w 41P .A- --A6-a - 4", .Jjj t vqpp- 43a Wcatber Warmer VOL. LIII No. 129 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, APRIL 3, 1943 PRICE FIVE CENTS British Advance Toward Tunis, Guidance for War Work To Be Given High School Pupils Two Million Students Will Be Tested For Civilian, Military Needs by Local Officials, State Education Departments By STAN WALLACE A sweeping program to inventory more than two million high school students in the nation to help them find their proper place in the war effort was disclosed here yesterday by Dr. Harry Jager, Guidance Director of the U.S. Office of Education. This is the first program of its type to meet more fully the needs of the military and civilian agencies prosecuting the war. Broadening existing local guidance facilities in the nation, the program will be administered by individual state departments of education and local superintendents of schools. The plan was formulated by the Guidance division of the U.S. Office of Education and was presented to rep- resentatives of 39 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico meet- ing here this week in the fourth an- nual conference of State Supervisors of Guidance. The program has been endorsed by the War Department, Selective Serv- ice, War Manpower Commission, the Food Administration, and other fed- eral agencies concerned with the war effort.b The Guidance program was pro- posed as a solution to the perplexing problem that faces the youth of the country and was unanimously a-- cepted by the representatives here. It will be the choice of each State De- partment of Education and local school superintendents to devise their own means of putting it into effect, Turn to Pae 4, Col. 1 Bureaus Draw Up Plans for High Schools Surveys of Students' Abilities Will Be Made To Help War Effort In line with the suggested program for War Service Guidance by the U.S. Office of Education, the Department of Education of Michigan has drawn up theiri plans for Michigan high schools. Planning for the Michigan program was begun last August when the first intimation of the program announced yesterday was made at a Guidance Conference at Iirvard University. The general aims of the Michigan plan follow the lines set down by the U.S. Office of Education and has re- ceived the approval of the state di- visions of Selective Service, War Manpawer Commission, War Produc- tion Board, and the Michigan Council of Defense. A Bulletin entitled "Youth, the War, and the Future" is being dis- tributed to all high schools in the state. This announcement carries a detailed account of the Michigan plan to set the wheels of the War Guidance Program into motion. This plan is a general outline of the entire arrangement, but it is expected that each school will adapt it to its own situation. To obtain a unified effort the per:- iod between April 5 to. May 15 will be declared a period of War Service Guidance in the State of Michigan. During this period the program is expected to get underway in every re- spect. These are the objectives of the Michigan plan: 1. To make available information about opportunities in both military and civilian service immediately. 2. Measure the abilities of each student. Turn to Page 4, Col. 5 Help Wanted ... Saying that'the hospital was Dataon Army Coimissions Now Available U' War Board Has Inforniation for Men Classified in 3-A Information regarding commis- sions in the Army for qualified civil- ian applicants who are classified in 3-A under the Selective Service Act is now available at the University War Board's Information Center on the first floor of the Michigan League it was announced yesterday. Applicants r4st meet all of the following qualifications in order to be appointed: 1. Have specialized training and experience needed by the Army be- yond that normally provided at an Officer Candidate School. 2. Be thirty-five years of age or older unless the applicant is a for- mer officer, is classified as 4-F, or has specialized ability in what has officially been declared a "scarce" category. 3. Have a Selective Service classi- fication other than 1-A, 2-A, 2-B or 3-B. A candidate classified as 1-A can be appointed if the ability is in a "scarce"p category or if he is a former officer. A candidate classified as 2-A, 2-B or 3-B can be appointed only after he has obtained a release from his local Selective Service Board. 4. Have citizenship in the United States, a co-belligerent or friendly country. A candidate for an Army commis- sion cannot be appointed if he is on Turn to Page 4, Col. 1 Aptitude Test Forms To Be Sent Out Today Results Will Determine Student's Proper Place In Aiding War Effort Application forms for the first all student aptitude test in University history to be written April 13 in Hill Auditorium are being distributed to- day. This test is part of the University policy to aid students in determining their proper position in the armed services or in civilian positions. All application blanks must be re- turned by Tuesday to the War Infor- mation Office in the League or the office of the Academic Counselors in Mason Hall. Individual students are asked to return their blanks to the represen-' tative from whom they received them, while women living out are to bring their forms to Miss McCormick in the League. Following are the steps involved to take the examination: 1) Fill out both sections of the U.S. Naval Grads Will Train at 'U' Ensigns Will Begin Advanced Training in Marine Design June 1 Transfer of the Postgraduate School of Naval Architecture and Marine Engineering from the United States Naval Academy to the Uni- versity is contemplated by the Navy Department, University officals re- vealed yesterday. According to the plan two classes of 80 men each will be trained here be- ginning June 1. A letter from Captain R. A. Koch of the Bureau of Naval Personnel confirmed the University as a site for this advanced training in marine design. The men to be trained here will all be Ensigns, graduated from Annapo- lis.. They will be housed in the Michi- gan Union and the University will furnish instructors and physical equipment for the program. A Naval representative is scheduled to inspect the University in the near future to survey the arrangements for the course and to determine what additional equipment may be re- quired. When final arrangements have been completed, a contract will be negotiated following the general pat- tern of previous Army and Navy con- tracts for college training facilities. Use of the University for this training program was approved some time ago by the Army-Navy-War Manpower Committee for selection of non-federal educational institutions for specialized training. Housingr Survey Is Made Here Vacant Rooms Can House 840 People With a few reports not yet comput- 'ed, results of the housing survey of Ann Arbor to find facilities available for war workers, show 600 vacant rooms which can house approximately 840 people. This figure includes only rooms in private homes and rooming houses. In addition, 25 apartments and one house are available. The results also do not include rooms, houses, and apartments which will be available after repairs and remodelling have been completed. Plans for the establishment of a homes registry office in Ann Arbor are being made, A. B. Flagg, Senior Homes Use Specialist of the National Housing Agency, said. This office will recheck and follow up on the canvass in an effort to uncover still more space. Mrs. Charles Fisher, director of the local Neighborhood War Clubs, which along with the Civilian De- fense Office conducted the survey, said that the final figure will un- doubtedly be increased when all the reports are in. Ganoe Gets Appointment Col. William A. Ganoe has recently been appointed commandant of all Army groups in the University by the Adjutant General of the Army. Colonel Ganoe came here as ROTC commandant. Nazi Warships" Threaten Convoy Route Bizerte Rommel Retreats lp Coast Southern Forces lit By Air Raid Assatl Is Troops in North Sector Offer Little Resistance By The Associated Press ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AFRICA, April 2.- British First Army troops in the north fought their way toward the Axis strongholds of Tunis and Bizerte to- day while Gen. Montgomery's Eighth Army gathered force in the south for more smashing blows coupled with the continuing massive air as- saults on Marshal Rommel's divi- sions retreating up the Tunisian east coast. Axis Leaves Booty Axis forces in the north were re- rwegian ported offering little resistance and ons con- leaving rich booty behind as the ins coen British pushed through El Aouana ad been station, six miles east of Sedjenane, . fronts. and moved on to occupy strategic heights between there and Mateur. (The Algiers Radio said British 3s and French forces in the north had "left Sedjenane well behind" and were slashing at the retreating Ger- Ing mans "in the vicinity of Mateur," which is only about 18 miles south of Bizerte. They thus 'would have regained almost all the ground lost when Col. Gen. Jurgen von Arnim's Axis forces sprang an offensive a itical month ago.) Fighting Is Quieter attle in An Allied communique described the Tunisianr fighting as "generally Camnp Quieter yesterday," but told of ter- rific punishment being dealt the ss Axis from the air. In one raid on -With the El Maou air field at Sfax on the 3hecks on coast 100 light and medium Allied bek firmlybombers plastered the strategic base be firmly with a shower of bombs that must osevelt to- have destroyed or damaged virtually I Bill and everything within the target area. battle be- As in the Wednesday raid by near- Porters in ly 100 American Flying Fortresses on dea n the Sardinian port of Cagliari, not a demanding single Allied bomber or pscort was lost in the damaging assault. )em.-Ala.), : This scene from a captured German newsreel film shows Nazi warships maneuvering in a No fjord. German ships and planes based on Norwaly constitute the cihief Axis threat to the United Nati voy route to Murmansk, Russia. A Berlin broadcast sa id Nazi defense walls 1,680 miles in length h constructed along the European coast, exclusive of forttifications along the'Danish and Norwegian sea Russian Offensive" Is Fatal to Million Nazis By The Associated Press LONDON, April 3 (Saturday)- Germany suffered 1,193,525 casualties- 850,000 dead and 343,525 captured-in the great Red Army winter offensive which swept back the Germans to the west as much as 435 milesI and freed 185,328 square miles of Soviet territory, Russia announced early) today in a special communique. At Stalingrad on the Volga where the Russian offensive began last November, the Russians "inflicted on the German fascist troops the biggest defeat in the history of wars," said the bulletin recorde'd 'by the Soviet Monitor. In addition to these powerful blows to Adolf Hitler's military manpower, the Russians announced this toll of German equipment in the period be- Allied Plin es tween last Nov. 10 aand March 31: FDR Veto( Farm Ceciii Prices, Plai Stage Set for Cri Congressional B Administration By The Associated Pre WASHINGTON, April 2.- assertion that present c wages and prices must maintained, President Ro day vetoed the Bankhead set the stage for a critical tween Administration sup Congress and Legislatorsc higher farm prices. Senator Bankhead (E lomb Jap Ships' Off New Ireland Blast Supply Route to New Guinea in Effort To Break Lae Stalemate ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN AUSTRALIA, April 3. (Saturday)- M)-Two Japanese ships have been bombed by Allied planes off Kavieng, New Ireland, the High Command an- nounced today. Allied heavy bombers dispersed part of a, concentration of- nearly 50,000 tons of Japanese merchant shipping and its naval escort in New Ireland's Kavieng harbor, and pos- sibly sank a large transport and a medium cargo ship in nearby Steffen Strait. Four-motored bombers, raiding at dusk, found a number of enemy ships in the vicinity of Kavieng, which is approximately 550 miles northeast of the Allied base of Port Moresby, New Guinea. The ships were scattered in the area south of Steffen Strait. This was the same area from which the Japanese recently sent four de- stroyers bent on carrying badly need- ed supplies to troops in New Guinea, only to have one sunk off Finsch- hafen, New Guinea, and the other three were forced to flee. Captured Destroyed Total PLANES ..,,1,490 3,600 5,0901 TANKS ... 4,670 4,520 9,190 GUNS .....15,860' 4,500 20,360 Other booty reported captured in- cluded 30,705 machine guns, ,9,835 mortars, over 500,000 rifles, 17,000,- 000 shells, 128,000,000 cartridges, 123,000 trucks, 890 locomotives, 22,- 000 railway carriages, 1,825 dumps of various kinds ,of war material, "as well as many radio transmitters, motorcycles, and other military equipment." The regular midnight communique disclosed that a Czechoslovak mill-, tary unit formed in Russia under the command of Colonel Svoboda now is in action against the Germans on the northern Donets River front in the Ukraine and during yesterday's operations the Czechs destroyed 22 Nazi tanks and killed morethan 400 Germans. The special communique in telling of the German equipment losses said 3,600 planes, 4,520 tanks, and 4,500 guns were destroyed and the remain- der were captured as the Russians swept westward from Stalingrad to liberate the Volga and Don River Valleys, and most of the Caucasus., Vast stores of other Nazi military equipment fell into Russian hands it added. "The Red Army at Stalingrad in- flicted on the German fascist troops the biggest defeat in the history of wars," said the special bulletin. author of the measure, which would increase ceiling prices on some farm commodities, said a determined effort would be made to override the veto when the question is brought up next Tuesday. Majority leader Barkley (Dem.-Ky.) was not too optimistic that the Senate would sustain the President, but said the House might. He remarked that the "city" vote is much larger in the House. Returns Bill to Senate In returning the bill to the Senate unsigned, Mr. Roosevelt vigorously declared that no economic group could hope to gain advantage in war- time. "The time has come," he said, "when all .of us-farmers, workers, managers and investors-must real- ize that we cannot improve our liv- ing standards in a period of total war. On the contrary, we must all cut our standards of living for the dura- tion." For that matter, he said; enactment of the Bankhead Bill would not aid farmers in the long run, but instead would set off an inflationary upward spiral of both wages and prices which would add to the burdens of all and make "the winning of the war more difficult and gravely imperil our chances of winning the peace." Includes Benefit Payments The Bankhead measure would for- bid the inclusion of government bene- fit payments in calculations of parity prices for farm products. (Parity prices are figured by the Agriculture Department to mean a "fair return" to the farmers). The bill was approved originally by votes of 78 to 2 in the senate and 149 to 40 in the house, far larger margins than the two-thirds vote required to override a Presidential veto. anikhead Bill Opposed fv CIO and AFL t Officitls Axis Strengthening Coastal Defenses LONDON, April 2.-(P)-Keeping one eye on the progress of the Allied armies in Tunisia, the Germans and Italians are reported continually strengthening the coastal defenses of Europe, particularly those of the "underbelly" in Italy and southern France, in preparation to meet in- vasion. Dispatches to Lonaon newspapers this afternoon reported that persons living along the coasts have been warned to mov,- inland. The fashion- able Riviera resorts have been con- verted into fortresses or razed to clear the way for guns. The Germans have put thousands of French workers to the job of constructing blockhouses and gun emplacements with commandeered French materials. Swiss correspondents have cabled reports that barbed wire has been strung hastily along Mediterranean beaches. Other information reaching Lon- don from Toulon and Marseille by way of Switzerland confirmed pre- vious reports that German inspectors are making a survey of boats, in- cluding even motor launches, all of which are being made seaworthy- apparently for the use of Marshal Erwin Rommel should he attempt a "Dunkerque" from Tunisia. Tydings Pr poses To Free Puerto Rico WASHINGTON, April 2.- (IP)- Complete and absolute independence for Puerto Rico was proposed today by Chairman Tydings (Dem.,-Md.) of the Senate territories committee. Announcing in the Senate that he had introduced a bill to haul down the flag that has flown over the THEY CAN PLEDGE TOO: Fraternities Will Rush Enlisted Men I Also a feature of the National Conference was the Fraternities will rush enlisted men who are sent to the University for specialized training beginning this summer, If they are still open, IFC president Dick Emery, '43E, said yesterday. This statement cameas a result of an announce- ment by the War Committee of the National Interfra- ternity Conference that the Army and Navy have indi- cated that they have no objection to enlisted men on college campuses for specialized training pledging a fraternity. question of what to do with fraternity real estate hold- ings. The suggested plan was the leasing of fraternity houses to the armed forces. Emery declared that such a plan is being considered by IFC, as by summer very few fraternity houses will be open. "By summer the fraternity -men left on campus won't be able to live in their houses," Emery said. "There won't be enough of them. The members who I