/ ita :4aitt Weather -~ Colder VOL. LI No. 106 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, MARCH 6, 1943 PRICE FIVE CENTS New Ration Edict Governs 'U' Houses; Food Measure Is Point-Pound Basis By PAUL HARSHA Campus fraternities, sororities and cooperative houses must file pro- cessed food inventories on a new "point-pound" basis, the Detroit Ra- tion Board advised the Dean of Stu- dents office last night. The ruling from Earl Fitzgerald, Senior Rationing officer in Detroit, denied these house groups the priv- lege of reporting their stocks by number of cans, as originally was planned, according to Assistant Dean Walter B. Rea. Authorized representatives of the campus' approximately 75 organiza- tions affected will be required to di- vide their inventory of the number of pounds of processed foods on hand February 28, 1943 in three new clas- ses under the new ruling. Three Groups Listed The groupings are: 1. Canned soups, fruits, vegetables and fruit and vegetable juices. 2. Commercially frozen fruits and vegetables. 3. Dried or dehydrated fruits. Dean Rea traced the following steps to enable fraternities, sororities and co-ops to adapt themselves to the newruling:, Revise their Feb. 28 invntory of foodstuffs on hand to fit the three foregoing point-pound classifications. Present these, three figures, listed ona:sieet of paper bearing the name and address of the house, the name of the individual submitting the re- pot ~and the date of the inventory, together with No. 2 books of all per- sons eating in the house, to the local branhh rationing office. This office is located , in the, .old Chamber of Commerce Building, corner of Ann and Fourth Avenue. Inventory on Point Value There the inventory will be figured on a point value schedule announced as11i points per pound for canned stock, 13 points for frozen and 18 fints'.fdr dried. Deductions will be made by ration, authorities from the No. 2 books to, cover these inventor- Fitzgerald announced deductions will. be made only foti the three- month period of March, April and May, for campus groups, and that they will not exceed 4 points per{ month per person, bean Rea said the ration program allows every individual a month's al- lowance of 48 points, and the re- maining 24 points can be used either for buying of foods not included in the inventory or for additional with- drawals from the stock on hand.- In each case, to constitute deduc- tions from the house inventory, point stamps involved must be taken to the local ration board for cancellation.- May 31 Is Next Date Any balance remaining on hand on May 31 will be designated as the starting inventory for the next oper- ating term, officials said. Registration forms will be available at the Chamber of Commerce Build- ing according to Mrs. Neva Heath, supervisor of the local ration board branch office, and inventories can be filed beginning Saturday, March 6, and continuing through the week starting March 8. The office closes on Wednesday and Saturday after- noons and Sundays. House groups who have not yet registered for ration book No. 2 should do so immediately at the Dean of Students office in Room 2, Uni- versity Hall, Dean Rea said. , The Dean's Office will discontinue issuing of No. 2 books to unaffiliated students tomorrow. House Cheers Plea Written By FDR's Son Elliott's Fighting Letter Defends His Brothers Against Congressmen By WILLIAM T. PEACOCK Associated Press Correspondent WASHINGTON, March 5.-A burst of applause from both Republicans and Democrats greeted reading in the House today of a plea from one of the President's sons that he and his brothers be allowed to "fight without being stabbed in the back for the sake of politics" by criticism of their war records. Lieut. Colonel Elliott Roosevelt, writing from North Africa to Rep. Lanham (Dem.-Tex.), referred with- out naming the Congressman to charges by Rep. Lambertson (Rep.- Kan.) that the President "jerked" two of his sons from battlefronts. "Such criticism aimed at men who are fighting for their country strikes me as sort of unfair," Roosevelt said. "They can't answer back. We feel we are fighting for all America. We are not in politics. In the forces there is unity of purpose-the con- tinuation of American freedom and American ideals. "Please explain this fact to your colleague, and try to explain to him that we, as soldiers, don't care whe- ther or how much he disagrees with the President, but for God's sake let us fight without being stabbed in the back for the sake of politics. "I don't care whether a man is a Republican or a Democrat. Let's get together and get this damn war won! I'm tired and I want to go home and live in peace on my ranch with my family. The sooner the better too." When the applause from both sides of the chamber ended, Rep. Baldwin (Rep--N.Y.) declared that Lanham was "voicing the sentiment of those on this side of the aisle, too." OPA Control Of Meat Sales Begins April 1 By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, March 5.- Strict controls over the slaughter of live- stock and sale of meat, designed to stamp out black market operations, will go into effect April 1. Secretary of Agriculture Wickard, announcing them today, said he did not regard the controls as a "cure-all for the defects in the present meat situation," but part of a broad pro- gram which includes consumer ra- tioning and uniform retail price ceil- ings. One order requires all livestock slaughterers who sell meat, including farmers and local butchers, to oper- ate under a permit system. As an aid to enforcement, each wholesale cut of meat must be stamped at least once with the permit number. ' Livestock dealers also must obtain permits to buy and sell livestock and keep complete records of their tran- sactions. While farmers need not obtain permits, they were asked to keep records of their purchases and sales. 27 More ERC Meni Called to Active Service Second Group From University To Report For Duty March 15 By STAN WALLACE Maintaining its speeded-up plan for calling up Enlisted Reserve Corps men to active duty, the army yester- day ordered 27 more University men to report for service March 15. The orders were transmitted to Un- iversity War Board by the Sixth Ser- vice Command as were those of Thursday. Burton Thuma, armed service rep- resentative on campus, said last night that "these orders were similar to the first group we received although the number is not quite as large." "It appears that the Army will now call up all non-deferable ERC men in this school," Thuma said, "and I expect the rest of the orders within the next week." The University War Board, which acts as the communicating link be- tween the men and the Corps head- quarters, distributed the orders yes- terday notifying the men by phone. 450 Go by March 20 In all 450, University students will be called to duty by March 20 if the present plan continues, Thuma said. The 450 men are those who were clas- sified as non-deferable by the army last month. Deferments were made on the basis of academic pursuit and position in college, he said. Four midwest location centers will receive the men from this area, ac- cording to previous Army releases. Fort Sherridan, Ill,., Camp Grant, Ill., Scott Field, Ill., and Camp Custer are the centers. Reiterating the statement he made yesterday, Thuma advised "students to remain in school if possible. The orders are coming here and a delay is caused when students are not im- mediately available. If the men do choose to leave school, we ask that they leave their forwarding address with the War Board." Transcripts Required The character of the second group of orders follows the same general vein of the first group, Thuma said, and he emphasized "that the orders require each man to present to his command officer a transcript of his college record." In accordance with the Army En- listed Reserve plan, all men will be assigned to the branch of service for which their college education best fits them. These orders follow three contrary statements by the Army giving dif- ferent dates for active duty. It was first announced that active duty as- signments would be made two weeks after the close of last semester, but delays made it impossible, according to Army releases. Stories this week announced the calling date a March 13 and 20. However, these plans indicate men will be on duty by March 20. OPA Will Prosecute Black Market Violators DETROIT, March 5-(P)-Striking at practices it said contributed to "black market" operations in meat, the Office of Price Administration petitioned in federal courts at Detroit and Grand Rapids today for injunc- tions against 36 slaughterers, packers and dealers. The Michigan suits were part of an OPA move to halt violations of meat restrictions in Ohio, Michigan, Kentucky and West Virginia, insti- tuted by the Cleveland Regional Of- fice of OPA. Nazi Ships Gathering Off Norway By The Associated Press LONDON, March 5.--ondon news- papers published dispatches today saying a powerful concentration of German warships has been assembled in the Trondheim area of Norway. The stories carried in the Evening Standard and Daily Telegraph, with- out giving the source of their infor- mation, declared the concentration included the battleship Tirpitz, 35,- 000-ton sister of the lost Bismarck, at least two cruisers of the 10,000-ton Hipper class and a number of fast destroyers. The aircraft carrier Graf Zeppelin, which was laid down in 1938, also was reported to be in the group, along with the 26,000-ton battleship Scharnhorst, which was reported in the Skagerrack between Norway and Denmark three weeks ago. The articles stirred immediate speculation over the possibilty that the German fleet was preparing to make a forceful attempt to attack the allied supply route to Russia. Such a breakout, unofficial sources pointed out, probably would involve the British home fleet in a hunt greater than that for the Bismarck and Prinz Eugen early in the war and the possibility of a major naval engagement in northern waters. Unofficial naval sources said there was a possibility the German fleet was concentrating "for one big fight against heavy odds rather than face Nazi Resistance Smashed Near Rzhev in Offensive Toward Smolensk Base ~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~ ~~~~* scuttling as did the high seas in 1918." fleet Union Objects To House Bill On Absenteeism WASHINGTON, March 5.-(IP)- Some opposition to legislation against absenteeism developed today at the Capitol. 1. A union official protested to the House Naval Committee that a bill providing for absentees to be reported to their draft boards would be a step toward turning the country into "a penal institution. 2. Representative Celler (Dem.- N.Y.) asserted in the House that the word "absenteeism" is being used as "a catch-all phrase" in an attack on labor. Celler contended willful ab- sences from work at war plants were "isolated and exceptional." 3. The request of the House Labor Committee for authority to investi- gate "all labor conditions" was view- ed by some Naval Committee mem- bers as a maneuver against the bill they are considering. If such an in- quiry is undertaken, they reasoned, there will be demands that no labor legislation be enacted until it is completed. N. P. Alifis, a district president of the International Association of Ma- chinists (AFL), argued before the Naval Committee that the absentee- ism measure would give employers the power to impose any conditions of work they desired on employes1 under threat of reporting their names to draft boards. Last Showing of Play Production Set for Tonigyht The last performance of "Heart of a City," current presentation of Play Production of the speech production, will be given at 8:30 p.m. today in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. The play is the story of a small re- vue theatre in London during the days of the Nazi terror. The role of Judy is played by Catherine Fletcher; Rosalind by Patricia Meikle. The male leads will be taken by Harold Cooper who will portray Tommy and John Babington as Paul Lundy. Others in the cast include Blanch Holpar, Janet Stickney, Barbara White, Rebecca Kynock, Carol Mis- ner, Dorothy Wineland, Suzanne Wood, Zabelle Yardumian, Miriam Ruge, Nathan Bryant, Mary Lou Meeker, Barbara Stuber, Marcia Zimmerman, Ellen Hooper, Gertrude Slack and Marjorie Leete. Cagney, Greer Garson Win Academy Awards HOLLYWOOD, March 5.- (,)- Another chapter in history of film- Enemy Forces. Press Allies in North Tunisia British Eighth Inflicts Losses 'Heavy Enough To Remember' on Axis By HAROLD V. BOYLE Associated Press Correspondent ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AFRICA,nMarch 5-Enemy forces in Northern Tunisia kept up their pressure in the face of stiff Allied resistance today while advices reaching here from the southern sec- tor reported that the British Eighth Army in its first feeler brush with Axis troops yesterday inflicted on the Germans "very heavy losses- heavy enough to remember." American patrols clung to Sidi Bou- zid, about 25 miles south of Faid Pass where the withdrawing Nazis hold hill positions overlooking the valley. Reports late tonight said American troops are near the western end of the pass but their location was not given. The Germans still held on to Gafsa in the south and Habjeb El Aioun, about 22 miles northeast of Sbeitla, where French patrols had contacted them. French patrols pushed to a point a few miles west of Pichon in the central sector and in the far south other advanced French elements con- tinued to move forward east of Nefta. These units were "continuing their action in an easterly direction," a French communique said. Tank forces of the British First Army were said officially to have beaten off violent German attacks. British Bomb Continent Tenth Strai ht Night LONDON, March 6. (Saturday)- (P)-The RAF sent its big bombers on their tenth consecutive night raid over the Continent during the night and repeated blasts along the French coast were heard on this side of the Channel. Huge flashes, apparently the result of the explosions, also could be seen shortly after the bombers crossed the Channel. The explosions were so terrific that residents reported they rattled win- dows in buildings on the British side. The roar across the Channel was in the direction of Dunkerque which had been attacked several times re- cently. Many European radio stations were silent last night including the Berlin radio. It went off the air at 9:15 p.m.-about the same time it was closed last Monday when the Nazi capital got its heaviest pounding of the war. RAF bombers carried their assault on the Continent through the ninth straight night last night, laying mines in enemy waters and attacking targets in the industrial area of west- ern Germany. Ensian Payments Due March 22 All students who have made down payments on their 1943 Michiganen- sian must turn in the rest of their money by March 22, Martin Feffer- man, '44, business manager of the 'Ensian announced yesterday. He added that anyone who would not be in school when the 'Ensian comes out may have his yearbook mailed if he leaves his address at the 'Ensian business office in the Student Publications Building before he with- draws from school. Anthractie Coal Miners Demand $2-A-Day Raise SCRANTON, Pa., March 5.- (P)- Leaders of 90,000 Anthracite mem- bers of the United Mine Workers to- day formally demanded a $2-a-day James M. Barnes, former Demo-i cratic Congressman from Illinois, was named an Administrative As- sistant to President Roosevelt at a salary of $10,000 a year. House Group O.K.'s Tax Plan Pay-As-You-Go Bill Affects All Taxpayers By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, March 5-A pay- as-you-go plan for all 44,000,000 of the income taxpayers-the wage earner and salaried man, the farmer, the banker and the candlestick mak- er-was approved tentatively today by the House Ways and Means Sub- committee, to be effective July 1. The subcommittee skipped over the baffling choice among the Rum plan to cancel a year's taxes and the vari- ous proposals for smaller amounts of abatement, tossing this problem back to the full committee. Chairman Doughton (Dem.-N.C.)1 called the full committee to meet Monday and said he was elated over the prospects of speedy action. Under the plan tentatively ap- proved all taxpayers must file their 1942 returns and pay the first quar- terly installment by March 15 and the second by June 15. Production of Naval Planes Hits New High WASHINGTON, March 5.-(P)- Production of 150 warships and 1,400 Navy airplanes in February was reported today by Secretary of Navy Knox who also told of a new type of ship to combat submarines. In addition to the 150 warships, Knox said at a press conference, more than 700 landing barges were completed last month. "Our sea and air production reached new records in February," he said, adding that the ships turned out then represented 200,000 tons displacement and included all types. Of the 1,400new planes accepted by the Navy in February, he said "considerably more than half" were combat planes. It was the highest total for any month in Navy history. "We are going still faster and we expect more in March," Knox said. The new type of anti-sub vessel for convoy duty, designed to relieve de- stroyers for actual combat work, is a small craft of approximately 1,300 tons, with a hull line slightly more than 300 feet long and a beam of 35 to 36 feet. 294 Drivers Get I Police Summons Over 100 Ann Arbor drivers re- ceived summons yesterday by the local police because they did nt have their 1943 license plates and New Aide to President S ov jets Free 100 Villages In Two Days Localities Recaptured Near Railway Center Between Lgov, Sevsk By The Associated Press LONDON, March 6 (Saturday),- Smashing stubborn Nazi resistance southwest of Rzhev in the central front sweep toward the enemy an- chor of Smolensk. The Russians have freed more than 100 localities in two days, a midnight Soviet communique disclosed today. Fresh gains also were reported on the southern front where a 50-mile- wide Red Army salient was being driven westward to cut the Bryansk- Kiev railway in the sector between recaptured Lgov and Sevsk. This maneuver also was aimed at turning German defenses hinged an Bryansk and Orel to the north and northeast. 2,000 Germans Killed Approximately 2,000 Germans were reported killed and 1,165 captured during yesterday's operations, but the Russians did not claim any ad- vances in the Donets Basin where the Germans for days now have told of successful counterattacks that have regained Kramatorsk, Slavyansk, and Lisichansk in the sector north of Stalino. The German high command declared that the Russian Third Army was encircled south of Kharkov and was about to be wiped out. Reds Attempt Landing The Russians also were silent about further operations in the western Caucasus where 'the Germans still are clinging to positions pivoting on Novorossisk, Black Sea port. A new Russian attempt to land from the sea at that port was re- pulsed by German coastal batteries, the Berlin radio said last night in a broadcast recorded by Reuters. On the central front the immediate Russian goals a'peared to be Vyaz- ma, 80 miles south of Rzhev, and Gzhatsk, 60 miles to the southeast. Jap Survivors Killed in Pacific By Allied Flyers ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN AUSTRALIA, March 6 (Saturday)- An Allied airman saw 200 Japanese troops in three lifeboats-all that remained of 15,000 spilled into the Bismarck Sea by the sinking of a 22-ship convoy-dropped his bombs and messaged his base: "No surviv- ors." That ended one of the most bril- liant aerial strokes by American and Allied fliers in the southwest Pacific, a spokesman said today in comment- ing on the high command communi- que announcing "there was scarcely a survivor." The final score: For Japan-ten Japanese warships, cruisers, and destroyers, sunk; 12 merchantmen, transports and cargo ships sunk; more than 80 enemy planes destroyed or put out of com- mission; and the troops, estimated at 15,000, which the Japanese were hurrying to their threatened foot- hold in the Lae-Salamaua sector of upper New Guinea. For the Allies-only one bomber and three fighters lost. Absenteeism'I s Too High at Willow Run WASHINGTON, March 5.- (M)- Representative Arends (Rep.-Ill.) told the House today a personal in- spection of the Ford Willow Run Bomber Plant convinced him that production strides are good but that DELIVERING THE GOODS: American Suplies Aidin Russia (Editor's Note: In his Sunday's arti- cle, Henry C. Cassidy, Chief of the Associated Press Bureau in Moscow, now home on leave, writes on Russia's relations with her Allies.) By HENRY C CASSIDY Associated Press Correspondent NEW YORK, March 5.-The United States, despite all Adolf Hitler can do to stop it, is defi- nitely delivering the goods to the Soviet Union. After riding in American tanks, trucks and jeeps, seeing American bombers and fighters, Sixth eating American sug- in a ar and lard, in remote Series corners of Russia, one ing the Soviet Union? Are the Rus- sians satisfied with our supplies- is, in each case, yes. Hitler, early in the war, boasted that the United Nations' only sup- ply lines to the Soviet Union were across the Arctic or along the equator. Since then, he has cer- tainly been surprised by the way those :very lines have been made effective. Our most conspicuous contribu- tion to the Soviet war effort is in vehicles. On the main streets of Moscow, on the roads of provincial towns, on the dirt tracks of the countryside, American trucks are carry officers on their missions. Both have been employed exten- sively in the Russian winter offen- sive. It would be idle to deny that there has been any trouble with the vehicles. Some trucks have broken axles on trackless terrain, boiled over in summer, frozen up in winter; some Jeep motors have become clogged with mud. But generally, men who drive the vehi- cles have told me, their perform- ance has been splendid. The Russians, moreover, what- ever their reputation may be- abroad, are good, resourceful, me-