America at war! (1941--) -- Part 2

Rubber strike halts output in Akron area

52,000 defy WLB order and union officials; tank lines halt
By the United Press

Babies also get break –
Ceilings put on 22 foods

Jams, jellies and preserves also on list

World War I widow loses sergeant son

Bedford, Massachusetts (UP) – (May 22)
Mrs. Sarah Foster, whose husband was killed in World War I, received word today that her son, Marshall, 30, a staff sergeant in the Army Air Forces, was one of five soldiers killed Thursday in an airplane crash at Rapid City, South Dakota.

AFL committee to study Lewis unity petition

Tobin, Harrison and Woll, of executive council, are named

Labor on spot in Congress, CIO is warned

Unions likely to be caught in ‘pincer movement,’ La Follette says

Dies sees end of his group’s probe of Reds

Comintern’s action kills need for legislation, Congressman says

New vessel to be named for heroic Navy Negro


Capt. Foss pins medal on fellow Marine hero

Superbomber will attack U.S. enemies

New ‘secret weapon’ goes into production next year

‘Big inch’ break to be bypassed by 8-mile loop

Oil flow to East expected to be resumed by June 1

Night planes took parts to Guadalcanal

Navy reveals how Marines patched aircraft under fire
By B. J. McQuaid

Chapel for fighter pilots in Guinea built by priest

By George Weller

Tax conferees still tied up on compromise

Monday’s session may be last attempt to draft bill

Navy salvages all but 5 of Pearl Harbor warships

Even Oklahoma, believed destroyed, has now been righted
By Frank Tremaine, United Press staff writer

Profiteering plant owners facing trial

U.S. may prosecute them on basis of Truman investigations

82-year-old widow of President Taft dies in Washington

Son Charles was only child at her beside when end came; burial will be made in Arlington Cemetery

Axis to be denied a breathing spell before blow falls

Incessant air attacks to keep Nazis on jump while Tunisian armies ‘toll up’ for coordinated assault
By Carroll Binder, foreign editor of The Chicago Daily News

Yanks bombers blast path into new pronunciations

Italian names found easy enough to say for those who study a few simple rules

Two million more women in war jobs

WMC report female labor force past 15 million

Banning of pleasure driving on nationwide scale seen

Action expected because of steady deterioration in oil supplies on East Coast

New York sees end of season

And the fadeout is not exactly brilliant!
By Jack Gaver, United Press drama editor