4v 4ijtr t gan 4 il #1 Weather warmer VOL. LIII No. 9 ANN ARBOR, 'MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 14, 1942 PRICE FIVE CENTS Borman Named Student Director Of 'U' Manpower Everything Is Set For All Coeds To Go Into Action U.S. Smashes Jap Forces * * In Solo10mons And Alaska Volunteers Will Register Tomorrow And Friday For Local War Work Executive Board To Aid Coordinator Marvin L. Borman, '44, was chosen to head thenewly-formed Manpower Mobilization Corps by the Student War Board yesterday. Borman immediately established tomorrow and Friday as registra- tion days for all male students in- terested in helping out with local war work, taking the first direct steps towards utilizing University manpower. Every Student Needed "Every student who feels that this war is his business and who is willing to work to help win it, is expected to sign up at one of the campus booths," Borman said yesterday. "It will be work, helping out on farms, collecting scrap, working for the Red Cross and the CDVO, and there will be no glory, or points, or big jobs to reward most of the stu- dents. But they will have the satisfac- tion of knowing that all their jobs are part of the big one that will win the war, that they are doing some- thing for their country. "There is a great and urgent need for apple pickers on nearby farms. Men are needed to harvest sugar beets, to help farmers chop wood so that they will have fuel for the win- ter, to collect the tremendous amount of scrap that is to be found on the campus. "There is work to be done with the under-staffed building and grounds department, in the University Hospi- tal, in fuel and gas rationing." In registering with the Manpower Mobilization Corps, each student will give his name, when he can work, the kind of work for which he is best suited, and will sign a pledge to fulfill his obligations when called upon. Executive Board An eight or ten-man executive board will be appointed to assist Borman, and all persons interested in serving on the board should re- port between 3 and 5 p. m. today in Room 1009 Angell Hall to be inter- view by him. Other local agencies are solidly be- hind the new Corps. The Washtenaw County Agriculture Defense Board called it "great", and emphasized the need for an agency to which they can appeal in time of need. The CDVO also is behind the move. Stressing the fact that the Corps is not a play or good-time agency. Bor- man stated, "This is an opportunity for students to work in a student in- itiated movement. It will give all of us a chance to do something that we should have done a long time ago at Michigan. Stamp Drive Rouses Greek Sales Rivalry Michigan sorority-women, led by Virginia Morse, '43, and the Pan-Hel- lenic Council, took their most aggres- sive war-time action late yesterday when they hurled a challenge to all campus fraternity men to out-do them in the Homecoming Stamp and Bond Drive. President John Fauver of the Inter- fraternity Council gladly accepted the sororities' invitation to competition and unhesitatingly forecast that Michigan's rush-minded fraternity men with their "smooth salesman- ship" would far outsell their feminine competitors. Begins Today The war bond and stamp contest begins today and will take the place of customary homecoming displays, in front of sorority fraternity houses. The house selling the greatest amount of bonds and stamps will receive a cup as well as a bond award. Next Monday has been set as the drive's Manpower Chief By BARBARA DEFRIES DAILY WOMEN'S EDITOR THIS is a frank appeal to the patriotism and common sense of every coed on this campus. You havc been told that the University of Michigan has lagged behind in its contribution to the war effort. You have been told that there is much to be done - much that must be done immediately. Finally the era of talk-action is over. The moment for immediate action from you is here. TECHNICAL ARRANGEMENTS are complete. Your applications for volunteer work at the University Hospital, where the shortage of help is particularly serious, will be accepted- at the League starting NOW. All sophomore women can help to relieve the Hospital shortage by participating in Sophomore Service. At 4 p.m. tomorrow there will be a mass meeting in the League for all sophomore women willing to put their spare time to work. Mrs. Kathryn Walsh, head of the volunteer service for the Hospital, will be there to explain the work' in 'detail. Because this is both necessary to the Nation, the University and is a sophomore project, every sophomore woman is under a triple obliga- tion to be at that meeting. Any other woman wanting to do the same sort of work may sign up in the League today and any sophomore who does not wish to wait until tomorrow may do the same. FORTY-FOUR PERSONS are now working in the Canteen Corps. One hundred -more are needed. The Motor Corps has sixty-two active members. Thirty more are needed. From July 1, 1941, to June 30, 1942, approximately 4,000 persons completed the Red Cross standard first aid course, but only 440 of this number were University students. This is not enough. There are thousands of bandages to be rolled from 9 a.m. to 12 and from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesdays and Wednesdays in the Rackham Building. A thorough job is not now being done. THESE THINGS and many more are what must be done by Univer- sity women. In the accompanying news story, each shortage, each vacancy, each opportunity for volunteer help is listed., We know that that "deep-down willingness to help" is just as powerful and consistent in University coeds as it is in the hearts of those University men now fighting on foreign soils. We believe it firmly. But it's up to YOU to prove it. Coed Volunteers oNeeded As 'U'Hosptal Worker"s By Air And Sea Onslaught 'I Meet Mary Borman . . Modest, energetic Mary Borman yesterday took over the most impor- tant student job on this campus- that of Manpower Director. In characteristic, hard - hitting fashion the 19-year-old junior swung into action not more than ten min- utes after hearing of his appointment. He immediately ordered campus reg- istration tomorrow and Friday of all male students interested in doing war work and announced that interviews would be held today for administra- tive positions in the new Manpower Corps. Borman resigned his position on the Union Executive Council-where he had made an outstanding record- so that .he might devote his full ener- gies to the mobilization of student workers. Member of Zeta Beta Tau and Phi Eta Sigma, honorary scholastic sooi- ety, and one-time chairman of the Frosh Frolic, he is enlisted in the Marine Corps Reserve. WLB Refuses, Pay Increase For Ford Men WASHINGTON, Oct. 13. -(P)- A demand from the CIO's United Auto- mobile Workers for a dollar-a-day in- crease in the pay of 115,000 employes of the Ford Motor Company was re- jected today by the National War Labor Board. The Board gave no reason for its action, but an official who asked that he not be quoted said the labor agency could find no justification for an increase because Ford workers were generally better paid than others in the automotive industry. The union had contended that the increase was necessary to offset ad- vances in the cost of living. The raise was sought in connection with nego- tiations for a new UAW-Ford con- tract to replace one expiring Oct. 31. Students To Wanted As Clerical, Clinical Replacements Release Professionals For War Work Hospital Service Student volunteers are needed in unlimited numbers at the University Hospital to work from 1:30 to 5:30 p.m. to fill in the many gaps in the personnel staff. Innumerable tasks such as clerical and hostess work in the various clin- ics, escorting of patients to (various departments, cleaning of instruments, care of flowers, and passing of trays -all can be accomplished by the vol- unteer worker, leaving the services of the professional worker free for a multitude of more urgent tasks. A training period of several weeks will initiate the volunteer worker to hospital ethics and routines, after which each person will be assigned to a definite station to be covered once a week at the times mentioned heretofore. The League is accepting applica- tions and all students are requested to apply through that organization. Civilian Defense Office The campus branch of the Civil- ians' Defense Volunteer Office lo- cated in the Student Offices at the League will welcome applications from girls trained in bookkeeping, typing and shorthand. These girls will be used in Civilian Defense offices. Girls who are interested in car- ing for children are also needed to assist in play groups formed for the care of children whose parents are employed in war plants. Proposed plans for gasoline ration- ing will probably include a call for services of University women to aid in the clerical work and to help dur- ing registration periods. Red Cross Red Cross on the Michigan cam- pus offers a great many fields in which University women can do an appreciable part in winning the war._ Perhaps the most urgent need at the present time is to relieve the strain in the Hospital personnel; and Nurse's Aides are qualified to take over a large part of the Hospital rou- tine. The University has cooperated with the Hospital to make this pro- gram a two hour credit course. Those interested are requested to call Miss Ethel McCormick, adviser to women on war training programs, at the League, as the first course Continued On Page 5, Col. 5 Pavlichenko Will Address Rally Friday Woman Sniper To Speak Of Battlefield Spirit At StudentMeeting "Every time my bullet fells a Nazi, I have the feeling that I have saved lives." In this way Soviet Lieut. Liudmila Pavlichenko, the woman sniper who killed 309 Germans, tells of the spirit of the battlefield, the spirit that will bring her to a huge United Nations war rally at 8 p. m. Friday in Hill Auditorium. Lieutenant Pavlichenko comes here on her mission of bringing unity be- tween the youth of the United Na- tions at the invitation of President Alexander G. Ruthven. Her visit will be sponsored by the Student War Board with the endorsement of the University War Board. At the rally to -honor this great wo- man soldier will be the Women's Rifle Corps, an American counterpart of the organization in which Lieutenant Pavlichenko received her initial train- ing. In addition the R. . T. C. and the N. R. O. T. C. will turn out in uni- form. The campus will respond to the idea of unity with a Declaration of Unity signed by campus leaders. It will be read at the rally. Representatives from 26 United Nations in all will be present on the platform. Twenty-four will be sent from the International Center. Lieutenant Pavlichenko will speak' for the fighting youth of the Soviet Union while Paul Lim-Yuen will rep- resent the youth of other United Na- tions. The Michigan Band will furnish music of the United Nations repre- sented at the huge rally which is ex- pected to be as large as that held shortly after the declaration of war. Lieutenant Pavlichenko's exploits have made her famous in both her native land and the other nations fighting fascism. Her job as sniper is one of the most dangerous in the ar- mies. Her work was fighting with men, against men, on one of the most ac- tive battlefields in the world. Lieuten- ant Pavlichenko went through the siege of the great naval base of Se- vastopol. In the devastated town, the action was some of the heaviest of the war. Bill To Outlaw Poll Tax OK'd In House Feud WASHINGTON, Oct. 13.- (P)- A measure outlawing the poll tax as a prerequisite for voting was passed overwhelmingly by the House late today after a bitter sectional fight centering around the issues of states' rights, the bill's constitutionality, and the vote for the negro. Fiercely but futilely, a southern bloc battled the measure down to the final 252 to 84 roll call vote which sent it on to the Senate, with Rep. The Inter - Racial Association, first University approved organiza- tion intended to eliminate discrim- ination against minority groups, will set up abooth on the diagonal tomorrow and Friday to circulate petitions in favor of the Geyer Bill. The petitions will be sent to the Senate. Colmer (D-Miss.) assailing his north- ern democratic colleagues for their "ingratitude" to the solid south. But, from the measure's supporters came the cry that the negro now is fighting for this country, that he is entitled to vote for its officials; that the legislation would carry this coun- try's message of democracy to op- pressed people the world over. Colmer declared that the bill's di- rect object was "to enfranchise the BRUSSELL UNGER Scrap For Uncle Sam * * * About 900 pounds of solid iron grat- ing from the living room of the Pi Lambda Phi fraternity house on Hili Street went the way of all scrap yes- terday as six of the brothers took off three hours to help out Uncle Sam. Inspired by articles in The Daily asking for scrap, the Pi Lambs took a good look around the house the other day and couldn't find anything they thought would help. But a couple of them used their imagination and announced that the grates must go. So yesterday afternoon six of the huskiest Pi Lambs got busy and piled the stuff in the front yard. Today they're going to call the scrap man to haul the iron away. Russians Gain As Battle Lulls For Stalingrad Mozdok, Black Sea Areas Carry Fiercest Battles; Key CitySiege Wanes By The Associated Press MOSCOW, Wednesday, Oct. 14.- German attacks on the Stalingrad front died down again today and the Soviet midnight communique said Red Army troops had recaptured a street given up the previous day and pushed the Germans back slightly in one sector northwest of the battered city. Beyond the isolated Soviet action in which the street was recaptured, the communique said, activity inside the rubble-strewn city again was confined to artillery after a one-day renewal of German assaults. Local Engagements Action northwest of Stalingrad also appeared to have been restricted to local engagements. The communique said one unit of elite guardsmen "pressed back the Germans some- what" in one engagement and in oth- er sectors the Russians "continued to defend their former positions" and "carried out reconnaissance raids." Fighting, however, continued heavy in the Mozdok area of the Caucasus and along the Black Sea. In the Mozdok area, the communi- que said, two battalions of German infantry, supported by tanks and air- craft, attacked Russian positions, but were hurled back to their original positions by fierce artillery and mor- tar fire after losing 300 men. Positions Improved Southeast of the German-occupied Black Sea base of Novorossiski, it said, Soviet marines repelled an en- emy attack and "improved their posi- tions." In this engagement two com- panies of enemy infantry were said to have been wiped out. Fighting also was renewed on the northwest front, between Moscow and Leningrad, where the Germans -Exit, One Gate! Enemy With Land 47 Nazis Bagged By MaltaScrappers By JOHN M. HIGHTOWERl Associated Press Correspondent WASHINGTON, Oct. 13.- From the tropic jungles of the Solomon Is- lands to the chill shores of the Aleu- tians, United States forces have dealt the Japanese enemy a terrific beating by land, sea and air in the last six days, it was revealed tonight. Three navy communiques gave this account of American onslaughts at both ends of the far-flung Pacific battle front: A task force of U.S. cruisers and destroyers waylaid an enemy force trying to land troop reinforcements on Guadalcanal Island in the Solo- mons Sunday night and sank one 10,000 ton heavy cruiser, four de- stroyers and a 5,000 ton transport. One unidentified U.S. destroyer was sunk. Six Ships Sunk Navy and marine corps torpedo planes and dive bombers, chasing the fleeing remnants of the enemy fleet next day, badly damaged at least one more cruiser and probably sank a de- stroyer. Total enemy ship losses for these sea and air actions were six ships sunk, one probably sunk and one damaged. Last week, on October 9, Marine Corps aircraft attacked two Jap light cruisers and four destroyers in the Solomons, damaged both cruisers and shot down three seaplanes. Meanwhile the enemy's seaplane base at Rekata Bay was strafed by Navy and Marine Corps planes. Eight Bombers Downed Two days later, October 11, Army, Navy and Marine Corps fighter planes intercepted a four-flight attack of 65 Jap bombers and fighters over Guad- alcanal, forced them to jettison their bombs in an open field and shot down eight bombers and four Zero fighters with a loss of only two U.S. planes. In the face of stiff resistance from the enemy's reinforced jungle troops American Marines had won new ad- vance positions west of their old de- fense lines around the all-important U.S. air field on the north coast of Guadalcanal. The positions were tak- en in two days of battling during which the enemy suffered many cas- ualties. In the Aleutians the Army's four- engined Flying Fortress and Liberator bombers showered incendiary and de- molition bombs on the Jap base at Kiska Island October 8, 9 and 10., The box score of comparative losses reported in today's communiques stood as follows: Losses Compared Japanese: One heavy cruiser sunk, one bad- ly damaged, one light cruiser bad- ly damaged and one slightly dam- aged; four destroyers sunk and one probably sunk; one medium sized transport sunk. Total 10 ships. Also eight bombers, four fighter planes and three seaplanes shot down. Total 15 planes. These losses, all in the Solomons, raised the enemy's ship casualties for the Solomons campaign so far,. to eight sunk, three probably sunk and 37 damaged, and his plane losses to 260. In addition there is the incalcul- able and cumulative damage of fires and explosions among shore installa- tions. American: One destroyer sunk. Two U.S. fight- er planes lost. These losses, all in the Solomons, raised known American ship cas- ualties for the campaign to 10 ves- sels sunk, including the three hea- vy cruisers, Vincennes, Astoria and Quincy, loss of which was announc- ed by the Navy Department yester- day. The total of American plane losses in the Solomons has not been announced but is known to be much smaller than that of the enemy. Navy Is Battered Six Ships Sunk; Bases Are Strafed Congress In High Gear As FDR/ Plans Draft For 'Teen-Age Boys By WILLIAM F. ARBOGAST Associated Press Staff Writer WASHINGTON, Oct. 13.- (P)- With speed reminiscent of that with which it declared war last December on Germany, Italy and Japan, Con- gress went into high gear today to put 18 and 19-year-old boys into Ar- my uniforms. Responding to President Roose- velt's Fireside Chat, and to an appeal by Secretary of War Stimson that it help build up "with the minimum de- lay the' finest army in the world," Congressional leaders disclosed plans to rush to House passage this week legislation lowering the draft age from 20 years to 18. Announcing plans for hearings to- morrow and Thursday and a house vote Friday or Saturday, Chairman May (D-Ky.) of the House Military Committee said the legislation to be considered would provide that 'teen- sooner. For his part, he said, he was ready to vote tomorrow. Some Senators, notably Vanden- berg (R-Mich.), said there was con- siderable "public anxiety" over re- ports that the Army might be built up to ten to thirteen million men and expressed hope that the hearings would bring out "as clear a prospectus as possible" of eventual military needs. May said that witnesses before the House Committee would include Maj. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, Selective Ser- vice Director; Secretary Stimson, and possibly General George C. Marshall, Chief of Staff. Two days, possibly with night ses- President Decries Use Of Manpower WARHNOTON. Oct. 13.- (P)- sions, should be ample time in which to hear their views, May said, adding that the hearings would be closed ex- cept for that part of the testimony "which the public can be permitted to hear." Stimson's Letter In a letter to the House Committee, Secretary Stimson said: "Members of the 18 and 19 age groups are peculiarly well adapted to military training. This is a military axiom. Their response to leadership, their recovery from fatigue, their en- thusiasm or 'flair for soldiering,' are exceptional as compared with older age groups. The simple fact is, they are better soldiers and never before in its history has the American nation more urgently needed exceptional sol- diers." Along this line, committee members said Army statistics showed that a high percentage of all cases in base 47 By Nazis Bagged Malta Scrap pers CAIRO, Oct. 13.-(P)--Malta's de- fenders bagged eight more Nazi planes today, bringing a three-day total to 47 definitely destroyed and