V Y r it 431Z I - Oi m~e A il I- 4ati Weather Light Rain VOL. LII Nq. 44 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, NOV. 24, 1942 PRICE FIVE CENTS Daka Red Russians GainNeal Stalingra( German Supply Line Cut by Soviet Troops Nazi Casualties Reac. 50,000 in Five Days By The Associated Press MOSCOW, Nov. 24. (Tuesda: Russian troops in their great winter offensive have smashed ac the Dn River to a point appr mately 100 miles northwest of Sta grad in a great double-flanking m ient that now has cost the Germ 50,000 casualties and threatens to terminate thousands of other t soldiers stalled near the Volga R to the east, it was announced c cially today. A special communique-the sec in two days-said that the tow ChernyshevsJaya, well inside the River loop, had been taken in a mile continuing advance. This Army column apparently was same that hadi occupied Serafimo on the north side of the Don R loop, and was striking southwart link up with other Red Army u now penetrating on the lower sid the Don River. Great Pincers Movement This southern Red Army in its fort to close a great pincers on Nazi besiegers of Stalingrad also mt a 12-mile' advance during yester , aving cu4dAgnrv,4~ southwest of Stalingrad, to cut a r railroad supply line, they also I Aksai, a point 10 miles farther so and other villages. (British observers in London mated that between 300,000 and 4 000 German, Rumanian and H garian troops were in danger of bE trapped by the Russian encirclen attempt). To date the Russians said t: four or five day offensive had cost Germans this toll: 26,000 dead, including 12,000 Monday's operations alone. 24,000 prisoners, including 11 taken on Monday. 50,000 Nazi Casualties Thus a grand total of 50,000 r casualties ih a vast winter coun offensive still in its early stages. In addition the special commi que listed this booty taken: 556 C man guns, 2,826 trucks, 1,200 rail cars, 2,625 machine guns, 32 pl in working order, 35 tanks in working order. "A large quantity of other wea and military supplies has not been counted," the special annou ment said. "We destroyed 70 pla: 157 tanks, and 186 guns. (This huge Russian drive, ap ently timed to coincide with Ger difficulties caused by the dispatcl reinforcements to Tunisia and Sot ern Europe after the Allied inva of North Africa, had Berlin worrif Is * * Now In Allied Hands -- Darlan *. * * * * * * Army Smashes * * * Across Don S * * River tv7 ^- . Decisive Battle Looms In Tunisia - -,C.> British 70 Miles from El Agheda By The Associated Press CAIRO, Nov. 23.- The British Eighth Army smashed through Axis rear guard resistance at Agedabia and was pressing on tonight within 70 miles of the El Agheila bottleneck be- tween the sea and the inland salt marshes where the enemy may try one more desperate stand. The British kept in contact with the withdrawing German and Italian forces. "Our troops successfully en- gaged the enemy and made progress in the neighborhood of Agedabia," the British communique said. "Enemy troops to the south of the village were forced to withdraw." With the British drawing close to El Agheila, the next two or three days were expected to disclose whether Marshal Rommel's last forces had enough strength and time to attempt a stand on the,narrow front, or would continue their fox and hounds race along the coastal road toward Tripoli. (In London some British military observers predicted that Rommel's epleted strength and weakened air the withdrawal, fighting only rear guard actions.) Aerial activity over Libya was lim- ited to fighter patrols because of con- tinued bad weather, but other fighter and fighter-bomber formations-pre- sumably based on Malta-kept up their battering of Axis supply lines and carried the war again to the air- dromes of Sicily. League Gives Awards for Scholarship 23 Houses, Students Cited for Activities at Assembly Banquet Twenty-three citations and awards were made to outstanding indepen- dent women students and houses at the ninth annual Assembly Banquet held yesterday at the Michigan League. Cited for the highest percentage of girls participating in extra-curricular activities by Charlotte Thompson, president of the League, were Alum- nae House, 86 per cent, Martha Cook, 82 per cent, and Adelia Cheever, 78 per cent. Betty Newman, president of As- sembly, listed the eight sophomore and junior women who were out- standing for their participation in extra-curricular activities. The sopho- mores are Ernestine Elser, Obeline Elser, Cornelia Groefsema, and Mar- Turn to Page 8, Col. 4 Old Glory Flies in Morocco American sentries march In the battered front at Port Lyautey, near Rabat, French Morocco, after occupation of that point by U.S. forces. This picture was sent from London to the U.S. by radio. Manpower Corps will Register Men -Today Manpower Corps officials, out to fill every job in this vicinity essential to the war effort, will register all men on campus "who are really willing to do important war work" from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. today and tomorrow at campus booths. "We are all set to take over Jobs in local war plants, in Ann Arbor restaurants, and in the dorms, as well as continue our farm and scrap collection projects," Manpower Direc-' U.S. Chiefs Aim at Air Supremacy By The Associated Press LONDON, Nov. 23.- American op- erational chiefs in North Africa were striving tonight to bring additional planes, equipment and men to bear on the Tunisian front to cope with Axis armies entrenched in their Tunis-Bizerte arc with augmented forces. In Oran Lieut. Gen. Mark W. Clark, deputy American commander in ] WASHINGTON, Nov. 23.- ()- American forces occupied French1 North Africa at a cost of only 860J men killed or missing and 1,050 wounded, the War Department an- nounced today. This small number of casualtiesl in comparison with the size of the forces involved pointed up President Roosevelt's recent statement that arrangements made by Lieutenant General Dwight D. Eisenhower with the French Admiral Jean Darlan were designed primarily to facili- tate the occupation. North Africa, warned that getting Tunisia from the Axis would be a "scrap," and a spokesman at Allied headquarters warned the fight would] be "longer than expected" because of Axis plane and troop reinforcements1 in Tunisia. The Germans were reported drain- ing all other European sectors, in-1 cluding Russia, to build up their aerialt strength in Tunisia, on Sicily and Sardinia, and the struggle for airt supremacy over Tunisia was sharply intensified. Combatting problems of supply for1 their mechanized columns, Alliedt commanders were building up a huge, base at Oran and sending a stream of, units eastward in preparation for the final all-out assault on Tunis which was being delayed until Allied avia- tion could take contrdl of the air. Drop Tons of Explosives] American and British bombers cas- caded tons of explosives on the vital Bizerte airport, where the Axis has been landing reinforcements, and shot; down six more enemy troop trans- ports ferrying troops across the nar-i row Sicilian straits. They made three] sharp raids on Sicilian airdromes and three on Tripoli in Italy's last remaining colony. The Tunis airport also was bombed.] An Allied communique said that investment of the Axis Tunisian for- tifications "continued according to plan," with Allied fighter planes car- rying out offensive sweeps ahead of the British-American advance and providing aerial protection for the columns of men, guns and tanks. A British column .was reported by the Morocco radio to have clashed with Italian forces of the Axis Tuni- sian garrison south of Tunis and to have forced the fascists to "retreat hurriedly." Senate Buries Poll Tax Bill Defeat of Cloture Proposal Ends Debate WASHINGTON, Nov. 23.-()-The Senate buried the Poll Tax Bill today with a vote of 37 to 41 against limit- ing debate on the measure which had been filibustered since Nov. 13 by Southern opponents. The proposal to limit debate heeded a two-thirds vote but failed to -win even a simple ma- jority. The bill, which would ban the pay- ment of state poll taxes as a require- ment for voting for federal offices, technically went back to the Senate calendar but its author. Senator Pep- tor Mary Borman said yesterday. "And because we are expanding, we are going to need more men than we ever have before, men who will New recruits to the Manpower Corps can register today and to- morrow in the Angell Hall lobby,, in the Union lobby, at the West Engineering Arch, and on the Diag- onal. work when they are called upon, to supplement the 1000 volunteers now in the Corps." The freshmen engineering assem- bly and fraternities will carry on registration drives supplementing the main campus campaign. Last Sunday morning five students were driven three miles west of Whit- more Lake to saw and haul wood dur- ing the day. During the six hours they worked, the five took care of fifty cords of the wood and pocketed $5 each for their help to the Man- power Corps. CAN'T TAKE IT: Italian Citizens Demoralized' by Bombings, By GLADWIN HILL LONDON, Nov. 23.- (P)-- Evidence piled up rapidly today that the heavy bombing attacks on Italy and con- tinued advances by Allied forces in North Africa were imposing a grow- ing stiain on Italian morale. Mussolini was reported to have called the Fascist leaders of battered Genoa, Turin and Milan for a con- ference, presumably on methods of allaying civilian fears of the bomb menace. His action came on the heels of a radio admonition to the Italian peo- ple by Allesandro Pavoloni, Minister nf PunnilarC ltr.fi r to eauatel are All of French West Africa is Now H eld Caribbean Possessions Cooperate As United Nations' Control Spreads By The Associated Press LONDON, Nov. 23.--All French West Africa, including the strategic naval base of Dakar, has come under the orders of Admiral Jean Darlan, the Admiral declared tonight, indicating that Dakar, for two years a po- tential dagger pointed at the western hemisphere, had fallen to the Allies without bloodshed. Admiral Darlan, the former Vichy defense chief who led all North Africa into the Allied camp three days after the British-American expedi- tion of Lieut.-Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower had set foot in Vichy territory, made the announcement from the Algiers radio and it was rebroadcast from Marshal-Petain's capital. Petain tonight countered Darlan's move with a special radio broadcast Marines Push Japs Northward on Guadalcanal Americans Driving Toward Enemy-Held Island Beach-Head WASHINGTON, Nov. 23. - OP) - Pushing steadily westward despite heavy enemy opposition, American Marines are slowly driving the Japa- nese back toward the northern tip of Guadalcanal Island in the Solomons, the Navy reported today. Fighting and bombing planes also are joining in the attack intended to sweep the enemy back to the Japa- nese beach-head, and ultimately to force them from the island which can control shipping lanes to Australia and New Guinea. Lack of mention of either enemy planes or surface craft in the Navy'sj short communique today was regard- ed as an indication that the available Japanese air force may have been damaged so severely that only ground action is practicable pending repairs or replacements. The last aerial attack by the enemy was 11 days ago when 31 bombers and Zero fighters roared down on surface craft off Guadalcanal. Navy fighting planes sped to meet the as- sault, aided by deadly fire of anti- aircraft guns. Only one enemy plane escaped. ROTC Adviser to Speak to Pre-Meds beamed at French West Africa in w - l *} Balliol College Master to Give Lecture Today 'Democracies in the Universities' Is TopicI of Dr. Lindsay's Talk 1 Speaking under the joint sponsor- ship of the Departments of Philoso- phy, Pqlitical Science and History,1 Dr. Alexander D. Lindsay, master ofE Balliol College, Oford.wi deliver a University lecture at 8 p.m. today inl the Rackham Amphitheatre. Lindsay, recently arrived from Eng-4 land, will discuss "Democracies in the Universities" and is expected to describe the way in which English universities have been effected by the1 war. He is the author of many well; known books of philosophy, some of the most outstanding of which include "The Nature of Religious Truth,"1 "Christianity and Economics," "Kant"+ and "The Ten Moralities." He was graduated from Glasgow University and University College, Oxford and has received honorary LL.D. degrees from Glasgow and St. Andrews. Before his appointment as master of Balliol in 1924, Lindsay was a Shaw Fellow of the University of 3d- inburgh, lecturer at Victoria Uni- versity, Professor of philosophy at Glasgow, and Jowett lecturer at Bal- lioL. Before coming to Ann Arbor, he will have spoken at several Eastern schools, including Yale, Harvard, Co- lumbia and New York University. Man Stuck Up' orn Way Home from His Work By AL WEEKS A thin colored man wearing a dark fedora hat pulled down over his eyes jabbed a knife against the back of Charles Kimbler early yesterday morning saying, "This is a stick-up! , If you make a sound I'll kill you!" Kimbler, a fifty-year-old dish- washer at the Main Restaurant, was walking home from work about 2:30 a.m. when he heard the footsteps of the hold-upnman atrthe corner of Fifth, Ave. and Detroit St. He was forced to hand over his 17 jewel gold watch and small change. "I asked him please not to hurt me," the hold-up victim said, "be- cause I have a wife and family to support. He said he didn't know any- thing about such things." Kimbler, in re-enacting the crime for a Michigan Daily reporter, showed how the man had threatened his life a second time. "He said he'd 'get me' if I told po- lice. He said he knew where I lived and who I was and that he'd kill me hich the aged Marshal called upon French soldiers, sailors and aviators to resist "if you are attacked." The announcement was made as the Allies rapidly forced the issue in Tunisia and Libya, the only remain- ing territory in the continent of Africa which is not under the United Nations colors or neutral. Darlan's announcement followed by a few hours a statement by Secre- tary of State Cordell Hull at Wash- ington that an agreement had been reached with Admiral Georges Ro- bert, French high commissioner at Martinique, which would make it un- necessary for American forces to ec- cupy any French possessions in the Caribbean. The agreement applied to all French possessions in the west- ern hemisphere, he said. Thu aIll French possessions on both sides of the South Atlantic now are cooperating with the Allies. Gave In Freely ' Darlan said West Africa had "placed itself freely under my orders" and that i Governor-General Pierre Boisson and Gene'al Barreau, com- mander of the extensive land, sea and air forces at the Dakar stronghold, were joining General Henri Honore Giraud, General August Nogues of Morocco and Governor-General Yves Chatel of Algeria under his leader- ship. "In habitants of French Africa, I have this evening good news to an- nounce," the Vichy radio quoted him as saying. "French West Africa has placed itself freely under my orders. There- fore French West Africa remains faithful to the person of the Mar- shal." For the record, Darlan thus per- sisted in his contention that he is acting in accord with Marshal Petain's wishes, although Vichy announcements have emphasized Pptain's repudiation of Darlan's ac- tions and reclare him stripped of all offices and commands. 'Inhabitants of French Africa: we are on the right road. Follow me with discipline. Vive La France!" the broadcast concluded. French West Africa is the largest unit of'the French empire, embracing an area of 1,815,768 square miles and a population of 15,000,000, and in- cluding the Senegal, French Guinea, the French Sudan, the Ivory Coast, Dahomey, Mauretania and Niger. Its following of the leadership of Darlan gives the United Nations a 500-mile Atlantic coast line and a strategic territory stretching more than 2,000 miles into the heart of the continent. Sleepy Students Hit Hard by Cup-a-Day Coffee Rationing Study-mellowed ties between steaming black coffee and bleary eyed students have been slit by a world at war. Control of that sleep - chasing standby is under the government's thumb now, and when rationing goes into effect this week it's going to be a sustenance dole of a cup a day. No longer can you pick up a can of drip grind by flashing the high sign to your favorite Greek grocer. GOOD TO THE LAST DROP: Mrs. FDR Gives President's Recipe for ConservingCoffee WASHINGTON, Nov. 23.- (A')- Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt revealed today that the President (along with Mayor LaGuardia of New York and Uncle Sam) "considers himself some- thing of an expert in coffee-making" Australian Troops Drive toward Gona and she gave his recipe on how to stretch out rationed coffee. The First Lady laughingly told her press conference that she didn't know whether her husband's idea was a good one "because I don't care whe- ther I get coffee, tea or just hot water." Anyway here's the Presidential technique on how to make that pound of coffee yield its utmost: dry used coffee grounds and add a teaspoon-