.~000Iw __.. .. / -its U? 4 '1 l '!Z vit a 1 VOL. LIII, No. 110 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, MARCH 12, 1943 I I PRICE FIVE CENTS Russian Troops Kill 1,200 Nazis in Battle for Kharkov Germans Rush Fresh Reserves To Clash With Already Outnumbered Red Forces; 36 Axis Tanks Destroyed By The Associated Press LONDON, March 12, Friday- Outnumbered Russian troops killed 1,200 Germans and destroyed 36 tanks yesterday in the violently unfolding third battle for Kharkov, but a midnight Moscow bulletin spoke ominously of an "unequal engagement," and said "the Germans are bringing up more fresh reserves." The German High Command said its counterattacking army-estimat- ed by Moscow to number 375,000 men in the Kharkov-Donets Area- had reached the northern and west- - ern edges of the key Ukraine strong- hold which the Nazis lost Feb. 16. "West of Kharkov," said the Mos- cow communique recorded by the Soviet Monitor, "our troops repulsed violent attacks of the enemy. The Germans are bringing up more fresh reserves. Enemy Tanks Destroyed "The Germans are trying at all costs to break through to the city." In one "unequal engagement" the Red Army destroyed ten of the 15 attacking enemy tanks and killed 100 Germans; in another sector a Soviet formation wiped out 700 Ger- mans and destroyed 11 tanks, four self-propelled guns and 20 trucks, the communique added. Four hundred Germans were slain and 15 tanks destroyed south of Kharkov, the midday bulletin an- nounced yesterday, as wave after waveof Nazis beat againstthe Rus- sian lines in an attempt to retake the key stronghold which fell to the Red Army last month after a sensa- tional 375-mile winter drive from Stalingrad on the Volga. Russians Still Mastors at Kharkov A Reuters Stockholm dispatch said the Russians still were masters of the situation at Kharkov and that there were .indications of a powerful Russian counterattack in the mak- Ing, both there and in the Donets and Western Caucasus areas. On the central front, however, the Red Army continued to advance, its columns threatening the imminent encirclement of Vyazma, German base 130 miles west of Moscow, and cutting across the bleak steppes di- rectly towrd Smolensk, 100 miles beyond Vyazma. Patriots Kill 250 Germans Inside France LONDON, March 11.-()-French guerrillas announced in bold, unprec- edented communiques from inside France, today that they had killed more than 250 Germans and wounded hundreds of others by blasting a troop train at Chagny-Sur-Saone and had carried out 300 attacks during the month ended Jan. 20. Gen. Charles DeGaulle's Fighting French headquarters issued the an- nouncements as received from "gen- eral headquarters of French guer- rillas and partisans somewhere in France.". The Swiss radio said French pa- triots attacked German forces in Paris twice today. Two patroits were reported killed when a grenade they planned to toss at a passing German patrol exploded prematurely. A bomb was reported thrown later at a group of sailors who escaped uninjured. Three passersby were said to have been "victims." Mine Owners Fight Union Lewis Demands Pay Raise for Workers NEW YORK, March 11.-()-Op- erators of bituminous coal mines in the Northern Appalachian district to day refused all major contract de- mands made by the United Mine Workers of America at a union-man- agement wage conference. Said Charles O'Neill, spokesman for the northern operators: "The operators say to these (ma- Manpower To Assist in Red Cross Drive Three Campus Booths Will Add Contributions To Men's Campaign The Red Cross drive will be car- ried still further today when the Manpower Corps will set up three booths on campus to receive contri- butions which will be turned over to the men's campaign of $1,000 in ten days.t These booths will be in charge of women and will be open from 10 am. to noon and from 1 to 3 p.m. The booths will be located in Angell Hall, the Michigan Union and the Engineering Arch. As the count stands the men have reached the $500 mark in their cam- paign. Allen Mayerson, '46, is lead- ing the committee working from the Union with $150 turned in. The'Michigan House is in front of the drive for the dormitories with 68 per cent of its members pledging contributions. Four more fraterni- ties pledged themselves 100 per cent yesterday. These houses are Delta Kappa Epsilon, Lambda Chi Alpha, Sigma Alpha Epsilon and Pi Lamb- da Phi. Committee members will contact the professional fraternities and co- operatives today. A chart will be placed in the Union tomorrow on which the progress of the coopera- tives will be marked. "With the passing of the halfway mark we are well on our way to at- taining our goal," Bunny Crawford, chairman of the drive, said yester- day, "but we still need the coopera- tion of every man on campus who has not yet contributed to make our campaign a success. The American Red Cross has asked for our support; there is no reason why we should deny them that." House Debates FDR Authority Over Salaries WASHINGTON, March 11.-(P)- President Roosevelt's authority to limit salaries to $25,000, after taxes, was challenged on the House floor today as a powerful coalition, in an attack upon the Administration's executive decrees, gathered behind a move to fix a ceiling of its own. Day's end found the House em- broiled in the most acrimonious de- bate of the year, and saw Adminis- tration supporters desperately at- tempting to rally their forces against an attempt to nullify, through a legislative rider, the Chief Execu- tive's salary order. The fight, in which charges of "Demagoguery" were hurled back and forth across the House aisle, centered over a clause inserted over the President's protests in the na- tional debt bill. The rider would prevent freezing of salaries below their Pearl Harbor levels. Final action on the bill, and test votes on two pending amendments, was deferred until tomorrow when House leaders, with nearly a score of members on their feet clamoring for recognition, saw little chance of completing debate until late tonight. The bill itself, boosting the na- tional debt limit from $125,000,000,- 000 to $210,000,000,000, got little -- '---at-I h ~tttn"I ,A _ FOR MICHIGAN MEN: Apathy Detrimental To 'M' War Effort YOU MICHIGAN STUDENTS wanted the Manpower Mobili- zation Corps. Last fall you demanded that this campus con- tribute its share to home front war work, and as a result the Corps was created. In the five months since then scrap salvage work, bond sales, beet picking and harvesting crews all have been organized. Your Manpower Corps last semester made a great contribution to the war effort. But even then the Corps' work wasn't done with 100%c co- operation from the men on campus. And today that percentage of cooperation is practically non-existent. , Must Michigan men now rest on laurels garnered perhaps by others who have since left for service? Isn't there some way each of us can still contribute to the home front war effort, and thus justify our presence here in college? ** * * MICHIGAN STUDENT APATHY was strikingly revealed yes. terday by the plight of the overburdened doctors and nurses in the University Hospital and Health Service. The Manpower Corps appealed to you for volunteers to relieve a dire need for or- derlies and porters to assist these people. A minimum of 35 volun-' teers are needed. Six students offered their services. These six, plus one other male volunteer who works two hours a week, comprise the hospital's total number of male volunteers. While some other orderlies are available for night shift work, the shortage of helpers for morning and afternoon work is desperate. The armed services' demand for trained medical workers has whittled away the Univesity Hospital's staff to the point where doctors and nurses are obliged to perform a multitude of tasks that could be done by unskilled labor. In caring for 30,000 patients a year, they have been lately tremendously understaffed and overburdened. Last semester student response to the hospital's need for help was good, but irregular. Some students showed up for work once or twice, others offered their services but never gave them. Only four persons remained on the volunteer staff any length of time. There is work to be done in practically every department of the hospital: in the pharmacy section, the storeroom, the wards, the operating rooms, and many others. This is a shortage which Michi- gan students, as patriotic citizen-workers, are obligated to alleviate. THE HOSPITAL PREDICAMENT is only a single example. The Manpower Corps has countless other prospective projects crying for attention. Men are needed for farm labor, for restaurant work. Volunteers are wanted to help the Univesity Buildings and Grounds Department make defense parts. Workers are needed to put a bomber plant recreation center project into operation. Yet, these projects cannot be undertaken because the Man- power Corps has been hamstrung by student apathy. Hamstrung by you who created it. Our college life is still one of coke dates, bridge, afternoon naps, and bull sessions at your fraternities, dormitories or rooming houses. The men left on campus are too busy bidding fond farewells to "Joe College" days to face the stark, real fact that, although you may soon be actually in the war, you are nonetheless a part of it now. It's your war. Our war. We must fight it now. Not when called to service next June or July, but now. And we can begin our backyard battle against our country's enemies today by rebuking those who have branded us apathetic. However, we can only make this refutation through deeds. Through volunteering for hospital work. Through giving the Manpower Corps the 100% cooperation it deserves but has yet to receive. -Bud Brimmer Attacks in Ti President Signs Bill Extending Lend-Lease Act Russians Are Aware of United States Aid, Says Soviet Ambassador By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, March 11.-Pres- ident Roosevelt capped a celebration of Lend-Lease's second anniversaryl today by signing into law a bill ex- tending its life for one year. With a view to making the most of the momentous law's anniversary, the Senate had rushed the measure through by an 82 to 0 vote only 24 hours after the House approved it 407 to 6. The anniversary also brought a declaration from Maxim Litvinoff, Soviet ambassador, that the Russian people are fully aware and deeply appreciative of Lend-Lease aid and a report to Congress by Edward R. Stettinius, Jr., that aid extended by the United States under the act ag- gregated $9,632,000,000 in its first two years and is rapidly expanding. Litvinoff's remarks on Lend-Lease were made at an anniversary lun- cheon. Although they seemed framed in reply, he did not mention the charge by Ambassador William H. Standley at a press conference in Moscow earlier this week that the Russian government has withheld from its people full knowledge of American aid. That incident apparently was end- ed today with the statement from Sumner Welles, Undersecretsry of State, that Standley had advised he spoke as an individual and not as a representative of the American gov- ernment. Welles had said earlier that Standley had not consulted Washington beforehand. , a Russians Are Told Standley's Opinion MOSCOW, March 11.- ()- The Russian people were informed last night and today that Admiral Wil- liam H. Standley, the American am- bassador, had expressed the opinion they were not getting the full story of United States aid to the Soviet Union in its war against Germany. Tass, official news agency, in a dispatch from New York dated March 9, the day after the admiral's press conference statement, told the story in this way: "According to the Moscow corre- spondent of the Associated Press, the United States Ambassador to Moscow, Mr. Standley, made a state- ment to American correspondents announcing that, as he presumes, the information is not given to the Russian people on American aid to Russia." Produce Situation In Detroit Critical DETROIT, March 11.- ()- The Detroit Retail Grocers' Association, asserting that a critical situation has developed in Detroit and Michigan in the distribution of fresh fruits and vegetables, announced tonight it has appealed to Secretary of Agri- culture Clyde Wickard for relief. Louis R. Shamie, secretary of the Association, said that the fruit auc- tion at the Detroit Union Produce Terminal failed to open today for the first time in its history. Rationing of Meat, Butter Set for April 1 Cheese, Canned Fish, Edible Oils Also on New Restricted List By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, March 11.- Ra- tioning of meat, butter, cheese, canned fish and edible oils was or- dered tonight effective "on or before April 1." In other rationing chan- ges, the coffee allowance was in- creased and the cost in points of dried prunes, raisins, beans, peas and lentils was reduced. Food Administrator Wickard esti- mated that the amount of meat available would average "in the neighborhood of two pounds, more or less" per week per person. Cus- tomers will not have to surrender coupons for meat eaten in restau- rants. Details to Be Announced Details of this program will be announced tomorrow by the Office of Price Administration. It was in- dicated, however, that meat, cheese, butter, canned fish and the edible oils would all be lumped together as one group of foods purchasable by using the red stamps in the No. 2 Ration Book. This would mean some persons could purchase more than two pounds of meat by holding down on butter purchases, for instance. Point allowances are expected to be large enough to permit purchase of two pounds of meat a week plus some of all the other foods. Point Rations Cut OPA ordered the point cost of prunes and raisins reduced from 20 to 12 per pound and halved the point values of dry beans, peas and lentils, cutting them from 8 to 4 points a pound. It also removed dates and figs from the list of rationed foods- unless they are in cans or sealed jars. Another order put the coffee ra- tion back at one pound for five weeks, beginning March 22 when stamp No. 26 in Ration Book No. 1 becomes valid for purchase of one pound. The current ration is one pound every six weeks. Jap Dive Bombers Raid Guadalcanal WASHINGTON, March 11.-(P)- American fighter planes repulsed the strongest daylight raid on Guadal- canal since early February, the Navy reported today, knocking down one of 10 Japanese dive bombers and three out of 12 escorting zeros with- out loss to themselves. At the same time, bombers roar- ing through the fogs of the Aleutians pounded heavily at the Japanese toe hold in the Western Hemisphere at Kiska. There medium and heavy bombers with fighter escort flew through anti-aircraft fire to score several hits in the enemy's camp area. All United States planes re- turned. The raid on Kiska and the inter- ception of the Japanese air fleet northwest of Guadalcanal took place Tuesday (Wednesday in the Solo- mons.) Those aerial losses brought to 886 the number of planes the Japan- ese have expended in the Solomons. Allies Inflict Heavy Casualties on Axis As Fight Continues ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AFRICA, March 11.-(IP)-- The British Eighth Army, threaten- ing to turn the southern flank of Marshal Rommel's Mareth Line in Tunisia, has inflicted "heavy casual- ties" on attacking Axis troops, and the fight is continuing amid the wreckage of many enemy vehicles, a supplementary Allied communique said tonight. This was another Rommel attempt to push back an Allied ring gradually squeezing him into a pocket, and it appeared to have been no more suc- cessful than the smashes against General Sir Bernard L. Montgomery's forces last weekend when the Axis lost 52 tanks. Enemy Casualties Heavy "In attacks on our forces near Ksar Rhilane heavy casualties were in- flicted on the enemy and many ve- hicles were left burning," the com- munique said. "The RAF gave very effective support during the day. Fighting continues." i Ksar Rhilane is 45 miles west of Foum Tatahouine, and the Axis at- tack came after the British had pushed along a caravan trail which winds northwestward to Kebili, Axis Base on the eastern side of the salt lake, Chott Derid. Battle Is Small Although the battle was continuing it was believed to be a small one, coinciding in character with the thrust by Col.-Gen. Jurgen Von Arn- m's forces in northern Tunisia at Sedjenane. That attack also was re- pulsed by Allied troops. The German commanders appar- ently were trying to check an ever- tightening noose of men, tanks, and guns being thrown around them by American and British contingents in the north and Eighth army in the south. While the land forces prepared for showdown battles, the Allied Air Turn to Page 2 Cal. 2 War Clubs To Handle Housing Survey Here Ford Co. Will Conduct Canvass in Ypsilanti, Surrounding Villages Ann Arbor Defense Council leaders met yesterday morning with a repre- sentative of the Ford Motor Co. to conclude plans for the survey of Washtenaw County housing facilities to lodge workers at the Willow Run bomber plant. In order to avoid duplication of ef- fort, the Ford Co., which had already LANSING, March 11.-(IP)-Gov. ernor Kelly and a group of high Army and federal officials dis- cussed behind closed doors of the executive office today the problems besetting them in providing for the magic development of a vast com- munity of defense workers about the Willow Run Bomber Plant, which not many months ago was just an expanse of open country. begun a similar survey, will have charge of the canvass in Ypsilanti and all villages and rural areas within a radius of 30 miles of the plant, while the Ann Arbor survey will be handled by the local Neighborhood War Clubs, > under the direction of Mrs. Charles A. Fisher, president. Mrs. James B. Kennedy and Mrs. Wells I. Bennet, representatives of the CDVO placement service, will evaluate and classify the material gathered by the survey in Ann Arbor. Mrs. Kennedy said that canvassers would not attempt to cover students' rooming houses since this task has been adeauately handled by the Uni- British Repulse Rommel Tunisia; Nazi Threatened Army Orders For 175 ROTC Cadets Delayed Situation Still Remains Uncertain; Decision Expected Within Week Orders expected yesterday calling 175 advanced ROTC students to ac- tive Army duty were not received, and the entire situation remains indefi- nite, Col. William Ganoe of ROTC headquarters said yesterday. The general plan announced in February by the Arny named March 1 as the date the men would be in- ducted and processed. Since that time March 8 and March 15 were cited as possible calling dates, but no action has resulted. The plan which would put these men in Army uniforms and in regular barracks here on campus has not crystalized but ROTC headquarters expects some action within the next week. Under the new arrangement the men would live under strict military discipline, but would be allowed toj continue their current course of study till the end of the present semester. In June it is expected the seniors in the Advanced Corps would be sent to Officers Candidates School while the rest of the company would be sent to Army camps for basic training after which they'd be sent to OCS. Vital Farm Labor Will Be Deferred mTV AQ=.TNTh7_IrnTvT if-. r-. i i 91- Congress Silent On Post-War Plan of NRPB Most of Legislators Display No Interest In Board's Proposal WASHINGTON, March 11.-(1P)- The National Planning Board's mo- mentous program for revamping the national economy after the war and giving greater social security to all got the silent treatment from con- gress today. For the most part, the legislators simply displayed no in- terest. One of the few to comment was Senator Wagner (Dem. N.Y.), author of the National Labor Relations Act, who told reporters he was in general agreement with the welfare, employ- ment and security recommendations of the report. He did not commit himself as to other phases, but said, "Our first objectives must of course be the full- est possible development of private enterprise." "One of the fundamental issues," he said, "will be how to dispose of many billions of dollars worth of gov- ernment-owned plants. It would be folly to put them on the auction block without any thought to their use in providing jobs in a healthy economy for our boys in uniform, their families at home, and other war workers, when peace-time readjust- ment comes." On the House floor, Rep. Rizley (Rep.-Okla.) asserted the board had offered "a plan for national social- ism" which could "operate only 'VICTORY AND AFTER' Margaret Campbell Warns Defeat Follows Imperialism "If we conduct this war as an im- perialistic war, we are already de- feated," said Margaret Campbell, '42, speaking on "Victory and After" be- fore the Karl Marx Society last night. The first problem brought up by Miss Campbell was. "Will this be a long war or a short one?" She em- above all the establishment of a sec- ond front in western Europe. Miss Campbell posed a second, question, "Can we win the war and lose the peace?" and answered it with a definite "No." She said that victory cannot be taken for granted, and that "the guarantee for the kind