it 43U 4at Weather Not much change VOL. LII No. 5NANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, DEC. 10, 1942 PRICE FIVE CENTS Big Ten Manpower Conference Planned Huge Ne Great Battle for Tunisia lIm1pending Tanks, Guns, Planes, Men Rushed to Front; Allied Patrols Stab at Germans near Bizerte By E. C. DANIEL Associated Press Correspondent LONDON, Dec. 9.-Allied and Ger- man patrols fought brief but bitter battles in bad weather today along the Axis horseshoe defending Bizerte while the British and Americans rushed tanks, guns, planes and men to the front for the impending great battle for Tunisia. A dispatch by Wes Gallagher, Asso- ciated Press correspondent at the Allied force headquarters in North Africa, said the weather was restrict- ing land and air action but that the British and American patrols were stabbing repeatedly at the German defenses before Bizerte. 20 German Tanks Destroyed iField reports from North Africa showed that last Sunday 20 German tanks were destroyed when the Nazis struck British and American posi- tions on a hill southwest of Tebourba. In that action the Germans wedged into the Allied line but were forced to withdraw when the Americans and British hurled more tanks and guns against them. The Nazi tanks were flaming wrecks. The Germans and Italians in Tu- nisia are not on speaking terms now in some places, and n some instances refuse to be photographed together, an Allied headquarters spokesman declared. He merely passed the in- telligence along, saying that "we don't know how much it means.-..- Planes Constantly Arriving Reuters reported from North Africa that fresh units of . American and British planes are constantly arriv- ing at the Tunisian front to give sup- part to the ground forces. Increased flights of U.S. and Brit- ish planes over enemy lines suggested that Lieut.-Gen. Dwight Eisenhower had solved in part the problem of providing airfields in the rugged hills and deep ravines of the French pro- tectorate. The attrition to both sides in tank battles south of Tebourba, a key junction 20 miles west of Tunis, like- wise contributed to the subsiding of fighting to patrol operations and ar- tillery exchanges. Be A Goodfelow 1540 French Reach Ethiopia Men Pledge Loyalty to Former Leader LONDON, Dec. 9. ()- Forty officers and 1,500 men from the French garrison of 6,000 at Jibuti, French Somaliland, have reached Diredawa, Ethiopia, and pledged loy- alty to a former commander now with the Fighting French, it was re- ported today. On arrival in Diredawa a Colonel Roinal, leader of the party, sent a message of loyalty to General Paul Le Gentilhomme, a former governor of Jibuti who is now Fighting French Commissioner in Madagascar, Recent reports from Vichy said that par of the garrison of French Somaliland, the last part of the colonial empire remaining nominally under Vichy control, had left the col- ony. Meanwhile, a Reuters dispatch from Rabat, French Morocco, quoted Pierre Boisson, Governor-General of French West Africa, as saying that "Dakar and the rest of French Africa intend to intervene against Germany with their full strength as soon as we have received materials and equip- ment from America." Be A Goodfellow British Fighters Intercept German Transport Planes CAIRO, Dec. 9.- (AP)- Long-range w Year's Eve Dance Is Announced Allied Chief .Russians Down German Planes Ferrying Supplies to Stalingrad Airmen Destroy 68 Transports; Red Army Kills 6,000 Nazi Troops in Central Front Struggle Gen. Dwight Eisenhower, dynam- ic U.S. second front commander, will lead the coming push in Tuni- sia.He is now rebuilding and pre- paring his forces to shove the Nazis from Africa. U.S. Air Force Cripples Jap Invasion Fleet Enemy Ship Is Sunk, Others Are Damaged in Guadalcanal Battle By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Dec. 9.- Ameri- can dive bombers,.torpedo planes and fighters have crippled -a small Japa- nese invasion fleet heading for Guad- alcanal, sinking one enemy warship, setting afire three others and shoot- ing down 10 fighter planes, the Navy disclosed today. Flying out from Henderson Air Field, the air striking force hit the enemy with big bombs and torpedoes last Thursday in the narrow waters between Santa Isabel and New Geor- gia Islands, 150 miles northwest of Guadalcanal in the Solomons. Flames Flare When they left, giant flames were flaring from three of the 10 vessels in the enemy fleet and another-its type unidentified-was sinking. Two cruisers, the Navy said, were hit by thousand pound bombs, while a third warship, either a destroyer or a cruiser, was hit by two aerial tor- pedoes. The fourth ship, described as either a second destroyer or another cruiser, probably was struck by two more torpedoes. Sharp aerial fighting accompanied the attack on the surface craft, which presumably carried reinforcements and supplies for the Japanese on Guadalcanal. Japs Counterattack Meanwhile in New Guinea despite an intense Japanese counterattack, American troops today held fast to the salient they had driven to the beach between Buna village and Buna mission. In the first counterattack against this beachhead to be mentioned offi- cially, the enemy opened a drive at dawn yesterday from both the village and the mission. The Japanese were supported by heavy machine-gun and mortar fire. But the United States soldiers stub- bornly stood their ground. When the battle subsided at least 30 to 40 Japa- nese were dead on the battlefield. American losses were not stated. By HENRY C. CASSIDY Associated Press Correspondent MOSCOW, Dec. 10. (Thursday)- Russian airmen in two days have de- stroyed 68 transport planes trying to ferry supplies to German troops in the Stalingrad sector, and the Red Army fighting near Velikie Luki has killed more than 6,000 troops of the 246th Nazi Infantry Division in an exhausting struggle on the frozen Central Front, it was announced early today. ' No New Gains Claimed The midnight Soviet communique did not claim any important gains for Russian arms during yesterday's fighting which was marked with con- tinuing German counterattacks and methodical Russian consolidation of hard-won gains on both fronts. Another inhabited locality was cap- tured however in the Velikie Luki sec- tor, the bulletin said, and one battery of 105 mm. guns and two tanks were taken in the effort to annihilate the remainder of the 246th Nazi division. Approximately 900 Germans were killed in offensive operations north- west and southwest of Stalingrad, the communique said, and inside the Senate Debates Mail Censorship Van Nuys Calls Action Illegal; Inquiry to End WASHINGTON, Dec. 9.-(P)-The Senate Judiciary Committee ques- tioned Censorship Director Byron Price for three hours today, and af- terward Chairman Van Nuys (Dem.- Ind.) declared "wholly illegal" the censoring of mail between the United States and its outlying territories. Price testified in a closed hearing. He told reporters he had no doubt that the first War Powers Act gave the administration authority to pro- vide for the security of communica- tions. He felt, rc said, that censor- ship of commrnications with posses- sions and territories was necessary because they passed through areas where they were susceptible of enemy interception. As to the legal authority, Price re- ferred the Committee to the Depart- ment of Justice. Senator Van Nuys said he would summon a justice offi- cial to testify next Monday, along with heads of the Military, Naval and FBI Intelligence Services. Pending completion of hearings, Van Nuys termed the censorship "wholly illegal" and said he would "hesitate a long time" before voting for a pending bill legalizing it. Be A Goodfellow Senior Class Petitions Will Be Available Today Petitions for senior class officers in the literary college may be obtained from 3 to 5 p.m. today and tomorrow in the Student Offices of the Union, the Men's Judiciary Council an- nounced last night. Yesterday's scheduled election was postponed till next Tuesday because an insufficient number of petitions were submitted. northern factory district of the Volga River City the Russians destroyed 13 Nazi emplacements and wiped out about one infantry company. A resumption of fighting in the Nachik sector of the Caucasus was reported, but these battles were only of local significance. The Russians said they killed 300 Germans and destroyed 12 tanks, eight machine- gun nests and three mortar batteries. Be A Goodfellow RAF Raid on Northern Italy is Reported High Command Admits Heavy Damage at Turin By The Associated Press LONDON, Dec. 9.- Air raid sirens wailing tonight in Switzerland indi- cated that the RAF, relentlessly pur- suing Britain's determination to bomb Italy out of the war, was crossing the Alps for another- raid on northern Italy following up last night's de- structive attack on Turin. The Swiss radio reported that raid alarms were sounded in Basel and Zurich at 9 p.m. Last night the biggest bombers of the RAF heaped destruction and a solid mass of fire on Turin with "many" 4-ton and 2-ton block-bust- ers and thousandsv of . incendiary bombers.. The Italian High Command ac- knowledged the devastation in these words today: "Enemy planes carried out a vio- lent -raid last night over Turin, caus- ing very heavy damage, especially to buildings in the central area, includ- ing a university and a hospital." The Italians reported one plane was shot down and crashed in the center of the city, killing seven of its crew. The British reported one plane was missing. Visibility was so good that the shells of buildings wrecked in pre- vious raids stood out clearly. -Be A Goodellow - 'P-B el' License Is Refused Again, Stapp Still Hopeful Despite a second refusal by the state liquor control commission in Lansing yesterday to remove the beer license suspension it has imposed on the Pretzel Bell, local student hang- out, Philip °Stapp, manager of the tavern last night expressed confi- dence that the suspension will be lifted. "Just when it will be lifted I don't know," Stapp explained, "I protested the commission's unfairness in con- tinuing the suspension so long when in the past other taverns in Ann Ar- bor lost their licenses for only two or three days on charges of selling beer to minors." Ralph Thomas, chairman of the commission, yesterday told Stapp the commission was "not yet ready to lift the suspension," but promised to dis- close in two or three days how long the penalty will remain in effect. Women's Curfew Is Ia.m. Celebration Planned by Manpower Corps; Bomber-Scholarship to Receive Proceeds "What to do on New Year's Eve" problems were finally solved for grumbling University students yester- day when the Manpower Corps began preparations for a huge informal Bomber-Scholarship dance guaran- teed to make everybody forget "the good time we might have had at home." At the same time the long debated question of women's hours for New Year's Eve was settled with the an- nouncement that a 1 a.m. curfew had been set for all women students. Only social affair of the evening, the informal dance will be held from 9:30 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. in the Sports Building; and will inaugurate a Man- power Corps bond and stamp drive. Bill Sawyer's orchestra will play, and noisemakers will be provided for what a Corps spokesman called "a big celebration. that is right in line with the war effort." "All proceeds from the dance will go to the Bomber-Scholarship fund, and war corsages will be sold in the Sports Building to open our war stamp drive." The dance is strictly a student cele- bration, and student identification cards will be required of all couples at the .dance, according to co-chair- men Hack Kellnar and Richard Dick. Tickets will cost $2.00 and will go on sale at the Union, the League and Manpower headquarters in Room 1009 Angell Hall some time next week. panel and discussion group, so that t Ineli gibilities Halt Election Announcements Candidates Failing to Secure Cards Must hand Them in Today Results of yesterday's race for posts on the Victory Ball committee can-' not be announced today because it has been discovered that certain of the candidates had failed to secure eligibility cards, the Men's Judiciary Council said late last night. All candidates who have not done so must secure eligibility cards at the Dean of Students' office, Room 4, University Hall and turn them in at the Union student offices between 3-5 p.m. today, the Council announce- ment stated. If the candidates do not turn in their cards today, they will be auto- matically disqualified from the race, the statement said. Candidates who are found to be ineligible lose their positions to the rivals having the next largest vote totals. the persons best acquainted with each rtype of problem -can furnish first hand information on the difficulties and solutions to the task of bringing willing students together with the jobs that must be done. Bob Johnson, Manpower executive in charge of the conference, said that the meeting had three purposes- "an exchange of ideas, an attempt to Representatives Will Meet Here Tomorrow Two-Day Parley to Attempt. Formation of Corps on Other College Campuses By BOB PREIS=KEL Michigan's Manpower Corps, already highly commended by Paul -V. McNutt for its contribution towards solving the manpower problem, will help other midwestern schools set up similar organizations by holding a conference of representatives from Big Ten schools and Michigan State here tomorrow and Saturday. Result of three weeks of negotiations by Corps executives to interest other schools in a discussion of mobilization of student manpower, the con- ference will consist of a series of panels, dinners and talks designed to aid in the organization of every Big Ten campus for more efficient war work. A member of the Manpower Corps executive board will preside over each COLORS FLYING PROUDLY: Armed Merchantman Bravely Fights Enemy Surface Raiders By HAMILTON W. FARON l Associated Press Correspondent1 WASHINGTON, Dec. 9.- Fightingt to the finish and going down with her colors flying proudly, a little American merchantman took one enemy surface raider to the bottom with her and left a second badly damaged in the south Atlantic, the Navy disclosed today.- It was the first reported instance of an armed merchantman sinking a; surface craft of prey.1 Battered from stem to stern, her deck structures a shambles, her en- gines and steering apparatus crip- Axis Continues Terror Reign Execute 49; Strike at French City of Lyon LONDON, Dec. 9.- (A)- Forty- nine more persons have been executed and 500 rounded up in the campaign of German and Axis terror striking again in Europe and for the first time in the formerly unoccupied zone of France, London and continental re- ports said tonight. In addition, six Polish students were reported sentenced to death in Paris for fomenting communism. Reports from Bern said that 400 dealers and customers of a black mar- ket in food were arrested at Zagreb by Croatian police during the last month. The Germans dealt out their first stern measure of hostage reprisal in the remainder of France which they occupied Nov. 11 by rounding up 100 men and women at Lyon and holding them for execution for an attack on German soldiers, the Fighting French declared. "On Nov. 29," the Fighting French pled, she traded shell for shell with the raiders for a furious twenty min- utes. As she slipped under stern-first, the smaller-but more heavily armed+ -of the raiders was a mass of flames with survivors clambering over the+ sides to be picked up by the larger and badly damaged raider. Only ten of the 41 members of the merchantman's crew and five men of a Navy gun crew survived the late September- battle and the 31 days in an open boat before survivors reached' the south Atlantic coast. Heroes Save Injured Comrades Half a dozen or more men earned names as heroes in the 20 blazing minutes of the clash, ignoring their own wounds to carry on the fire against the enemy or to aid more severely injured comrades. Another, Chief Mate Richard Mocz- kowski, Richmond, Calif., also miss- ing, propped himself in a passageway adjacent to the wheelhouse to relay from Capt. Paul Buck, Merrimack Port, Mass., orders which kept the little merchantman maneuvering to present the smallest possible target area to the enemy and at the same time to keep the vessel's guns on the raiders. Given first aid, Moczkowski, heed- less of his severe chest wounds, insist- Turn to Page 4, Col. 2 Be A Goodfellow Volunteer Officer Candidate Program Stays Unchanged WASHINGTON, Dec. 9.-(')-The order suspending voluntary enlist- ment in the armed forces will not interrupt the Army's Volunteer Offi- cer Candidate Program, the War De- partment announced today, but no man who has passed his 38th birth- day will be accepted. Those over 38 who had been or- dered by Dec. 5 to report for induction As the Manpower Corps moved to help.other Big Ten schools set up organizations for the harnessing of student workers, it received the following letter of commendation from Paul V. McNutt, War Man- power Head. My Dear Mr. Borman. Thank you for sending me under date of Nov. 20 a copy of the orga- nizational program of the Man- power Mobilization Corps of the University of Michigan. The activi- ties which your corps is carrying on are very useful and the assis- tance they render to the manpower problem is very genuine. I com- mend what seems to be a very fine scheme of organization and also the effectiveness of the work you have done as revealed by the report of your activities. I hope that other colleges may be stimulated by your fine example. If there is anything which the War Manpower Commission can d to aid you in your effort, please let us know. Very sincerely, Paul V.'McNutt spread manpower mobilization by setting up organizations on each campus, and the establishment of an intercollegiate body to aid in coordi- nating and furthering the student war effort." Clark Tibbets, director of the Uni- versityMWar Board and Manpower head Mary Borman will greet the delegates at the opening meeting on Friday, define the purposes of the conference, and explain the functions of the corps here. After an informal hour in which the representatives can become ac- quainted with each other, the dele- gates will meet for the first panel, at which methods of organization will be discussed. Banquet to End Procedure A banquet will finish the formal procedure for Friday. Saturday, three panels will be held, the first of which will discuss the al- location of student labor among lo- cal defense plants, hospitals, CDVO, scrap and salvage drives, work in res- taurants and dorms, the postoffice, the telephone company and the gen- eral distribution of workers in local war jobs. A second panel will be deoted to a discussion of farm work, the meth- ods of getting assignments and carry- ing them out, and the diversion of student workers to the war activities when the farm season is over. Be A Goodfellow Wickard Will Ask for Materials Pool WASHINGTON, Dec. 9.- ()- Secretary of Agriculture Wickard, the nation's new war food boss, will ask the War Production Board for a large pool of strategic materials to expand food dehydration facilities. Aides of the Secretary said tonight that future requirements. for dried foods of the United Nations' fighting forces would exceed by far the pres- ent productive capacity, and conse- quently many new plants would have to be built. Wickard may also recommend that materials be made available for ex- STUDENTS LEND FULL SUPPORT: CD VO Praises Campus War Effort Coordinated activities of University men and women students under the direction of Mrs. Morse D. Campbell of the local Civilian Defense Volun- teer office were lauded yesterday by officials of the Washtenaw county civilian defense organization. In a report on the work done by students under the student Manpower Corps and the Women's War Council more than 1,500 men volunteers are listed while it is shown that 1,777 eral projects among which are listed farm labor, scrap salvage, hospital assistance, fuel registration, and var- ious other civilian defense jobs. Coed volunteers recruited by the Women's War Council have also con- tributed a large variety of war ser- vices. More than 105 women partici- pated in Freshman Project, enter- taining at Cassedy Lake Camp, about 300 coeds are doing volunteer hos- pital work, more than 100 worked on Allied Relief Fund in which $128 was earned. The Manpower Corps has arranged classes for men students in air raid precautions, fire warden duties, in- struction on various explosives and other phases of civilian defense. Classes for women students include nurse's aide, first aid, home nursing, nutrition, motor mechanics, braille, typing and shorthand. All students registered either with