... 'R! ' Ills t YI [ 41it 4 it Weather Cold er VOL. LIII No. 113 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, MARCH 15, 1943 PRICE FIVE CENTS V-7 Seniors To Go' On DutyApril 29 In Volunteer Plan Students in Accelerated Program To Receive Degrees Upon Leaving, Will Enter Midshipman's School Voluntary participation in an accelerated program will enable 75 last semester senior V-7 students to obtain their degrees early and enter mid- shipman's school on April 29, the University War Board announced yester- The program will go into effect immediately in response to a Navy Department request, according to Prof. Burton K. Thuma, armed force service representative. Although detailed graduation plans for those who join the program have not been worked out yet, Prof. Thuma said an effort will be made to allow a few days between graduation and entrance to midshipman's school. Since April 29 falls on a Thursday, Prof. Thuma said he considered it "reasonable" that students graduate by the preceding Saturday, April 24. The voluntary program will sendi Men 17 to 20 men into Naval training at least one month earlier than would have been possible under former arrangements.M a Apply for 75 Students Eligible Only the 75 last semester senior Navy V-12 Test students, of a total of 275 V-7's on campus, will be eligible to apply for FoNo Av'lable the accelerated program. The re- maining 200 students are either jun- At Leagu ; Screenin iors, first semester seniors, or they g g are listed in other categories to Exam To Be April 2 which the Navy did not refer in its request. Last semester seniors, how- Men between the ages of 17 and ever, enrolled in pre-medical or en- 20 are eligible to apply for admission gineering curriculums, may ,not en- and identification forms which will ter the program. permit them to take the preliminary Following are the complete re- screening examination in the Navy's quirements to epter the accelerated new V-12. college training program, program: the University War Board announced 1) Men must be V-7 students in last night. the last semester of their senior year. An admission and identification 2) They must have completed forms necessary are available from their one year mathematics require- Gerald Poor, stationed in the War ment by the time they get their de- Board's Information Center on the gree, April 29. I first floor of the Michigan League. Should Apply Today The preliminary screening exami- 3) No pre-medical or engineering nation will be given from 9 to 11 a.m. V-7 are eligible to apply. on Friday, April 2, in the Rackham Interested men who meet all these Lecture Hall. Dr. Paul Dwyer, re- conditions are asked to appear at the search associate in the University's University War Board office today. Office of Educational Investigation, They are also required to confer will supervise. with the heads of the various schools The examination will not be re- and colleges to arrange for their ac- peated for at least six months. celerated academic program. An admission and identification The original plans for men in the form, properly filled out and carrying Navy V-7 Reserve were not changed the certification of an official of the by this announcement. After the school or college the applicant is now completion of their Navy training, attending or last attended must be these men will be commissioned 'En- presented at the examination. signs in the Navy. According to the Division for i ,i 'Gen. Giraud Urges Unity For French 2 Pro-Vichy Officials Resign; DeGaulle To Be Welcomed in Plan By The Associated Press LONDON. March 15.-( P-Gen. Henri Giraud said today he was ready to welcome Gen. Charles De Gaulle to give "concrete form" to a union of pro-allied Frenchmen, and a British diplomatic observer termed the ac- tion "the most concrete step yet taken towards union." Resignation of two pro-Vichy North African officials was reported meanwhile from Algiers, further clearing the way for agreement be- tween Giraud and the Fighting French leader. The British observer declared that "after Giraud's broadcast the chances for full agreement were good;after De Gaulle's reply they were better, and now they are the best of all." Giraud's message today asserted "the moment for unity of all French- men of good will has come. I am ready to welcome DeGaulle to give this union concrete form." The message was addressed to Gen. Georges Catroux, Fighting French delegate to Syria, who is expected in Algiers soon to serve as liaison agent between Giraud and De Gaulle. DeGaulle today expressed general satisfaction with Giraud's speech yes- terday, in which he pledged a return to the laws of the French Republic and offered a basis for an agreemen with DeGaulle. Waves Give College Seniors Officer Ranking WASHINGTON. -(/P)- The Navy has announced that women college students now in their senior year will be accepted as officer candidates for the Coast Guard and Naval Wo- men's Reserves, but will be called to duty only after graduation. "This move has been made," the announcement said, "in order to en- able the Navy to enlist outstanding college seniors who have talents and ability to contribute to the services despite a lack of professional experi- ence. "Previously, the only non-college graduates accepted by the women's reserves as officers were thos who had had two years ofwcollege train- ing plus two years of business ex- perience." No Specific Details Received Here Yet Although no specific details have arrived here yet, Dean Alice C. Lloyd commented yesterday that "women who are interested can find imme- diate information at the Naval Office of Procurement, Book Building, De- troit." Nazis I_ _press French Labor BERN, Switzerland, March 15 -(P) --German SS and regular troops were reported tonight to be rounding up Frenchmen for forced labor by house-to-house raids in Lyon and other districts, in some cases seizing Frenchmen and shipping them off to Germany by freight carload lots without allowing them to communi- cate with their families. The Nazis led details of French po- lice in house-to-house night raids, and fear was expressed that even women 18 to 35 years old might be mobilized for work in Germany, ad- vices reaching Bern reported. German and Italian occupation authorities meanwhile kept hands off the troubled Haute Savoie district, where the Vichy government had sent more than 1,000 mobile guards equipped with machineguns to rout out more than 5,000 youth who had taken to the woods and the moun- tains to evade forced labor. The Tribune de Geneve said the situation there appeared less tense today, and that some youths had "surrendered" to the authorities. It said 500 hungry and discouraged youths had returned to villages near Lake Leman yesterday under "pa- ternal" exhortations of French gen- darmes. First Tin Can Collection Will Re Marle Thiir-azrlv Russians Admit Loss of Kharkov LATVIA IVelike zo20 STATUTE MILES Smolens * v a Minsk %Tl Bryansk Orel" Konotop Kursk Voronezh x oronez Kiev Graivoron, Belgorodf Kharkov}0,R o% STALINGRAD 'q (zyum 4 Dniepero-. petrovsk O ROSTOV g The Russians officially announced yesterday that the Red Army has evacuated Kharkov (lower arrows), Ukraine industrial and com- munications center. They also announced new advances west of Vyazma and Bely (upper arrows) in a drive toward the German-held stronghold at Smolensk. Hull Backs Eden View on War; Wallace Lauds War-Peace Bond Drive for Red Cross Continues Campus Collections Reach Total of $2,170 In their respective Red Cross mem- bership drives the men of the Uni- versity have already collected $815 of their $1,000 quota, and the women of the campus have received $1,3355.20 in their campaign for $2500. Proportionately one of the largest contributions to the women's cam- paign has been made by Mosher Hall. This residence which houses 222 girls has already turned in $250. Although the women are just above the halfway mark in their campaign they are at the present time far ahead of the amount of money col- lected last year. In this 1942 drive $1055 was collected. The Wenley House with 78 per cent of its members pledging contributions to the men's drive is leading the dormitories. Michigan House places second among the dormitories with 75 per cent of its residents pledged. With the Triangles pledging 100 per cent cooperation, there are now 12 fraternities which have signed up all their members. Robert Owen House is now leading the cooperatives with 75 per cent of its members hav- ing pledged contributions. Allen Mayerson,;'45, is still ahead of his fellow Union committee mem- bers with $230 now collected. Jap Drive Smashed By Chinese Attack CHUNGKING, March 15.-(AP)-A Chinese counterattack launched Sat- urday night was declared by the high command today to have completely smashed an eight-column Japanese offensive along 100 miles of the Yangtze River. The 20,000 Japanese troops who set out March 8 in a vain effort to Russians Admit Fall of Kharkov In German Drive Counterattack Gains in South; Soviet Advance in North Continies As Red Troops Head for Smolensk By The Associated Press LONDON, March 15.- The Russians officially acknowledged tonight that the Red Army after days of fierce fighting had evacuated Kharkov, rail hub of all southern Russia, and both German and Russian dispatches indicated that the powerful Nazi counter-offensive still was pressing vicious- ly on a broad front from Kursk to the middle Donets, below and beyond Kharkov. But the Russians reported new advances in the Smolensk region farther to the north on another vital front, with Red Army troops advancing farther west of Vyazma in a drive toward the powerful Nazi base at Smolensk itself. The Russians admitted withdrawal from the great industrial city of Kharkov only 24 hours after the Germans had claimed its recapture in a Emergency- Training, which is ar- ranging the tests, filing out the form is merely making application to take an examination and it not an enlist- ment in the Navy. After successsful completion of the examination the student must report to the nearest Office ofmNaval Officer Procurement for interviewing and a stiff physical examination. An educator, a representative civil- ian and a naval officer will be set up at each office to make the final de- cision on the candidates to be ac- cepted and enlisted as apprentice sea- men, Class V-12, in the Naval Re- serve. In uniform and under military discipline, the V-12 students will be returned to colleges for training. Al- Turn to Page 4, Col. 4 Ordnance Class Yesterday 59 women, coming from all parts of the United States, re- ported to the College of Engineering for the first day of classes in the Ordnance Engineering Aids course. Selected by Civil Service examina- tion, the women will receive training in basic engineering in preparation for work as draftsmen and muni- tions production work at the arsen- als from which they were sent. The trainees will attend from six to eight hours of classes a day, some of which will continue until 10 p.m. and require preparation in addition. "The source of this particular group of women, the type of training they will receive and the service to which they will return, indicates the extent to which women are perform- Ing actual engineering service in the war effort," Col. Henry W. Miller, General Administrative Officer, said. Closely allied 'with the Ordnance and Aircraft Inspection courses, the training is a part of the Engineering, Science and Management War Training Program, of which Prof. O. W. Boston is educational super- visor. Secretary Warns U.S. Of Drawn-Out Conflict WASHINGTON, March 15.-(/)- Secretary of State Hull gravely en- dorsed today a warning by Anthony Eden that the United Nations should not count upon a quick end to the war. At a press conference at which the British Foreign Secretary was an honored guest, the American Secre- tary of State said he was entirely in accord with the view expressed by Eden Saturday that people should not jump at conclusions about the end of the war. Hull said that according to all reasonable calculations, the conflict would be more long-drawn-out than one might expect on the basis of a hasty judgment. Here to help pave the way for United Nations conferences on prob- lems of the war and post-war world Eden said he was much encouraged with the progress of his Washington talks. Among the men with whom he talked today were Vice-President Wallace, Hull, Secretary of the Navy Knox and Sir Arthur Salter, head of the British Shipping Mission here. During the day Wallace spoke ap- provingly about a resolution pro- posed by a group of Senators calling, among other things, for a United Nations organization to preserve peace after the war. Wallace told re- porters the resolution seems "like a very constructive proposal" and ex- pressed hope it would be considered in Congress. Income Tax Returns Acceptable Today In order to take care of those who were unable to obtain money orders yesterday, the Collector of Internal Revenue will accept 1942 income tax returns all day today at the office in Room 608, Ann Arbor Trust Building, it was announced late last night. Record-breaking crowds, anxious to beat last night's 12 p.m. deadline for filing tax returns, yesterday swamped the Ann Arbor Post Office to get money orders, but before clos- ing time the money orders were sold out. A special staff of eight men, which was on hand yesterday at the deputy collector's office in the City Hall, was rushed from 8 a .m. to 8:45 p.m. help- ing citizens fill out their income tax blanks. The unprecedented number of* people filing tax returns this year was attributed to the increased number of defense workers and the lowering of the taxable scale. Daily Will Publish Service Newspaper Michigan's version of what the well - dressedseer vicemnewspaper should look like will make its ap- pearance Sunday when The Daily publishes the first edition of a spe- cial eight-page supplement by. for and about service men on campus. Scheduled to be set up in tabloid size, the paper will be replete with pictures, features, news stories, sports articles and just plain facts of interest to Uncle Sam's boys. The service men are asked to make any contribution they so de- sire. A A - WT 0 Wheeler Hits United Nations Peace Force WASHINGTON, March 15.-A')- Vice-President Wallace applauded today a proposed resolution to bind the United Nations closer in war and peace, but Sengtor Wheeler (Dem.- Mont.) declared his "unalterable op- position" to a section advocating the creation of a United Nations police force. Wallace, at a press conference, called the resolution by four senators as "very constructive." President Roosevelt earlier was reported to have approved the broad objectives of the proposals for the formation of the police force to guard against future aggression, creation of machinery to settle international disputes, streng- thening of cooperation in the prose- cution of the war and joint action in administering and rehabilitating conquered areas. Wheeler, declaring he would "op- pose the resolution to the limit," pre- dicted the recommendation for a world police force would cause "pro- longed and bitter debate and divide the country." Meanwhile, Chairman Connally (Dem.- Texas) of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee reaffirmed his approval, in principle, of a police force and cooperation in settling dis- putes. New Tax Plan Sought in House Democrats Prepared For All-Out Struggle WASHINGTON, March 15.-(/P)- House Democratic leaders decided at a conference today to make an all- out floor fight for an income tax col- lection system which provides no tax abatement. A number of Republicans have said they would fight for the RumI skip-a-tax-year' plan, so a notable struggle is in prospect. Today's conference was attended by Speaker Rayburn, majority leader McCormack of Massachusetts I and the ranking Democratic members of the House Ways and Means Com- mittee - Chairman Doughton of North Carolina, Cooper of Tennessee and Disney of Oklahoma. Rayburn said later, "I'm going down the line for the committee plan," and others who attended said sentiment was aligned solidly for the "no abatement" bill approved by the Ways and Means Committee. The committee plan, which is ex- pected to be reported formally to- morrow, cancels no part of a tax year, but provides for a 20 per cent withholding levy against the taxable portion of wages and salaries, ef- fective July 1. Foley Will Address Housing Surveyors Raymond M. Foley, state director of the Federal Housing Authority, will address an open meeting of can- vassers for the Ann Arbor housing survey at 8 p.m. today in the audi- torium of Slauson Junior High School. The canvassers, members of the Campus Fails To Respond to Manpower Plea Less Than Twenty Orderlies, Porters Volunteer for Work Student response to the Manpower Corps' urgent plea for volunteer workers to relieve the hard-pressed staffs of the Health Service and Uni- versity Hospital a few hours each week continued to be spasmodic and apathetic as only five more men signed for work, Bill Buckley, head of the Manpower hospital volunteer di- vision, said yesterday. The total of men working as order- lies and porters at both places is thus still under the 20-mark. "And it looks as if the campus is going to let us down," Buckley said. The University Hospital and the Health Service need a minimum of 35 volunteer workers to take over the additional duties now being per- formed by doctors and nurses. The Manpower Corps started its drive to help out last week. Buckley asked men students who It's your patriotic duty to give at least four of your leisure hours to help the under-staffed Uni- versity Hospital and Health Ser- vice. Orderlies and porters are des- perately needed to prepare oper- ating rooms, transport linens and drugs and to relieve the dotors and nurses for other vital work. The wages for thevolunteer positions are 51 cents per hour if you can work at least 14 hours per week. Four hours per week is the minimum asked of volun- teer aid. can only give four hours of their time each week to contact the Manpower offices at once. They will be placed at either the Health Service or Univer- sity Hospital, he said. "If any male student can work 14 hours a week," Buckley said, "he will be paid regular wage-rate of 51 cents per hour. Work whenever you can find the time." Meanwhile, both the hospital and Health Service continued to limp along. Nurses were forced to do the work of orderlies and doctors found themselves taking on more ond more unskilled duties due to the critical shortage of help. Mary Borman, Manpower head, said last night that "evidently the students do not yet realize the des- perate situation. Everybody who signs up to work will be doing his country a tremendous favor," he said. UMW Wage Boost May Be Rejected NEW YORK, March 15.- (N)- John L. Lewis today advised north- ern soft coal mine operators they could assume that failure to nego- tiate a pact by March 31 giving wage boosts to 450,000 miners would keep those men out of the mines April 1. Replying to a flat rejection of the United Mine Workers' major de- mands for a contract to supplant the one expiring March 31, the UMW president told the operators at a joint wage conference- >smashing counter-offensive that has rolled the Russians back on a huge arc in southern Russia, an offensive carried by 325,000 Germandtroops, nearly half of them fresh divisins rushed up from France. Fighting Is Fierce "Our troops after many days of fierce fighting, by order of the com- mand evacuated the town of Khar- kov" Monday, said the Russian mid- night communique as recorded by the Soviet Monitor. The Germans had claimed Kharkov fell on Sun- day. The Russian communique made no more mention of Kharkov, which they had wrested from the Germans Feb. 16 in a major triumph of their winter campaign. The Russians had battled furious- ly in the streets of Kharkov in a vain attempt to save the strategic center against a crushing attack by huge numbers of German infantry and tanks. Nazis Claim Advances To the southeast in the middle Donets area, the Russians told of stubborn fighting against tank-sup- ported German attacks, while the Berlin radio declared that the coun- ter-offensive had advanced to Chug- uev, 35 miles south of Kharkov, and also extended to areas west and northwest of Kursk, 125 miles north of Kharkov. Post-=War Fund Will Favor U Sum of $1,350,000 Asked for Michigan A $5,032,000 post-war reconstruc- tion fund for Michigan educational institutions, including a $1,350,000 appropriation for theUniversity of Michigan, was introduced in the Sen- ate yesterday by the Finance Com- mittee. The proposal would provide $950,- 000 for the construction of a general service building, $150,000 'for land purchases, and $250,000 for additions to the Chemistry Building. For the past three years Pres. Alex- ander G. Ruthven has been request- ing the general service building, which would house administrative departments, and the addition to the Chemistry Building In his annual reports to the Regents. In his report on the year 1940-41, he stated that without these addi- tional facilities, the growth of the University could proceed "only with the greatest difficulty." "The quarters occupied by a num- ber of services and administrative offices are now so congested and dangerous to health as to be a dis- grace to the University and to the state," he said. The addition to the Chemistry Building was also men- tioned as a need which was essential to the development of the University. Allied Planes Batter Mareth ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AFRICA, March 15. (()- Allied planes from the western desert battered the Mareth Line steadily yesterday in a continued aerial pre- lude to new battles while fighting along the entire front deteriorated to patrol action because of foul weather. Neither Allied nor Axis communi- ques reported fighting over the week end, but both sides were wheeling up reinforcements for the greatest clash of the Tunisian campaign which appears in prospect as soon as storms clear from the northern