VOL. LIII No. 61 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, DEC. 14, 1942 Weather Slightly Calder PI ICE FIVE CENTS Blaze Kills 110 In rvicemen's Hostel Briftish '!. . Drive Rommel From El Agheila " --- ____ U.S. Navy Sinks Jap Destroyer Enemy Airfield Near Guadalcanal Is Heavily Bombed in Powerful Army Air Offensive WASHINGTON, Dec. 13.- (A)- American dive-bombers and warships sank one Japanese destroyer, dam- aged at least four others, and pre- sumably killed hundreds of enemy troops, the Navy reported today, when the Japs undertook last week another desperate sally to strengthen their forces on Guadalcanal Island. One United States torpedo boat was lost. Further, a communique disclosed, army Flying Fortresses stepped up their offensive against Japan's new Munda 'Wfield 6n'Ne v Georgia' Is- land, only 150 miles from Guadal- canal. In two days the big planes splat- tered the enemy base with more than 27,500 pounds of bombs, including four 1,000-pounders that hit squarely on the flight strip. The outburst of intense activity around Guadalcanal-unusual since Japan's greatest bid to reconquer the island was smashed in mid-November -began Friday (Solomon Islands Time). At the same time there was a brief flurry of action in the winter- locked north Pacific. The communi- que said three Army medium bombers (Martin B-26s) bombed an already damaged enemy ship aground at Kis- ka Island and bombed and strafed shore installations. The main fighting of the two-day period in the Solomons began at 6 p.m. Friday when the Japanese task force, consisting of 11 destroyers, was drawing close to Guadalcanal. Nor- mally the Japs load each destroyer on such a mission with about 150 men plus supplies, Reports made no men- tion of transports, and the Japs evi- dently expected as many ships as possible to fight their way through on their own if necessary. Dutch Traitor Named Head of Netherlands Former Nazi Party Leader Given Control LONDON, Dec. 13.- 0)- Anton Mussert, diminutive 48 - year - old Quisling who for 11 years led the in- effective Dutch Nazi Party, has been recognized by Adolf Hitler as the "leader of the Netherlands people," the Germans announced today. Mussert's new position, however, is short of the status of puppet premier and apparently is more in the nature of a probationary leader to see if he can bring the Netherlands people nearer to wholehearted Nazism. Some observers predicted that one of Mussert's first tasks would be to raise a Dutch Army to fight for the Axis. The Russian News Agency Tass reported from Stockholm that Hitler, when he received Mussert to invest him with his new powers, demanded the mobilization of 250,000 Dutchmen fnr the Gprman Arm. LABOR PIRATES: WLI Fixes Wage Ceilings in 6 Counties Tool and Die Workers Are Affected by Order WASHINGTON, Dec. 13.-()-In a move designed to prevent labor pirating, the National War Labor Board today established maximum wage rates for the more than 50,000 tool and die workers in all jobbing and manufacturing plants in six Michigan counties, including the cit- ies of Detroit, Flint and. Pontiac. The board also established a special commission in the area to interpret and enforce the order and to rule on disputes over minimum wage rates in individual plant cases. No minimum rates were established by the order. Benjamin Aaron, WLB mediation officer who has represented the board in tool anti die cases in the ietriOit area several months, was named to head the commission. The board announced that public hearings.will be held shortly at which employers in five other Michigan counties may appear to show cause why the blanket order should not be extendedtto them. Counties covered by the present order are Wayne, Oakland, Macomb, Monroe, Washtenaw and Genesee, which also embrace the cities of Mon- roe, Ypsilanti and Mt. Clemens. Reds Repulse Strong Nazi Counter Blows Russian Offensives Knock Out 250,000 Germans in 25 Days MOSCOW, Dec. 14. (Monday)- VP)- Powerful and repeated counter- attacks by a "considerable force" of Axis soldiers south of Stalingrad were hurled back yesterday, the Russians announced early today as the Red Army drove forward its twin winter offensives which in 25 days have cost the Axis nearly 250,000 men killed or captured. Northwest of Stalingrad, where ap- proximately 300,000 German soldiers: are now reported trapped by the Sov- iets, the Russians said their men have' captured "several important strate- gic heights." On the central front, the midnight communique acknowledged a German battalion in the Velikie Luki area had pressed the Red Army back "slightly" but said that the enemy was sur- rounded by a skillful maneuver and "fighting now is proceeding for its annihilation." West of Rzhev, the Russians said, three counterattacks by a German regiment with a large group of tanks were hurled back and 400 of the en- emy were killed. Thus the Russians, with the excep- tion of the slight German advance in the Velikie Luki area, continued their victorious reports in the tone of a special communique yesterday telling of vast German and Axis losses in men and material. Students Join Varsity I Axis Forces Flee West from Fast-Moving Allied Advance American Flying Fortresses Sink Ship, Set Fire to Tunisian Warehouses in Great Aerial Assault CAIRO, Dec. 14. (Monday)-(P)- " LONDON, Dec. 13.-(JP)-American The British Eighth Army has re- Flying Fortresses and Billy Mitchell sumed its big western offensive and bombers in the greatest aerial assault driven 'Jarshal Erwin Rommel from of the North African campaign sank his striongly-held bastion at El Aghe- one ship and set roaring fires amidst ila, and, the Axis forces in Libya are the docks and warehouses of the in flight to the west, it was officially three main Tunisian harbors of Bi- annduneed today. ' zerte, Tunis and Sousse today, a dis- The British, smashing toward Trip- patch from North Africa said tonight. oli and Tunisia td meet- Allied forces The terrific aerial battering given driving eastward from Algeria, thus the three ports apparently was a for the first time in the fluctualing quick follow-up of a smashing as- campaigns' in Libya have pushed be- sault by Flying Fortresses yesterday yond El Agheila. The Axis twice be- of Bizerte and Tunis, with Sousse fore has halted -its headlong flight added today in the scope of the there,= rested, and thrown back the American aerial offensive. British. The force today was the largest -The official announcement wasthe ever to participate in a raid on the first British confirmation of German Axis in Tunisia. broadcasts yesterday that the British German Infiltration Eighth 'Army had begun its expected German infiltration attempts on offensive against Rommel at El both the north and south sides.of Agheila ' Medjez-E-Bab, 35 milessouthwest Berlin Reports of Tunis, were turned back by Bait- Later the Berlin radio reported ish and American defenders, and that the British had penetrated posi- British submarines also entered the tions "far to the south" in the El attack on the Axis shuttle system Agheila line, across the Sicilian Straits. Rommel thus was fleeing once Four enemy supply ships were sunk more from the stand he had taken in the Mediterranean and inside Lib- last month after being; pushed back yan anchorages, and a convoy was hit 700 miles from his deepest thrust with three torpedoes only 30 miles into Egypt atAEl Alamein. from Naples by the submarines, the "The first intimation of the British Admiralty announced. offensive which began' in October and London sources estimated that' cracked the Alamein positions came Gen. Walther Nehring, the German from the Germans, as did the first commander in Tunisia, had lost about intimation of -the new British move half his mechanized force employed against El Agheila. in 'twin thrusts at Medjez-El-Bab and The British Eighth Army struck farther north Friday. Allied casual- against Rommel while the British ties were said to be "comparatively, First Army and its American allies low." were repulsing German tank and in- But Reuters, British news agency, fantry attacks Saturday in northern reported from North Africa that a Tunisia; new battle for Medjez-El-Bab was The Agheila battlefront, from the "expected to be joined at any mo- coast of the Gulf of Sirte to impass- ment." able salt marshes, is less than 400 miles 'from Rommel's main base at Mountains along Road Tripoli. The mountains along the road 'from that place to Mateur were re- Passable Ground ported spotted thick with German The passable ground in the Agheila machine-guns. area funnels down to a 40-mile defile Naples was bombed anew Friday between the marshes and the sea night by British Liberators flying and the next defensible position, re- under U.S. command through smoke ports have said, probably is Misurata, left by explosions from U.S. bombers only about 100 miles east of Tripoli. ,riday afternoon. The German reports broadcastA Saturday said that Gen. Sir Bernard Other Allied bombers attacked L. Montgomery, commanding the Tripoli, the railway station and other British in the field, attacked Satur- targets at Gabes, on the east coast day morning with two tank divisions of Tunisia, and the docks at Palermo, and two infantry divisions, strongly in Sicily. supported by planes, at Mersa El The submarine successes were in Brega on the Gulf of Sirte coast, and addition to those announced Satur- at another point further inland just day, when the pigboats sank at least east of El Agheila. two ships, scored torpedo hits on four The British were repulsed in the others and shelled the Italian coast south around noon, the Germans damaging oil tanks, a factory and added,, lut renewed the battle late two railway trains. Saturday afternoon and threw an One of the new victims was an entire fresh tank division into the armed merchant cruiser, sunk by a fight. torpedo. Another was a tanker. He's Looking at You-Goodfellow * * * ',' * EVERYONE DOES HISPART: Goodfellow Dailies to Be Sold by Student Army, 300 Strong By HANK PETERSEN Fully armed with Goodfellow Dai- lies and firm determination to make the 1942 Goodfellow Drive the most successful in Ann Arbor history, a 300-student army of salesmen hit the streets at 7:45 a.m. today beginning a nine hour campaign to raise funds for local charity groups. Fraternity and sorority members headed straight for campus posts where they are to sell papers through- out the day, while Manpower Corps men made for the downtown Ann Ar- bor district. Later in the day, these salesmen will be supplemented by residents of West Quadrangle dormi- tories, selling papers within the quad- rangle on a floor-by-floor basis in an experiment this year to increase the range of Goodfellow Daily sales. Already mailed in or pledged from campus fraternities, sororities and cooperative houses are contributions expected to raise at least a third of the $1,600 total which has been set as the goal of the drive. Additional contributions are to be solicited today from Ann Arbor bus- iness and factory officials, and roving Goodfellow Daily salesmen will carry papers to the defense plant area to give workers their chance to be a Goodfellow. Funds raised by Goodfellows this year will be allocated to the Family and Children's Service Bureau, out- growth of the Family Welfare Bur- eau, the Goodwill Fund and Textbook Lending Fund. Purpose of the Family and Chil- dren's Service Bureau, chief recipient of Goodfellow funds, is to make funds available throughout the year to fam- ilies whose incomes are insufficient to meet economic emergencies. Mary Hester, executive secretary of the Bureau, has said that cases of such need are numerous this year despite prevalent high wages because accom- panying high prices reduce buying power of low income families more than ever. Council Plans TIiown. Meeting' for Tomorrow Types of Post-War Planning to Be Topic Various plans for international or- ganization will be presented, dis- cussed and voted upon at the Post- War Council's "Town Meeting" that will be held at 8 p.m. tomorrow at the Rackham Auditorium. Having grown out of the interest shown in specific plans at the Inter- collegiate Post-War Conference held here last week, the meeting will cen- ter around four prominent types of planning that have been suggested for the world to come. After an introductory talk by Mary Borman, head of the University Man- power Corps, Alan Brandt, '44, will discuss Pax Victorum. He will be fol- lowed in turn by Clifford Straehlev 102 More Injured in Holocaust Frenzied Patrons Jam Exits in Newfoundland Fire; Is Compared with Boston Disaster ST. JOHN'S, Newfoundland, Dec. 13.-(P)--A roaring fire spreading with incredible speed killed at least 110 persons and injured 102 more at a barn dance in the Knights of Col- umbus hostel late last night in scenes of frenzy and panic like the Boston night club holocaust exactly two weeks before. Dozens of persons were trampled to death in a panicky rush to escape, and bodies were found piled near the exits just as in the Cocoanut Grove blaze in Boston, which claimed nearly 500 lives. Like Boston Disaster As in the Boston disaster, many of the victims among the 500 dancers were servicemen, including some Americans, and a large proportion were women. Shrieking men and women stam- peded for the exits when the fire sprang up again shortly after mid- night, after first being reported under control. The hostel, operated for conveni- ence of the services, drew men from the armed forces of many of the United Nations on Saturday nights. The fire whipped through the structure before firemen could get into action, and flames scorched or threatened several nearby, buildings. Origin had not been determined late tonight. Public Halls Public halls in St. John's became temporary morgues and hospitals when regular institutions became crowded to capacity. Searchers still combed the debris late today for more bodies believed buried in the ruins. Anguished relatives and friends crowded the roped-off area and awaited the results of attempts to identify the charred bodies. The identity of only a few of the recovered bodies had been established by this afternoon. The first warning, of the blaze was heard by townspeople at 11 p.m. last night when a radio broadcast from the hall said fire had broken out but was under control. Shortly After Shortly after, however, the blaze sprang up again and swept through the structure with such speed that by the time firemen arrived from their station only 200 yards away the whole building was a roaring mass of flames. Some of those who got away with their lives did so by diving through the windows. The blaze was not extinguished un- til 2 o'clock this morning by the fire- men who battled in bitter cold. Every ambulance in the city was summoned to the scene and the crews worked throughout the morning re- moving the dead and injured to morgues and hospitals. Another Fire-This Time Goodfellow Contributions Support Student Aid Funds, Local Charities- By STAN WALLACE Where does the money contributed in the Goodfellow Drive go? For what purposes is it used? These .are some of the questions raised in connection with today's Goodfellow campaign. They deserve Dean Alice Lloyd have taken an active part in administering the fund. When ill health forces students to give up board jobs, the Goodwill fund steps into the breech to tide them over their hard times. Money is do- nated outright to students in such nredicaments, and thev mav if they, Needy families are provided with clothing, food, shoes, and medical supplies the year round. Said Miss Mary, Hester, executive secretary of the Bureau, ". . . the large portion (ofj the money) is put in our fund for use I thrnnhnut the vear. There are nther