fr ~43t :4IIaIt13y WeatLer Little Change VOL. LIV No. 17 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, NOV. 20, 1943 Russians Lose hitomir in Major Seti PRICE FIVE CERNTS ack Australians Advance in Battle near Finschhafen Despite Rain and Fierce Jap Resistance Jungle Troops Are Within 8 Miles of Goal :" By The Associated Press F SOUTHWEST PACIFIC HEAD- QUARTERS, Saturday, Nov. 20 = Australian jungle troops on the Huon Peninsula of northeastern New G#i- nea have battled forward against strong Japanese resistance and tor- Showdown on Food, Subsidies Seen in House Resolution Adopted by Women Voter League To Back Price Control By The Associated Press WA§HINGTON, Nov. 19.-Backing for continued consumer food subsi- dies came from the League of Women Voters today while a powerful House coalition drove on toward a climactic showdown Monday in its fight to out- law such payments. One of the first major consumer groups to enter the fight over subsi- dies, the League declared through a resolution adopted by its National Board: "Run lies ahead unless Congress quits undermining price control and if it persists'in its refusal to see that subsidies are essential to price con- trol; unless both Congress and the President hold firm on wage stabili- zation; and unless the Congress stops backing away from using the taxing power to curb inflation." 'The resolution"also declared the League "is appalled at the extent to which the interests of the country are being betrayed by political lead- ers who yield to the demands of spe- 'cial interest groups." The House completed general de- bate late today, and took the week- end off to think over the arguments of opposing forces with the likelihood that several compromise amendments will be offered-and defeated-Mon- day before a vote is reached on the bill itself. The measure, in two parts, would give a new lease on life to the Com- modity Credit Corporation, but would prohibit use of any government funds for consumer subsidies, President Roosevelt's chief weapon for holding down food prices. Yehudi Menuhin Stars in Concert Tuesday at 8:30 "At my age old friends pass away and leave the world rather empty. Your friendship in any case must be -is-a remarkable thing and has given me a new zest for life." The writer of this was the com- poser and conductor, the late Sir Edward Elgar, and its recipient was Yehudi Menuhin, the brilliant young genius of the violin, who will give the third concert of the Choral Un, ion Series at 8:30 p. m. Tuesday in Hill Auditorium. Friendship Influences Life The famous violinist's friendship with Sir Edward Elgar exerted a profound influence in Yehudi Menu- hin's life, in spite of the fact that the composer was sixty when Menuhin was born and over seventy-five when they first met in 1933. It was Men- uhin who, after one trial perform- ance, gained the honor of giving the first performance of this British composer's violin concerto. Among the other great musicians who have played a part in Menu- bin's life, is the world famous violin- ist, conductor and composer, Georges Enesco. Child Prodigy Transformed His teacher for many years, Enes- co was described by Menuhin as "the man to whom I owe more than to anyone except my parents. With Enesco, Yehudi Menuhin associates In.c ,ranm.enn frnm a child "tuous terrain to within a mile of Sattelberg, eight miles northwest of Allied-held Finschhafen. Artillery Gives Support Supported by heavy artillery, mor- tar and machine gun fire and bombi ing and strafing sweeps by American Mitchell and Marauder planes, the Australians drew close to Japanese positions which are on the edge of a 3,000 foot plateau and command the whole Finschhafen area. Gen. Douglas MacArthur's Head- quarters announced the drive's prog- ress in a communique today. Heavy rains added to the diffi- culties encountered by the troops. On the eastern flank of the Pacific land offensive, there were air battles over the Bougainville beachhead held by Americans at Empress Au- gusta Bay during which 16 Nippon- ese planes were reported shot down at a cost of two Allied interceptors. 16 Planes Shot Down At- South Pacific Headguarters, a spokesman elaborating on Gen. Mac- Arthur's reports said more than 35 Japanese bombers and fighters made the raid at daylight Wednesday. In addition to the 16 shot down in air battles, anti-aircraft downed an- other and an 18th wrecked itself against barrage balloon cables. Only the day previously, another Japanese raid had resulted in the sinking of a small Allied vessel, one of a convoy bringing in reinforce- ments and supplies. (Such enemy air activity on an island whose bases have been repeat- edly bombed out must mean either the Japanese still are able to make some use of their Buke bases or are coming down the 260 miles from Ra- baul.) Liberators for the third time re- cently made the roundtrip flight of more than 2,000 miles from Australia to hit oil refineries at Soerbaja on Java and the Den Pasar airdrome at Bali. Allies Bombard Japs at Nauru PEARL HARBOR, Nov. 19.--(P)- Extending the scope of the six-day- old Central Pacific air offensive, car- rier based planes dropped 90 tons of bombs on . Nauru, Japanese island base 700 miles northeast of Guadal- canal, Thursday, Adm. Chester W. Nimitz announced today. Expanding operations 500 miles west of the Gilbert Islands which, with the Marshalls, have been pound- ed daily since last Saturday, several squadrons of bombers and torpedo planes kindled fires on the airdrome and shop areas, destroyed several grounded planes and set a ship ablaze at Nauru, Despite slight air interception and heavy anti-aircraft fire, none of the Nauru raiders was lost, Adiral Nim- itz said, thus leaving the raiders in- tact during all six days of the spread- ing attacks. Over Nauru, seven Zeros got into the air and two were shot down. One American pilot was wounded. It was the first carrier raid against Nauru which is a strong Japanese air base and is a valuable phosphate pro- ducing island. Germany Hit In Heaviest Raid of War RAF Blasts Berlin, Ludwigshaven With 1,000 Heavy Bombers By The Associated Press LONDON, Nov. 19. - Germany rocked to the heaviest 12-hour aerial bombardment of the war today as American Flying Fortresses pounded western German objectives in day- light a few hours after a record force of nearly 1,000 RAF heavy bombers ravaged Berlin and Ludwigshaven with 2,500 long tons of bombs in a devastating night assault. Offensive in Third Day In what appeared to be an all-out campaign to obliterate Berlin and smash Germany's war sinews, the Allies carried their pre - invasion offensive into the third straight day. Four German radio stations went silent tonight, giving a strong indi- cation that big British bombers were out over the continent for the third straight night. The American Flying Fortresses, escorted by Thunderbolts, bombed their western German targets today without loss, Eighth Air Force Head- quarters announced tonight. Not a single enemy fighter came up to op- pose the Americans, it was stated. After two months of mild stings by Mosquito bombers, Berlin rumbled under the full weight of Allied air might last night. The four-engined bombers sent more than 350 block- busters weighing 4,480 pounds each crashing down on the Nazi capital. Fires Still Raging More than 12 hours after the big Berlin raid, the German High Com- mand indicated fires still were raging in the city in a brief broadcast an- nouncement which said "the Anglo- American" raid started conflagra- tions but "these have now been brought under control." The U.S. Army communique telling of the Flying Fortress assault on western Germany failed to name the targets, although in the past com- muniques have done so. No explana- tion was given for the omission. The Berlin radio said numerous U.S. bomber formations penetrated western occupied territories and Ger- many at noon. Armed Forces Are Well Under Fiscal Budget WASHINGTON, Nov. 19.- (P)- Capitol Hill heard tonight that the Navy may find it unnecessary to spend $5,000,000,000 of its funds for this fiscal year, thus bringing the total of "saving" by the armed forces to more than $18,000,000,000. Last night it was disclosed that th'e Army will not use $13,163,519,000 of the $71,000,000,000 given it to spend in the fiscal twelvemonth. Rep. Taber of New York, ranking Republican on the House Appropria- tions Committee, said he expected Navy savings of $4,000,000,000 to $5,- 000,000,000. The Army-Navy actions, he said, make it "perfectly clear that with any kind of management and any kind of elimination of the things that we do not need, the Federal budget can be trimmed $25,000,000,- 000 next year below what it was for this year." German '-t, r . Counter-Attack Wins Zhitomir 'STATUTE MILES Dnieper Is Crossed BySky-Borne Reds Nazis Announce Their First Big Victory Since July; 150,000 Germans in Attack By JUDSON O'QUINN Associated Press Correspondent LONDON, Saturday, Nov. 20.-The Russians lost Zhitomir, the Red Army's westernmost threat to Poland and Rumania, yesterday, in their first major reverse in four months, but the Red Army dropped troops from the skies for a new crossing of the Dnieper and captured another rail junction, 70 miles north of Zhitomir. Evacuating Zhitomir before a concentrated German counter-attack by perhaps 150,000 men, the Russians abandoned a strategic center they had captured only a week ago. Pre-War BoundrRes RUMA N fA / German counter-attacks (swastika arrow) have forced the Russian Army (black arrows) to evacuate the city of Zhitomir on the Central front. DISCONTENT IN VICHY: Democratic Plans Thwarted; Petain Offers Resignation By The Associated Press BERN, SWITZERLAND, Nov. 19. -Information leaking across the French frontier tonight said that a number of Marshall Petain's close friends, including three generals, had New Classes To Begin Course At JAG School At Least 110 Officers And Candidates Will Arrive for Training A total of at least 110 candidates and officers, composing the 4th OC and 14th Officer Classes of the JAG School, will arrive today and tomor- row to begin a 17-weeks' training course, it was announced yesterday. The men of the 14th Officer Class, about 30 in all, range all the way from second lieutenant to major in rank. Four from the candidate class, which includes approximately 80, are returning from foreign duty to attend the course. One officer hails from Alaska and another from Tunisia. The new arrivals will take the place of the 2nd OC and 12th Offic- er Class which graduated Nov. 13. At present there are only two classes in the JAG School. All the men of the new 4th OC and 14th Officer Classes are law graduates. It is possible that sev- eral more names will be added to the list of newcomers as all orders have not yet been received. The new classes will be processed Saturday and Sunday so that all de- tails will be out of the way by Mon- day when the usual orientation talks will be given. Equipment, including both books and field equipment, will also be issued Monday morning. Col. Edward H. Young, comman- dant of the JAG school, will greet the incoming students and outline school rules and regulations. In ad- dition they will receive a preview of the course of study. been arrested after the 87-year-old chief or state offered his resignation in protest against thwarting his plan to promulgate a democratic consti- tution. "Vichy France"-which meant Pi- erre Laval and the Germans-was said to be exerting every effort to keep Petain in office. Speech Barred A speech, which Petain intended to make over the radio but which was barred by the Germans, would have been an attempt to renounce Laval as his successor, and put power -in the hands of a national assembly, trusted advices said. The Marshal was said to have told friends that he sought a way out whereby a revolu- tion between the Vichy regime and the French Committee of National Liberation could be avoided. The Journal De Geneva (Geneva) published today what it described as the text of the speech Petain had at the text of the speecr Petain had prepared for broadcasting last Sat- urday night, including the decree the Marshall intended to promulgate. Old Constitution Desired Among other things, the edict ab- rogated all acts by Laval's govern- ment, which has collaborated with the Germans. It directed France back to the democratic constitution of 1875 and declared the Marshal in- tended to conserve his power until his death, after which the power would be returned to the National Assembly, unless the new constitu- tion he desired came into effect, New Blood Bank Solicits Support Germans Claim Capture of Four' rg n .Island s Allies Raid Balkans As Counteroffensive Creeps Along Sea Line By The Associated Press LONDON, Nov. 19.-The Germans claimed the occupation of four more pin-point Aegean Islands today in a creeping counteroffensive along the sea line before Greece, while the Al- lied air arm fell with methodical vio- lence across the Balkans from Salon- ika to the Yugoslav coast. In another Balkan area the Yugo- slav Patriot Army of Gen. Josip Broz (Tito) cut tirelessly at the Nazis in far-separated fighting arenas. Adolf Hitler's command, expending yet more of forces so, badly needed elsewhere, announced a victory to follow its recovery of the Dodecanese Islands of Cos and Leros-seizure of the outlying islets of Patmos, Ikaria, Furni and Lipsos, the military sig- nificance of which is not clear. The situation on the more impor- tant island of Samos, the last in the Aegean to remain under Allied stan- dards, was in doubt, but German broadcasts indicated Allied resistance there was still strong and implied that some of the Allied forces taken off Cos and Leros had gone in to sup- port the Samos garrison. All these actions, however, were inconsequential to the future Allied strategy in the south of Europe and seemed to be largely propaganda ac- tions as far as the Germans were concerned. Hard and factual were the con- tinued fierce resistance to the thous- ands of Rommel's troops by Tito's fierce irregulars in Yugoslavia and the rising weight of Allied air bom- bardments both against the seats of German air power in Greece and in support of Yugoslav ground forces. UNRRA Argues N11ewspaper Banl Russian Delegate Is Center of Discussion ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., Nov. 19.- (P)-The staid pace of the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Conference was shattered today in a controversy as to whether a Rus- sian official had proposed exclu- sion of the press. A spokesman said flatly that Rus- sian Ambassador Andre Gromyko, had been defeated in a move to ban the newspapermen and women, but two hours later another Russian rep- resentative said Gromyko had sug- gested nothing of the kind. While continuing to permit cover- age of the conference, the delegates also decided for the first time to is- sue regular written statements to the press, a move which the spokes- man said also was opposed by Grom- yko. The UNRRA spokesman, who ask- ed that his name not be divulged, said Gromyko objected to the press on the ground that some matters under discussion were so delicate that news seepage might cause seri- ous misunderstanding. Secretary Sliaw Resigns OPA Post WASHINGTON, D. C., Nov. 19.- SThe Moscow midnight communi- que supplement, recorded from a broadcast by the Soviet Monitor, failed to mention Zhitomir which the earlier war bulletin said had been evacuated to obtain better defensive positions. The Germans announced their first sizeable victory in Russia since July a :few hours after the Russians had admitted their own retreat. 'A Berlin radio broadcast said the Nazis captured a large number of Soviet weapons and prisoners. 2,000 Germans Killed Meanwhile Russian airborne units, aided by guerillas, struck an unex- pected blow at the Germans, crossing the Dnieper between Kiev and Dne- propetrovsk and storming up to the town of Cherkasi amid Naziconfu- sion. Two thousand Germans wee reported killed in the assault aimed at flanking the Germans holding out to the south in the Dnieper bend. The action might also take the pres- sure off the Russians in the Zhitomnir area. Other air-borne troops captured Ovruch, 25 miles- north of Koroan and severed another rail link . bp- tween German's forces in White Russia and the Ukraine. They cap- tured trains and other military equipment, wiped out 1,600 Germans, and took more than 30 towns and hamlets, Moscow said. White Russians Advance But despite the Russian retreat before what appeared to be largely a German-defensive to protect their communications, Gen. Vatutin's northern flank and Gen. Constantin Rokossovsky's White Russian Ar- mies scored successes. Eighth Army Gains Strategic Hills at Archi ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, AL- GIERS, Nov. 19.-(P)-Units of Sir Bernard L. Montgomery's Eighth Ar- my fought through rain and rough country to win new high ground north of the village of Archi near the Adriatic end of the Italian battle line, the Allied command announced to- day, while American bombers prac- tically completed destruction of the Germans' Elevss airfield near Ath- ens. There was a slight improvement in the weather, but the front remained relatively quiet. Rivers still were flooded to record heights and there was no question of a mass movement of troops by either side. Artillery duelled interminably and patrols fought brisk actions at many points. Heavy equipment was hopelessly bog- ged down. (The German International In- formation Bureau said, however, that Gen. Montgomery had brought into line "massive forces in the coastal region." The broadcast, recorded by the Associated Press, noted the arriv- al in the fighting area along the San- gro River of "armored formations and infantry groups." (The Nazi propaganda agency said the British attacks near Archi were interpreted as an indication of "a full-scale attack for which the left wing of the German offensive front appears to be the objective.") Turkish Newspaper Hints War on Nazis ANKARA, Nov. 18.-(Delayed)- (IP)-The influential Istanbul news- paper Tanin declared in an editorial today that "Turkey is not without sides in the British-German war." TL - - -- - _ . . .. - - .I- . . ..... d F Students To Make Are Urged Reservations PERSIAN REVEALS EXCITING LIFE: Romance of Arabian Nights Lives Anew By BERYLE WALTERS The family history of John Faily' University teaching fellow in the government's Islamic language program, reads like a strange tale from the Arabian Nights. Faily, the son of Persia's ambas- sador to Iraq, was born in Bagdad -how long ago no one knows. When he came to this country 14 years ago, lie was in his late teens. He met an American girl and mar- ried her a year later. Shortly aft- erwards, he became homesick and returned to Persia, leaving his wife and a child here. Several months later Faily returned to America, months by the Head Chieftain of the Lurs, who believed that their thieving existence should continue. He was sentenced to a fate con- sidered by the Lur people compara- ble to our capital punishment. It was decreed that his beard, mark of distinction and authority, was to be shorn and auctioned at a tri- bunal of the chieftains of each tribe. This punishment, used only for major crimes against the Vali, or head chieftain, signified not on- ly loss of prestige and influence in the tribe, but honor as well. Sacrificng his entire fortune, i r_ _ - . t .__ _,, 4 - . - : 3 4.. ican missionary in Iran for his early education. The Persian gov- ernment later sent him to Detroit to learn automobile mechanics and to return afterwards as a govern- ment advisor. Deciding that he wanted to at- tend college, he gave up his factory job and attended night school. He worked his way through college by selling Persian rugs, cats, tapes- tries and other articles and in 1939 was graduated from Michigan Nor- mal State College with a B.A. de- m~ra Students are urged to sign up for the Blood Bank, conducted by the Union in cooperation with the Ameri- can Red Cross, which will be held from 12:30 to 4:15 p.m. Friday in the WAB. Calling on students to be aware of their patriotic responsibility, Roy Boucher, '45, co-chairman of the War Activities Committee in charge of the Blood Bank, urged students to call 2-5546, the number of the Ann Arbor Red Cross chapter, to make their appointment to donate blood. The Blood Bank is held each month under the auspices of the Union and Boucher pointed out that some stu- dents have contributed as many as four times to the Blood Bank since its inception a year ago. Japs Reported Leaving China CHUNGKING, Nov. 19. ()-Trust- worthy reports reaching Chungking today said heavy Japanese troop movements from Manchukuo and north China were in progress with the Snthwest Pacific a the mnst