Y it t at4j Weather Colder r VOL LIII No. 43 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, NOV. 22, 1942 PRICE FIVE CENTS French Join Assault On African Front 1 - . Osu Beats michigan Decisively, 21-7 * * Sophomore' Paces OSU Pass Attack By BUD HENDEL Diy Sports Editor COLUMBUS, O, Nov. 21.- Aerial warfare bombed horseshoe Ohio Sta- dium today as Ohio State's bruising Buckeyes pitched their way to undis- puted possession of the Western Con- ference football championship with a decisive 21 to 7 victory over Michi- gan. As a wild, rain-soaked crowd of 71,896 homecoming spectators roared their overwhelming approval, the Buckeyes hurled three perfect touch- down passes and added all three extra points to prove their superiority be- yond any doubt. Twice their, Con- ference-winning scores came as the direct result of Wolverine misplays, and their ability to capitalize on these opportune breaks overshadowed the Michigan edge in statistics. Victory an Upset Today's triumph, an upset in light of the 7-5 betting odds favoring the Wolverines, gives Ohio State a Con- ference season record of five wins and one loss, a mark that no other team in the Big Ten can equal. The last time the Bucks were sole holders of the title was in 1939, and not since then had they been able to gain a hold on the eotvetd crown. Michigan, entering the fray in strong contending position for the championship, never could unleash the vast scoring power that battered Notre Dame last week. Hampered by the rain and the muddy field, the Wolverines were unable to make any series of sustained drives into Buck- eye territory despite their lop-sided edge of 17 first downs to nine. Past Defeats Avenged The Ohio State victory which came in steady portions throughout the game with touchdowns in the second, third and fourth quarters, was the first for the Bucks over the Wol- verines since 1937.. Since Fritz Crisler came to Michigan in 1938, the best the Scarlet and Gray had been able to do was a 20-20 tie last year, but today they struck swiftly and sav- agely to avenge '1 past defeats and leave the Wolverineb far in arrears. Neither aggregation could crack the line of the other for any long marches downfield. Even the Wolverine touch- down, scored by fullback Bob Wiese, in the third period, came after a foray Turn to Page 7, Col. 1 U.S. ACks Cut in Telephone Distance Rates WASHINGTON, Nov. 21.-()-The government called today for a second reduction in long distance telephone charges. American Telephone & Telegraph Company, the nation's largest cor- poration, was ordered by the Federal Communications Commission to show why it should not substantially reduce toll rates and other charges in the face of commission figures indicating excess earnings of $47,000,000 to $62,000,000 this year. A hearing was fixed for Dec. 16. In addition to defending its charges, A.T.&T. was ordered to show why an immediate.reduction in rates pending conclusion of the investiga- tion should not be made. * * * - A.T.&T. ANSWERS In a special telegram to The Daily, received last night from American Telephone & Telegraph, the following statement dealing with the govern- ment's demand for a rate reduction was made by Walter A. Gifford, pres- ident of the company. "With our lines overloaded, we are BOB WIESE Fullback Bob Wiese, spinner play master, sparked Michigan to its single touchdown against the OSU Buckyes in yesterday's defeat, car- rying the ball over after a 37-yard single-handed march in the third quarter. ,I In junction of' NLRB Order UAW-CIO attorneys filed a bill of complaint in the Washtenaw county circuit court yesterday in protest against an injunction restraining a National Labor Relations Board order to end American Broach Protective Association representation of Broach employees. At the same time Judge George W. Sample of the circuit court ordered representatives of the Protective Asso- ciation to show just cause Wednes- day why the temporary injunction, granted Nov. 9, should not be negated. "This is the customary procedure in handling temporary injunctions," Judge Sample said last night. "After the temporary injunction is granted, both parties are required to show further evidence before a final deci- sion is reached." The CIO bill of complaint, ancillary to Judge Sample's order, was filed against both the company and the unionson the grounds that if either party had a grievance resulting from the NLRB decision it should have been taken to the United States Cir- cuit Court of Appeals rather than to the district court. SPepper Bill Backers Speed o Washington The Inter-Racial Association will send two delegates to Waslington today to urge the passage of a motion limiting debate in the Senate on the 'Pepper Anti-Poll Tax Bill. Contrary to the impression created by an Associated Press dispatch yes- terday, supporters of the bill have by no means conceded its defeat, Miss Gaye Locke, treasurer of the Associ- ation said. "If the motion for closure does not pass by the required two-thirds vote," Miss Locke said, "the bill will prob- ably be defeated, but we believe it is possible to get the required support. It is even more important now that we urge the Senators to vote favor- ably and that we wire Sen. Prentiss Brown; who is in St. Ignace, Mich., to go to Washington so that he can vote on the measure." Bock Beer Passes to Sudsy Oblivion You're going to have to get your beery cheeriness from something else besides billy - goat - whiskered Bock Beer, brother. That special brew is out for the duration on government orders. Yesterday the state liquor commis- Quadrangle to Organize War Activities Borman to Describe Dormitory War Role Marv Borman, director of the Stu- dent Manpower Corps, will describe the part that men's dormitories can play in the University war effort be- fore a meeting of the West Quad- rangle's student executive board at 9:30 a.m. today. Later, at 7:30 p.m., Homer Swan- der, managing editor of The Daily, Bob Matthews, president of the Stu- dent War Board and Borman will discuss campus war activities with Quadrangle residents in the Allen Rumsey House lounge,. Already West Quadrangle, men are working for the Manpower Corps, with more than fifty of them signed up to work as orderlies and war help- ers in University Hospital. Wenley House of West Quadrangle has de- veloped a staff of house members operating to solicit workers for Man- power Corps projects, such as apple- picking, scrap-salvaging and sugar beet-picking. J GP to Begin "Sale of War Stamps, Bonds Tomorrow Junior Girl's Project will start the year's activities tomorrow with a goal of $25,000 for the first week of sales Of war stamps and bonds. Their pro- ject begins in conjunction with Wo- men at War Week, Nov. 22 to 28, a national campaign to sell a greater volume of bonds and stamps than have been sold in this country since Pearl Harbor. During this week, three booths will be erected by Junior Project to make the buying of bonds and stamps most convenient for University students and Ann Arbor residents. There will be a booth open in the League lobby from noon until 5:30 p.m. Monday, Tuesday, and Friday of this week. Anothef booth will be stationed in the bank on State St., where bond buyers can register serial numbers and prices of bonds with the junior woman stationed there, after having made their purchases at the bond window in the bank. The third booth will be a moving booth. It will be in the main Library from 10 a.m. until 3 p.m. Monday; in Angell Hall during the same hours Turn to Page 5, Col. 1 ' Hirohito's Little Devils Have Sun in Their Eyes NEW YORK, Nov. 21.- (A')- Mass meetings will be held in all Japanese cities and towns on Dec. 8 to observe the first anniversary of the outbreak of war in the Pacific, reports from Tokyo via the Berlin Radio said today. Japanese leaders will devote much of the day 'to speeches reviewing Japan's expansion in the last 12 months. This will be in sharp con- trast to President Roosevelt, who, the White House has announced, will consider the anniversary, Dec. 7 in America, as " day of silence in re- membrance of a day of great in- famy." Thomas, Russell to Speak Here in State Post-War Conference NORMAN THOMAS BERTRAND RUSSELL Post-War Council to Sponsor Meeting to Unify State Movement and Provide Basis for Thought 4> Focusing the attention of a war- conscious campus on the problems of the post-war world, the Post-War Council will conduct a state confer- ence here Dec. 4 and 5, highlighted by the presence of Norman Thomas, four times candidate for president, and Bertrand Russell, prominent phi- losopher and mathematician. Thomas will open the conference with a talk on "The Relation of the Individual to the State in the Post- War World." Russell will speak on the second dale. His speech will deal with the general topic "International Government." Delegates from 29 Michigan col- leges and universities have been in- vited to attend and take part in the Conference which is intended to unify the post-war planning movement throughout the state. Additional aims of the conference are to stimulate interest in the problem and to pro- vide information and ideas to serve as a basis for further thought, dis- cussion and action. Ticket sales for the Conference will begin tomorrow at the desks of the League and Union. Tickets will also be sold on the Diagonal Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday of this week and all of the following week. The one ticket will entitle the purchaser to hear both lectures. None will be sold individually although students may, if not able to attend both talks, trans- fer one of their stubs to another per- son. Story of Rickenbacker's Rescue Told as 'World War Ace Lands Japs Cornered after Savage Fight in Buna Air Force Backs Up Allied Land Smash; Enemy Navy Braves New Guinea Waters By The Associated Press ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN AUSTRALIA, Nov. 22. (Sunday)- (IM)- Fierce fighting raged for the second day at Buna, New Guinea Northeast Port, between General Douglas MacArthur's advancing troops and Japanese forces with their backs to the sea, the High Command reported today. The Allied air force re-entered the struggle after being checkmated by bad weather yesterday, when the heavy fighting opened for the deci- sion which might well be the most smashing land blow the Japs have suffered. Japanese naval forces, still willing to risk punishment despite this week's loss of a light cruiser and a destroyer which got under the bombsights of Allied planes, were reported again maneuvering off the coast. Yesterday's communique told of the first appearance of Jap air units in force in some time but today's re- ported the Allied fliers back in action, continuously bombing and strafing enemy positions and shooting down' two enemy fighters. The heavy. -fighting :continued all along the short strip of coast between Gona and Buna. Allied bombers returned again last night to Kavieng, on New Ireland to the north of New Guinea, raiding the airdrome. Americans Secure Guadalcanal Hold WASHINGTON, Nov. 21.- (P)- American troops have punched their way westward on Guadalcanal into territory formerly held by the Japa- nese, the Navy said today-a develop- ment which gave force to Secretary Knox's recent statement that our hold on the island "is now very secure.'' A communique said the American line had been advanced to a point five miles west of Henderson Field and a mile beyond the Matanikau River, formerly the western boundary of the American position.. This statement of successes to the west followed one yesterday which told of effective action to the east- ward of the air field, in which about half of a Japanese landing force of 1,500 were killed. The advance to the westward oc- curred on Nov. 18 Guadalcanal time. It was undertaken and carried out although "enemy patrols were ac- tive." During the same day, the Navy's communique said, Army Lockheed "Lightning" fighter planes shot down three Japanese "Zero" fighters in the Buin area. Reds Hurl Back German Stabs MOSCOW, Nov. 22. (Sunday)- (MP)- German assaults intended to better the Nazi position in the Cau- casus after the smashing Russian vic- tory before Ordzhonikidze have been consistently hurled back by Rusian units and at least two companies and a battalion of the enemy have been annihilated or dispersed, the Russians reported early today. The Soviet midnight communique announced that in the Mozdok area (in the same general sector where the Germans were beaten) one Soviet unit in one day repelled three enemy attacks, "annihilating some two com- panies of enemy infantry." On that cold Caucasus front, the communique added, "Soviet artillery and mortar fire dispersed and partly annihilated about a battalion of Ger- New Nazi Line Bu ilt in Tunisia Allies Capture Vital Cross-Roads; German Land Retreat Cut Of f as Fighting Intensifies By The Associated Press LONDON, Nov. 22. (Sunday)- A French assault on German dugouts in the hastily erected Nazi defense arc around Tunis and Bizerte, with the result still undetermined, and the capture by Allied advance units of an important cross-roads in the Tunis area were reported early today from North Africa, where powerful Allied forces are moving rapidly to smash the beleaguered Axis Tunisian troops. Reports from Allied force head- quarters indicated that the fighting is hourly growing in intensity, with the Germans and Italians bracing themselves for the imminent fight against the main body of British, American and French troops.~ Nesr Casablanca A steady stream of men and ma- terial was moving eastward as far west as Casablanca against the Ger- mans and Italians, cut off from al retreat except by sea or air. The Allied main forces were pre- gressing methodically for the kill, de- spite intense air attacks and violet air battles. Reports from the Allied headquar- ters indicated that the British, Ameri- can and French spearheads had seized the cross-roads and driven the Ger- mans back. The gain in this struggle included a bridge. Then the Germans dug in and the reports said the French immediately and violently assailed their positions. Around Blkerte The German defense arc around Bizerte, with its three main airfields, and Tunis, with its important mili- tary ardrome, was beleved to run somewhere east of Tabarca,, on the north coast, to Hammamet, southeast of Tunis. At the nearest points the Allied advance forces have been re- ported within 30 miles of both Bizerte and Tunis. I It was reported that the Germans have patrols constantly on the watch behind their contracting lines, appar- ently on guard against a French up- rising in that sector. Pro-Allied French forces were said to be in control of Gabes, on the east- ern Tunis coast, thus effectively blocking any connection between the Tunisian Axis armies and Marshal Rommel's harried soldiers in Libya. Turin Devastated by RAF in Heaviest Raid Made on Italy LONDON, Nov. 21.- ()- A fiery raid on Turin, the RAF's heaviest so far in its growing offensive against Italy, sfread such a blanket of fire over the northern arsenal city Friday night that the raiders had difficulty finding clear spaces 'for targets, the British disclosed today. This assault was comparable in, size to an "average" raid on Germany, usually carried out by between 200 and 300 planes, well-informed sources believed. After giving Turin, the home of Italy's Fiat, Caproni bomber and other war works, only two nights of respite from their devastating. two- ton bombs, a heavy RAF group re- turned in good weather and, indica- tive of the punishment loosed on the city, one bomber group alone dropped 54 two-ton bombs and 110,000 pounds of incendiaries in just less than an hour. This was an average of one two- ton bomb a minute and one 30-pound incendiary a second. Deaths Blamed men died before rescue-said that he'd heard that one evening while the men were on the raft a seagull alighted on Rickenbacker's head. All the 'survivors agreed that they found raw seagull very tasty, indeed. Rickenbacker corroborated the sea- gull story, adding: I "However, I didn't eat much of the raw bird, nor of the raw fish we caught." He explained that just the .dislike for the taste of this raw meat kept him from eating much of it, and not the fear that it might make him sick. "All the others ate when we could catch them," Rickenbacker said. "And th'ey did not get sick. As a matter of fact there were no disturbed sto- machs after the first two or three days. The reason was simple enough. No one had anything in his stomach." In speaking of the raw fish and seagull diet, Captain William Cherry another survivor, admonished Rick- enbacker not to say that no one had anything in his stomach. "You know I ate that fish eye," Cherry said, laughing. The survivors laughed, also at this remark, and Cherry explained: "We were going to use this fish eye for bait when somebody dropped our last fishhook overboard. So I ate the eye,probably before the others thought of splitting it seven ways." Rickenbacker declared he never doubted for one moment that he and his companions would be rescued. CAPT. RICKENBACKER * * * SOMEWHERE IN THE SOUTH PACIFIC, Nov. 14.-(delayed)--()- Capt. Eddie Rickenbacker, famous American flier, set foot on this atoll in the dark early morning hours yes- terday, after 25 days lost at sea. The flier, known almost as well for his many escapes in air mishaps as for his record as America's premier ace of the last World War, talked more of other subjects than of his experiences on a tiny rubber life raft, from which he and two companions were rescued by a Navy flying boat. A medical corps man who helped care for the six survivors-one of the WHO HAS THE GREATER SEA-POWER NOW? Relative Strength of Jap and American Fleets Called Baffling Question by Naval Experts on Insecticide I By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER Associated Press Correspondent WASHINGTON, Nov. 21.- Every important naval engagement churns up a wave of speculation as to how 4-1.a h.lnavnarAf ,qA. newer has bY-en had of the great and small ships ,which, with ther crews, make up the measurable element of sea power. The charts showed a great edge for America over Japan. The charts were wrong. TTvnhnornii Tann mAn on the nre.war the Japs had a total of 46 cruisers. In the 11 months of war since then the Allies in the Pacific-mainly the United States-have officially report- ed the sinking of 33 cruisers. That would leave the Jap navy with 13. Rnt mnre than that number have SALEM, Ore., Nov. 21.- (R')- The mystery of the poisoned scrambled eggs in the Oregon State hospital which killed 47 patients was virtually cleared up tonight. Dr. John C. Evans, hospital super-