,, SQL.; LmI No. 94 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, FEB. 19, 1943 Weather Warmer PRICE FIVE CENTS Red Advance Cuts RailwaY Near Rostov Russians May Have Trapped Nazi Forces In New Azov Drive By The Associated Press LONDON, Feb. 19. (Friday)-Ad- vancing with a speed indicating little efective opposition, the Red Army in putrsut of beaten Nazi troops in the area west of Rostov has cut the only escape railways on this front, the Russians announced in the midnight communique recorded here by the Soviet monitor.. The rail line was cut with the cap- ture of the district center of Mat- veev-Kurgan, 25 miles north of the Azov port of Taganrog, and, although it was not immediately clear from which direction the victorious Rus- Sians came, it was entirely possible that large forces of Germans were trapped by the stroke. 1isslans Move North The Russians have been operating both north and east of Matveev- Kurg n, and the town could have been taken from either direction. If the Soviet forces .came down from the north the trapped Germans might be counted in great numbers-prob- ably less if the Russians advanced from the east. Even in the latter case, however, obeservers believed sizeable Nazi groups might well be caught in the Taganrog area. x The bulk of the midnight com- muflique dealt with Red successes i the areas north and northwest of Rostyvindicating the Soviet armies Wr : qicly cutting into the Ger- ains retreating from this great area. lseWhere the Russians were mov- n 'still closer to the Nazi strong- ponb oftare, at the north end of the .w active front. The communique reported the capture of the railway ,o .Feaand district center of Zale- gopbh, 'onxly 3Q miles east of Orel, Verkhbaya Sosna, 45 miles southeast of Ore, and Pokovskoye, 40 miles Qutheast of the .strongpoint- Progress towiii QreI Te~ Russians already have report- S rogress toward Orel along the railX y from the -"south-from the dIrection of ursk., The midnight communique, how- ever, :dealt mainly with the battle ani'ist the Gettn armies left be. biW#"in te region of Rostov and to the north in the Donets Basin area. est of Novo-Shakhtinsk, the co4mmunique said; the Soviet troops took 60 populated places as they "continued their successful offen- eive." Heavy losses fell to the enemy, and one Russian motorized formation alone killed 1,000 and captured 1,500 derman officers and men, the com- munique said,: Briish Labor Threatens Split LONDON,* Feb. 18.-(W)-The Labor Party -mustered the largest vote ever cast in the, House of Commons against the Churchill coalition gov- ernment today when the House voted 335 to 119 to support the Cabinet's qualified endorsement of the Bev- eridge cradle-to-grave social security plan, and this domestic issue threat- ened seriously for the first time to break warring Britain's political unity. - The Labor members, numbering 166 in the House, decided to meet immediately to determine whether to withdraw their 22 ministers from the government. Herbert Morrison, laborite Minis- ter of Home Security, opposed his own party in an appeal to members not to "villify" the government forl being cautious about the Beveridge plan, and asking them not "to pre- cipitate serious political difficulties." Goebbels Tells Nazis Cruel Truth By The Associated Press LONDON, Feb. 18.-Propaganda Minister Paul Goebbels told what he called the "cruel truth" to the Ger- man people today-that "motorized robot divisions" of the Red Army had "broken loose with a power eclipsing all imagination," and that "we must act quickly and thoroughly or it might be too late." "Danger is imminent;" he - was [quoted as saying by the Berlin radio. "It is not the moment for asking ques- tions how it happened. We must act, and this immediately and thorough The Nazi propagandist complained that other nations, including the United States and Britain, failed to realize the "Bolshevist-Jewish peril," again promised death to saboteurs, said Germany's living standard prob- ably would fall lower, and many busi- nesses would be closed to raise men both against Russia and against an Allied invasion danger to the west. (The Berlin radio, quoting the Ger- man transocean agency's "political correspondent" in a dispatch record- ed by the Associated Press, described it as "the most drastic war speech Germany has so far heard." ("Dr. Goebbels' speech, outlining the danger threatened from the east, surpassed everything that has been said about the bolshevist menace in recent weeks," this correspondent commented. (The propaganda minister was de- scribed as the "inner political motor" in a movement aimed at making the German people realize all the aspects of the situation). He again attempted to explain why Germany, who had a non-aggression pact with Russia, ever attacked that nation, explaining that "in view of the big camouflaging and bluffing maneuvers of Moscow we did not cor- rectly estimate the war potential of the Soviet Union." Japs Advance In Seven Areas Ons: China Front First Offensives Since May Aimed at Ending Chinese Resistance CHUNGKING, Feb. 18.-()-The Japanese have begun attacks in seven widely separated areas, from the Lake Country north of Shanghai to the jungles of Yunnan in the southwest, apparently with the hope of ending Chinese resistance, the Chinese an- nounced today. Not since last May when the Jap- anese attempted simultaneously a push up the Burma Road, a twin- headed drive in Kiangsi and Chekiang Provinces on the Eastern Seabord, and made several lodgements on the Fukien Coast have the invaders shown as great coordinated activity. A Chinese spokesman told a press conference that there was no indica- tion that the current operations were the "prelude to a general offensive." He said they probably were motivated by the desire to "dissipate Chinese strength." (However, a Tokyo broadcast re- corded in London said a Japanese Army spokesman had announced that Japan now intends "to take all con- ceivable measures to crush Chungking resistance," thus suggesting that the Japanese might be delivering the first blows in an effort to knock out China before the United Nations can bring effective assistance to her.) A Chinese Army spokesman re- ferred to a Japanese broadcast which said the invaders had previously suf- fered four severe reverses. An Editorial: One week ago the Manpower Corps held its first registration for the current semester. There are approximately 4,500 men in the University. About 50 signed up. The restlessness and uncertainty of college life in these hectic days have been generally assigned as the reason for the deplorable registra- tion results. Students are being drafted and called to active duty every day; no one seems to know just how long he will be allowed to remain in school. But not only does such an argu- ment fail to explain the situation; it is a very strong argument on just the opposite side. The ravages of Registration will be today from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in Angell Hall, the West Quad and the Union. the war on normal college life con- stitute the most important reason why every male student who can spare even a few hours a month should sign up today. The greater the drop in enrollment, the greater is the responsibility of those still in school to help the Manpower Corps in its home front battle. There are many vital jobs which demand men immediately-help- ing filling in as hospital orderlies, building a Willow Run recreation center and working part-time in factories, to name only a few. If you haven't signed up already, sign up today. -John Erlewine Managing Editor Republicans To Nominate Two Regents Today GOP State Convention In Detr'oit Is Centered On Commissioner Post DETROIT, Feb. 18.-(P)-Interest among early arrivals for the Republi- can state convention here centered tonight on the nomination for state highway commissioner and the state Senate's refusal to accept a House bill abolishing that elective office while nominations to two vacant posts in the University of Michigan's Board of Regents will be closely watched by nearby Ann Arbor. The convention, scheduled to get under way at 11 a.m. (CWT) tomor- row, will select Republican candidates for the April 5 election and will re- organize the party's state central committee. Incumbent Regents David H. Crow- ley of Detroit and R. Spencer Bishop of Flint face opposition from Ralph A. Hayward, of Kalamazoo, a paper manufacture'. Crowley is now com- pleting his first eight-year term and Turn to Page 6, Col. 5 1 Prentiss Brown Flays Congress In Stormy Speech; Asks Rebirth Of Uni~ty Among All Americans Where Nazis Attack in Tunisia 0 50 ROBAA STATUTE MILES MAKTA OUSSELTIA SOUSSE AIN-BEIDA 'Ai ROUAN' TEgES FA, ? ,,BCj' SSEITLA w"PASS BOUTHADI "; -9CNEBK A ~ 7ERIANA MAKNASSY ALER IAGA SA ENED : REDEYEF *....."......... aT UNISIA T OZ EU R .. - ~ aMm.":m .;G . S U I f -----'CItt Dietid Black arrows indicate German drives against American positions in Tunisia, where Nazi tank forces were reported to have reached the out- skirts of Sbeitla and to have advanced toward Feriana. Original German drive came through Faid Pass from the eastern coastal region. To the north, Allied observers saw the possibility of a German drive (broken arrow) southwestward toward Bou Chebka. Ro-mmel Drives Yanks. Back to Al1gerian Border'' Heavy Allied Casualties Make Flank Attack By Montgomery's Eighth Army Impossible Price Administrator ,Says Two Bills Before Congress Will Wreck Country By The Associated Press NEW YORK, Feb. 18.- Prentiss M. Brown, the nation's new price ad- ministrator, today lashed out at "back-biting, this under-the-table" talk in Congress, pleaded for a rebirth of unity, and declared "there must be no strike" in the bituminous coal industry. In the strongest words fired by any Washington official in recent months, Brown covered a wide field of admin- P istrative problems in one of his first public speech since becoming head of OPA. He spoke before the technical association of the pulp and paper in- dustry. Brown said two bills were now be- ing considered by Congress which would "just about wreck the control law of food prices." He identified these as the pace parity amendment and the Senate bill to eliminate gov- ernment payments in computing par- ity prices. Pay Increase Demand The possibility of these agricultural price changes was the foundation for pay increase demands which would ruin price control, Brown said. "If we break through the price structure as it is today," he said, "the wage structure will inevitably be bro- ken through, and we will face in this country the most dangerous domestic situation that this nation has ever faced. It would be equal to a. tremen- dous defeat on, the military front." He said earlier in an interview that "if we break over on prices we'll pro- vide ammunition for the organized labor groups." Speaking of Congress, Brown said: "I have never known a time when there was so much disunity, in the Congress of the United States, when there was so much back-biting and fighting between the American peo- ple over inconsequential things." Rebirth of Spirit "We need a rebirth of the spirit of unity. I hope all of us will realize that unity in spirit is necessary, that these. great nations who are not united to- gether must stand together." "And they won't if this back-biting, this under the table talk, these criti- cisms of the war effort of our allies and our friends, are continued, if these seeds of disunity which have been sown are permitted to nurture and grow and live and become power- ful elements in our life. "We all deplore the temporary los- ses in North Africa-which have de- pressed many of us in the last two or three days-where our forces for the first time are in active combat with the enemy. "But out of it, my good friends, may come a realization that Joe Sta- lin and his friends can't win this war alone." Brown also appealed for public support of price control, but said that if price control measures failed "the responsibility is mine." He said his job was to represent consumers "who never come near and so often whose voices are silent when their interests are so vitally affected." Frosh-Soph Dance Slate Announced Associated Press Correspondent ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AFRICA, Feb. 1$.-German tank formations stood almost on the Algerian border today after capturing 4,000 square miles of Central Tunisia in four days from American forces who have withdrawn into the moun- tains below Tebessa, an Algerian town 12 miles west of the border. However, word that the British Eighth Army, driving from the south to relieve the situation, had reached Medenine afer a 45-mile advance, promised an early lessening of Mar- shal Rommel's pressure on the Amer- icans. Fight Way Back Straggling units which fought their way back from behind the German lines reached American outposts in the heights east of Tebessa, bringing accounts that tended to scale down down early reports of Allied losses. (Gallagher's dispatches did not say whether the American outposts were east or west of the border. The moun- Duranty Lecture Stresses Russian Need for Stable Post-War World ALL CLEAR NOW: New Law Makes Residents Responsible for Sidewalks -- By BETTY KOFFMAN What the Russians need most is a stable, peaceful post-war world in which they can develop their resour- ces and industries, said Walter Dur- anty last night in an Oratorical Asso- ciation lecture. Speaking in a clipped British ac- cent, the veteran news ace told his Hill Auditorium audience that "since America will be stronger than the rest of the world put together," it will be worth Russia's while to be friendly with us. After setting at rest current fears concerning our future relation with the Soviets, Duranty traced the coun- try's development since the Revolu- tion and explained that it is impos- sible to use our own standards in judging their progress. In the effort to industrialize their country the Bolshevists have altered their original aims so that today the only difference between their system and ours, he said, is that in Russia no one can become an owner or mil- lionaire. hey say that their system isno longer communism, but socialism. I'll go a step further and say it is state capitalism," said Duranty. He explained the many difficulties encountered after the Revolution, such as the struggle for power be- tween Stalin and Trotsky and their followers after Lenin's death, and the Small Turnout for Union Smoker Blamed on War A disappointing audience of an es- timated fifty people were introduced to campus extra-curricular activities refusal of the farmers to join in the newly-created "food factories," as well as the hostility of the ,Allied powers. "Perhaps the Revolution didn't give the peasants freedom as we consider freedom, but it did give them free- dom of opportunity," he stated. In discussing his predictions for the future time of Germany's collapse, he admitted that there is a possibility of serious revolutionary movements in Europe before the American and. British troops move in. He believes that there is no possi- bility of the Russians making a sep- arate peace because they have a greater grudge against the Germans than almost anyone else. Former Regent And SisterDie News of Bulkley's Death Is Fatal to Mrs. Tagge A few hours after learning of the death of her brother, Harry Conant Bulkley, 72, a University Regent from 1911 to 1918, Wednesday in Phoenix, Ariz., Mrs. Arthur C. Tagge, 73, of Monroe, died last night. The shock from the news of her brother's death, friends said, was be- lieved to have aggravated a heart condition from which she had been suffering for several years. Born in Monroe in 1870, Bulkley attended school in that town and at- tains below Tebessa sprawl on both' sides of the line.) The Axis veterans had advanced some 60 miles since Sunday and the Allied communique today announced1 that they had taken Sbeitla, Kasser- ine and Feriana, the last only 12j miles from the Algerian border. a Rommel apparently was using twol tank divisions in two columns. The northern wing had driven from Faid Pass about 55 miles to Kasserine and the southern colump had swept up7 through the Gafsa oasis some 60 miles to Feriana. Rommel's veterans of the Egyptian and Libyan compaigns inflicted a se-, vere defeat on American armored forces in their first important clash, but the pressure appeared to be slack- ening. Reduced Fighting ."Fighing in southern Tunisia yes- terday was on a reduced scale," Gen. Eisenhower's communique said. The less experienced American troops were in stronger positions west of the three abandoned towns on the eastern 'slopes of a mountain hange which is 4,500 feet high at its peak. It appeared that Rommel had in- flicted such losses that an Allied at- tack on his flank was virtually im- possible. Thus he was ready to turn south to meet the British Eighth Army which now is 65 miles inside southern Tunisia at the outposts of the Mareth Line. City Lays Plans For Huge War Rally Monday Corporal-Hero Bartek Will Be Principal Guest At Patriotic Celebration Ann Arbor won't see just an ordi- nary Washington Day on Monday. True, it will see a usual patriotic celebration, but this time a special war-time touch will be added. The U. S. War Department, the University and the city's industries will combine to salute local war work- ers with a mass meeting that night in Hill Auditorium at which Sergeant John F. Bartek,the corporal-hero who spent 22 days on a life-raft in the South Pacific as a member of Captain Eddie Rickenbacker's ill- fated crew, will be the principal guest of honor. Bartek, who was Rickenbacker's chief engineer, and at least one or two other soldier-heroes from either Guadalcanal or North Africa, will tell the stories of their war-time experi- ences. Col. W. A. Ganoe, commander of the University Reserve Officer's Training Corps, will also speak. In addition, authentic government pictures of an actual sea battle In the 12 Committeemen Will Be Chosen at All-Campus Election Candidates who are to run for the 14 Are Killed In Plane Crash Bomber Hits Building; Test Pilot Allen Dead SEATTLE, Feb. 18-()-A mighty four-motored Boeing bomber's crash into a packing plant in Seattle's south end today killed at least 14r persons and spread flaming destruc- tion through the four-story packing; company building. One of the victims was Edmund T. Allen, nationally famed test pilot. Eleven of the dead were aboard the plane. Frye Packing Company officials reported nearly a score of employes still were unaccounted for, but many were believed to have made their way to safety. Thirteen injured persons, some with serious burns, were listed in the city's hospitals. Four persons were reported to have attempted parachute jumps to safety, but the crippled craft, with motors afire, was too low for opening of their 'chutes. Krueger in Australia To Head New Army ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN AUSTRALIA, Feb. 19, Friday- (P)- General Douglas MacArthur an- nounced today that Lieut. Gen. Wal- ter Krueger is in Australia to com- mand the new Sixth Army. The spokesman who made the an- nouncement said that formation of the new Field Army under General -Krueger is "an administrative step and has no special operational sig- nificance." Troops composing the new Army, General MacArthur's spokesman said, C d E c d is ., v r F E F f F combined freshman-sophomore class dance were announced last night by Bill Sessions, '43E, Judiciary Council chairman. Twelve committeemen will be chos- an at an all-campus election Wednes- day. The freshman and sophomore in the literary college receiving the greatest number of votes will co- ,hairman the dance. Freshmen in the literary college who will appear on the ballot are Morton Blum, Lee Chise, George Dai - row, Don Epstein, Rosemary Klein, Elanor MnacLaughlin, and Edna Sott. Literary college sophomores are Bob Aldrich, Marjorie Borradaile, Faye Bronstein, Ruth Edberg, Selig Estroff, Betty Hendel, Harry Loftus, Ruth Maloney, and Stan Wallace. Of these candidates, the freshman ,lass will elect three members of the ;ommittee while the sophomore class will be entitled to four positions. Other schools and colleges not repre- sented may vote for the sophomore -candidates. Catherin Sauer, '46A, was automat- ically elected to the committee when her petition was not challenged. The engineering school will elect two members from each class. The Freshman nominees are Allen J Das- kal, Stuart Finlayson, Harry R. Scott, and Jerry Stenbuck. The engineering sophomore class will choose its representatives from the following three: Herb, Beye", Don Granger, and Joe Warner. Voting will be allowed by class 3nly and each qualified voter must present his identification card to re- ceive a ballot. Board Positions Are Announced The nominees for the Board in Control of Student Publications was announced last night by the Men's Judiciary Council together with the addition of Art Geib, '44, to the list of candidates for the :six Union vice- presidents' positions. The following nine men were nom- inated to the Board wpositions from whom three will be elected intheall campus election Wednesday: Marvin Borman, '44, John Fauver, '43E, Bob G. Johnson, '43, Hank Loud, '43, Nor- ton Norris, '43, Hoe Seltzer, '45M, David Striffler, '44, Homer Swander, '43, and Pete Wingate, '43. In all 15 men will run for the six Union positions. Voting for this and the Board election is open to any eli- gible student in the University. The complete Union list follows: Literary college and graduate schools, George F. Ceithaml, '43, and Robert J. McWilliams, '44; engineer- ing college and architectural school, Ann Arbor's common council last' night finally cleared up the confusion of the "forgotten city ordinance" to the satisfaction of all aldermen and did it with a flourish-by passing a new law. The' old law, passed in 1938 and never used util this year, had five fraternities, a sorority and a girls' co-op on the carpet for failing to shovel their walks clean of snow. Ten Ann Arbor residents also had war- rants nut aginst them because of on any person whose sidewalk has been cleaned by the Board of Public Works. The new ordinance thus puts the-first responsibility upon the citi- zen-and'this, according to the coun- cil, is where the new law has it all over the old. "There's no use in making a goat of one of the residents for. whom the warrants were issued in a test case," city attorney Laird said, "when we feel that the ordinance could be con- siderably clearer." Whether the new law, which