of a unified United Nations high command. Besieged With Questions Mr. Roosevelt, making his an- nouncemnt at a press conference, was besieged with such questions. He firmly declined, however, to am- plify his announcement in this dir- ection. Repeatedly he grinned and responded to questions with a single statement: that Leahy would serve as Chief of Staff to the Commander- In-Chief of the armed forces. Although the President parried questions about the Leahy appoint- ment with his usual adroitness and good humor, one highly placed Army officer, speaking anonymously, re- marked later that the title certainly implied something more than that of an administrative assistant to the President. In Good Position Where the second front was con- cerned, this source suggested that Leahy, who recently returned from France, where he served as Ambas- sador to the Vichy Government, was by virtue of this experience and his long naval career in an unusually good position to evaluate reports from France and elsewhere bearing upon the projected offensive. Leahy was born in Hampton, Iowa, in 1875 and was graduated from the United States Naval Academy in 1897 just in time to serve in the Spanish- American War. During the World War he arose to the rank of Captain. Caddy Killed By Lightning At Barton Hills Course Richard Gauss, 15, of 802 W. Washington, was struck dead by lightning at 6:15 p.m. yesterday while caddying at Barton Hills Golf Course. Sheriff's officers and an Edison Co. lineman administered artificial res- piration for two hours in a vain at- tempt to restore the youth to con- sciousness. The youth was struck after seek- ing shelter beneath a tree on the first fairway. Two other persons, also sheltered by the tree, were unin- jured by the flash which shook the tree. By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, July 21.-If the nation's motorists will reduce their driving 40 percent below their 1941 mileage, the rubber industry told the government today, a two-year sup- ply of tires can be provided for all cars on the road. A committee of leading rubber manufacturers said that efforts of the government and public thus far have reduced the use ofpassenger cars by 25 percent but that a further reduction of 15 percent would be needed "to maintain necessary trans- portation." Estimating that 48,174,000 tires in addition to those now on the road would see all drivers through June 30, 1944, the industry proposed to supply the demand with 4,060,000 pre-war tires now held by factories or dealers, by recapping 30,291,000 used tires, and by making 13,223,000 new tires without interfering with military requirements. No new tubes were contemplated on the theory that existing tubes, plus 10,000,000 pre-war tubes in storage, would be sufficient. To make the new tires, the indus- try proposed to use only 3,332 long tons of natural rubber along with 97,420 long tons of reclaimed rub- ber, 32,475 tons of butyl and 33,188 tons of thiokol, a new synthetic pre- U.S. Bombers Sink Two Jap Ships In China By The Associated Press CHUNGKING, July 21. - Chal- lenging Japanese air power over the Yangtze River, fighter-escorted bombers of the United States Air Force in China sank two Japanese ships of 1,000 to 2,000 tons each yes- terday and returned to base undam- aged, Lieut.-Gen. Joseph H. Stilwell's headquarters announced today. The raid was centered upon the river port of Kiukiang, southeast of Hankow and due north of Nanchang, main Japanese advance base in Kiangsi Province. Chinese spokesmen appealed to the United States for still more planes and more arms, and pledged to draw the soldiers to use them from China's vast manpower at a rate of 2,000,000 new conscripts a year for the next three years. Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek's Nigh Command announced, mean- while, that the fight for the Cheki- ang coast port of Wenchow had not ended with its recapture last Friday by the Japanese in a counterattack on Chinese troops who drove them out of the city several days earlier. viously believed unsuitable for tires. A. L. Viles, chairman of the Com- mittee of Directors of the Rubber Manufacturers Association, stressed "the fact that the plan would leavef for military and non-tire civilian re-i quirements nearly all the nation's crude rubber supplies, over 85 percentr of all reclaim producing capacity, allt the buna and neoprene synthetic rubber capacity now scheduled, as1 well as a portion of the-expected thi- okol and butyl production."c Along with the production pro- gram would go measures to requirec drivers to take the maximum care of their tires and a rationing system to deny tires to speeders or negligent drivers. Treason Laws May Be Used To Halt Strikes W.L.B. Sounds Warnings Against Union Disputes, War WorkStoppages By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, July 21.--A stern warning that the treason laws would be invoked if necessary to halt union jurisdictional disputes leading to war work stoppages was sounded today by Wayne L. Morse of the War Labor Board. Morse, one of the public represen- tatives on the board, talked directly to union representatives who are de- bating the question whether CIO ort AFL painters should do work neces- sary to convert a Dayton, O., refrig- erator plant to war work. He promised that the public would take drastic action unless labor set-~ tled its own jurisdictional disputes, 'even to the application of the laws of treason if necessary" "As we go further and further into this war," said Morse, Dean of the University of Oregon Law School, "it becomes clearer and clearer that we cannot permit any stoppages of work. I don't care whether they are over jurisdictional disputes or what they are over. They simply have to stop. Later the four labor representa- tives on the WLB disclosed they were requesting Phil Murray, CIO presi- dent, and William Green, AFL chief, to set up machinery for the deter- mination of jurisdictional disputes for the duration of the war. As a result of this move the board asked AFL craft unions to resume work. CIO To Negotiate 'Big Steel' Contracts PITTSBURGH, July 21. - Philip Murray announced tonight the Beth- lehem and Inland Steel companies have agreed to meet representatives of the CIO United Steel Workers of America next week to resume nego- tiations for a contract-a move the CIO president said he interpreted as meaning the concerns were accept- ing the War Labor Board's decision last week in the "Little Steel" case. The conference with Inland is to start Monday in Indiana Harbor, Ind., and with Bethlehem on Wed- nesday in New York. Dates are ex- pected to be arranged later for meet- ings with Youngstown Sheet and Tube and Republic. The negotia- tions were broken off last February when the parties became deadlocked over three issues decided by the Labor Board. Murray's announcement came shortly after a 200-man policy com- mittee of the union instructed its By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, July 21-Presi- dent Roosevelt said today he hoped to send a message to Congress in a few days dealing with ways of keep- ing a thumb on the cost of living. Announcing his intentions at his regular press-conference, the Presi- dent thus gave an answer to the con- gressional leaders who have ex- pressed an eagerness to get a mes- sage from the White House soon if one were forthcoming at all. Mr. Roosevelt described the cost of living issue as the first real domes- WASHINGTON, July 21.--(AP)- The State Department announced tonight that Secretary Hull's radi speech on the war situation would be delivered Thursday (July 23y between 9:30 and 10:15 p.m., East- ern War Time, and would be broadcast over all networks. tic problem in carrying on the war, In discussing the message on ne inflation curbs, the President replild in the negative when asked if he intended to freeze wages, he said anything on that would be said in the message. In any event, he said no to a ques- tion whether the message would deal with military as well as domestic problems, saying it would deal ex- clusively with ways of keeping a thumb on the cost of living because. this goes into every home in the nation. Welcome Legislation Senate Majority Leader Barkley o Kentucky and Senator Vandenbg (R-Mich) both said recently they would welcome an opportunity .to deal with legislation to control in- flationary tendencies, while many House members have expressed the same view. Shortly before the President spoke Congress sent him a $1,858,939,000 deficiency appropriation bill which carries $120,000,000 for the Office of Price Administration. Total U.S. War Casualties Are 44,143-MOOW.1 By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, July 21. - The Office of War Information an- nounced tonight that United States armed forces have suffered 44,143 casualties-dead, wounded and miss- ing-since the start of the war. The total includes 4,801 dead, 3,218' wounded and 36,124 missing. The figure, which includes the cas- ualties at Pearl Harbor and all those up to date, represents the combined losses of the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Coast Guard and the -Philip- pine Scouts. In addition, 1,022 Navy officers and men were reported prisoners of war. Of these, 301 were Navy per- sonnel and 721 Marines. Only 20 of the Army personnel listed as "miss- ing" have been officially reported as prisoners. "The bulk of Army casualties fall into the category of missing," the OWI said, "and since most of these were at Bataan and Corregidor in the Philippines, and in Java, they are believed to be prisoners of war. No definite report as to their status, however, has been received from the International Red Cross." The casualties by services: Army: killed, 902; wounded, 1,413: missing, 17,452. Philippine Scouts: killed, 479; wounded, 754; missing, 11,000. Navy: killed, 3,420; wounded, 1,051; missing, 7,672. Prisoners of War: Navy: officers, 52; enlisted men, 249. Mrine Corn-. farn 41).- ac FDR To Speed Special Message To Congress On 'Cost Of Living; Leahy Gets New Presidential Post Rubber Industry Formulates Plan To Give Everyone Tires Stocks Of Reclaimed, Synthetic Product To Be Used; Motorists Must Reduce 1941 Mileage By 40% Control Of Prices Labeled Big Domestic Problem; Will Not Freeze Wages No Military Issues To Be Considered Noel Coward's 'Hay Fever, 'Third repertory Play, Opens Run Today British Make Gains On Egyptian Front CAIRO, July 21.-()-The de- struction of more than 50 Axis planes caught on the ground at El Daba and Fuka and the Roya Navy's third and most devastating shelling attack on the port of Matruh were reported by the British today. While the British Eighth Army held the lines intact along the 40- mile El Alamein front, General Sir Claude Auchinleck's tactics seemed to be steadily sapping Marshal Erwin Rommel's sea lines, bases and con- r-+nt.rAin nof tnrs and vehicles in By BERYL SHOENFIELD Jungle scene wall paper, inspired by Rousseau and interpreted by cele- brated scenic artist Howard Bay, will serve as the backdrop for Noel Cow- ard's comedy, "Hay Fever," which opens at 8:30 p.m. today, on the Lydia Mendelssohn stage. It is the third Repertory play of the cur- rent season. Nancy Bowman, University instruc- tor, actress and secondary school drama director, takes the feminine lead in the role of Judith Bliss, a retired actress to whom all the world is literally a stage, and everyone she meets a character in a play. Cast as her novelist husband in this Depart- manf+f n aen mrbieoinon _ i Rih_- orous woman-all without provoca- tion. Playing the startled guests, will be John Babington, as the middle-aged diplomatist; Dorothy Chamberlin, as the flapper, Jackie; Paul Johnson, as the athlete, Sandy and Fawn Adkins, as the faithful theatrical dresser, Clara. Helen Rhodes, heroine of "Under the Gaslight" and "The Riv- als" is cast as the intense young woman who has intrigued Simon. The exotic scenery of the Coward farce will be executed by Bay and his Broadway assistants, Horace Armi- stead, scenic artist, and William Kel- lam, stage carpenter, who together produced the sets for "One-third of -------------------------