r loKr61- -4 rN c c; VOL. LITI No. 153 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, APRIL 30, 1943 PRICE FIVE CENTS Allies Advance in Tunisian Mountains 'U' Fresh Air Ca 400 Students Will Aid in Annual Drive Goal of $1,500 Will Provide for Boys of Metropolitan Areas "Send a boy to the Fresh Air Camp" will be the slogan for the twenty-third consecutive year as four hundred students from dormi- tories, sororities and fraternities sell tags in the annual drive from 8 a.m. till 4 p.m. today. The students will man twenty-five posts on campus and in the down- town area, and will open three spe- cial stations at the East Quad be- tween the hours of 4 p.m. and 6 p.m. to receive contributions from soldiers. Fifteen hundred dollars, the amount for this year's goal, will send several hundred boys from Detroit and other metropolitan areas to the University Fresh Air Camp on Pat- terson- Lake, loca d near Pinckney, for a month's vacation. The boys, who, re between the ages of 8 and 16, are chosen by twen- ty-five different cooperating social and case-working agencies and are sent to the Camp for special study and diagnosis. An expert staff of sociologists, psychiatrists, and psy- chologists is provided to help the boys work out some of their problems in adjustment. The drive is under the direction of Pete Wingate, '43, former secretary- treasurer of the Inter-fraternity Council, and Helen Kressbach, '44, Turn to Page 2, Col. 1 Nine Defeats Broncos, 10-9, In Wild Thilt Walterhouse's Single In Eleventh Drives in Game Winning Tally By BUD LOW Michigan pushed across a run in the last of the eleventh when Dick Walterhouse singled with the bases loaded to give the Wolverines a 10 to 9 victory over Western Michigan here yesterday. The wild marathon lasted two hours and 55 minutes as the lead changed hands four times and was twice tied. Each team used three pitchers, and freshman Dick Drury, who pitched to one man in the ninth and then went on to hold the Bron- cos scoreless, received credit for the victory. Ben Almany, who was charged with the loss, came in at the beginning of the second inning and hurled the remainder of the game for the Kalamazoo squad. Michigan thought they had the game on ice until Western brought in three tallies in the ninth after two were out. Successive singles by Ber- nie Compton, Gene Conley, and Gene Nyhius, followed by Bill Kowalski's pinch double accounted for the Bronco scores. Bob Stenberg received a base on balls to start off the Maize and Blue half of the eleventh. Then success- ive errors by Almany and Phil Al- bertson set the stage for Walter- house's single to left for the game- winning tally. Drury pulled himself out of a hole in the eleventh by fanning two Bron- Plan Given For Marine Reservists WASHINGTON, April 29,-()-- Marine Corps headquarters. today announced details of the college trainingprogram under which stu- dent reservists and enlisted men may continue their education and qualify for commissions. Men possessing necessary or poten- tial educational background will be trained, it was announced, at a lim- ited number of colleges participating in the Navy college training program. The program will be open to re- servists now enrolled in colleges and secondary schools in the Marine Of- ficers Candidate group, and to a limited number of selected enlisted Marines and men' in the Army En- listed Reserve Corps who have ex- pressed preference for Marine Corps service. Students will be permitted to ex- press preliminary choice of a course of study for specialists training. They will be allowed to participate in col- lege athletics and all campus ac- tivities on the same basis as civilian students provided there is no inter- ference with their prescribed hours or courses of study, the announce- ment said. Reason Given For Polish Split With Russia* By The Associated Press LONDON, April 29.- A recent Pol- ish proposal for a confederation of Central European States was one of the concealed but major factors which leads to Russia's severance of diplomatic relations with the exiled government here, diplomatic quar- ters said tonight. Churchill, Roosevelt Agree Prime Minister Churchill and President Roosevelt . were reported meanwhile in diplomatic circles to have reached an agreement on the course to be followed in trying to heal the rupture between Russia and the Polish government. Some de- clared a personal appeal would be made to Premier Stalin to cooperate in the move. The ambassador of the Polish Gov- ernment - in - exile, Tadeusz Romer, left Moscow today on a slow with- drawal from the Soviet Union, head- ed first for the alternate Russian capital at Kuibyshev for a stay of about two weeks and thence to Te- heran, Iran, to await further assign- ment. Poles Propose Confederation Diplomatic quarters said the Polish confederation proposals were more important than either the boundary dispute between the two governments or the Polish suggestion for an Inter- national Red Cross inquiry into the German story that 10,000 Poles had been killed by the Russians near Smolensk. These sources said that the Soviets regarded the proposed alliance dis- cussed among the expatriated gov- ernments in London as the first step toward an anti-Soviet Bloc. Senior Class Dmes Payable Next Week All graduating seniors of the Col- lege of Literature, Science, and the Arts, will be able to pay their dollar class dues between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. next Tuesday and~Wednesday in the lobby of Angell Hall and on the diag- onal in front of the Library. The dues will be used for present expenses of the class as well as for future needs George Sallade, '43, fi- nancial chairman of the class, said. Some of the money will be spent for representation of the class in the 'Ensian and the remainder will be re- served for class reunions and cor- respondence. mp Tag FDR Issues Ultimatum to Coal Miners 77,000 Workers Idle; - Nationwide Shutdown Threatened by Strike By The Associated Press WASHINGTON Apr. 29-A his- toric showdown between President Roosevelt and John L. Lewis was at hand tonight. With more than 77,000 soft coal miners idle and a nationwide shut- down threatened, Mr. Roosevelt served notice this morning that he would use all his vast powers as Com- mander-in-Chief "to protect the na- tional interest" if work is not re- sumed by 10 a.m. Saturday. Lewis, the United Mine Workers leader, preserved deep silence. The 77,000 miners showed no tendency to return to work, and one of their local leaders said "we won't go back without a contract unless Lewis says so.' President's Action Still Undecided What the President would do if the strikes continue beyond the Sat- urday deadline was not stated but informed officials said many courses are open to him. They include: Martial law in the coal fields, with suspension of the writ of habeas corpus and Jury trial; use of troops to protect miners willing to work; as- signment of troops to work in mines; reclassification of miners under sel- ective service to make them liable for the draft; an order denying them work in any war industry-or some less drastic measure such as further appeal to public opinion or to the miners themselves over the head of Lewis. Contract Expires Tonight The mine union is demanding a new contract providing for $2-a-day wage increases with an $8 minimum. The present contract expires at mid- night tomorrow (Friday) and Lewis has said that none of the miners will "trespass" on the employers' proper- ty thereafter unless a new contract is reached. Yesterday the War Labor Board which Lewis had ignored turned the case over to Mr. Roosevelt. Today the Chief Executive sent a letter to Lewis, and to Thomas Kennedy, UMW sec-' retary-treasurer, appealing to the striking miners-"as a friend"-to resume work and let the WLB handle the case. 'International , Night' Program I To Be Today Presenting a seven-act floor show, a carnival midway of booths and an hour and a half of square dancing, "International Night" will feature student entertainers from the Inter- national Center and Lane Hall at 8:30 p.m. today in Lane Hall. The proceeds from all tickets, which are now being sold at the League, the Union, and in Lane Hall, will be turned over to the World Stu- dent Fund, a non-sectarian, non-po- litical organization which aids stu- dents in all war-torn areas. The highlight of the evening, be- ginning at 9 p.m., will be the hour floor show. Two new acts have just been added to the program, Elaine Spangler, '43, social chairman, said yesterday. One will be a Chilean quartet. Johana Reischer will sing a group of French songs. Also included in the floor show will be some special hula dances by Dottie Tamura from Honolulu. Clar- ence Forster Grad. will give a fe'w of his well-known dramatic readings and the Lane Hall quartet will sing a few of the old favorites. Harriet Porter '44SM, will sing a group of Italian songs, caberet style. Square dancing will begin at 10 nPm. and will continue until 11:30. At Sale Will, Be Held WiLl Holds Hearings On S oft Coal Miners' Walkout Today) With 77,000 soft coal miners of the threatened 450,000 already idle, the three man arbitration panel of the WLB had submitted the case to President Roosevelt. Left to right: David B. Robertson, president of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Engine men, representing labor; Morris L. Cooke, chairman of the panel and Walter White of the Business Advisory Council, Department of Commerce. World News In Brief... LONDON, April 29.- (I)- The RAF sowed a massive pattern of -mines across Hitler's U-boat training waters in the Baltic and his supply routes to Russia last night in a grand scale operation coupled with a diver- sionary bomber attack on the Wil- helmshaven Naval Base. The mine-laying was carried out by the RAF heavyweights "on a very large scale, particularly in the Baltic Sea,", the Air }inistry announced and then added almost as an after- thought: "Wilhelmshaven also was bombed." WASHINGTON, April 29.--(P)- Agreement between Mexico and the United States to create a joint committee to formulate a program for economic cooperation after making a study of.international payments between the two coun- tries was announced tonight by the State Department. The agreement to create an ec- onomic committee made up of two representatives from each country, the department said, was reached by President Roosevelt and Presi- dent Avila Camacho as the result of their reciprocal visits. ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN AUSTRALIA, April 30 (Friday)-(IP) Liberators executed a strong morn- ing raid Thursday on the Japanese seaplane base on the Island of Am- boina, Dutch East Indies. Their bomb loads started fires and explosions among the barracks and hangars at Halong. LONDON, April 30 (Friday)-(A)- Russian airmen were reported ear- ly today to have shot down 116 German planes in two days of fighting in the Caucasus, where German dispatches said the Red Army had launched an "expected large-scale attack" in an effort to throw the Nazis into the Black Sea. FDR Impressed with Nation's Proficiency After 20-State Tour By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, April 29.-Presi- dent Roosevelt returned today from a 7,652-mile, 20-state tour impressed with America's military and industri- al proficiency and holding the idea, too, that the wartime 'establishments ought to be used when peace re- turns for training young people. The Chief Executive held a special press conference two hours after his forenoon arrival back in Washington which he left April 13. This was given over largely to the coal situation but his major impressions from his trip,I as outlined briefly at the conference! and in more detail in aboard-train talks with newsmen who accom- panied him were: Army Over Growing Pains 1. The Army is now over the grow- ing pains incident to its vast expan- sion and is grown-up. This is demon- strated not only in the excellence of its training but in its improved housekeeping practices such as its- good conservation measures. A re- porter noted his remark about the Army being grown-up and asked if that meant it is as big as it needs to be. Mr. Roosevelt said no, that there has been no change in plans as to its size. 2. He was struck by the achieve- ments of women in industry. In avi- ation plants, he said, from 30 to 50 per cent of all employes are women and in one plant the number of wom- en is well above 50 per cent. Among new workers, 60 to 65 per cent are women. Mr. Roosevelt commented that this is helping tremendously in meeting the manpower problem. Peacetime Service for Youth 3. The camps and industrial plants ought to be put to good use in the post-war era perhaps by requiring that the youth of America give a year's service to their country. He said he had no specific program and that anyone developed probably would be only partly military, but he was impressed ' by the benefits in physical condition and mental alert- ness that men and women in service and war-worker uniforms have rea- lized. 4.He found the country as a whole has a better perspective on the war, a better sense of proportion, is sob- erer in temper and more intelligent in its attitude than a good -part of Washington. Seventeen days of crowded activi- ty formed the background for Mr. Roosevelt's conclusions. He saw troops in all stages of training including simulated warfare, ate Army meals on three occasions, and, in factories, saw the production of planes and ammunition. Town Meeting To Be Called Voters Will Decide On City Tax Increase All eligible Ann Arbor voters have been summoned to a town meeting; the first since the city's early days. The purpose of the meeting, which is to be held Saturday, May 8, is to pass on a proposed increased in the city tax limitation. This meeting will not amount to an actual assembly as did traditional town meetings. Instead, voters will be asked to vote by means of the me- chanical voting machine between 2 p.m. and 8 p.m. at city hall. A proposal to raise the maximum tax limitation from 71/2 to 9 mills (or $1.50 per $1.000 of assessed prop- erty valuation) for the 1943-44 fiscal year will be set before the voters. At present the city charter provides for a limit of 3/4 per cent of the total assessment. The new measure pro- poses to raise the limit to 9/10 per cent. The meeting, which was voted unanimously at a special session of the City Council Wednesday, is for the purpose of raising $66,000 more than the present tax limitation pro- vides. Of that amount, $51,000 is needed to meet salary raises for city employes most of which have already been granted, and to meet a $15,000 deficit for garbage collection. Serenade Will Be Held Today The All-Campus Serenade which was postponed when "the rains' came" last night-will be held at 8:30 p.m. today on the Library steps. The Serenade will not be called off as an ordinary serenade would have been. Due to the large number of re- quests received from townspeople and students for a public appearance of Axis Defense Moves Stop British Army U.S., French Troops Attack Nazi Positions In Mountain Country By The Associated Press ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AFRICA; April 29.-Ameri- can and French troops have sliced deeper into the tough Axis mountain defenses in Tunisia. but desperate German counterattacks 20 miles west of Tunis temporarily staved off a British First Army break-through into the plain leading to the capital, an Allied communique disclosed to- day. Dispatches emphasized the grow- ing resistance of the cornered Axis troops all along the 140-mile are of ridges, while American troops "gained some important ground" in the north, and a French communique told of the seizure of three more hilts north and south of the British First Army salient which had pushed up to the last hill barrier barring the way to the Tunis plain. German Resistance Savage German resistance was particular- ly savage in the center where the British First Army had attained the crest of Diebel Bou Aoukaz, only to be pushed back slightly by German shock troops supported by tanks. The Germans launched two heavy counterattacks yesterday after the British had attained the summit of this key hill. The first was repulsed, leaving many enemy dead and some wrecked German tanks. Then the Germans - called up N0 men and 30 of their precious reserve of tanks and'sucdeeded in forcing the British "to make a slight withdrawal" in this battlefield 12 miles northeast of Medjez-El-Bab. Axis Supplies Get Through It is apparent, too, that Axissup- plies still are getting through to the besieged troops despite Allied aerial supremacy and staggering Axis losses in planes, ships, and materiel. A further toll of Axis shipping was taken yesterday, and American bombers also attacked Naples and Messina across the straits. The American troops, fighting against bitter opposition and rough terrain, were reported to have gained in the hills bordering the Sidi N'Sir- Mateur road southwest of Bizerte. Bald Hill, the Army name for the high barren peak of Djebel Ajred, still was the scene of heavy fighting. Energetic German defense thus far has prevented full occupation of that height which is about 12 miles west of Mateur. H~ichigamua Braves Seize 18 Palef aces Listen to this tale of romance, Tale of Indian warrior bold. In the early moon of greenleaves Came they forth the stoic valiant; Forth they romped to paleface wigwam, Wigwam one offriend great chief, Paleface mighty among his kind; Came he forth to take their token Of the warpath they would tread, Theh to the mighty oak of Tappan Dashed the screaming yelling red- men; To the tree of Indian legend When the whitemen pale and trembling Stood around the mighty oak; Warriors choice of paleface nation Choice of tribe to run the gauntlet Down the warriors, painted de- mons, Swooped and caught their prey like eagles, Loud the warcry stirred the still- ness, As they seized their hapless captives Forth they bore them to their wigwam There to torture at their pleasure. There around the glowing bon- fires, Heard the words of mighty wis- dom, Smoked the pipe of peace and friendship. ANOTHER MILESTONE: Fielding H. Yost Spends His 72nd Birthday in Tennessee By ED ZALENSKI From the scarred battlefields of Guadalcanal to the quiet University campus here there are thousands of Michigan men who mark today as another milestone in the life of' Fielding H. Yost-his 72nd. And while well-wishers shower Michigan's "Grand Old Man" with their customary messages of con- gratulation he and Mrs. Yost will spend a few days of rest at their farm in Walling, Tenn. It has been a long-standing cus- tom here that Yost will be at his of- fice in the Field House which bears his name to greet friends and cele- brate a quiet birthday anniversary. all carry messages of his continued good health. Among the congratulatory mes- sages was one from Herbert O. (Fritz) Crisler present director of athletics and football coach positions which Yost once held. Yost was foot- ball coach from 1901 through 1923 and in 1925 and 1926, and also di- rector of athletics from 1921 until his retirement on June 1, 1941. Many men fade from the public eye on retirement, but Yost is still fresh in Michigan's mind. Known as "Coach," "Hurry-Up" and "Grand Old Man" to everyone on the parade of Wolverines for many past years, Yost first gained recognition for his famous point-a-