Ed I tril New Semster Exists To Better Democracy .. ic, it -~Au 4a111 Weather Slightly Warmer. t VOL. LII. No- . ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JUNE 16, 1942 ® .... ...._...... _ ...... m -- Personal IncomesI Held At $25,000 In Treasury Plan Proposed Tax Increases Would End 'Luxurious Living Of Few'-Paul Married Couples To Keep $50,000 WASHINGTON, June 15.-(I)- Super-levies to take from, single per- sons all income over $25,000 after payment of regular taxes and from married couples all, above $50,000 were formally recommended by the treasury today with the declaration that a nation at war cannot afford "luxurious living. for a few." The idea of such a wartime tax was first advanced by President Roosevelt in his April 27 message to Congress outlining his anti-inflation program. Today, Randolph Paul, tax adviser to Secretary Morgenthau, laid the specific plan before the House Way and Means Committeee. Although aimed generally at hold- ing spendable income to the $25,000 and $50,000 levels, the plan would permit a deduction for debts up to 15 percent of income after payment of present income taxes. Debt Committments "While this deduction would be in- tended for the purpose of relieving the hardship of debt, "Paul told the committee, "it would be made avail- able also to people who had no debt commitments, provided it was spent in meeting other financial commit- ments, such as insurance premiums on policies taken out in the past, or was invested in federal securities." Presenting the proposal to the committee, Paul read a memorandum which said there could be no "equal- ity of privilege" in the war effort "when some of our citizens are per- mitted to enjoy a luxurious standard of living while others are called upon to cut their living standards to a To Effect 11,000 Paul estimated the plan would af- feet 11,000 single and married per- sons and would add $184.000,000 to the approximately $6,250,000,000 in new taxes the comiittee already has approved tentatively. Under levies tentatively approved by the committee, a single person would have to have an income of about $50,000 to have over $25,000 left after payment of regular income taxes. To have more than $50,000 remaining after payment of regular taxes, a married couple would have a gross income of about $185,000. CIO Charges Unfair Acts In Two Plants By ROBERT PREISKEL Charges of company unionism and discrimination against UAW employes have been filed by the UAW-CIO against the Hoover Ball and Bear- ing Co., the Economy Baler Co. and their independent unions, on the heels of the NLRB hearing on alleged unfair practices of the American Broach and Machine Co., and the in- dependent American Broach Em- ployes Association. Ringer Files Findings :Findings in the Broach case of Examiner William R. Ringer are to be filed with the board in Washing- ton, and the company, the employes association and the UAW-CIO will be given time to file exceptions. They may also argue the case orally before the full labor board in Washington. Commenting upon published re- ports citing the UAW refusal to hold a bargaining election, international representative Edwin Hills charged that "The Ann Arbor News has stat- ed very explicitly that the UAW-CIO refused any appeasement election during the time of the NLRB hearing. However, the paper failed to bring to the readers the reasons for the re- Company Union "The reasons that the election was refused are primarily stated in the UAW charges. We were then in hear- ing on a company dominated asso- 0iation, and did not intend nor do we now intend to admit the validity Head Of War Board Leaves For New Post Prof. Harlow J. Heneman, execu- tive director of the University War Board, will leavettoday for Washing- ton to take a position with the War Department. An associate professor'of political science, Professor Heneman will work in a civilian capa- city until he receives a commission, now pending, in the U.S. Army intelligence service. He has resigned ' his directorship of the War Board and will be on a one- year's leave of ab- H. J. Heneman sence, approved last month by the Board of Regents. Professor Heneman has been direc- tor of the War Board, an advisory and planning unit for the formula- tion of proposals on the adaptation of the University to the war pro- gram, since its inception early in January. A new director, Professor Heneman said, remains to be ap- pointed by President Alexander G. Ruthven. Summer Daily Tryouts To Be Held Thursday Any student of the Summer Term interested in gaining experi- ence in newspaper work, either editorial, sports, or business, is invited to a tryout meeting at 4:30 p.m. Thursday in the Student Publications Building. Previous experience is not ab- .splutely necessary, although those who have worked for high school papers or other publications are particularly urged to attend. Interested students unable to at- tend the meeting may call the Managing Editor, Homer Swan- der, or the City Editor, Will Sapp, at the Daily offices, 23-24-1. StumnerAnto Ban i nEffect, Drivinlg Permits Available For Tird! Semester Eiorc jg thei same 'reulations for1 the unnuner term as for the summer sesrion, the University auto 'ban will operate as it hs for the past several suiuers, Dean Walter B. Ra a- nounced yesterday. f The auto ban, which went into effect yesterday at 8 a.m, exempts1 but demands permits for those en- gaged in professional pursuits dur- ing the semester, students 26 or old- er, and those who have a faculty rank of at least instructor, Other special permits are issued by the Dean of Students Office in Room 2, University Hall, for family, business, chauffeuring and health purposes, Summer term recreational permits are also granted for partici- pation in outdoor activities which require transportation. The regulations now in force gov- ern use as well as operation of all cars, and no student will be allowed y to operate the car for other than the; specific purposes for which his per- mit is granted. More detailed information con- cerning special cases may be obtained at the office of the Dean of Stu-1 dents. No violation based on ignor- ance or misunderstanding of the reg- ulations will be excused. is Sik By U-Boat (By The Associated Press) Deadly Axis U-Boats have crept back into the Gulf of Mexico, free from the underwater raiders for two weeks, the Navy reported last night in announcing the sinking of a large Panamanian merchant vessel. Third Term Students Top 3,500_Mark Ratio Set At Five To One As Only 670 Women Return To Campus University officials heaved literal sighs of relief yesterday as virtually complete summer term registration figures-soaring above the 3,500 mark - wiped out all remaining doubts about the success of a Third Term for education. Only 670 women decided to take advantage of the variegated summer program, but men, headed by the engineers, swarmed back in droves to swell enrollment totals to a level little expected by pessimistic officials in charge of this educational experi- ment. About 200 freshmen-only days out of high school-reported for an ab- breviated Orientation Program han- dicapped socially by the fact that only 19 of them were girls, but cheered by the fact that they were getting a head start on Old Man Draft. Total enrollment figures for the summer of course await summer ses- sion registration, but a decline in several of the schools hardest hit by the call to colors was already noted -notably in the law school. The literary college led in enroll- ment, but its usual numerical su- periority over the engineering school was cut to almost nothing by tech- nical students hurrying their prep- a ration for war work in defense plants demanding trained engineers. Although those two schools carried the bulk of the load, medical and graduate students helped push the final mark over War Board estimates. Figures through yesterday showed a total registration of 2,910 men and 670 women--a registration ratio of five to one now added to the woes of the constantly complaining Michi- gan male, Summer session registrants are looked to for relief, but it may be a long, hot summer. 700 Stud ets Yanks Smash, Cripple Japanes Force In Aleutians, Sink Cruise Italy Says British Convoy Blaste Rome Broadcasts Report English Losses In Fierce Mediterranean Struggle London Is Silent On Enemy Claims ROME (from Italian broadcasts), June 15.-( )-A violent battle raged through its second day in the Medi- terranean today as Italian warplanes pounced upon " "remaining enemy units" of one Of two huge British convoys which the High Command declared had already lost two escort- ing cruisers and a destroyer and suffered damage to an aircraft car- rier, a battleship and three other warships in an effort to break through from the Atlantic. (British quarters in London had no comment to make on the report which so far hadI come entirely from Axis sources.) Britain's Biggest Convoy The convoy, declared by Il Giornale D'Italia to be the biggest ever sent into the Mediterranean by Britain and said to consist of about 30 units -a battleship, two aircraft carriers, four cruisers, 10 destroyers and 12 to 14 transports-was believed bound for Alexandria or Malta. The biggest part already had been forced to turn back from the at- tempt to pass through the 100-mile wide passage between Sardinia and Sicily on one side and Tunisia on the other, Il Giornale D'Italia declared. Believed West-Bound Italian official quarters said noth- ing the second convoy, but informed sources said they believed it was west bound, from Suez or Alexandria. Twenty Italian planes were lost and 15 planes which rose from the two defending ;carriers were shot down, the-Italif said.- ' . The High Command summed up the convoy's losses as follows: Sunk: Two cruisers, a destroyer, four other ships. Badly damaged; A battleship, an aircraft carrier, two cruisers, a de- stroyer, four more ships. Battle Began Sunday At sunup Sunday, according to Il Giornale D'Italia, the first blow was delivered by torpedo planes, dive bombers, and bombers accompanied by fighters as the convoy drew op- posite Sardinia and near Cape Teu- lada, midway between Philippeville and Cape Bon on the Tunisian coast. Two more assaults were delivered, the paper related, and then the con- voy came within range of Sicily whence two more attacks were made. Fails Road TestWith Bang DETROIT, June 15.-W)-A 50- year-old applicant for .an automobile driver's license, Theodore Dimitruk, escorted by Patrolman Oscar C. Hass, went out for a roat test and wound up at Receiving Hospital. Meanwhile he clipped the front porches of two residences and smashed into the con- crete steps leading to the second, Hass, explaining the crack-up to fellow officers who answered the wreck call, said Dimitruk "froze on the wheel and jammed down on the gas." American Pilot Calls His Shot, Sends Jap ToFlaming Death, Epic Five-Day Coral Sea Battle, First Fight Between Aircraft Carriers, Is Described By Eye-Witness (This is one in a series of stories supplied to the Associated Press by the Chicago Tribune whose corre- spondent, Stanley Johnston, was the only American newspaperman aboard the aircraft carrier Lexing- ton in the Coral Sea engagement. In the preceding stories Johnston told of heavy losses inflicted on the Japanese, of the Lexington's destruction several hours after it had beaten off Jap attacks, and of the devastating American air at- tack on enemy ship concentrations in the harbor of Tulagi, capital of the Solomon Islands. This latter action he described as the curtain- raiser to the Coral Sea fight.) * * * By STANLEY JOHNSTON Foreign Correspondent of the Chicago Tribune (Copyright 1942 by the Chicago Tribune) CHICAGO, June 15.-A pillar of flame and smoke-the funeral pyre of 12 Japanese airmen-opened the! second stage of the epic five-day Coral Sea battle. This was one of the unforgettable sights I saw during the tense moments of this, the first of the world's fights between mod- ern aircraft carrier forces. It was awful, majestic and a threat of what was ahead for all of us, for the big Nipponese patrol plane that burned there so fiercely in the sky and on the sea, fell right into the heart of our speeding two carrier task force, . . u,. Jhas Found Our - fighter planes, patrolirg in pairs, found the Jap-a Kawanishi four-engined long-range flying boat with a 132-foot wing span-lurking in the cloud layer that covered us at the 8,000 foot level. The plane was first seen right over the Lexington, Student Directory Will Appear During First Week In July Even though the army has taken many members of, the Michigan- ensian staff, including the 1943 edi- tor, William "Buck" Dawson, the Student Directory will be out during the first week of July, as previously planned, according to Ben Douglas, Business Manager, and Stuart Gil- dart, Acting Editor and art director. The form of the directory will be the same asother years, except that students of the Summer Session and Term will be listed separately. All members of the faculty and visiting faculty will, of course, be given. For the second time, home ad-! dresses of students will also be listed, making the volume a handy refer- ence book when school days arerover, The directory will be sold at vari- ous stations on campus and at the book stores, the,cost being 50 cents. which was in the center of our pro- tective cruiser and destroyer screen. Lieut.-Comm. Jorgensen, leader of the patrol then in the air, called to us on the signal bridge over the fighter radio circuit: "Tally-ho a plane. Kawanishi at 8,500 feet, right over you." His voice died away, then came in strongly from the loud- speakers that carried its sound to every part of the great 880-foot ves- sel. He said: "Wait a minute and I'll show him to you." All of us who could, rushed to scan the sky. We saw only the clouds for a moment, then a glow showed through. Out of the cloud vapor less than a mile away popped the huge Jap plane, afire and spinning madly in an uncontrolled descent. This ship was larged than the Pan Ameri- can Airways.Martin transoceanic air liners, but it spun exactly like the small German fighters and bombers I'd seen shot down over England two years ago. Clouds Of Smoke Rise The flame, barely visible at first, bloomed swiftly. The turning wreck- age crashed into the water. The fire turned to thick black smoke. Jor- gensen called his shots for the whole Turn to Page 6, Col, 3 INazis Launch Trust For Oil .I .ncadlle East"' See preview Of New PEM When the War Board and the physical department get together on a muscle-building course for men they mean M-E-N. At least that's the impression that more than 700 slightly out-of-con- dition young men who reported to Ferry Field yesterday received as they took a look around. Sweatsuit-clad professors explained the three-period, four and one-half hour program to students anxious to know just what the much-publicized conditioning would be like, The professors - alias Coaches Crisler, Martineau, Munn, etc-ex- plained the calisthenics, games, re- lays, obstacle races, and individual combat activities which make up half of the program, and the boxing gymnastics, wrestling and track and field which makes up the other half. Most students took the swimming test in order to fill their swimming requirement and among them were surprised, tired students who crawled from the pool ready to admit they needed conditioning and plenty of it. Practically everybody had a glimpse at the obstacle course which has been erected on Ferry Field and it alone clinched the fact in every student's mind that there was no fooling in PEM 31. A seven foot wall to be scaled, tun- nels to be wriggled through and a four foot fence to be taken on the run were only part of a course rigged to give the toughest kind of test to embryo soldiers and sailors. Coaches who had tested it the day before testified to its toughness and most students were more than will- ing to take their word for it. Dr. Elmer Townsley, chairman of the required program committee, stressed yesterday that "This is not a fun program. The activities won't be monotonous, in fact they should be extremely interesting; but the stress will be laid upon physical hardening." Ocean-Per (Gallop SAN FRANCISCO, June 15.-(I') -The United States Government today stopped the sale of the Paci- Germans SeekI Giant Pincers, Valuable Iraq To CloseI Around Fields No U.S. Losses Reporte As Allied Planes Blai Carrier,_Six Other Shp Battle Still Raging In Fog-Bound Isle WASHINGTON, June 15. -(/) Striking again at the Japanese, tt time far north in the Aleutia American air power has sunk at lea one cruiser and damaged seven oth vessels, including an aircraft carr it was officially disclosed tonight. The blows were delivered again a Jap force striving desperately break into the Western Hemisphe by conquering a few bleak islan far out in the Northern Pacific, While officials refrained fra making any decisive claims, it a: peared to many authorities that third great American sea-air victo was in the making to add to tha which only recently repelled the eM emy, in destructive routs, from Au tralia in the Southwest Pacific a Midway Island in the mid-Paclfic.- Breaks Silence Breaking a three-day silence t Japan's attempt to gain a hold c the rocky islands at the tip of Aleutian chain, a Navy communiqt and a report which came indirect from Lieut.-Gen. Henry H. Arn%1 Army Air Chief, gave this accou of Japanese losses: Sunk: One cruiser. Damaged: One aircraft carri three cruisers, one destroyer, 'a gunboat and one transport. (T) damage to several of these vessi was severe.) Army and Navy aircraft, hamper by fog and foul weather, are co tinuing their attacks, the commur que said, and the indication was th So far, no American losses 0a been reported. "Except for these continuing a attacks upon the. enemy landing pa ties and their supporting naval cc; tingents, the general situation in t Aleutian Islands appears unchanget the Navy declared. Nothing New This statement was interpret authoritatively to mean that no wo had come through of further Ja anese encroachments on Aleutian te ritory in addition to those report last Friday. It was stated at that time that small-scale landing had been affec ed in Attu Island, a rocky chunlk land with a snmall and treachero harbor which lies 769 nautical ml west of the base at Dutch Harb It was also disclosed that enemy shi had slipped into the harbor at Kisli But, authorities said that Americ aircraft had driven the landing pa away from the only populatedpl on Attu, and had forced them to fli out of the Kiska harbor. Presumably, the Japanese did n know the strength of the forces whi could be brought against them in t remote section where they mig have expected relatively light resis ance. Today's announcement showed thl they had not withdrawn before t: full force of available American i power could be brought to bear. Pay Allotments Get Senate 01 WASHINGTON, June 15.-) The Senate speedily approved tod legislation to aid the families of ser ice men through a system of pay P lotments and government grants. The measure, which now goes the. House, clears the way for V drafting of husbands and fathi who are family breadwinners if Ar and Navy needs should require One of its provisions, however, a thorizes the President to direct dra boards to take into consideration man's family relationships when V question of inducting him arises. That provision amends the S lective Service Act. As the act ni stands, man's wife and children a not reasons for his deferment unlE they are actually dependent on Y earnings for their .livelihood. A wor ing wife, who earns her own livi. LONDON, June 15.-(IP)-On bat- tlefields 1,500 miles apart Adolf Hit- ler's armies smashed across the tortured sands of North Africa and Russia's wreckage-littered Ukraine tonight in a supreme effort aimed eventually at closing a vast pincers about the coveted oil fields of the Middle East for which his need grows daily. These coordinated thrusts toward the great land bridge between the Caucasus and Suez, an area produc- ing a seventh of the world's petro- leum supply, appeared to be the opening phases of a campaign on which the Nazi fuehrer is expected to gamble everything for victory in 1942. In the Libyan battle, on which hangs the fate of Egypt, the Ger- mans were hammering at the ap- proaches to Tobruk and the Italians claimed they had smashed through to the Mediterranean to isolate South Africans west of Ain El Gazala, plainly a dangerous threat to the Allies. There the British eighth army counter-attacked up and down the fluid desert line in a series of blows designed to thwart Marshal Erwin Rommel's armored forces. Some London quarters held that the outcome of the Libyan campaign depended on developments of the next 48 hours. The capture of To- bruk is part of the German plan which aims at a descent into Egypt and a northeastern drive on Iraq. Without possession of Tobruk as well as Bengasi, port which the Germans now hold, such an advance would be impossible. Far to the north, German forces under General Fedor Von Bock hurled themselves at Soviet lines in the first of two anticipated thrusts toward Stalingrad and the ap- proaches to the Caucasus. MacArthur's Airmen Drop Six Jap Bombers ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN AUSTRALIA, (Tuesday), June 16.- Citizens Give Up Scrap Rubber To Aid WPBSalvage Drive By LEON GORDENKER Everything from hot-water bottles to innertubes flowed into Ann Arbor gas stations yesterday as the green- light flashed on in the nation-wide drive for scrap rubber. At stake in the salvage drive is the fate of the nation's automobiles. Prime purpose of the country-wide drive is a census of scrap supply to determine the necessity for universal gas rationing. Data from the drive may be uti- lized by the President and the War Production Board to settle the much- debated question of gas rationing to preserve rubber. Citizens Active Local gas stations reported that citizens are actively striving to bring member of the state rubber salvage committee. A severe shortage of scales to weigh the incoming scrap is slowing collections. "Citizens are urged to lend the committee any available scales for the two-week drive," Kempf declared. "Even the bathroom scales will be useful." University Cooperates The University announced its full cooperation, appointed E. C. Pardon, superintendent of the Buildings and Grounds Department as head of the campaign in the University and des- ignated the University Storehouse as central collection agency. Storehouse trucks will make scrap collections during regular trips to University buildings. Collections of scrap metals will continue through