Y 4F 4b* : ait Weather Colder Tomorrow . LIn No. 91 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, FEB. 16,'1943 PRICE Fln CENTS ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, FEB. 16, 1943 PRICE FIVE CENTS . .. . - .- yam ,v MEMNON w Advanced R( Investigation Order )TC To Be Army Privates willow Run Plant Senate Group Seeks Facts On Production Curtiss-Wright Shop Also Faces Inquiry By Subcommittee On Recent Progress By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, FEB. 15.-A full investigation into plane construction at the Curtiss-Wright plant at Colum- bus, O., and the Willow Run plant, near Detroit, was ordered today by Chairman Truman (Dem.-Mo.) of the Senate War Investigating Committee. Truman announced that a personal inspection of the two plants by virtu- ally all of the committee Thursday and Friday would be followed by a hearing at Washington "at which we will get all the facts." "There has been so little production at either plant as to amount to virtu- ally none," Truman told a reporter.- Truman said the inspections, at lumbus Thursday, and at Detroit, liday, would be by a~ subcommttee Beaded by Senator Wallgren, (Dem.- Wash.) but that he and most other members of the full group would go along. Only Rumors Heard Wallgren agreed that "apparently there has been practically no pro- duction to amount to anything" at the plants "but all we have heard as t6 why have been rumors." The Office of War Information re- ported Saturday that the great Wil- low Run plant is operating at "only a small fraction of its ultimate poten- ti but may reach peak production #,vihna year The plant is govern- ment-owned and Ford-operated. "We are interested in getting the facts," Wallgren declared, "in the hope that we can get the difficulty re- moved and production going at top speed." Committee Counsel Hugh Fulton disclosed that committee investigators had visited both plants and that on the basis of their confidential reports the committee decided to have a look "on the ground floor." WPA Head Questioned He understood Senator Kilgore (Dem.-W.Va.), Burton (Rep.-Ohio), Ball (Rep.-Minn.) and Ferguson (Rep,-Mich.) would be included in the investigating party. Charles W. Wilson, WPA Produc- tion vice chairman, was called before an executive session of the Truman committee this afternoon for ques- tioning as a preliminary to the visit to .Columns and Detroit. "We just got some background in- formation on priorities given the two companies," Truman said later. "The information was confidential in na- ture." McNutt Says Skilled Men To Be Drafted WISHINGTON, FEB. 15.-()- Paul V. McNutt, emphasizing the sweeping nature of the 1943 draft program, said today that even occu- pational deferment must yield to the armed services' requirements for specially skilled men. The chairman of the War Manpow- er Commission told a press confer- ence that the fighting services al- ready invoked their authority to levy special draft calls for men with par- ticular skills.' This situation, following official word that family men would have to make up the majority of the 4,000,000 men to be inducted this year, was summarized by McNutt with the com- ment: "There is no such thing as perma- nent deferment." At the same time, however, McNutt wrote Rep. Robertson (Dem..-Va.) that "under present regulations al- most any man engaged in full time work in agriculture may claim defer-, ment" from the draft and that "to extend further relief at this time Marines Head for Rest after Battle Details Reveal Alternatives For ERC, Air Reserve Men Students in the Army Air Corps Enlisted Reserve and the Enlisted Reserve Corps find that the welter of details and orders emanating from the Army confuses them more than did the months of silence.- They want to know whether or not to stay in school and find the decision hard to make. When they consult their advisors they are often told that they should catch the next train home, but when they read the latest Army order they are told to stay in school. Out of the mass of information several alternatives can be drawn to make a decision. But there must always be the presumption that the Army can change its mind-although it probably never will. Yesterday the Adjutant General of the Sixth Service Command told The Daily to advise students to stay in school. Presumably his rea- sons were that the Army might change its mind and that they would have plenty of time to visit home, for with that advice he told Air Corps men that they would have five days notice and told Enlisted Reserve Corps men that they would have 10 days. But we believe that Prof. Thua's advice is sounder. He tells students that if they live a considerable distance from the University they may as well drop out of school so that they may spend some time at home before induction. However, if they live close to the University, they may as well stay In' school because they will have enough time to spend a week at home before leaving. Implicit in that advice is a disbelief that the Army will change its mind. We do not believe, either, that it will. This reserve program, so long in maturation, must have finally achieved full growth if the Army is beginning to issue induction orders. The delay in calling the Enlisted Reserve Corps, unassigned, will probably be very short. It hinges mostly on the speed with which the Army will act on certain other Sixth Service Command colleges and universities and on the lists of deferable men which will be sent to it by the colleges and universities. But there is no reason to believe that it will be even a month. If you are in the ERC or Air Corps, then the alternatives are depen- dent on the distance you are from your home and on your desire to get there. But we believe that it would be unwise to base a decision on a possible change of Army plans-those plans seem very definite. -- Leon Gordenker Corps To Continue Present Programs Until End of .Year Army Specialized Training Goes Into Effect Soon after March 1; 175'U' Men Affected by Order One hundred and seventy-five University men enrolled in the Advanced Course of the ROTC will become privates in the regular Army and will be given housing and pay as such while continuing their training at the Univer- sity when the Army's Specialized Training program goes into effect shortly after March 1, Col. William Ganoe head of the ROTC, announced yesterday. Just returned from War Department conferences at Washington, Col. Ganoe emphasized that the men affected by the plan would be allowed to continue their present programs until the end of the semester in May. Seniors to Get Officers Training At this time the seniors will be sent immediately to Officers' Training School while the juniors will be sent to a basic training camp in .order to provide the drill training which they would have received had they been able to complete the final year of ROTC training. Present Advanced Course cadets will be barracked under military disci- pline, probably in the East Quadrangle, and will receive the Army base pay ' of $50 per month in addition to board These tired U.S. Marines, heading for rest in an unnamed South Pacific port after months of bitter fighting on Guadalcanal, lead their dogs down the gangplank with them. Although use of dogs in combat in other war theatres has been officially announced, their presence among troops driving the Japs from Guadalcanal has not been mentioned. Rites for Harr illoison To Be Conducted Today Funeral services for Harry A. Til- lotson, University of Michigan Ath- letic Association business manager since 1920 who suffered a fatal heart attack Sunday morning, will be con- ducted at 2:30 p.m. today at Staffan funeral home, 513 E. Huron. Death came suddenly after 23 years of uninterrupted service for Mr. Til- lotson who was more widely known as head of the University's ticket sales. He was 57 years of age. Mr. Tillotson had been in apparent good health Saturday when he at- tended the hockey match between Michigan and Paris A.C. at the Coli- seum. The fatal stroke came Sunday morning as he read the newspaper at the breakfast table. His official capacity as business manager had given him jurisdiction over all University athletic equipment and transportation arrangements for Michigan sports squads. His job as ticket manager, however, gained him much fame and thousands of friends, especially among the alumni seeking the choicest seats. Survivors include his wife, three sons, Harry Jr., Ann Arbor; Jack S., a Naval air cadet at Glenview, Ill., who flew home Sunday in a Navy plane; and Fitch. Ann Arbor, who is awaiting call as an armament cadet in the Army Air Corps, and is em- ployed at the Bomber Plant in Ypsi- lanti. Other survivors are his mother, Mrs. Mary Tillotson, Corry, Pa.; two sisters, Mrs. Magna Haley, Saginaw, and Mrs. Ida Guignon, Corry, Pa.; and one grandson, Harry Tillotson III, three months old. Dr. Leonard A. Parr, minister of ,the First Congregational Church, will officiate. Burial will be in Forest Hill cemetery. Friends may call at Staf- fan's today. Pallbearers will be Harry G. Kipke, former Michigan football coach; Harold O. (Fritz) Crisler, present coach; Louis F. Hallen, C. L. LeValley, Chief of Police Sherman H. Mortenson and Louis F. Becker. Registration for Rushing To End With Spring term rushing registra- tion ending tomorrow, IFC secretary Paul Wingate, urged all those inter- ested in having some means of con- tact with the fraternities to sign up between 3 and 5 p.m. at the IFC offi- ces in the Union. The registration, he said, is not- compulsory and is being done entirely for the benefit of the fraternities and the men now interested in joining them. Registering involves neither charges nor obligations, he empha- sized. Soviets Tighten Arc in Battle for. KharkovSector Nazis Send Troops From. France; Reds 'Roll Up' Donets Basin By EDDIE GILMORE Associated Press Correspondent MOSCOW,FEB. 15.-The Russians said they tightened their strong semi- circle about Kharkov today, and the battle for that great Ukrainian prize mounted to peak violence seven miles, from the city as the Germans were reported pouring veteran troops from, France into the battle. Charging west from recaptured Rostov, and south between Voroshil-. ovgrad and Krasnoarmeisk, dis- Vatutin's army was tearing wide gaps in the enemy defenses and swiftly rolling up the whole lucrative Donets basin. Kharkov Not Mentioned Reuters recorded a German radio broadcast that the Soviets had breached the German defense lines in the Kharkov area, but the Russian midnight communique made no di- rect mention of Kharkov itself. The communique, as recorded in London by the Soviet Monitor, de- clared the Russians had smashed back three counterattacks by SS (elite. guard) troops in the Chuguyev area 22 miles southeast of Kharkov, killing hundreds of the Germans. Other Soviet forces, it said, surged forward in the Donets basin, captur- ing Krasnodon and Verkhne-Duvan- naye, 45 and 50 miles northeast of Stalino, and Rodionovo-Nesvetais koye, about 20 miles north of Rostov. Thirty populated places were cap- tured west of Krasny Sulin, and Soviet offensives continued south of Voroshilovsk and in the Krasnoar- miesk area, the war bulletin declared. Nazis Announce Fall The German communique an- nounced the fall of Rostov and Voroshilovgrad and acknowledged the Nazi plight in the Donets area saying the Russians "once more are trying to force a decision by out-flanking and break-through operations." Ber- lin said the Russians were throwing fresh units into the battle. Attacks at Novorossisk were declared repelled. The Russians also were reported at- tacking on a broad front south of. Leningrad to Volkhovo and at Kron- stadt Bay west of Leningrad. U.S. igh ts Nazi Drive In, Tunisia. By DANIEL DELUCE Assciated Press Correspondent ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AFRICA, Feb. 15.-Amerl. can and German forces, identified as part of, Marshal Rommel's Africa Corps, were locked in violent fighting today aong the southern end of the Axis corridor in Tunisia, where the powerful initial Nazi drive had brok- en through for more than 20 miles and imperiled the American anchor position at Gafsa to the south. Noland Norgaard, Associated Press correspondent with American forces in southern Tunisia, reported that one spearhead of the German ad- vance had cut the Gafsa-Sidi Bouzid Road in a thrust from the Ma1gnassy area which carried to a point nine miles southwest of Sbeitla in the mountains 45 miles northwest of Faid pass. He said an elite Panzer division of veterans of Rommel's Africa Corps, refitted with the newest German tanks in Tunisia, was being hurled against American tank units, many of which were in battle action for the first time. The Germans attacked west of Faid pass in central Tunisia, with tanks, infantry, artillery and dive bombers in such force as to indicate to officers here that armored forces from Rom- mel's army were in the action, and thus that an effective junction had been made with the Axis Tunisian army of Col.-Gen. Jurgen Von Arnim. "Heavy fighting took place and is continuing," said the day's communi- que from General Eisenhower's head- quarters. The British Eighth Army, which has thrown Rommel out of Libya and pursued him into Tunisia, still was about 200 miles south of the scene of this new battle and was reported engaged only in patrol activity. 'Morale Building' Programs Begun Initiating a series of 'morale build- ing' programs for military personnel on campus, faculty and servicemen teamed up last night to set Rackham Auditorium ringing with laughter 14 Students. Nominated For Union Nomination of 14 students for vice- presidents of the Union was made last night by the nominations com- mittee of the Union. Those naminated were: literary college and graduate schools, George F. Ceithaml, '43, and Robert J. Mc- Williams, '44; engineering college and architectural school, Roy K. Bradley, '43E, L. Will Coulter, '45E, and Bill Hutcherson, '43E; medical school, James W. Rae, '44M and Robert Tay- lor, '44M; law school, William F. Aig- ler, '43L, and John Zimmerman, '45L; dental school, Dennis H. Fruitiger, '44D, Al Jacobs, '44D, and Howard O'Dell, '44D; other schools, Howard S. Baumgarten, '4. BAd and Bob Schwyn, '44BAd. Six vice-presidents will be chosen in an all-campus election from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 24, to serve on the Board of Directory, policy- making body of the Union. Three of these will be on the committee to choose the new Union president and vice-president in the spring. Other Union members may still pe- tition for nomination by obtaining petitions from 3 to 5 p.m. today and tomorrow from the student offices of the Union. Signatures of 200 Union members must be obtained, and the petitions filed by 4:30 p.m. Thursday. To be eligible for such an activity students must have maintained a 'C' average last semester and present an eligibility card obtained at Room 2, University Hall. First Lady Asks Free Post-War Schooling for Vets! COLUMBIA, Mo., Feb. 15.-(P)- Men drafted out of school and into the armed forces' should be allowed to return and finish after the war at the expense of the government, either state or national, Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt told a group of University of Missouri students here this after- noon. She said it was her personal hope that students who wanted to return to their studies after the war could do so at governmental expense. She also could see no reason why the voting age could not be lowered to 18, if the schools of the country can adequately prepare students of that age to participate in a demo- cracy. Mrs. Roosevelt was met by her es- cort for the visit, Michael Trachten- berg, the student leader who made the arrangements for her talks on the campus. Detroit Endorses E asern W r Ti me and quarters. Since the University will be paid by the Government, food and housing will, of course, be pro- vided free of charge to the new pri- vates. A Naval ROTC headquarters said that men enrolled there will not be affected by the new program. Neither will Naval and Marine Reservists find their status changed. Medical Students are Privates Colonel Ganoe said that Medical students enrolled in ROTC will 4e kept at the University as privates also and should live in barracks but will not be compelled to do so, le adde, that non-ROTC medical students will be called out of school by the endof this semester and their rturn to Michigan is problematical.. A small contingent of about 2 privates will arrive at the University for Specialized training in engineer- ing classifications shortly after March 1, Colonel Ganoe said. Their courses will be divided into three 12- week terms per year and will include liberal subjects as well as technical, he added. Plan to Aid the War "This plan, has been devised, not to keep college education alive nor yet to militarize the American educa- tional system but plainly to help win the war more quickly," the colonel emphasized. He said that specialists badly need- ed by the Army can be trained in from four to six months Irs8 time un- der the Specialized Training program than under present college systems. "The Army is not commandeering the schools. It hires such instruction, feeding and housing as it requires.' Since soldiers will be marched to and from classes and disciplined by Army authority, their presence should ac- tually aid the civilian instructors and students," he concluded. * * * Unassigned ERC's Not To Be Called Yet Calling of the Army Enlisted Re- serve Corps, unassigned, scheduled for two weeks after the end of last semes- ter, will be held up, and Army Air Corps Enlisted Reserve men some Avi- ation Cadets will be called to active duty between Feb. 18 and 26. This information was received by The Daily yesterday from the Ad- jutant-General of the Sixth Service Command. Here is what he said: 1. Students should stay in school until called to active duty. (Prof. Burton D. Thuma, campus armed forces' representative, said Fri- day that "if a student lives close by he might stay in (school), but if he lives a considerable distance away he might drop out to see his parents." (Prof. Thuma is now preparing a list of deferable Army Enlisted Re- serve Corps men to be sent to the Sixth Service Command. This list of technical, medical, dental and pre- professional men will be checked against the complete list, Men not in the deferred classifications pre- sumably will be called as quickly as the Army can prepare their papers.) 2. All Enlisted Reserve Corps and MUSIC, MAESTRO, PLEASE: Heifetz To Play for Eighth Choral Union Concert Today Jascha Heifetz, who has achieved fame throughout the world for his mastery of the violin will be pre- sented on the eighth program of the current Choral Union Concert series at 8:30 today in Hill Auditorium. Heifetz will perform four numbers at this concert. These selections in- clude Mozart's Sonata No. 8 (Krockel 296), Bach's "Chaconne," which is written for violin alone, the fourth concerto of Vieuxtemps and a group of short Russian pieces. The com- posers to be represented in this group are Prokofieff, Shostakovich, Glaz- ounoff and Tschaikovsky. Heifetz believes that no one in the world is too unmusical to acquire a