it gau I it W'Ceather Light Snow VOL. LIII No. 53 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, DEC. 5, 1942 PRICE FIVE CENTS McNutt Nazis L Will Control All U.S. Manpower; aunch Counterattacks In Tunisia 6 Tebourba Reported Retaken Allies Face German Stone-Wall Resistance; Consolidate Forces in Rearward Position -- BULLETIN - ALLIED FORCE HEADQUAR- TERS IN NORTH AFRICA, Dec. 4.-- (AP)- American combat troops striking southeast of Tebessa near the Tunisian-Algerian border drove a Nazi armored column back to- ward the coast today in a disor- derly retreat, capturing more than 100 prisoners and taking a town. * * * By The Associated Press LONDON, Dec. 4.-- A series of ter- rific Axis counter-attacks through the mountains between DJedeida and Mateur which caught the British First Army with its American arm- ored forces on the flank at Tebourba were reported tonight to have left the plains and hills of Tunisia strewn with 'the wreckage of tanks and the situation. at Tebourba in doubt. "It is now clear that Axis troops have recaptured Tebourba." 20 miles west of Tunis and about 35 miles south of Bizerte, said the military correspondent of Reuters, British news agency. The Germans also were reported holding to M~ateur, 25, miles south of Bizerte. An Allied headquarters communi- que, however, said, "Our troops in the neighborhood of Tebourba are con- solidating their positions" without giving the situation at the previous advanced positions of the Allies at Djedeida, 12 miles west of Tunis, or at Mateur, 25 miles south of Bizerte.' The implication was plain, how- ever, that the Allies had come up against a stonewall of resistance in the admission that the forces of Lieut. Gen. K. A. N, Anderson were consoli- dating at the rearward position. Russell Will Conclude Post- War Conference Three Panel Discussions Scheduled for Today Will Stress Phases of World Reconstruction 1.'. Americans Honor French T roops En Route to Tunisia Moving into its final day, the Post- War Conference will reach its climax at 4:30 p.m. today with a talk by Bertrand Russell at the Rackham Auditoi'ium on "International Gov- ernments.". Three panel discussions will be held at 1:30 p.m. today at the Union. Heading a panel on "How Can Ap- plied Science Bring the World a Higher Standard of Living," Prof. BERTRAND RUSSELL KNOX SAYS: Jap. Supplies Running 'Short, in Solo mons By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER Associated Press Correspondent WASHINGTON, Dec. 4.- Japan's latest costly and futile attempt to deliver troops and supplies to Guad- alcanal Island was cited by Secretary of the Navy Knox today as evidence that enemy forces there must be run- ning short of material. Knox described the attempt, made Monday night, as a complete failure for the Japs and he called it "Round 3" in the battle for control of the Southeastern Solomons. An American Naval force sank six warships, two transports and a cargo vessel. "They lost a lot of ships," Knox said, "and they went away. They failed to gain their objective. They did not get ashore." The Secretary told his press con- ference, in fact, that he believed the enemy had been unsuccessful in land-; ing any reinforcements or supplies for the past three weeks; that is, since their greatest effort to retake the island was smashed by a great American Naval victory Nov. 13-15. Wilson Is Made Supervisor over Munitions Output WASHINGTON, Dec. 4.- (,P)- A long tug-of-war between the War Production Board and the armed ser- vices apparently came to an end to- day when Charles E. Wilson, WPB's vice-chairman, was clothed with Louis Corey of Antioch College will talk on "How World-Wide Industrial- ization Will Affect Our Mode of Liv- ing." Also on this panel will be Prof. John Worley of the Engineering school and Prof. Harlow Whittemore of the School of Architecture and De- sign. A discussion of "Can We Estab- Sig Eps Win SongContest Place First in IFC Pledge Sing Fest High spot of the Interfraternity Ball yesterday was Sigma Phi Epsi- lon's capture of the trophy for the first annual Interfraternity Council pledge sing held during intermission of the dance. Twenty-four Sig Ep pledges' rendi- tion of "Kentucky Babe" was selected after ten minutes' deliberation by the judges for top honors of the evening. Kappa Sigma led off the contest with "Now the Day Is Over," while pledges of Phi Kappa Psi followed with "I Had a Dream." Beta Theta Pi was the fourth group picked in the semi- finals and sang their traditional "Loving Cup." As president of the Sig Ep pledge class, Lou Johnson, '46, was presented with a dinner gong as trophy by Fletcher Henderson himself. To be engraved with the name of the win- ner, the gong will become the perma- nent prize of any fraternity to hold it for three years in a row. Prof. H. A. Van Deursen and Prof. Earl V. Moore of the School of Music were judges of the contest as well as Bill Sawyer, Union band leader, who was also judge for the preliminary eliminations. Staff Members Return to Jobs Hospital Epidemic Remains Unsolved The 117 staff members of Univer- sity Hospital who were afflicted with a mild intestinal ailment Wednesday night returned to work yesterday as bacteriologists continued to hunt for cause of the disease. Dr. A. C. Kerlikowske, assistant di- rector of the hospital, said two pos- sibilities were being considered by authorities; either the food in the lish Internationalism?" will be han- dled by Prof. Preston Slosson of the History department and Prof. Men- tor Williams of the English depart- ment with Honier Swander, managing editor of The Daily serving as student moderator. "America's Responsibility in the Post-War World" will be considered by Prof. Harold Dorr of the Political Science department, and Prof. Earl Cissel of the Engineering school. Stu- dent moderator of this panel will be Allan Axelrod. Tickets for Russell's lecture will continue on sale during the day at the desks of the League and Union. There will be no admission charge for the panels. Thomas Tells of Future U.S. Centralization America will emerge from the war with a collectivized, powerful state, Norman Thomas said last night be- fore the first session of the Post-War1 Conference. Warning of a blind and confused attempt to go back to "the good old days of covered wagons with 16 cyl- inder motors" in a period of post-wara cynicism, Thomas declared that one of two things may happeny. "Either we will get h powerful gov- ernment by evolution in the direction our war-time government has takenf or there will be a confusion out of which will arise a demagogue and it is this going back to the good old days that would make more certain a to- talitarian rule." Condemning our system for its fail- ure to utilize its resources in conquer- ing poverty, Thomas declared that, we are going forward to collective control. The issue is not individualism vs. collectivism but rather the absorbing1 issue will deal with the amount kind and quality of collectivism and thet -possibilities for. democracy in it,I Thomas said.- KHAKI-WACKY: Girls Are Hore{ Boy-Crazy, Sheviakov Sayst LANSING, Dec. 4.- ()- Adoles- cent girls are "more boy-crazy than ever before" as result of war glamort which now envelops young men in1 uniform, the Michigan Secondary School Association heard today at the closing session of its annual meeting. Dr. George C. Sheviakov, Chicago University psychiatrist, warned the educators that they must "expand the normal relationship between young boys and girls," asserting thatf war conditions have tended to make girls "look down upon and disparage their natural role as wives and home- makers." For older girls, he said, the question of marriage is made so problematical by the war that many are seekingt happiness and male companionshipx on a "catch-it-while-it-comes" basis.s He warned that the war years might( result in "lop-sided and distorted at-t titudes" toward human living on the part of girls, who subconsciously re- sent the fact that the glory and ex-t citement of combat belongs to boys.I Such a consequence followed the last war, he said, when women's imi- tation of men resulted in an era ofx "boyish bobs and flat chests." e EVEN THE COPPERS HELP: Good fellows Ask Contributions U.S. troops stand at attention and present arms as a contingent of French soldiers marches through a railway station at Oran boarding trains for the Tunisian battle front. Be Sent to Daily's Offices I Encouraged by early returns on pledges received fromrsororities, fra- ternities and cooperative houses to- ward the Goodfellow Drive which will culminate in sales of the Goodfellow Daily, Monday, Dec. 14, theGoodfel- low Committee has urged that con- tributions be sent to the Student Pub-j lications Building as soon as possible.I Bulk of the funds raised by the Goodfellow Drive will go this year to the Family and Child Service Bureau, a merger of the Family Welfare Bur- eau and Child Service Bureau. Ac- Jeffers Says Nation Faces Rubber Crisis By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Dec. 4.- William M. Jeffers, rubber -director, bluntly warned today that the nation is threatened with military "disaster"1 because materials needed for syn- thetic rubber factories are being de- voted to other war uses. Unless vital equipment for the fac- tories is forthcoming immediately the arned forces face a serious shortage of rubber.in 1943, he said in a report which he laid before a joint commit- tee of senators and House members. He added that he had little hope of solving the priorities problem in time to avoid a crisis. Instruments, forgings, valves, heat exchangers and other equipments are badly needed, Jeffers said. If they are not provided it will be impossible to get synthetic plants into quantity production soon enough to prevent such a drain on crude rubber stocks that there may be none left for heavy duty tires, self-sealing gasoline tanks and other military necessities. Inspector Finds Majestic Theatre Is A-I Fire Trap Because its seven violations of the Ann Arbor city building code qualify it as a first class fire trap, the Majes- tic Theatre building should never be reopened as a theatre, according to a report issued yesterday by William C. Maulbetsch, city building inspec- tor. The report further stated that the structure could not be remodeled so that it would be safe in every respect. Maulbetsch said that, as building in- spector, he ". . . would be derelict in (his) duty if (he) did not oppose the reopening of this theatre under pres- ent conditions." cording to Miss Mary Hester, execu- tive secretary of the Bureau, money is used by the Bureau to supplement incomes of low-income families who are caught without funds in special emergencies. "In times of prosperity like the present, people do not consider that low-income families have an especial-' ly hard time," Miss Hester said yes- terday. "Higher prices. which result from booms make it impossible for marginal families-those living at mere subsistence level-to provide themselves with even the barest necessities. It is our job to help these families." Goodfellow Fund money not allo- cated to the Bureau will go this year to the Goodwill Fund and the Text- book Lending Fund. The Goodwill Fund releases money to Goodwill Industries, agency by which handicapped and aged people are provided work repairing discarded articles of furniture and clothing for resale. The Textbook Lending Fund provides money to students for the purchase of books not otherwise to be gotten. FDR Gives WPA Death Sentence as War Jobs Increase By RICHARD L. TURNER Associated Press Correspondent WASHINGTON, Dec. 4.-(G'P-The Works Proj ects Administration, which provided depression relief for millions and an ever bitter contro- versy for Congress, was ordered out of existence today by President Roosevelt. War-time increases in private em- ployment make the agency unneces- sary now, he said in a letter to Major- General ihilip B. Fleming, the Fed- eral Works administrator. Some indi- viduals remain on the rolls, he added, but they can be provided for by the states and localities. Uncompleted building projects are to be taken over by other federal agencies. In "many states" the death sen- tence is to become effective by Feb. 1; in others "as soon thereafter as feasible." The whole is to be liqui-: dated by June 30 at the latest, for Mr. Roosevelt observed there would be no necessity for WPA appropriations for the next fiscal year. During its career, WPA spent more than $10,000,000,000, providing relief for some 38,000,000 people. ROTC Men Go into Battle Today One thousand ROTC cadets will march off at 1:30 p.m. today to train in the wintry Ann Arbor countryside in preparation for big mock battle soon to be held between the two bat- talions of the campus unit. Galens Pails Net $1,200 in Campus Coins Society Enters Its Second Day of Drive for Contributions Their buckets loaded down with $1,200 worth of campus contributions, members of Galens, honorary medical society, enter the second day of their; drive with prospects high for better- ing last year's record. Leaders of the two-day drive ex- pressed themselves as exceedingly well satisfied and predicted that if townspeople respond as well as the students, last year's all-time high of' $2,100 will be broken. Although today's drive will be con- centrated in downtown Ann Arbor, a, few members of Galens will be on campus to enable those who did not have an opportunity to contribute to do so today. Officers of the society voiced their appreciation for the fine cooperation exhibited by the students and are confident that the townspeople will not allow a final total under the $2,100 mark. Funds from this, the fourteenth annual Galens campaign, will be used to entertain the children in the Uni- versity Hospital's pediatrics ward during their confinement. The money will go a long way toward making the young patients more self-reliant and prepared to meet conctions in a' normal world. Specifically, your mon- ey will be used to maintain and equip the Galens workshop on the hospital's ninth floor where the children learn to operate power tools and precision instruments, to provide entertain- ment and presents for the annual Galens Christmas party and to furn- ish books and films for the children's library. - r 'Blood Donors Still Needed Deadline for Signing Set at I p.m. Today Registration for the present blood bank will end at 1 p.m. today, offi- cials in charge of the drive stated, as they issued a special call for per- sons to sign up between 9:30 a.m. and the deadline. While the campus blood committee has pledged the American Red Cross 200 pints of blood for this month, registration to date amounts to 135 persons. Last month's drive netted 125 pints. Men may register in the lobby of the Union while women may do like- wise in the League: Actual blood tak- ing will begin Tuesday and continue Wednesday in the Women's Athletic Building. All blood donors may indicate a WMC Gets Power to Run Draft Wickard Becomes New Ration Boss as FDR Appoints Him Food' Administrator By JACK BELL Associated Press Correspondent WASHINGTON, Dec. 4.-Executive orders naming Secretary of Agricul- ture Wickard as Food Administrator and transferring control over Selec- tive Service to the- War Manpower Commission headed by Paul V. Mc- Nutt were reported tonight to be on President Roosevelt's desk for action tomorrow. High administrative sources who could not be quoted by name said the President planned to confer on Wick- ard wide authority over the nation's wartime food production, along with power to determine what products should be rationed and when new rationing orders should be issued. Transfer F. E. S. The delegation of Selective Service policy-making functions to the"Man- power Commission, it was indicated, would be accompanied by transfer of the Federal Employment Service to the commission. This would concen- trate in McNutt's hands centralized control over manpower. The decision to make McNutt the chief in this field was said to have been taken after the President aban- doned plans for a three-way cabinet shift which would have given the post 'to Secretary of Interior Harold L. Ickes. Subsequent suggestions to Mr. Roosevelt that he turn over the man- power authority to James F. Byrnes, the economic director, were said to have been met with objections from Byrnes that this would place on him administrative tasks conflicting with his full time duties as stabilization policy maker. Enlistment Ban To assist in handling the manpower problem, there were indications that Mr. Roosevelt might act to ban olun- tary enlistments in the armed forces. Many employers have complained at the loss of skilled, key men through such enlistments. With authority to direct the policies of Selective Service, McNutt also would be in position to regulate the flow of essential industrial and agri- cultural workers into the ranks of the military branch. The over-all Manpower Authority was expected to be based to a large extent on provisions of the* second War Powers Act. While there would be no compulsory "freezing" of work- ers in their posts or compulsory transfers from job to job, those fa- miliar with the situation said there was little doubt that controls could be made highly effective. Russians Push Dual Offensive By EDDY GILMORE Associated Press Correspondent MOSCOW, Dec. 5. (Saturday)- The Red Army seized 11 more vil- lages in the Stalingrad area yester- day, presumably in the Don River bend west of that city, surrounded a German stronghold near Velikie Luki on the frozen central front, and killed upwards of 2,500 Nazis in twin of- fensives that still are gaining ground, the Soviets announced early today. The regular midnight communique said the Russians gained 200 to 300 yards inside Stalingrad itself, occu- pied two important points northwest and southwest of the Volga river city, and were beginning "the liquidation of encircled enemy strongpoints" in the area of Velikie Luki, only' 90 miles from the Latvian border. Dispatches said the Germans were throwing reserves into the central front in a desperate effort to stem the Red Army in the Rzhev-Velikie Luki-Vyazma triangle northwest of Moscow. Almost a Year Ago na v ca, e of a yea after DarlT-arhnr.Amen w. PP n r