' iQll I _ l . 41P t t all 4 nil We+sath~er 'o~ VOL. LIII No. 3-S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JULY , 1943 PRICE FIVE CENTS Congress FOrbid Five Fiscal Bills Remain Indisposed Congress Leaves FDR Without Funds at Start1 Of New Money YearE WASHINGTON, June 30.- (')-< Five major appropriation bills were, left up in the air tonight on the eve of the new fiscal year' when bothI houses of Congress recessed until omorrow without final agreementI bn terms of the big money measures.1 Among the measures caught in the legislative jam was one carrying $89,000,000 of emergency funds for the President and its failure to be1 enacted left the President, techni-t cally at least, without emergencyI funds for the fiscal year starting at midnight. . Each of the other bills, however, contained a provision validating any obligations incured after June 30 in accordance with terms of the indi- vidual bills. Just before quitting until noon to- morrow, the Senate passed by a voice vote a $2,391,000,000 catch-all appopriation for 18 war agencies. A last minute amendment, offered from the floor, chopped $5,000,000 off the War Relocation Authority (WRA) Fund, originally $48,170,000. Numerous Senators had charged that interned Japanese were being pampered in WRA camps. The War Agency Bill, however, still has to go to a conference with the House. Also in conference, with varying degrees of progress reported, are the $875,000,000 farm bill, a $1,000,000,- 000 labor department Federal Se- curity Agency appropriation, the $127,000,000 Interior department bill and a $143,000,000 urgent deficiency measure. Wallace-Jones Controversy Flares Agait WASHINGTON, June 30-( - The Capital's hottest controversy flared again tonight as Secretary of Commerce Jesse Jones issued a new statement accusing Vice President Wallace of making a "dastardly" and "untrue" charge against the Recon- struction Finance Corporation, which is under Jones' jurisdiction. Vice-President Henry A. Wallace said tonight he had intended no re- flection on Secretary of Commerce Jesse Jones' "patriotism or his inter- est in the war effort" by accusing the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, (RFC) which Jones supervises, or hampering work of the Board of Eco- nomic Warfare (BEW) Vice-President Wallace and Sec- retary Jones called to the White House to explain their differences over imports of strategic materials, tlked for two hours today with War Mobilization Director James F. Byrnes-but they were reported to- night to be as far apart as ever. There was no announcement on the result of the conference, but an u- usually well-informed source said that Byrnes gave the contestants no instructions, Yanks Launch Invasion On Jap-Held Solomons Amierican TrIopLand on Rendova Island; Violent Fighting in Prospect,_NavySays WASHINGTON, June 30. --()- American forces launching their long expected campaign to break Japan's South Pacific defenses have landed on Rendova Island in the enemy-held central Solomons, the Navy an- nounced today, and violent fighting was in prospect-if it had not al-. ready begun. The Japanese air base at Munda, New Georgia Island, only five miles from mountainous Rendova, appear- ed to be the immediate objective of Admiral William F. Halsey's powerful aggregation of land, sea and air fighters, but in the absence of any' official comment there remained the possibility that Halsey is after some more significant prize. A 22-word Navy communique re- Victor Va grha Settles Down, to Army Routine 200 Medical, IDental Corps Students Re-tu1rn Here as Scrvi(+idlenI Victor Vaughan House was set- tling down to a new job yesterday- that of the Army, as more than 200 students returned from processing at Fort Custer The medical and dental seniors, juniors, and sophomores were all busy getting used to Army routine. They are privates in the Army Medi- cal and Dental Corps, many of them having voluntarily resigned their commissions so as to be allowed to complete their education. Get Army Doubledeckers The returning men, almost 100 per cent former Michigan students, found the Army doubledecker beds waiting to greet them. They also had to register for Army prescribed courses which for most of them meant a day of classes stretching from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. At Vaughan House the regular Army discipline has been relaxed. Though the boys have to get up in the wee hours of the morning they are not required to keep hours at night and have far more freedom of action than any of the other service groups. Army Pays All The students, all of whom have been accepted by the University Medical School, no longer have to worry about tuition, room, and board. The Army pays for every- thing in addition to the basic allow- ance of $50. Many of the new recruits were members of the ROTC and ERC. They said they were disappointed that the Army did not offer any mil- itary courses. At present, the medi- cal students get no drill, P.E.M. or courses in military science. The dental student-soldiers by special re- quest may elect five hours of mili- tary work a week including two hours of physical education. These soldier-students are being fed in the Vaughan House cafeteria which is operated by the University. ported the immensely important op- eration, which by some standards shaped up as the first thoroughly offensive campaign of the war against Japan. The communique said: "On June 30, during the early morning, combined U.S. forces landed on ' Rendova Island, New Georgia group. No details have been received." The timing indicated that the ac- tion started about noon, June 29, Washington time. The Solomons are in an east longitude time zone, and run about 15 hours ahead of Eastern War Time. Because of scanty official infor- mation it was not known whether the enemy had opposed the landings or engaged American troops as they drove into the island from the black sand beaches. But authorities con- sidered it certain that heavy fighting would develop since the Japanese hold many strongly garrisoned posi- tions in that section, about 170 nau- tical miles northwest of Guadalcanal airfield. The reaction of the Japanese fleet and air force was also regarded as a question of importance. The enemy used both ships and planes prodigally in futile attempts to defend Guadal- canal against American, conquest. Similarly costly activities on his part in the defense of the central Solo- mons would further sharply reduce his sea and air striking power. ,Robert Asks For US. Envoy To0Martinique NEW YORK, June 30.-(P)--Ad- miral Georges Robert, Vichy French High Commissionertof Martinique, has asked the United States govern- ment to send an envoy "to fix the terms for a change of French authority" on the Caribbean Island, the Martinique radio reported to- night in a broadcast recorded by the Federal Communications Commis- sion. The broadcast declared that Rob- ert has taken the step "to avoid blood shed" and had made his request to the United States "under the double condition of their renewing the guar- antee to maintain French sovereign- ty in these islands, and of the non- intervention of American forces." The broadcast, in the French lan- guage, presented Robert's statement as a "communique to the popula- tion." There have been several recent reports of disorders in Martinique. Presumably Robert's allusion to a change of French authority meant that he was willing to permit the is- land to divorce itself from Vichy and associate itself with the French Na- tional Committee of General Giraud and General DeGaulle which has been set us in North Africa. Diplomatic relations between the United States and the French island were severed by Secretary of State Cordell Hull on April 30 and shortly I after that Hull announced that U. S. I Navy was keeping close watch over the island. Allied Forces Take Pacific Island Group Trobriand, Woodlark Landings Unopposed, Communique Says ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN AUSTRALIA, Thursday, July 1.- (/P)- Allied land, naval and air for- ces under the personal direction of Gen. Douglas MacArthur have occu- pied the Tobriand 'and Woodlark Is- land groups between New Guinea and Solomon Islands and are attack- ing the neighboring New Georgia is- lands and are engaging Japanese land forces near Salamaua on New Guinea, it was announced today. The occupation'. of the Tobriand and Woodlark groups was accom- plished without opposition, appar- ently unknown to the enemy, a com- munique said. In the New Georgia group American formces have suc- cessfully landed on both New Geor- gia and Rendova Islands and are en- gaging the enemy's defense, it added. "All elements of ground, naval and air forces are being employed in the closest synchronization," the com- munique said. Fighting was in progress at Nas- sau Bay, a few miles from Salamaua, where American forces affected a landing shortly after midnight on the heels of concentrated bombing by attack planes and medium bomb- ers. The planes also carried out "straf- ing raids against enemy positions on the bay shore and. along the Bitoi River," the communique said. Timed with the action was a heavy raid by Allied Fortresses and Libera- tors on Rabaul, New Britain, ap- proximately 500 miles northwest of Rendova and 300 miles above Tobri- and. The Japanese tried another raid on Darwin, resulting in aerial dog- fights in which six of their bombers and two of their fighters were lost as against six intercepting Spitfires. The raid was made at midday by 27 Japanese bombers escorted by 21 fighters. The communique admitted some damage to g'ound installations and slight casualties. League Offers Meal Tickets 350 Men in Greek Houses Get Board Rate Special arrangements have been made by the Michigan League to pro- vide meals for the 350 men who will live in the ten fraternity houses re- cently taken over by the University. Meal tickets will be sold by the League for $7 a week which can be used for lunch and dinner during the week and for breakfast and dinner on Sundays: Although the arrangeme? t was made especially for those stu- dents living in the fraternity houses, any student may take advantage of the offer. Students buying such tickets will get their meals in the League cafe- teria until July 6. After this time meals will be.served to such students in the League ball room. Areas Of Continued Allied Pt ndings 0 100 Trieste ,Zagreb STATUTE MILES Venice " ' Fiume YULGOSLAV A ~~N<~ Bologna g'GSAI 4~Genoa F a d x ~~Pesaro . Leghorn Florence Ancona l An r -n j .a s:7a _ Adriatic ' C- AE- Sea CORSICA rCiv tavecchia Porto T Y ROME Barleta Torres 4 ~ano A/he Naples ==Taat SARDINIA M.ips.;Tyrrhenian ยข~Decimomannu Sea Cagliari N alasetta Palermo Messina Giovanni Marsala 'Ctai zerte asaaCatania _Comniso Tunis. ' ' m "TUNISIA PANTELLERIA While Swiss newspapers reported increasing uneasiness in Italy, Allied bombers of the Northwest African Command hammered Leghorn, Italian shipping center. Other planes struck at San Giovanni and at Sardinian airfields. Arrows indicate the raids. * * * *. * * Volley Spurs xis ear Bombers Smash Ferry of To FDR Gets New Legal Face Slap Lawmakers 4irder Meat, Butter 'H oil Back' Dead August 1 Ask SubsId Nerve Front Wracks Bomb-Buffeted Europe LONDON, June 30.- U1)- Inva- sion jitters spurred to even greater intensity by a new and heavy British volley on the nerve war front wracked the bomb-buffeted peoples of Europe tonight. While Axis propaganda outlets beat a steady refrain on the time and place of the expected onslaught, Prime Minister Churchill assured the world that there would be heavy fighting in the Mediterranean and elsewhere before autumn. He cou- pled this intentionally vague fore- cast with the observation that the Italians were feverishly anxious to know how and when the blow would fall, and said, "It is no part of our interest to relieve that anxiety." And in the House of Commons! Foreign Minister Anthony Eden, dis- cussing the possible bombing of Rome, declared pointedly that it would be to the interest of humanity "if Mussolini was to release that the best thing he can do for his country is to accept the unconditional sur- render terms offered him." The Axis propagandists, already proven wrong on their June 2 inva- sion forecast, stuck stubbornly to their newest prediction that Satur- day would see the beginning of the Allied attack, according to the Paris radio. Ste phan Faces Milan Gallowsv Friday at Dawn DETROIT, June 30.-(/P)---Unless President Roosevelt intervenes with eleventh hour commutation, 52 -year - old Max Stephan, convicted of trea- son for aiding the flight of a German flying officer from a Canadian pris- on camp, will die on the gallows be- fore dawn Friday at the Milan (Mich.) Federal Correctional Institu- tion. Twice granted stays of execution by the United States Supreme court in order that he might utilize all avenues of appeal, the German-born former Detroit restaurant owner has lived nearly eight months beyorf. the Nov. 13 date first set for the hang- 'ing. Three times the Supreme Court !has refused to review the case, ap- pealed from. Federal District Court, but Stephan's attorney, Nicholas Sal- , wich. expressed belief yet today Attack Is Attempt To Rent Communicatiolns ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN1 NORTH AFRICA, June 30.-{IP)- Striking from bases many hundreds of miles apart at targets separated by only six miles of water, British bombers from the North African and Middle East Commands have smash- ed heavily at the ferry connecting Sicily with the Italian mainland in an effort to destroy the island's com- munications and so substantially to isolate it in the event of invasion. Announcements today from this headquarters and from Cairo told of great damage worked in these twin raids, delivered Monday night at a cost of two Allied planes. This continued hammering of the Messina Strait was accompanied by a statement, jointly issued by the U. S. and British air forces, that the Allies had now thrown "a complete air umprella" over the Strait of Sicily and that the whole stretch of the Mediterranean from Gibraltar to Suez thus was being opened'to Allied shipping. Alexandria, it was added, had now been biought "within little more then 3,000 miles of England by compari- son with the 12.000-mile route around the cape by which our Middle East forces had formerly to be sup- lied-animmense saving of time, and shipping tonnage." In Monday night's two-sided at- tack on the Messina Strait, Welling- ton bombers from the northwest Af- rica force poured a heavy weight of, bombs on the ferry terminus and the railway at Messina itself while heavy bombers from the Middle East blast- ed at similar rail and ferry installa- tions at Reggio Calabria six miles across the Italian shore. No Free Dailys To Be Offered Coin plimentary Coies Will Not Be listrl)ute d To correct the prevalent opinion of students and faculty members Daily editors said yesterday that there will be no complimentary sub- scriptions of The Daily for the sum- mer term to either students or facul- f ty. It.has been the policy of the Uni- versity in previous summers to sub- sidize The Daily and distribute copies to the campus, This year, however, 'the circulation of the paper will de- pend on subscriptions only. Students will be on campus today and the rest of this week selling sub- scriptions. A special effort will be Y M HP rivpr, nr in; a, . ll Rpmr- By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, June 30. -- Con- ress, handing the Roosevelt Admin- stration another legislative setback, oday forbade use of subsidies to push own retail food prices and ordered he meat-butter price "roll back" nded by August 1. The action was taken in the face >f repeated declarations from high overnment officials, from President Roosevelt down, that without subsid- es it would be extremely difficult if not impossible to hold the line against inflation. CCC Ban Expected Consequently, some legislators an- ticipated that the President may veto the ban which was incorporated in legislation extending the life of the Commodity. Credit Corporation for two more years from midnight to- night and adding $750,000,000 to its present $2,650,000,000 lending powers. However, the measure was ap- proved in both Senate and House by far more than the two-thirds major- ity which would be necessary to over- ride a veto. The House vote was 160 to 32, and the Senate vote, 62 to 13. Some Anticipate Reluctance Other legislators suggested that Mr. Roosevelt might be reluctant to disapprove the measure since this would halt the agency's lending pr- grams to farmers and, for the time being at least, put it out of business. As finally sent to the White House, the prohibition against use of sub- sidies to lower food prices represented a compromise between differing bills approved previously by the -House and the Senate. Use of Subsidies Permitted Less restrictive than the original House measure, it permits continued use of subsidies-up to $150.000,000 -to meet increased transportation costs due to the war (now being paid on movement of oil to the East Coast and on coffee imports), and to promote production of critical metals and was essential foods. It also allows incentive payments on canning and specialty crops, price support for domestic vegetable oils and fats, and payments for sale of wheat for feeding purposes. Before final passage, a provision prohibiting government agencies from deducting farm benefit pay- menits in calculating agricultu al price ceilings was striken out. Ickes Tells Miners War Comes First WASHINGTON, June .-(/P- Secretary Ickes tonight told the Na- tions coal miners-particuarly that group which has riot yet returned to work-that America stands "on the eve of the greatest military campaign in history" and that "the complaints of no man or group of men can be placed above our military goal" He urged a full return to the pits telling the miners theirs was only one of numerous group grievances presented in Washington--"many of them justified"-and that "each of these special groups tends to overlook the major issue--the winning of the war--to the immediate interest of the particular, group." "It may be no comfort to the min- ers to know 'that others, too, are serv- ing their country under economic disabilities, but this is the fact," the custodian of the government-seized mines said, "All of us must continue to serve until the need passes, dis- ability or no disability economically." Cpl. Tiplady Is Wounded Cpl. James L. Tiplady, son of Mrs. Mame Tiplady of 601 Miller of this city, was reported today by the War Department to have been one of 86 Michigan soldiers wounded in the North African area. i 'BEFORE THE LEAVES OF AUTUMN FALL: Churchill Forecasts Greater Axis Destruction LONDON, June 30. --(P)- In a buoyant and cheering speech, Prime Minister Churchill today forecast thrusts this summer in the Mediter- ranean "and elsewhere," triumph- antly reported a toll of 30-odd U- boats in May alone, and warned the Germans of an air offensive of ever greater wrath and destruction. "Very probably there will be heavy fighting in the Mediterranean and elsewhere before the leaves of au- tumn fall," Britain's war leader and roaster phrase-maker told a victory- minded assembly in London's blitz- blackened Guidhall. Churchill Reviews War Churchill delivered a confident war review there after receiving the an- cient capital's highest token of ac- claim--the freedom of the city-and after a tour through streets of cheer- His war analysis repeated the Al- lied demand for "unconditional sur- ./.-. r :i fr.r I i ref Pacific" will be sent there to fight "as many years as are needed to make the Japanese in their turn sub- mit or bite the dust." Of invasion, he stated directly only the prediction of probable heavy fighting. U-Boat Attack Defeated Of the submarine war, he declared that in May the Nazis made a deter- mined effort to halt the Allied con- voy bridge from the United States to Britain, but that this vital battle "ended in the total defeat of the U-boat attack." "More than 30 U-boats were cer- tainly destroyed in May," and since mid-May "carecly a single merchant ship has been sunk in the whole of the North Atlantic," Churchill an- nounced. 'June Is Best Month' fare is held out to the Germans as their last great hope-these suc- cesses are bringing the Nazis "a somewhat raw and bleak outlook." As to the air, Churchill disclosed that the RAF alone has dropped 52,- 500 tons of bombs upon Germany in the first half of 1943, or 35 times the weight dropped by the Nazis upon Britain in the same period. German War Industry Attacked "During the summer our main at- tack has been upon the mainspring of German war industry-in the Ruhr-but as the nights become longer' and as the United States Air Forces becomes more numerous our strong arms will lengthen both by night and by day and there is no industrial or military target in Ger- - - - -1 .1 - 11 - - rn ni -Q .%17 May Change Addresses The Student Directory staff will ,;; , i