THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, MARCH 5, 1943 -a I mwm .ussian People Adjust Lives to War (.9' (Continued from Page 1) around Moscow, chopped and hauled wood, and provided enough fuel to givedthe entire capital limited, but sufficient heat. My three-room house on Ulitsa Shchukina has been out of wood twice. But, by shut- Fifth ting off two rooms, liv- in a ing entirely in the Series bedroom, and luckily receiving a new deliv- ery of birch every time the cold start- ed to set in, I was able to keep com- fortable. The heating situation has been most acute in Leningrad, where a gap has been broken in the German ring around the city, but the enemy still camps in the southern and west- ern suburbs. There, I heard, not a single wooden house is left standing -all have been torn down for fuel. Electric lighting is severely ra- tioned. Only a single bulb is permit- ted for each room, limited to 25 watts for an average living room or kitchen, and 16 watts for halls and wash rooms. The penalty for violation of this rule may be a fine of 1,000 rubles (officially, $200) or loss of electricity for the duration of the war. In addition, a total limit is fixed for consumption in each house, and as this is approached, the house com- MSC To Meet Building Debts EAST LANSING, March 4.- (AP)- John A. Hannah. President of Michi- gan, State College, said today the institution would meet its program of self-liquidation of building debts, de- spite sharp drop in student enroll- ment due to designation of the college as a military training center. Retirement of debts for construc- tion of Jenison Field House, the col- lege auditorium and the music build- ing has been on a self-payment basis, largely from student fees and build- ing "rentals. Hannah said the government would assume a reasonable share of added expenses of the college in view of the military designation. Between 1,500 and .2,000 student reservists will be called to the colors at close of the current term March 20, while most remaining male students and 3,000 engineer and aviation soldier students will be classified as Army personnel exempt from college fees. The field house debt, now approxi- mately $500,000, is being retired at a rate of $50,000 a year, Hannah said, the auditorium debt, now $509,000, at a rate of $46,000 a year. mittee may cut off all current per- iodically, to reduce its use. This of- ten means sitting in the darkness, or by the light of a rare candle, in the early hours of the evening. Basic food rations provide daily a pound of bread, and monthly four pounds of meat, or fish, four pounds of rice, one pound of sugar and one pound of butter. Meat tickets usually bring sausage or herring. Chocolate candies are sometimes issued instead of sugar, vegetable oil instead of but- ter, and potatoes instead of rice. In addition, milk, vegetables and meat may be bought on the markets where collective farmers are permit- ted to sell their surplus products at competitive prices. The ration system was instituted quickly and completely at the start of the war, without public debate. It was designed to stretch the supply as far as possible, without seasonal ups- and-downs, and although there are some who go hungry, few starve. I have been solemnly invited to drop in for tea, and upon doing so, been handed a glass of pure hot water and a piece of candy through which to sip it. If you use your imagina- tion, it is a very tasty drink. The clothes you wear in Moscow are the ones you always had, or that someone left you. The clothing in- dustry works entirely for the Red Army. The shops are bare. But styles do not matter. The thing isj to keep warm.1 Transportation is less of a prob- lem. For persons engaged in essen- tial work, .25 gallons of gasoline a month are provided. For others, there are busses, streetcars and thel subway. These have been less crowd- ed during the war than before, since the population of Moscow has dwin- dled from 4,000,000 to 2,800,000. Perhaps the toughest task of all is having the washing done. My Mos- cow ration is two cakes of soap a month, and on that basis, you think twice before changing your shirt. Work is on a 12-hour day, seven-j MILL LEADS GROUP: War Forum Club Discusses Issues and Purposes of War By VIRGINIA ROCK Thirty students have banded to- gether to form the nucleus of a unique discussion group. It is not a new organization; in fact, it was established a year and a half ago. Formerly called the Naval Affairs Committee, and later the Interna- tional Relations Club, it was renamed the War Forum Club this year. Under the direction of Mr. Edward W. Mill of the political science de- partment, the students themselves discuss political, social, economic, and technical problems of the present war and post-war reconstruction. The club has three principal aims. The first is to discuss the actual land, sea, and air conditions of war. The Catholics Granted Lenten Meat Dispensation Today LANSING, March 4. -(1P)- The most Rev. Jcseph H. Albers today announced a special dispensation to Catholics in the diocese of Lansing, embracing most of Southern Michi- gan, relieving them from compliance with the church law of fast and ab- stinence in lent, except on Ash Wed- nesday, March 10, and Good Friday, April 23. Bishop Albers said abstinence would be obligatory only on Fridays, because of food rationing and in- tensified work in war plants. technical aspects of the present war are largely discussed in connection with this aim. Plans for the year include a consideration of the relative roles of air and sea power, the mili- tary potential of the United Nations as well as the enemy, the over-all strategy of war in the Pacific and Atlantic theatres, the methods and use of tactics by each of the branches of the armed services, and a discus- sion and analysis of major battles and actions of the war. Post-War Discussions The second principal consideration of the group is to discuss the out- standing proposals for post-war re- construction. Included in- this cate- gory will be panels, lectures and de- bates on the possibility on continuing the United Nations as a permanent organization, the plans for greater regional understanding in the Amieri- cas, the international dissemination of best possible information of the Allies, proposals for a World Court, and proposals for the extension -f greater freedom to dependent areas throughout the world. The third goal of the club is to call attention to important current litera- ture being published on international relations and post-war planning. Members Elected The War Forum Club is unique. in that all of its members have been elected to the organization by the executive committee. Among the thirty active participants, there are several foreign students, some from Latin America; other members are American students who plan to enter the consular service after the war. Although the club is an indepen- dent organization, it cooperates with the Post-War Council and works closely with the Foreign Policy Asso- ciation, said Mr. Mills. He emphasized that anyone may attend the discussions held at 7:30 p.m. every Wednesday in Room 229 Angell Hall. Hoover Ball, Bearing Co. To Vote on Union Status The National Labor Relations Board has ordered an election among the workers of the Hoover Ball and Bearing Co. for next Wednesday to determine the employes' choice for a bargaining agent. The workers will have an oppor- tunity to vote for the United Auto- mobile Workers-CIO, the Ann Arbor Industrial Union, or no union, the NLRB announcement said. day week basis. All social reforms, including the five-day, 35-hour work week and paid vacations, have been abandoned for the duration. Those who left Moscow with evacu- ated factories, stores and commis- sariats are staying in the east, on their jobs. Passes to return to the capital are rare. Those who re- mained in Moscow are working at their old posts, or new ones, almost all devoted to national defense. Small plants which once made consumers' goods are now turning out arms. The additional work has brought increased compensation. The aver- age pay of a Russian worker, before the war, was estimated at about 300 rubes (officially $60) a month. This has been swelled by pay for over-time and lost vacations. But there is not much to buy. Still, there is some brightness in Moscow life. The theatres are show- ing regularly the best of their reper- toire, the ballets "Swan Lake" and "Don Quixote," the operas "Eugene Onegin" and "The Queen of Spades," and plays like the old favorite, "The Cherry Orchard," and a new hit, "Front," a satire on an old-fashioned Red Army general. The controlling factor in everyone's life is the curfew from midnight to 5:00 a.m. Theatres open at 6:30 p.m., close about 10:00 p.m., so the audi- ence can get home on time. There are no nightclubs. The subway stops running at 10:00 p.m., streetcars at 11:00 p.m. At midnight, the streets are silent and dark, and the city sleeps, resting for another day's work. Army Air Corps Nurses Arrive on Tunisian Front ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AFRICA, March 4.- ()- Twenty-five specially trained Army air force nurses in trim Navy blue uniforms have arrived here in an air evacuation 'unit which will fly back wounded and sick soldiers from the Tunisian front. The nurses will free more men and medical officers for front line duty. They .were trained in a six weeks special course at Bowman Field, Ky. Several served as air line stewar- desses in civilian life. They form the first unit of its type to serve in any war theatre. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 4) Michigan Outing Club will go on a hostel trip to the Saline Valley Farm on bicycles on- Saturday and Sunday, March s and 7, leaving Hill Auditorium on Saturday at 1:30 p.m. All students are welcome. For further information call Dorothy Lund- strom (2-4471) or Dan Saulson (2-4401). Women's Glee Club:' will all members please wear white blouses and dark skirts to the broadcast on Saturday morning for broadcast picture. Michigan Chorus, assisting Women's Glee Club, special rehearsal for men on Satur- day, March 6, at 4:00 p.m. in Glee Club room of the Michigan Union. A Choral Evensong will be presented Sunday evening, March 7, at 7:30 o'clock in the Sanctuary of the First Methodist Church by the Senior Choir under the di- rection of Hardin Van Deursen, Director, with Mary McCall Stubbins as organist. Guest soloist will be Charles Matheson, Tenor, graduate student in the School-of Music. The public is invited. The Christian Science Organization at the University of Michigan announces a free lecture on Christian Science entitled "Christian Science: The Revelation of the Rights and Character of Man", by James G. Rowell, C. S. B., of Kansas City, Mo., in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre on Mon- day evening, March 8 at eight o'clock. The public is cordially invited. FDR Begins Eleventh Year In Office Today Anniversary Celebrated By Religious Services Held at White House WASHINGTON, March 4-UP)- President Roosevelt began his elev- enth year in the White House today at religious services which embraced prayers for strength, for peace and for the enlightenment of our enemies. Every March 4 since his first in- auguration in 1933, Mr. Roosevelt has attended church services in the pat- tern of those held today in the east room of the White House. The brief, simple services included familiar hymns and familiar passages from the Episcopal Book of Common Prayer. In other years the President has gone to nearby St. John's Episcopal Church but the services were brought to the White House this time because the Chief Executive is still recovering from an illness. Upwards of 200 persons gathered in the east room heard Lieutenant Frank R. Wilson, a Navy chaplain on leave as rector of Mr. Roosevelt's home church at Hyde Park, N. Y., ask that God "defend us Thy humble servants, in all assaults of our en- emies; that we, surely trusting in Thy defense, may not fear the power of any' adversaries." He asked the Lord to "grant us grace fearlessly to con- tend against evil, and to make no peace with oppression.". He asked, too, that 'the nations of the world be led "into the way of justice and truth," so that among them might be established "that peace which is the fruit of righteous- ness." There were prayers, also, for those in the armed forces and for those who have given their lives to their country. Donald Temelco Hearing Adjourned to Tomorrow MONTREAL, March 4.-(A)-Ex- tradition hearing for Donald Temel- co, 17-year-old high school youth from Ionia, Mich., who is held for American authorities on a charge of. murder, was adjourned until tomor- row by Justice Alphonse Decary here today. Temelco is held in connec- tion with the death of Clara B. John- son, 18-year-old war worker, at Ionia on Saturday. Judge Decary stated that he ad- journed the case so that American authorities might be represented here if they wished. It was indi- cated that Michigan police or repre- sentatives of the Montreal U.S. con- sul's office would be present tomor- row. Dean E. Blythe Stason of the School of Law said last night that there were still no definite develop- ments on his alleged appointment to head the legal staff of the Smith in- vestigation committee of the House of Representatives. A Washington news source yester- day announced that Dean Stason had been engaged to head the legal staff of the committee. But upon return- ing from Washington at noon yester- day he evinced surprise at the ap- pointment, as he had only received the offer by telegram upon returning to Ann Arbor. Dean Stason spent three days in Washington working with the com- mittee, "educating" the congressmen on administrative legal practices. The Smith committee was established to make an intensive investigation of President Roosevelt's executive agen- cies. Discussing the offer Dean Stason said, "I have not accepted the offer, nor, indeed, have I had time to dis- cuss it carefully with University au- thorities. The position in Washing- ton is one of importance and respon- sibility and I appreciate the honor of the offer, but the acceptance de- Soldiers Take Up Residence In Quadranle (Continued from Page 1) The men assigned to this unit are privates and were members of the Enlisted Reserve Corps. All have had previous college training. The curriculum of the course has not yet been definitely determined, but it is believed that regular Uni- versity facilities and instructors will be employed. Physical instruction and regular Army basic training will form a part of each day's routine. All men in the program have had no previous military training and all are privates. Staff Sgt. Forest Peters, Illinois All-American football player in 1930, has been assigned chief instructor in the physical training division of the course. The medical detachment of the ROTC has been administering medi- cal shots to the early arrivals this week. While this course is not directly related to specific Army Specialized Training programs, it is the third large military unit to be established on campus. The 1694th service unit took up residence here last December and the Judge Advocates General School has been occupying the Law Quadrangle. pends upon the possibility of making satisfactory arrangements to care for my obligations to the University. "The committee members in Wash- ington understand this, and the an- nouncement that final arrangements have been made for my employment as chief counsel is therefore prema- ture," he added. Bill Would Give Soldiers Bonus State Legislators Offer Change in Constitutioxk LANSING, March 4.-(OP-- Rep. George N. Higgins, Ferndale Repub- lican, introduced a bill today to pay a soldiers bonus to men in the armed forces at close of the war, and com- panion measures to finance it through a tax on cigarettes and alco- holic beverages. He said the levies would produce $15,000,000 a year. The cigarette tax would figure out to two cents a pack, the liquor tax to two cents a bottle of wine, beer or liquor with higher levies on containers of three gallons or more. Returning honorably discharged veterans would receive an amount equal to $15 a month for each month of service, and heirs of those who die in service would receive a bonus equal to that for service for the duration. Rep. Edward H. Jeffries, Detroit Democrat, offered a bill to deny a place on election ballots to the Com- munist Party and parties .which ad- vocate "overthrow" of the American form of government. A Joint resolution by Senator Jerry T. Logie, Bay City Republican, pro- posed a constitutional amendment to make the governor the only adininis- trative official elected by popular vote. His plan would allow the gov- Draf ted Swains.Leae Coeds as Army Arrive. PULLMAN, Wash., March 4.--(p)-. Jack Tuteur urged a group of Army- bound Washington State College stu-, dents at the railroad station 'not td worry about their girl friends. "The coeds will be lonesome for you," he said, "but with so many, menl gone they'll have nothing to ;do but write, letters to you." Just then a 15-car 'train halted nearby and unloaded a. host of sal- diers--bound for special training at the college. "Sorry, men," apologized, Tuteur, "maybe I was a little hasty." Final Arrangements Incomplete On Dean Stason's Appointment i LIBERTY MUSIC SHOP SATURDAY, MARCH 5th Open Monday as Usual Business Hours: Mondy 11 A.MA. to P.M. Other days, 11 until 6 modern'war reporting began with the boats equipped with composing rooms were sent Mexican war and The Associated Press grew out- of the experience. Never had the world seen such initiative in news gathering up to then. The newly invented "electro magnetic" telegraph was in operation in a dozen or more cities.and in addition American newspapers employed pigeons, ponies and boats to speed the news of the fighting at Monterey, Vera Cruz, Buena Vista and Mexico City. A New York newspaper offered $500 an hour for every hour that a pigeon could deliver the news ahead of its rivals. Two others set up a dispatch system using "60 blooded horses" to cover the 2000 miles to the Mexican front. Often, riders were ambushed by Mexican guerrillas. Fast out to meet the slower steamers. Large sums were spent to get news beats. Yet the news arrived weeks late. It had to move by boat across the Gulf of Mexico and thence by pony express across the hostile southern plains before it reached the telegraph at Rich- mond. A "bulletin" on the victory at Buena Vista arrived in the east fully five weeks after the battle, moreover, such coverage proved costly. So it was that the first real cooperative news gathering organization was formed. It was called The Associated Press. T has been estimated that 63,000 telephone calls are necessary in the building of one 10,000-ton cargo ship. And America is sending these vessels dowl the ways by the hundreds. We cannot build additional facilities because materials America was to learn to look'f or Associated Press news thereafter. AkRqe/,srdr /#6 AfRON FORA 4 CI WT//A