t QtU alit; Weather Somewhat Warmer VOL. LI No. 14 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, OCT. 20, 1942 PRICE FIVE CENTS Faculty Backs Regents' New War Policy _ ., I. . CU French Mass Large Forces Against Laval Underground Movement Threatens Throughout Conquered Countries Troubles Increase For Nazi Troops By The Associated Press LONDON, Oct. 19.- A vast under- ground army numbering upward of 2,000,000 Frenchmen is poised for mass revolt against Pierre Laval's program of forced labor for the Ger- mans, a fighting French spokesman said tonight as reports of mutinies, desertions and suicides among Hitler's own troops in Norway were added to accounts of spreading unrest in con- quered Europe. Laval ethqr must back down on his plan to conscript 150,000 skilled work- ers for the Nazis or be thrown out of office on a wave of revolt, the French spokesman predicted. If he does back down, this source added, the Germans themselves might oust the Vichy gov- ernment chief. Trouble In Norway With the critical French situation boiling toward a showdown, this was the picture elsewhere in Nazi-con- quered lands, as drawn by dispatches from the continent and statements from governments-in-exile here: Norway: mounting defections among the 200,000 Nazi occupation troops, resulting from the severe cli- mate, virtually no home leaves, fears of being sent to the Russian front and the hostility of 98 per cent of the Norwegian people. An authoritative Norwegian in- formant said that 1,000 Germans sta- tioned north of Kirkenes rebelled at an order transferring them to Russia and that one out of every ten was ordered shot, but that Nazi firing squads refused to shoot their com- rades and the garrison was sent to concentration camps instead. Belgium Belgium: spurred by fears of an allied invasion and by increasing sab- otage, the Germans were reported to have erected barbed wire barriers around all gasoline dumps and living quarters of the Nazi army of occupa- tion. The Belgian news agency said the Germans also requisitioned an addi- tional 1,000 locomotives, 16,000 cars and 625 miles of track. Carlos Romulo Here Thursday MacArthur's Aide-de-Camp Will Start Lectures As the first of eight platform per- sonalities who have made history in the past 12 months, the Oratorical Association will present Lt. Col. Car- los P. Romulo, aide-de-camp to Gen- eral MacArthur, in the initial per- formance o the 1942-43 Lecture Sea- son at 8:15 p. m. Thursday in Hill Auditorium. Introduced by Col. William A. Gan- oe, head of the University ROTC unit, Romulo will describe the heroic struggles of the Filipino and Amer- ican soldiers on Bataan in the last days before the surrender. From first hand information he will strive to impress upon the hearts and minds of Americans here at home the full sig- nificance of their dying. Before the war, Romulo was owner of four newspapers and two radio stations in the Philippines and was winner of the. Pulitzer Prize for the best foreign correspondence of 1941- the first time this coveted award has ever gone to a non-American journal- ist. NOTICES Tryouts for the Michiganensian and Student Directory business staff will meet at 4:15 p. m. today. Sophomore men and second- semester freshmen are especially urged to come out for the staff. Ben Douglas, Business Manager Don Cossacks 'I Open Series Here Today Ruthven Approves Petition Launched By Own Critics By WILL SAPP Daily City Editor A thinly-veiled criticism of President Alexander G. Ruthven's war policies" to date was circulated briskly in petition form yesterday among University faculty members-and in a surprising and unlooked-for move the President himself affixed his signature to a copy which was taken to his office by a non-faculty University official. The man who took the statement to Dr. Ruthven's office told The Daily last night that he "borrowed" the copy from the unattended office of a University professor to show it to the President. Ruthven immediately signed it. "I'm in hearty accord with the sentiments of the petition," Ruthven said. "Any loyal American would be glad to sign it." The petition, which bore only Dr. Ruthven's signature, was hastily returned, the man said. In part, the statement said: " The University is irrevocably in the war and defeatist statements about the University and the war are out- SERGE JAROFF . * * * The Choral Union will open its 64th annual season at 8:30 p. m. to- day in Hill Auditorium when Serge Jaroff leads the.Don Cossack Chorus in a concert of Russian folk music. The Cossacks, whose repertory con- sists of more than 200 songs of the church, campfire and battlefield, will return to Ann Arbor in a program of music ranging from the simplicity of Bach's 'Ave Maria' to the fiery tongue- twisters of Kastalsky, Lvov- sky and Tchesnokoff. According to Jaroff, the Cossacks uphold the Russian folk tradition of having a song for every moment in' life. "Our people live to a musical 'ac- companiment from cradle to grave. Through love, marriage, work, sorrow and joy, a song complements every occasion," he says. The Chorus, which Deems Taylor called "the best I ever heard or hope to hear". starts the first of ten con- certs of the 1942-43 series. Other artists scheduled to appear this sea- son include Gladys Swarthout, Jascha Heifetz, the Boston Sym--,hony Or- chestra, Artur Schnabel, Nelson Eddy and others. Prof. Edward Mill Marks Importance Of IslandOutposts Emphasizing the importance of the position of the island outposts of the Pacific, Professor Edward W. Mill last night stressed the need for keeping open the line of supplies at the term's second meeting of the Michigan Nav- al Affairs Club. One of the most vital factors of the problems in this area is that the Jap- anese are in close proximity to their home bases, while the United States has to send men and supplies across the entire ocean. In the discussion following the lec- ture questions were mentioned re- garding the possibilities of the route taken by Jimmy Doolittle, conflicts between the Russians and Japanese, the importance of Singapore, and a comparison of the American and Japanese fleets. Next week's meeting, which is open to all students interested in the con- duct of the war, will feature an analy- sis of the American fleet and recent important battles. worn, unrealistic, and hamper the0 victory drive. "The undersigned.. . wish to go on record as wholeheartedly in support of the constructive policy of 'win the war leadership' announced by the Board of Regents." Prof. Arthur S. Aiton, who identi- fied himself with "an informal group of professors who drew up the peti- tion," said that approximately 150 of the 800-odd faculty members had al- ready signed the petition. Few Refusals "The petition is going fairly lively, there have been very few refusals," he said. Asked if the petition was a veiled repudiation of Dr. Ruthven's "war policies" and especially his much- discussed speech to the incoming freshmen on Sept. 28, Aiton replied: "The petition should be read in the light of the Regents' action of Satur- day. You can be sure that whatever inspired the action of the Regents also inspired our action." "In fact," Aiton said, "we were working on the petition before the Regents' action was announced. They just beat us to it." Prof. Aiton said that the petitions would be submitted to the Regents "soon". The informal committee which drew up the statement said late last night that they were both pleased and surprised that the president saw fit to "shift his position." Meanwhile, in Detroit, the three members of a new, unprecedented Regential committee on "war policy," announced that they would call upon Dr. Ruthven for an immediate inven- tory on all University facilities and manpower that could be put to "fuller use for the war." Regents Alfred B. Connable, of Ann Arbor, and John Lynch and David H. Crowley, of Detroit, met in Lynch's office in the Penobscot Building and issued the following statement: "The Regents' War Committee has held its first meeting and has re- quested of the University officials a complete statement of the efforts of the University to date to cooperate in the war effort. This we believe to be the first essential step in our work. "When the required information has been received, our committee will be in a position to analyze the acts to date and make proper recommenda- tions to the Board of Regents. The work will be continued and the results will from time to time be announced in Ann Arbor." Connable was elected chairman and Lynch secretary of the new War Committee which was appointed by the Regents after a stormy four-hour meeting Friday. In the course of the session some phases of the Univers- ity's "war attitude" were bitterly assailed, and the committee was tcre- ated by a unanimous vote to "coun- sel" with Dr. Ruthven and the Uni- versity War Board. A STATEMENT FROM THE FACULTY The undersigned, members of the faculties of the University of Mich- igan, long mindful of the need to build student morale and confi- dence for the war effort, and of the complete failure to give the Uni- versity an orientation toward the complete cooperation demanded, wish to go on record as whole- heartedly in support of the con- structive policy of "win the war" leadership announced by the Board of Regents. The University is irrev- ocably in the war and defeatist statements about the University and the war are outworn, unreal- istic, and hamper the victory drive. Nothing else matters now or is of any importance save the positive and total prosecution of this con- flict. Freedom of education, the right to seek the truth and to pub- lish it, even the University itself, as an institution, will perish if the cause of the United Nations is lost. Warr guilt and the responsibility for a criminal assault on civiliza- tion are clear and unequivocal. None of us, faculty, students, or the last least American or ally to the ends of the earth desired this holocaust. It was thrust upon us. The forces of evil, embodied in the Axis, if triumphant, would destroy our great cultural heritage and re- duce us to slavery. The stakes are great and worth fighting for, be one young or old, since even life, with- out the great freedoms of democ- racy, would be meaningless and intolerable. In recognition of this, and of the responsibility which goes with the privilege of higher educa- tion, we, who seldom speak as a group, and whose opinions are in- adequately represented, pledge our- selves and our influence, without stint, to the great task which lies ahead and dare to hope: 1. That our skills, knowledge and training, as well as the full re- sources of our University, will be completely utilized in the mobiliza- tion for victory. 2. That the University, its staff, and its students, will respond unan- imously to the clear call of duty and enthusiastically support those loyal sons and daughters of our Alma Mater now on the farflung battlefields of the world, at what- ever cost or sacrifice, aware that we at home make the lesser con- tribution. 3. That complete support of the war will make certain our oppor- tunity to help rebuild the Post-War World. 4. That as those who have ac- complished the task at hand to the limit of our strength, we may, as participants in the struggle, and not as mere onlookers, be prepared for an intelligent ordering of the better society of the future. 'Al -American' The Michigan Daily was notified yesterday that it had been award- ed top honors in the nation-wide Associated Collegiate Press con- test, and had again been rated as "All-American Pacemaker." At the end of a score card which gave The Daily 1040 points out of a possible 1100 was a judges' note saying, "Your paper is tops in ev- ery respect-with excellent cover- age of world as well as school news. Congratulations on a fine Russians Hold As Stalingrad Battle Grows More Intense Fighting In Factory Area Continues In Northwest; Reds Claim Destruction Of Two Nazi Battalions' By The Associated Press MOSCOW, Tuesday, Oct. 20.- The great Battle ofStalingradraged on around a factory stronghold in the northern part of the battered city Monday, but the Russians said today that all German attacks were repelled after the Red Army had yielded one block of wrecked buildings during the preceding night. The Soviet midnight communique said the Germans continued to launch "fierce" tank and infantry attacks in a desperate effort to take the Volga city, and that "fighting was particu- larly stubborn in the area of one fac- tory," but indicated that there had been no change in the general situa- tion. Equipment Destroyed "Our troops in the course of the day," the communique said of the action in the factory area, "beat off' all enemy attacks here, and destroyed eight tanks and wiped out about two battalions of enemy infantry. "In one sector 18 German tanks were destroyed and 400 men were killed." Northwest of Stalingrad Russian troops consolidated their positions and repelled a number of enemy at- tacks. Rumanian troops tried desperately to capture a strategic hill, the com- munique said, but were thrown back after losing 150 men. On another sec- tor the enemy lost about a company of troops, it added. Heavy fighting also continued far- ther south in the Caucasus, both along the lack Sea southeast of Novorossisk and in the Mozdok area where the Germans. were trying to reach the Grozny oil fields. Smile, Podner -- It's Tradition The Steuben Guards of Comp'ny E -the roughest, toughest gang of fighters who ever wore the uniform of the Blue-stepped out of dusty Civil War history books today and officially moved into the barracks in the basement of the East Quad For the 40 gents who are making their home in regular Army-style barracks there this fall have taken over that illustrious name. And they've got a tradition to live up to. Back in the old days, the Steuben Guards of Comp'ny E used to makeit a habit to turn up where the fight- ing was thickest. They fought their way from Mechanicsville to Antietam and got in the hair of the Gray so often that the Southerners shortened two words into "damyankee," the saying goes. Yesterday the Clements Library presented a plaque that was designed by Hans Anderson to the gentlemen in the basement of the East Quad. Today the campus will recognize the barrack-men as Steuben Guards -or smile. There's a tradition in- volved. A mendment On Vote Age In Advanced Vandenberg's Proposal To Be Put To Debate In Congress Soon By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Oct. 19.-The Sen- ate received today a proposed consti- tutional amendment to lower the vot- ing age from 21 to 18 as it decided to begin debate Thursday on House- approved legislation to subject 18 and 19-year-old men to the military draft. Introducing the proposed amend- ment, Senator Vandenberg (R-Mich.) declared that his purpose was to give the privilege of the ballot to men who would be inducted into the fighting forces under the pending bill. The amendment would require ratification by three-fourths of the states, after approval by Congress, before it couldI become effective. Vandenberg Favors It "If young men of 18 are to be draft-t ed to fight for their country," Van- denberg declared, "they should be able to vote for the kind of govern-{ ment the country is to have." Democratic Leader Barkley of Ken-I tucky said he had agreed with Repub- lican Leader McNary of Oregon that debate on the Draft Bill would not start until Thursday. McNary said aI number of senators had been out ofi town on the understanding that no legislation of importance would be1 taken up immediately.t Little OppositionI Barkley -told reporters he expectedF little opposition to the bill, adding{ that the administration's attitude to-t ward some proposed amendments hadt not yet been determined. These in- cluded a proposal by Senator Lee (D- Okla.) to ban the sale of liquor in military camp areas and authorize the Secretary of War to act to combatE vice conditions in the vicinity of Army and Navy posts. In formally reporting the Draft measure to the Senate, the Military Committee said it was profoundly im- pressed by the testimony of military leaders that "not only the success of our armed forces depends upon- the employment of our 18 and 19-year- old men as soldiers, but that our very national existence is dependent upon their use." Chinese Face Major Famine Millions Take To Fields, AbandonChildren CHUNGKING, Oct. 19.- OP)- Thousands are dying daily and 6,000,- 000 persons are on the verge of star- vation in Honan province as the result of one of the worst famines in modern times, missionaries and Chin- ese officials reported today. Letters and reports painted a har- rowing picture of the destitute re- duced to eating grass and the bark of trees, stripping the fields bare, and - selling their children to persons who could care for them or leaving them to starve by the roadside. Famine conditions started three months ago as the result of a two- year general drought, spring frosts which killed crops, locust plagues and a brief Japanese invasion of some districts last October which caused abandonment of harvests. U.S. Warships Devastate Jap Arms Dump, On Solomons Navy Strikes At Japanese Ammunitions Intended For American Forces FightingAt Guadalcanal Enemy Remains Quiet Under Fire By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Oct. 19.- United States warships, joining in the Battle of the Solomons, have bombarded and blown up ammunition dumps the Japanese had collected for their all- out assault on the Marine and Army men on Guadalcanal, the Navy dis- closed late today Whether this accurate shooting by the Navy, coupled with constant, fur- ious assaults on the enemy from the air, had thrown te Japanese time- table awry was not stated, but the fact remained that at last reports the big enemy land offensive had not yet got under way. No Troop Activity "No recent troop activity or enemy landings on Guadalcanal have been reported," said a Navy communique. The communique, containing the first report in more than a week of the fleet's activity in waters previous- ly believed dominated by the Japan- ese, said that American surface vess- els shelled the enemy's positions on northwestern Guadalcanal the morn- ing of Oct. 17, with direct hits setting off heavy explosions and fires in ammunition dumps. The presence of American warships appeared to foreshadow a possible early engagement between the oppos- ing surface vessels which could prove decisive to the outcome of the Solo- mons campaign. Air Attacks Continued The Navy communique related that during three days beginning Oct. 16, American planes-both long-range Army bombers from General Douglas MacArthur's command and Navy- Marine Corps fighters and bombers based on the Solomons-had pounded enemy ships and installations throughout the islands. In a smashing raid Oct. 16 on the Japanese at Rekata Bay, American planes fired fuel storage facilities, bombed anti-aircraft batteries and destroyed 14 planes, 12 of them on the ground. The same day, four direct bomb hits completed the destruction of two of the three enemy transports previously damaged and beached on the northwest coast of Guadalcanal. On the morning of Oct. 17 the Navy's surface ships staged their bombardment of Japanese positions on Guadalcanal. Japanese Declare American Raiders Dealt Punishment Reactions -Slightly Mixed: Criticism, Approval Registered In CampusPoll Of War Policy Regents' War Committee Votes ApprovalOfManpower Plan NEW YORK, Oct. 19.- (P)- The Japanese Army announced today that "American fliers captured in the April 18 raid on Tokyo" already had been dealt "heavy punishment" for acts of inhumanity and that in the future the death penalty would be given raiders who commit such acts. Tokyo newspapers, which carried the announcement under large head- lines, did not say what the "heavy punishment" consisted of. They also published on the front page photo- graphs of captured'American airmen, described as crews of bombers which took part in the Tokyo raid. This, however, was in conflict with the facts as known here. Brig. Gen. James H. Doolittle, who led the raid- ing flight, said no planes were lost in Japan. One United States bomber came down in Soviet Siberia and the crew has been held there. Tokyo and Berlin radios broadcast and re-broadcast the threat an- nounced first by the press headquar- ters of the Japanese Imperial Com- mand. The press headquarters was quoted as saying that American airmen- their number not specified-had been captured in the April 18 raid, were Student reactions to the University administration's war policy range from sharp criticism to confusion and half-hearted approval according to a campus poll taken yesterday. Apathetic "I don't know what they're doing" and "I haven't thought about it" answers outnumbered defin- ite opinions on the questions: "Do you think that the University admin- istration has furnished sufficient Dick Harvey, '44, who said: "The stu- dent effort has been much more con- structive than the administration." John George, '45, said: "I think the administration has been doing enough by things like PEM. I don't see how they could do more." Henry Bracker, '45, said: "Idon't think that the University should try to bring the war home to the students so much that it hurts their studies or In its first move toward closer Regent-student cooperation, the new- ly-create' Regents' War Committee yesterday gave its official stamp of approval and hearty endorsement to the Manpower Mobilization Corps. The statement released after the Committee's initial meeting said: "We understand that the Man power Mobilization Corps has the approval of the University War Board. We heartily endorse the action of the War Boa. A in this respect, and also approve of ur announced pol- picking part of the 1000 bushel crop of apples in the Soffe orchard. Another crew will get to work to- morrow for the University Building and Grounds Department, and a re- quest has been received from the CDVO for Manpower Corps members to aid in fuel and gasoline rationing next week. Top-man Mary Borman, organizing the campus labor supply for local war work, said, "We are really starting to move now. "We have enough men enrolled to handle just about any job that comes