six THE MICHIGAN DAIL WEDNESDAY, FEB. 1 SIX WEDNESDAY, FEB Nelson C. E. Wilson Is Promoted In Shake-Up Dismissal Is Charged To Quarrel Between Board, Armed Services Demands Resignation of Eberstadt from WP <> Knox Peers at the Japs WASHINGTON, Feb. 16.-VP)-A tense struggle in the War Production Board culminated today when WPB Chairman Donald M. Nelson ousted vice-chairman Ferdinand Eberstadt and handed Eberstadt's powers in toto over to Charles E. Wilson. Wilson, a production specialist and former president of General Electric Company, was stepped up from vice- chairman to executive vice-chairman of WPB, answerable only to Nelson. The action was disclosed in an un- precedented WPB press release which stated that Nelson had asked Eber- stadt "for his resignation." This was in effect a public dismissal, and was linked by WPB sources to the in- creasingly bitter feud between the armed services and WPB over control of arms production. Asked Nelson's Removal The report circulated also that Eberstadt supporters in the Army and Navy, alarmed by Nelson's transfer of. seven WPB divisions from Eberstadt to Wilson some days ago, had gone to the White House proposing thatNel- son himself be removed from the WPB chairmanship. They suggested that Bernard Ba- ruch, 72-year-old production czar of the first World War, take over the reins of WPB, informed but unquot- able sources said. Baruch has been a friend and ad- visor of Nelson, but Eberstadt, a New York investment banker, also is close to Baruch and was brought into the war effort partly upon Baruch's rec- ommendation. Denies Knowledge of Appeals Late in the day President Roose- velt said at a press conference that the Army and Navy had made no appeals to him. He said he did not know whether any appeals had been made to economic stabilized James F. Byrnes, a White House official. Nelson's announcement of the dras- tic reorganization said: "it is my con- viction that this change will bring harmony to WPB and end the juris- dictional questions which, if permit- ted to continue, could only hamper the war effort." He did- not enlarge upon the "jur- isdictional questions," but a WPB spokesman, when called upon for ex- planation, said Eberstadt and Wilson, who were on an equal level of author- ity, "saw things differently at times." Chose Production Man "Nelson had to make a choice, and he chose the production man," the spokesman said. Rightly or wrongly, Eberstadt has acquired the reputation in some WPB quarters of being "an army man." He came to WPB from the Army-Navy munitions board, and set up the "new controlled materials plan" to allocate raw materials and assure their un- interrupted flow to war plants and civilian industries. His program had the support of Army and Navy of- ficials. Inter-Guild To Sponsor Service Annual World Day of Prayer To Be Sunday The second annual World Day of Prayer for Students will be sponsored by Inter-Guild, representative organ- ization of Protestant students, at 8:15 p.m. Sunday in the Congregational Church. "Student groups the world over will join together in prayer, and our cam- pus Inter-Guild is sponsoring this united service in response to the re- quest of the World Student Christian Federation," said James Terrell, '43, chairman of the World Day of Prayer Committee. The service will be conducted by Lewis Howard, '44, president of Inter- Guild, with the assistance of James Terrell, president of the Canterbury Club, Larry Burns, '46E, Earle Harris, '44, president of Westminster Guild, and Virginia Rock, '45. William Muehl, acting director of the Student Religious Association, will give a short address. The music will be furnished by John Dexter, '43SM, at the organ, and the Rev. Leonard A. Parr will deliver the bene- diction. Student Election Date Changed' To Wednesday Candidates' Petitions For Next Week's Voting Are Due Thursday The all campus election originally scheduled for next Tuesday has been moved to Wednesday because of Washington's birthday, it was dis- closed yesterday by Bill Sessions, '43E, head of the Men's Judiciary Council. The polling on Wednesday will be' conducted from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. in regular campus booths to choose three members for the Board in Control of Student Publications, six Union vice- presidents, and a 12 man committee to stage a combined freshman-sopho- more dance. Any person not currently now con- nected with a publication may pe- tition for the Board positions. Each person interested and eligible is asked to write out his petition giving all pertinent data and return it not later than 4:30 p.m. tomorrow to the Busi- ness Desk of The Daily or the Union Student Offices. Candidates for the Union vice- president's positions were announced yesterday, but any other members of the Union may petition Dick Ford, '44, Union president said. Petitions may be obtained in the Student Offices.' Freshmen and sophomores interest- ed in the combined class dance may obtain regular Judiciary Council pe- tition's in the Student Offices of the Union. These must be returned in ac- cordance with the time cited above. Each petitioner must sign up for an interview today. These will be held from 2 to 5 p.m. in the Student Of- fices. Schnabel Gives Lecture Before Music School Well-Known Pianist Discusses Modern Music, Composers "Modern music would be mtch the same as it is today even if thexe were no war," Artur Schnabel, world- renowned pianist, stated in a special all-day lecture for the Music School. Schnabel made a special trip to Ann Arbor Monday to speak with students of the Music School, who were excused from classes to hear his lecture. Discussing modern music and the people who write it, he expressed the opinion that "a composer is a prod- uct of his own personal inspiration and not of his time." During the afternoon, Schnabel at- tacked the student's approach to mu- sic from a more technical angle, il- lustrating on the piano as he pro- ceeded. He urged students not to be afraid to introduce their own ideas into their interpretations of music and emphasized the importance of music for individual pleasure rather than for commercial purposes. At a tea following the afternoon session, Schnabel proved his wit and charm in deftly handling a number of questions from the student and faculty audience. UNION UMPIRE APPOINTED DETROIT, Feb. 16.--P)-The Ford Motor Company and the United Automobile Workers Union (CIO) to- day agreed to the appointment of IDr. Harry Shulman, former profes- sor of law at Yale University, as um- pire in disputes between the firm and the union. Walter Duranty, famous foreign correspondent and Pulitzer Prize win- ner, will discuss the place of Russia in the war in his lecture at 8:15 p.m. tomorrow in Hill Auditorium under the auspices of the Michigan Orator- ical Association. He will bring to the lecture an up to the minute picture of conditions in Russia and Japan as he recently returned from these countries. Be- fore a six-weeks' stay in Tokyo, he traveled the entire length of Russia. "By a strange irony of fate, our democratic nations have with them aikg hty ally whose system is not liours. I refer to the U.S.S.R., whose constitution has no flaw from a democratic viewpoint, but whose ways are not our way," he declared 'in a recent address. "The U.S.S.R. was attacked by Ger- many without warning or provocation and defended itself most valiantly. I have no shadow of doubt that Russia will cooperate with the United States, Great Britain, and China in the war against Japan. I have known Russia Gandhi's Health Waning After Seven Day Fast NEW DELHI, Feb. 16.-('P)-Mo- handas K. Gandhi, in the seventh day of his scheduled three-weeks fast, was growing constantly weaker today and there was anxiety among his followers that death might claim the frail little Indian leader this time. Gandhi began his fast last Wednes- day in protest against the refusal of the Viceroy, Lord Linlithgow, to give him his unconditionalrelease from the palace-prison of the Aga Khan where he was placed in custody six months ago. He drinks only citrus juices and water. PULITZER WINNER HERE: Duranty To Discuss Russia and Japan i Lecture Tomorrow Secretary of the Navy, Frank Knox, squats on the ground before a set of captured Japanese binoculars for a look at Jap positions on Guadalcanal. The picture was made during the secretary's tour of U.S. Pacific bases and before the Japs withdrew from Guadalcanal. Winter's Coldest Wave Strikes Ann Arbor and Eastern Seaboard WALTER DURANTY ... talks on Russia for twenty years and learned to un- derstand its complex foreign policy." His current book on the subject is "The Kremlin and the People." In 1932 he was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Foreign Correspondent and his autobiography, "I Write as I Please" was long a best seller. Duranty covered the Eastern Front of the First World 'War for the New York Times and was the Times' Mos- cow correspondent from 1921 until 1934. Since that time he has written for a number of publications includ- ing the Atlantic Monthly, Collier's, Readers' Digest, and the North Amer- ican Newspaper Alliance, as well as the New York Times. l. Ann Arbor's upstart thermometer bounced down to the zero line last night, but temperatures here were comparatively mild as the winter's coldest wave drove the mercury down as far as 50 below in scattered sec- tions of eastern United States. Freezing winter winds here nipped student ears, as the University Ob- servatory reported one of the longest sustained blows recorded this winter. Ann Arbor motorists, their radia- tors frozen by arctic cold, flocked to James Armour to Speak To Engineering Society Mr. James W. Armour of the Riley Stoker Corporation will address the meeting of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, which will be held at 7:30 p.m. today in the Union. The topic of Mr. Armour's speech will be "The Design and Construction of Steam Generating Units." A mo- tion picture on this subject also will be shown. local garages, and students donned extra-thick clothing. From Florida to New England the cold wave continued its work for the second straight day, killing at least thirty persons, slowing vital war work, ruining crops in the South. New England reported 19 dead yes- terday with thousands of cases of frostbite, transportation slowed to a crawl, and many schools closed. Boston, assailed both by extreme cold and a fuel oil shortage, has gone for a day and a half with sub-zero temperatures. Outdoor work in New Bedford, Mass. came almost to a standstill where fishermen were un- able to unload nine vessels bearing 50,000 pounds of fish. Trains in New England were re- ported as much as twelve hours late. The fertile Florida Everglades farming country reported 25 above yesterday, frostbiting several thou- sand acres of beans. Warrensburg, New York yesterday claimed the low in cold with a level 50 degrees under the zero mark. Mount Washington, N.H. registered 46 below. r Learn )tichqje an Ken at Wa' Naval Aviation Cadet Harry M. Galloway, '34, has been transferred to the Air Station at Corpus Christi, Texas for advanced flight training. Cadet Galloway attended the Uni- versity from 1932-34 and was a mem- ber of the ROTC during that time. Cadet Richard B. Stodden, '41, is now enrolled in the Army Air Forces Pre-FlightSchool at Maxwell Field, Montgomery, Ala. Cadet Stodden is an Ann Arbor resident, having at- tended both the Ann Arbor High School and the University literary college andmedical school. He played three years of hockey and was a mem- ber of Sphinx and Druids. Executive council of IFC will meet at 2:30 p.m. Thursday in Dean Burs- ley's office. Transferred to the Naval Avia- tion Advanced Flight School at Corpus Christi, Texas, Cadet Sterry B. Williams, '42, will be commis- sioned in the Naval or Marine Corps Reserve after three months train- ing. He is a member of the Alpha Delta Phi fraternity and was a member of The Daily staff and Sig- ma Gamma Epsilon while at the University. Paul D. Strickland, '40E, has re- ceived his Navy wingsaand Ensign's commission at the Naval Training Center at Pensacola, Fla. Ensign Strickland graduated from the Uni- versity as a mechanical engineer and is a member of Phi Kappa Psi fra- ternity. Winer of a swimmingletter and member of Michigan's Big Ten championship team in 1941-42, Cadet Joseph P. Trytten, '42, is now beginning training as a Naval aviator at Corpus Christi, Texas. Cadet Trytten is a member of Theta Chi fraternity. Also transferred to Corpus Christi is Cadet Robert B. Gelston, '42. Cadet Gelston is a member of Phi Gamma Delta and was active on the Council of the Student Religious Association. He played tennis and basketball and was a member of the Cap and Gown Committee of his senior class. THE GENERAL NEWS STAFF of The Michigan Daily offers you an excellent opportunity for practical experience in newspaper work. it offers you a chance to become acquainted with a complete news- paper plant, to participate in the editorial branch and to observe in the mechanical department. You will have an opportunity to The General News Staff has at its disposal the Associated Press wire service through two teletypes, and Associated Press telemat pic- ture service. i You will become familiar with -0 How about a CAREER on the CIVILIAN 1RNT? As a student, you've doubtless asked yourself many, times what you ought to do to help win this war. What can you study that will be of practical assistance? The Retail Bureau at the University of Pittsburgh is offering a new opportunity to college upperclassmen to be trained for a successful career in retailing while gaining actual working expe- rience at a steady weekly salary. You will receive regular under. graduate credit for your work at the Bureau, you'll earn a weekly income in a Pittsburgh department store, you'll be making a definite contribution to civilian wartime morale-at write news stories, features, torials and interviews. edi- shop procedures and printing prac- tices, and will observe the operation of shop equipment, including the Linotypes, Ludlow, Elrod, Press, and Stereotyping equipment. Women are especially welcome. No previous experience is necessary and oil second-semester freshmen and upperclassmen are eligible to tryout. Come up to the second You can learn how to "make-up" a page, judge the news value of stories and to become familiar with