Y 4kr t att MERRY CHRISTMAS" VOL. LIII No. 64 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, DEC. 18, 1942 PRICE FIVE CENTS College Fleeing Reservists To Go On Active Duty x * : >;* Rommel Forces Are Cutm Enem * * In Half y Trapped Subsistence, Pay American Troops Continue to Pour into Africa to Be Provided By LEE G All college enlisted reserve corp by the end of the spring semester, gi many cases detailed to special trainin This is the comprehensive joint terday by the University and by the A affect every one of the college reservi The first Army Specialized Trai February, 1943-after the conclusion and the first Army Enlisted Reserve Men not in certain designated cate- gories will leave school at the end of the spring semester. Navy Program Initial dates of Navy training pro- grams have not yet been announced. The complete story of what will happen to college men is shown graphically in charts on Page 2 of today's Daily. Army Training Selected Universities named by the Army and Navy will be used to train the men who will be under discipline, housed in special quarters and pro- vided food through contracted school facilities. Individual training programs will vary according to the length of time necessary to learn specific jobs and the training toward specialized jobs already taken by students. Dean Russell W. Bunting of the dental school yesterday reassured Army Specialized Training Pro- grains are designed to take men who have finished the current se- mester which will end in January, 1943. Men will not be taken from school before the end of the semes- ter if they are in. the reserves. dental and pre-dental students that they would be treated in exactly the same manner as medical and pre- medical students. He advised pre- medical students to obtain deferments from Selective Service on that basis. Meanwhile, University officials have been preparing a plan to mobil- ize the University's facilities. The blueprint of the Division for Emer- gency Training-a powerful new ad- ministrative body that will hold co- ordinate power with the present schools and colleges-will be placed before the Board of Regents today. New Division Created Direction of all the specialized ser- vice training programs which may be located here will be placed under the Division for Emergency Training. It is expected that radical innova- tions for the quick training of women workers for industrial and other jobs vacated by men will be effected by the new Division. A further plan of completely unheralded scope may af- fect certain high school students. Adult education plans are also re- ported to be part of the projected Turn to Page 6, Col. 2 Mwchigaffn Quota for Month Fitled LANSING, Dec. 17.- ( P)- The State Selective Service Headquarters said today no volunteers would be accepted by local draft boards for in- duction into the Navy and Marine Corps for the rest of December, be- cause quotas have been filled. An exception, the statement said, would be made in the case of candi- dates for officer training in the Ma- rine Corps, who first must obtain from Marine recruiting offices letters of identification for presentation to their local boards. - Col. E. M. Rosen rans, State Selec- tive Service Director, said there would be a temporary arrangement in Jan- uary allowing volunteers to join the Navy, Marines and Coast Guard. It will be a stop-gap, he said, until a system is ready for regular draft calls for all branches of armed service. Men 18 to 38 years old seeking to enlist in the Navy, Coast Guard or ORDENKER s men will be placed on active duty ven exhaustive screening tests and in g programs in colleges. Army-Navy plan released here yes- krmy and Navy in Washington. It will sts. ning Program will begin operation in- of college terms current on Jan. 1- 2 50,000 Men to Be Edueated by Army, Navy Uniforms and Pay for Soldiers, Sailors under New Program WASHINGTON, Dec. 17.- (P)- A huge portion of America's higher edu- cational system was dedicated to the arts of war today as the Army and Navy announced plans for the train- ing of perhaps 250,000 young men in colleges. Secretary of War Stimson readily acknowledged that the tremendous plan will go far to destroy liberal edu- cation for the time being, "So far as the able-bodied men of college age are' concerned." But he quickly-. added that the long run effect will be to. preserve liberal education, and plansi for its revival after the war are al-' ready under study. Contracts with Colleges "The immediate necessity is to win this war," he said, "and unless we do that there is no hope for liberal edu- cation in this country." The youths to be trained will be selected from among those now in colleges, in the armed services and in civilian life. The Army and Navy will contract with the colleges to provide educa- tional facilities, faculties, living quar- ters and food for the men. A cadet system will be established in each institution selected to take part in the program. The soldier and sailor students will be uniformed and will receive the pay and rating of the lowest enlisted grade. From All Programs The Army plans to draw its stu- dents from its own enlisted ranks and from the existing Enlisted Reserves and ReserveOfficers' Training Corps enrollment. The Navy, too, is count- ing on its enlisted men and reservists, and in addition may enroll young men now mn civilian life. In all cases, the youths who receive this educational preparation for more useful posts in the services must meet satisfactory e duc ational require- ments. Army students may not be younger than 18 nor older than 22. The Navy will take civilians who have reached their 17th but not their 20th birthdays and enlisted men who are not more than 22. At present there are considerably fewer than 800,000 male students in the nation's colleges. Turn to Page 6, Col. 1 by British Army By EDWARD KENNEDY Associated Press Correspondent CAIRO, Egypt, Dec. 17.-The British Eighth Army, throwing a strong force across the line of Field Marshal Rommel's retreat, has cut his fleeing columns in two and now threatens to inflict another major disaster upom them. A swift and powerful thrust which reached the Wadi (Gully) Matratix about 65 miles west of the abandoned Axis positions at El Agheila, thee American troops are shown landing barges at S urcauf, near Algiers, on:the coast of French North Africa, preceding announcements that U.S. bombers and fighters are spreading-destruction' in the Axis- held ports of Tunis and Bizerte. At least one ship w as sunk and five enemy planes were shot down. A SUDDEN CHANGE OF WARTIME: Col. Gan "h Foresees Prefer-ence for ROTC, ERC after Induction By JOHN ERLEWINE Elgven hundred bewildered ROTC cadets grasping at every possible source for knowledge concerning their status in the vast nation-wide calling dif. the Army ERC, sought vainly for specific details yesterday from a mili- tary science department which was quite as astonished by the sudden ac- tion as themselves. Addressing half the campus unit during its drill period yesterday, Col. William A. Ganoe stated that prior to the release in The Daily extra the department had had no inkling of the sudden change. Col. Ganoe told the cadets that it was no time for bitter charges that Meat Supplies to Be Reduced WASHINGTON, Dec. 17.- (P)- In order to fill expanding war needs, government food authorities issued orders today reducing the per capita supply of meat available for civilians from the present limit of 40 ounces to-35 ounces a week during the first three months of 1943. The civilian supply of pork, veal, lamb, and mutton was ordered cut about 13 per cent. Beef supplies will continue to be restricted at the pres- ent levels. There is no compulsory rationing of meat at present, but con- sumers are being asked to limit them- selves to 40 ounces a week. After the first of the year this voluntary ration will be cut to 35 ounces. "we had embezzled you into the 9RC." He emphasized that this was but one of the many sudden and un- expected changes of wartime. Urging the cadets not to be down- cast or to think about quitting school, Col. Ganoe said, "I do feel that the ERC men will have preference after being called. I feel that ROTC boys will have preference either in getting back to school or into officer training schools." He told the cadets that specific de- tails regarding the plan undoubtedly will be arriving shortly which should clear up the confusion. Col. Ganoe assured the cadets that, "Every man who has done well in ROTC, I'm go- ing to fight for as much as regula- tions will permit." Captain Roland L. Kolb, regimental adjutant, told the assembled ROTC students that under the new plan there would be much screening of officer material. He assured the stu- dents that by their enlistment and acceptance into the ERC, they had already been screened and were con- sidered officer material. He urged all students to come back after Christ- mas vacation and to not let up on their studies. ArysPlan Is Disapproved MEMPHIS, Tenn., Dec. 17.- (P)- The president of the Association of American Colleges tonight expressed his disapproval of Army and Navy plans to train young men in colleges, and added that the Association was particularly against one phase of the Army's program. Dr. Charles E. Diehl, President of Southwestern University, said the Association, meeting in Philadelphia Oct. 29, drew plans for training col- lege men that are opposed to the Army plan to require 13 weeks of basic military training before a stu- dent can be eligible for the college work. "We do not think the military training is going to be much use if interrupted with a year of college work," he said. He declared the Association opposes the Army's plan to select students for training by following the general pol- O PAiretor Reyigns FPst Leon Henderson Gives 'Ill Health' as Reason. WASHINGTON, ' Dec. 17.- (/P)-} Belligerent Leon Henderson, target of irate congressional' criticism 'for his handling":of the touchy price-fixing and rationing problems, resigned as price administrator tonight, "princi- pally" on the grounds of ill health. President. Roosevelt, in accepting the resignation,, effective "upon the appointment..and qualification of your successor'" did not indicate who that would be but it was generally expected that he would appoint Pren- tiss M. Brown,. Democratic Senator from Michigan who was defeated for reelection. Factors in Decision The portly Henderson has long suf- fered from a back ailment. But his explanation to Mr. Roosevelt that his departure was dictated "principally by a recurrent physical disability and a rather bad impairment of my eyesight" indicated that other factors also figured in his decision.: There has been. considerable dis- satisfaction -in Congress over his poli- cies in the Office of Price Administra- tion, which he has headed since its creation, and some senators and rep- resentatives have threatened to. cur- tail OPA appropriations if he con- tinued at the helm. In this connection Henderson told the President that he would be on call to help his successor and would be "readily available and eager to ex- plain any and all OPA actions for which I have had responsbility." Stabilization His Aim In his last days in office, Henderson said, he would' work on "stabiliza- tion" of the fuel oil and gasoline ra- tioning "so that these may be no more special burdens to my successor than the others which have had such excellent community acceptance." These two rationing programs have come in for particular criticism in Congress and elsewhere-the gasoline rationing on the ground that it was inequitable and unnecessary as a rub- ber conservation step, and the fuel oil rationing on the ground that it was too complicated. Further Conserving' swung south into the interior and isol O; Russians Make Small Gains on Central Front Strong Nazi Defense Is Reported Broken near Kotelnikovski MOSCOW, Dec. 18. (Friday)-()-' The Red Army killed 1,235 Germans and knocked out 12 tanks yesterday in sharp fighting along the railway leading to Kotelnikovski, 90 miles southwest of Stalingrad, made small gains on the central front, and con-; solidated its position deep inside the Don River elbow, the Soviets an- binounced early today. --The- -heaviestlighting was-.reported southwest of Stalingrad where the Russians announced yesterday they, had broken a stubborn German de- fense near Kotelnikovski after a two- day fight in which 50 Nazi tanks were destroyed. Reds Capture Supplies Supplementing a previous an- nouncement of a huge victory west of Surovikino, inside the Don River bend on the Stalingrad-Likhaya rail- way, the Russians said today a total of 580 German guns, 15 tanks, 26 small tanks and armored cars, 65 mortars, 203 machineguns, 650 anti- tank rifles, and huge quantities of ammunition and supplies had been captured in that action which appar- ently occurred more than 90 miles at the rear of the Nazi siege army on the Volga. Northwest of Stalingrad, in the area between the Don and Volga Rivers where subsidiary Russian en- circlement efforts are underway, the Red Army was reported to have wiped out more than 350 Germans, and de- stroyed three tanks, ten machine- guns and seven blockhouses. The Russian effort in that sector, how- ever, appeared to be devoted mainly to fortifying the wedges they have driven into enemy positions. Transport Planes Destroyed In the immediate Stalingrad area, the communique said, the Rus- sians destroyed seven more transport planes, one of the main Nazi methods of supplying their troops in the Don- Volga pockets, and killed 500 enemy troops in fighting that raged on the northwestern outskirts of the city. A German infantry company also was reported wiped out in a brisk engage- ment on the southern outskirts. Allies Beat Of f JTaps at Buna SOMEWHERE IN AUSTRALIA, Dec. 18. (Friday)-(P)-Allied troops in New -Guinea beat off local Japa- nese counter-thrusts against two points in their lines at Buna yester- day as the southwest Pacific com- mand's hard-working air force helped ground troops tighten their ring around the enemy's shallow beach- hold. After Allied artillery had destroyed a bridge leading to the Japanese-held Buna government station near cap- tured Buna Village, American infan- trymen closed in to clear out the Tan naa rnm - r nr lff niin'nf.ra im- ated large German armored, infantry and artillery units under a punishing fire. "Enemy troops east of this area (the scene of the cut in Rommel's line) include armored formations which, in attempting to' break out, have already suffered heavy casual- ties and continue to be severely mauled," the British communique an- nounced. The Allied Air Force, meanwhile, carried the offensive farther west- ward with heavy attacks on Axis airfields in Tripolitania, including Tamet, 25 miles 'west of Sirte, and CastelBenito, .16'milea--seoth-of Tri- poli, it was announced tonight. Planes Destroyed Destruction of planes on these fields is one reason for the compara- tive immunity from enemy air oppo sition in the present drive. (In London, the News Chronicle estimated that 10,000 of Rommel's best men are in the Allied bag and estimates of tanks trapped ;ranged At the western end of the Allied offensive in North Africa, in Tunisia, the day's information indicated that new and heavy ground fighting was in preparation as the rains abated. The Morocco radio was heard broad- casting reports that Axis forces were falling back from the vicinity of Med- jez-El-Bab, a key point along the Allied line before the cities of Tunis and Bizerte. (An earlier broadcast from German-controlled Vichy had claimed, on the contrary, an Allied withdrawal from that point.) Air Action Heavy (At Allied headquarters in North Africa it was reported that the big- gest bomber and fighter force yet in action in North Africa bombed and strafed Axis shipping, docks and air- dromes in Tunisia Thursday, sinking one ship and shooting down five Axis planes and damaging three others. (The Americans attacked Bizerte, Tunis, Gabes and other Axis strong- soldsn- iTunisia and beat-off attacks by a record number of German planes.) Jap Zero Planes Lost in Battle Big Bombers Down 12 Enemy Aircraft WASHINGTON, Dec. 17.- (')- Twelve Japanese Zero planes which dared to challenge a group of Army Flying Fortresses on a bombing mis- sion near New Georgia Island in the Solomons were wiped out by the gun- ners in the big bombers, the Navy re- ported today. One of the Fortresses was lost but its crew was rescued. The intercepting enemy planes were standard land-type Zeros in- stead of the pontooned craft which have participated in most of the re- cent engagements there, and presum- ably came from a field established at Munda. This would indicate that the foe has succeeded in establishing this field for at least limited use despite a series of heavy bombing attacks by American Army and Navy planes. If the field is completed, it would mean that nearly half the distance the enemy has been flying in some attacks on Guadalcanal has been whittled off. Heretofore the Japanese presumably had been using Buin on the southeastern tip of Bougainville Island, 275 miles northwest of Guad- TO THE NAVY ON SCHEDULE: Crowbar Wielding Students Ready Boilers for Shipment; Thanks to a crowbar wielding crew of student workers, the first shipment of parts from the Univer- sity's two ponderous power house boilers will leave Saturday, on sched- ule-Tfor a Naval airplane arsenal, Buildings and Grounds head E. C. Pardon announced last night. Tough University males, excused from PEM, worked with NROTC ca- -.i,..... . ..~+e d _ r n C e ln men who aren't afraid to get dusty and want to make a real contribution to the war effort are needed desper- ately," he said. Men from regularly scheduled PEM classes appeared at the University Storehouse all yesterday afternoon to work on the razing. These men were given excused absences to devote their time to the war effort. All the bricks by last night had