it 4)aitli Weather 0 Light Rain VOL. LII No. 10 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, OCT. 15, 1942 PRICE FIVE CENTS Manpower I Sudden Jap Registration To- Begin Today; Thrust Endangers Solomons Marines, Navy Resist Strong Jap Landings On Solomons Allied Ground Offensive Digs In On Guadalcanal; Nipponese Press Ahead In Face OfHeavy Fie Fierce Battle Seen For Strategic Isles By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Oct. 14.- The Japanese landed heavy reinforce- ments on Guadalcanal Island in the Solomons early today, and indica- tions tonight were that a major bat- tle was impending, if not actually be- gun, between the strengthened enemy and the Marines spearheading the American offensive in the Southwest Pacific. Announcement of the- enemy land- ings was made by the Navy Depart- ment tonight in a special communi- que based on reports received up to 7:30 p. m., Eastern War Time. The communique also reported that Japanese warships had bombarded the American airfield and shore in- stallations on the strategic island two nights before the landings were un- dertaken. Successful Operations These bold operations were carried out successfully by the determined enemy despite the fact that only last week-end a U.S. cruiser-destroyer task force had repelled a landing at- tempt and smashed eight Jap ships while Marines had fought forward to advanced positions on the edge of the northernmost section of the Is- land where the enemy troops are con- centrated. The latest landings were made on the coast of this same section. Whe- ther they were opposed by U.S. Army, Navy and Marine aircraft stationed on Guadalcanal was not stated in the communique. No Engagement Neither was there any mention of the Japanese surface vessels having been engaged by American ships dur- ing their bombardment. The seriousness with which the Navy viewed the enemy's latest man- euvers was emphasized by the speed with which they were announced. Al- most invariably in the past activities in the Solomons have not been dis- closed until at least two or three days after they occurred. Moreover, the Japanese activities of themselves contained a grim new significance not heretofore attached to their movements in the Southwest Pacific Archipelago. Macek Leads Croat Rebels Against Nazis BERN, Switzerland, Oct. 14.-(P)- Followers of Dr. Vladimir Macek, Croatian peasant leader, have revolt- ed against the government of Dr. Ante Pavelic and fighting is now rag- ing in the Nazi-created state of Croa- tia, Yugoslav circles said tonight. An army of about 4,000 peasants was said to be attacking the khaki- uniformed Ustachi, the militia which Pavelic developed from the handful of Fascist-inclined Croatians whom he trained while in exile in Italy. They are fighting independently of the insurgent forces which General Draja Mihailovic has been leading in the Yugoslav mountains since the capitulation of the Yugoslav Army in April, 1941. Yugoslav circles here said 46 trains were derailed in Croatia during the month of September and that Ger- man troops now are guarding the en- tire length of the Zagreb-Belgrade Railroad. Willkie Confirms Stand On Allied Second Front Conversation With Roosevelt Does Of 'Needless Delay' By United Not Alter Opinion Nations Forces f n v By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Oct. 14.- Back from his globe-girdling tour, Wen- dell L. Willkie conferred with Pres- ident Roosevelt tonight and emerg- ed from the White House still stick- ing to his stand that there had been needless delay in opening a second front. Although he said that in his judgment "Germany will never conquer Russia," he hammered away again at the second front theme in a session with reporters. Asked whether he thought there had been "needless delay," he said that was the conclusion that might be drawn from what he said at Moscow and what he was saying tonight. Clad in a battered hat and a blue suit plainly showing the effects of his 31,000-mile journey, Willkie announced in a formal statement that he would now devote himself to "making careful, crystal-clear reports to the American people." "How long that will take I don't know," he continued. "I do know- because I have found out at first hand-that a lot of us, including public officials, are going to have to stretch our muscles and our minds before we win." "Now, on a second front,"lhe went on, "you understand I talked to military men all over the world, in Egypt, all the countries in the Middle East, with Russian, Amer- ican, British and Chinese generals before I made my suggestion on a second front. May I say without boast that I have had considerable WENDELL WILLKIE experience in judging' recommen- dations of technical men. "I applied my judgment to the various opinions of the experts." Most of the leaders of govern- ments of the United Nations, Will- kie said, followed a similar proced- ure in determining courses of ac- tion. That was what he did in reaching a decision that a second front "is feasible and possible." Uncle Sam Wants You! Youth Draft BillSpeeded St alingrad Withdrawal Is Reported Russian 'Feeler Initiative' Growing In Caucasus; Nazi Assaults Stopped Dispatches Tell Of Red Successes The United Press, quoting front dispatches from Moscow, said last night that Nazi siege troops have started to withdraw from Stalingrad, leaving the streets "a vast cemetery" of their own dead, and the Russians, driving hard on their heels, have re- captured several districts of the city, more steppe land to the northwest and a strategic base to the south. The Russians were still developing a "feeler initiative" in and around Stalingrad and down in the Caucasus, moving forward in key sectors and hurling back counter-assaults by the Nazis, the United Press said. According to a report by the news- paper Pravda, the.United Press said, the charred slopes of the Stalingrad factory zone were one huge Nazi graveyard, littered with hundreds of dead. Navy Report s Sinkin Five Jap'asy By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Oct. 14.- Amer- ican submarines operating in Japan- ese dominated waters of the Western Pacific have sunk an enemy heavy cruiser and four other vessels and damaged three more, one of which probably sank, the Navy reported to- day. Disclosure of the undersea succes- ses raised the total of enemy ship casualties officially announced in two days to 18, of which 11 ships were sunk, two probably sunk and five damaged. Thosedsunk included two heavy cruisers, destruction of which at least partially avenged the loss of three American heavy cruisers announced by the Navy three days ago as having been sunk at the outset of the Solo- mon Islands campaign in August. The recent record occasioned con- siderable satisfaction in naval quar- ters here on the ground that such at- trition of Japan's naval strength must inevitably increase the enemy's diffi- culties in maintaining his extended supply line while projecting his bases scattered over the central, western and southwestern- Pacific. Clement Rites Will Be Held Funeral services for Forney W. Clement, secretary-treasurer of the Michigan district of Kiwanis Inter- national for the past 12 years, will be held at 1:30 p. m. tomorrow in the First Baptist Church with Rev. C. H. Loucks, pastor, officiating. Mr. Clement was 61 years old. He died of a heart attack at his desk in the First National building yesterday morning. He graduated from the Uni- versity in 1905 and returned to .live in Ann Arbor in 1928. Mr. Clement is survived by his wife Edna and daugh- ter, Joan, who is a senior in the art school. Inter-Racial Group To Sponsor Petition A petition favoring the passage of the Pepper-Geyer Anti-Poll Tax Bill will be circulated on campus today and tomorrow by the Inter-Racial Soviet Woman Sniper To Speak Tomorrow Lieut. Liudmila Pavlichenko, Russian War Heroine, Will Address Huge United Nations Rally Here Lieut. Liudmila Pavlichenko carved a career for herself in the Russian Army by doing the most dangerous kind of work-that of a sniper. The famous woman soldier comes here to speak at a huge United Nations war rally at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Hill Auditorium with a record of 309 dead Nazis behind her. v Lieutenant Pavlichenko comes from the battlefields to spread un- ity among the youth of the United Nations, to impart the feelings of Soviet youth to its allies. At the rally, the ROTC and the NROTC will turn out in uniform ~ to honor the Soviet heroine. An; American counterpart of the Rus- sian civilian defense unit in which3 she received her training, the Wo- men's Rifle Corps, will also be present. A Declaration of Unity signed by campus leaders will be read at the rally. The Michigan band will play patriotic music. Twenty-four representatives of the United Nations sent by the In- ternational Center Will be present on the platform.rPaul Lim-Yuen will speak for them. Lieutenant Pavlichenko's tre- mendous record was built up in some of the most fierce fighting on the Russian front. She went through the siege of the great naval LIUDMILA PAVLICHENKO base, Sevastopol, carrying tout her mission of sniper. brings her on her tour of the United At one time during her fighting States, attempting to unify the youth career, Lieutenant Pavli chenko and an enemy sniper hunted each other of the Soviet Union's allies as the for two days, -each- watching the youth of her own country are unified. other's slightest movement. Shots were traded back and forth until the German exposed himself and was B on killed. d From her hair-raising escapes froma death, from her work on the battle- line, Lieutenant Pavlichenko knows the spirit of her brothers-in-arms as A few men do. It is that spirit that Volunteer Workers Will_1Sign Top-Man Borman Asks Student Cooperation To Aid In War Effort Big New Project Rolls Into Action The Manpower Mobilization Corps, greatest campus project of the entire war, starts its drive toward the use of student labor with the registration today and tomorrow of all University men who will volunteer to do local war work. According to Mary Borman, top man on campus in the new setup, "This will bring the jobs that must be done to the students who want to do them." "There is plenty of work around here for people who really feel that this is their war, and after we get going, every person on campus will be offered a . crack at helping out on Register Here . . In front of the Library, West Quad, East Quad, front of Alumni Memorial Hall, lobby of Angel Hall Arch or lobby of West Engineering Building, depending on the weath- er. farms, collecting scrap, helping with registering for fuel and gasoline ra- tioning, or doing any one of the many tasks which must be accomplished if we are to win the war." Emphasizing that this is a student initiated program, Borman stated that, "This is our chance to show that we are alive to our responsibilities, and the enrollment of every man on campus will.show that we intend to fulfill them." Every person registering for the Manpower Corps, will give his name, address, the times at which he can work, and the kind of jobs he is in- terested in doing. He will sign a pledge promising to work when called upon. Interviews for members of the executive board will be held again from 3 to 5p. m. today 'in Room 1009 Angell Hall, with the selection being made today or tomorrow. According to Borman, an adminis- trative staff will be chosen from the registrants. Borman pointed out that there are many jobs which we can do. "The Washtenaw County Agriculture De- fense Board, which is in favor of our agency, has told me that if apples around here are not picked soon they will be spoiled by colder weather. There is a sugar beet crop to be har- vested, and farmers have not had the time or been able to get the labor to chop enough wood for their winter fuel supply." Alan R. Booth, Youth Leader, To TalkToday. Alan R. Booth, general secretary of the International Strident Service for Great Britain and Ireland, will dis- cuss the role of English students in wartime at 7:30 p. m. today in Lane Hall. The progran is co-sponsored by Inter-Guild, the Hillel Foundation and the Newman Club. Mr. Booth has been a leader of English youth groups since the out- break uf the war. He was educated in Ireland during the period of revolu- tion and civil war there and has trav- eled throughout India, visiting col- leges -in most of the important cities. By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Oct. 14.- Speed- ing hearings on the bill to draft 18 and 19-year-olds, Congress heard the American high command disclose plans today to begin calling up these youths in December, to weed out pres- ent soldiers considered incapable of carrying the terrific burden of mod- ern war, and to raise the Army's total strength to 7,500,000 men in 1943. It was also disclosed that Selective Service plans to call up 100,000 men with dependent wives next month, but hopes, if the new bill to draft youths is passed, to put off drafting married men with children until late in 1943. From Secretary of War Stimson, from General George C. Marshall, Chief of Staff, and from Admiral Ernest J. King, fleet commander-in- chief, came urgent appeals to Senate and House committees to approve the new draft bill quickly. It was Stimson who revealed the 7,500,000 man goal, which compares with an Army of 4,250,000 men at present and which would be almost twice the size of the Army at the end of World War No. 1. General Marshall told the Senate Military Committee the Army would send home men considered physically unfit, and was investigating the pos- sibility of releasing numbers of older men when the youths enter the ser- vice. The average age of the combat army, he warned, "has risen to a point not at all acceptable to the War Department." Enlistments Rise . . Teen-agers are crowding recruiting stations in most sections of the na- tion, a survey disclosed last night. The recruiting tempo went up mark- edly as plans were speeded in Wash- ington for drafting 18 and 19-year- olds. The upswing in enlistments was experienced mostly in Army recruit- ing offices. Navy authorities said the bulk of their enlistments normally were in the teen-age group. At Detroit, Army recruiting had swelled so by yesterday that Lieut. Col. Joseph L. Bachus, recruiting chief, added two rooms to the office and referred inquiries to a special staff of recruiting officers. OPA Reveals Plans To Buy Excess Tires Effort To Form National Stockpile To Be Backed By Defense Corporation WASHINGTON, Oct. 14.-(A)-The government will begin purchasing motorists' "excess" tires tomorrow in an effort to create a huge national stockpile to keep America rolling. Details of the purchase 'plan were announced today by the Office of Price Administration in connection with nation-wide gasoline rationing which limits each private car to five tires. The Defense Supplies Corporation has advanced $150,000,000 to finance the program, and designated 160 warehouses throughout the country as delivery points. The Railway Ex- press Company will collect the tires and transport them to the warehous- es. While gasoline rationing puts a limit only on the number of tires for each car, DSC also will purchase tubes which motorists desire to sell. Climaxing the second day of blood bank enrollments with 127 students already registered, Bud Brandt, '44, chairman of the student committee in charge, exhibited confidence today of a successful campaign. Three campus organizations are co- operating with the American Red Cross in this campaign to enlist the services of as many able bodied Michigan students as possible in this semester's blood bank. The Michigan League, the Michigan Union, and the Interfraternity Council are behind the drive. Registration will continue this af- ternoon and every afternoon this week at the defense booth on the cor- ner of State and North University and in the lobby of the Michigan Un- ion. The student committee in charge has pledged 125 pints of blood per month. Blood will be taken on Oct. 21, Nov. 20, and Dec. 8 and 9. All students who have not signed up are urged to do so immediately since a large waiting list is desired to insure smooth operations for the Red Cross when they arrive on campus. Student Identification cards will be given out in Room 2, University Hall beginning today. These cards must be presented at the gate for the football game on Oct. 17 and for all games thereafter. Sorority Women Lead Men In War Stamp Sales Contest By BUD BRIMMER Aggressive campus sorority women yesterday had a slight edge on over- confident fraternity men in the Homecoming War Stamp and Bond competition when they reported that all the sororities had secured $25 worth of war stamps apiece and were planning to return for more soon. While Virginia Morse, '43, president of Pan-Hellenic Council, announced this 100 per cent sorority coverage, the Inter-fraternity Council reported that only 23 out of Michigan's 37 fraternities had asked for their stamp fraternities' slow start in this contest to sell the most bonds and stamps during homecoming week by point- ing out that fraternity super-sales- men were "just giving the women a fair chance." The contest will end Monday. Page also announced that Miss Ruth Ann Oakes, Burr-Patterson, Auld Co. representative here, has of- fered a first prize loving cup to the house selling the greatest number of bonds and stamps. F. E. Benz, chair- man of the Ann Arbor War Bond Committee, also offered two addition- al trnhies One will be given to the Local CDYO Places Hundreds, Chairman Reports To Council Tabulations of the manpower re- cruited to date by the placement di- vision of the Ann Arbor Civilian De- fense Volunteer Office were submit- ted to the City Defense Council yes- terday by Mrs. Theophile Raphael, chairman of the local volunteer of- fice. Declaring that the local placement division of the CDVO "is doing a tre- mendous job of war service in Ann through the local rationing board. In a few weeks a great number of persons with specialized abilities will be signed up to register applicants for fuel oil and gas ration cards. Over 600 people were employed by the vol- unteer office to register housewives who asked for canning sugar in July. Hundreds of small assignments have also been undertaken by the CDVO in the field of special war ser-