j1 lull Y .44V ai4t Weather ILillt' le Chiln VOL. LIV No. 18 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, NOV. 21 1943 PRICE FIVE CENTS Ann Arbor Sc a Conf esses Killing Wolverines Gridders Cop First Conference Title Since 1933 Bucks Fall Before Fast Ground Attack Wiese, Dryer, Lund, Lead Michigan Victory As Ohio Bows, 45-7 By ED ZALENSKI Coach Fritz Crisler's tenth edition of the Michigan grid machine ended a 10-year title drought yesterday af- ternoon with a pulverizing 45-7 tri- umph over Ohio State, tying Purdue for the 1943 Conference champion- ship. It was the eighth victory in nine games for the Wolverines and the se- cond largest point total in the series with the Buckeyes since 1897. The Crisler machine completely routed the hapless Buckeye civilian eleven by piling up 426 yards and 23 first downs to 68 yards and two first downs for the losers. Wiese Scores Twice In writing a grand finals to the 1943 season the Maize and Blue grid- ders were sparked by hard-driving Bob Wiese, pony back Wally Dreyer, stocky Earl Maves and reserve back Don Lund. Wiese whose spinner plays bewil- dered the Buckeye line constantly, led the seven-touchdown parade by scor- ing twice on short plunges. Five oth- : President Ruthven Back From England Dr. Alexander G. Ruthven, Pres- ident of the University, returned to campus yesterday after a five- week trip in England. President Ruthven left campus Sept. 30 at the request of the Brit- ish government to view first hand the British educational system in wartime and to discuss post-war education plans. Members of his family said 'last night that he was "too exhausted" to make any comment on his trip. Russian Troops Smash -Back German Attack Nazi Tanks, Infantry Repulsed, Gains Made In Drive for Nikopol By The Associated Press LONDON, Sunday, Nov. 21.-Red Army troops crumpled a massed German tank and infantry attack in bitter fighting east of Zhitomir yes- terday, slaughtering 1,000 Nazis, ov- erran German defense positions to widen their newly-won bridgehead at Cherkasi, and gained in their drive toward the manganese center of Ni- kopol, Moscow announced early to- day. 4,000 Nazis Killed The Russian midnight bulletin said a total of 4,000 Germans were killed in fighting which saw Soviet troops beat back German counter- attacks at two other main points and gain ground in the lower Pripet Riv- er area west of Chernigov, and to the north inthe Rechitsa region west of almost-encircled Gomel. In the Rechitsa area alone 1,200 Germans were killed -as the Russians went over to the attack after blasting nine consecutive Nazi counter-attacks. Hoping to capitalize to the fullest on the German capture Friday of the strategic rail and highway junction of Zhitomir, Marshal Fritz Von Mannstein launched an assault in the area of Korostyshev, 15 miles to the east. Soviets Meet Nazi Thrust Soviet forces, fighting near the scene of the greatest Russian set- back of the 1943 campaign, met a thrust of 6,000 German infantrymen and 60 tanks in one sector, the war bulletin, recorded here by the Soviet Monitor, said. In the "fierce engagement" that followed the Russians burned out 32 enemy tanks, killed 800 Germans and "forced the Hitlerites to retreat," the communique said, indicating that the initiative in the area had passed again to the Red Army troops. Menuhin Will Play Tuesday Selections To Range From Bach to Bartok Music ranging from the stately classical works of Bach to the mod- ern harmonies of Bela Bartok will be featured by Yehudi Menuhin in his Choral Union recital at 8:30 p. m. Tuesday in Hill Auditorium. Highlighting the program will be the performances of the Sonata No. 1 in D major, Op. 12 by Beethoven, the Sonata No. 3 in C major for unac- companied violin by J. S. Bach, and the Priemiere Sonata by Bartok. Among the lighter works to be performed on the second half of the recital are "Voiles" by Debussy, "A Lenda De Baboclo" of Villa Lobos, and "Molly on the Shore" by Percy Grainger as arranged by Kreisler for violin. A concert artist since the age of seven when he made his first ap- pearance as soloist with the San Francisco Orchestra under Alfred Hertz, Menuhin made his Carnegie Hall debut as a child of eleven play- ing the Beethoven concerto with the New York Symphony Orchestra und- er Fritz Busch. In 1929 when Menu- I,; - - hiofirs- nnrr n K rln Aerial hiew of :; (!1 A ircraft Carrier U. S. S. Card, Back From Atlantic Duty "Baby Aircraft Carrier-an aerial view of the U. S. S. Card, an es cort aircraft carrier which performed sensational exploits in the Atlantic in the war against Nazi U-Boats. The Card was converted f rom a merchant hull. Allied Troops Move Ahead In New Guinea Australians Attack Jai Positions at Sattelberg On Huon Peninsula By The Associated Press SOUTHWEST PACIFIC ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, Sunday. Nov. 21. -Tank-paced Australian soldiers are continuing to move slowly ahead against Japanese entrenched in hilly DEMOCRACY MAY REIGN: Lv a S Cota bo-rationist Bloc May Collapse Soon By The Associated Press LONDON, Nov. 20.-Belief grew in London tonight that collaborationist Pierre Laval's bloc might collapse in the face of reported defiant deter- mination of the Vichy Chief of State Marshal Henri Philippe Petain, to lead conquered France back to demo- e country around Sattelberg on the cratic government. counry aoundSatelbeg onthe Lifting a week-long blackout of Huon Peninsula of northeastern New aLiftin of eklng hlacyut of all mention of Petain, the Vichy Ra- Guinea, Gen. Douglas MacArthur's dio went to elaborate lengths today spokesman said today. -apparently to quiet mounting (Tokyo had broadcast claims that French home front unrest-to create the tank attack was repelled). the impression that the 87-year-old Prevousl, te Ausie in ~enMarshall still was functioning. Previously, the Aussies in their . jungle drive northwest of Finsch- Petain Resigns-Rumor Says hafen to Sattelberg, which overlooks A Berlin Foreign Office spokesman the Allies' positions because the Jap- vs quoted in a Swiss dispatch as anese are on a plateau, had been shaving given guarded confirmation reported within a mile of their objec- of reports of a crisis at Vichy. The tive. The amounts of the latest gains spokesman added, that "rumors" were not specified. that Petain had resigned, "so far as is In addition to the light tanks, the known at the Wilhelmstrasse, are Australians drew support for the sec- Inonsensical." ond straight day from bombing and Out of the conflicting welter of strafing planes. rumors from unhappy Vichy, the re- Mitchells and Marauders ranged port of an open break between Pe- north of Sattelberg along the coast, tain and Laval, his German-support- concentrating bombs and machine- ed Shief of Government, appeared gun fire on enemy supply dumps. On to be substantiated. Friday morning, attack planes swept Petain Must Be Under Arrest the same sector as well as Japanese Swiss reports, without confirma- camp areas slightly southwest of Sat- tion, persisted that Petain was und- telberg village. er house arrest. French politicians in BOB WIESE ... scores twice for Varsity. er Wolverines, Bob Nussbaumer, Dreyer, Maves, Lund and Vince Mroz, scored one touchdown apiece. Dreyer Is Dynamo Dreyer, the 185-pound halfback who didn't even make a letter at Wis- consin last fall, was a dynamo on the offense with repeated gains off tac- kle and around the ends. He plunged over from the two for the second score. Maves, another ex-Badger, went across from the eight in the big final period. Mroz, former Michigan State end, took a Jack Wink pass in the end zone. Lund sprinted 20 yards through the Buckeye team in an exhibition reminiscent of Bob Westfall and Nussbaumer swept right end for 31 yards with a terrific burst of speed for the other two tallies. Hirsch Converts Once Rex Wells, reserve guard from Ida- ho State, booted two conversions q.nd Elroy Hirsch, injured halfback, kick- ed one to wind up the season as Michigan's top scorer with 68 points. The game was played under ideal weather conditions before a crowd of 45,000 fans who were drawn by the anticipation of a close duel and by the advance publicity given to Coach See WOLVERINES, p. 6 WPB Plan for Detroit Issuted DETROIT, Nov. 20.--(')-A new employment stabilization plan for the S p.iaia ,mhh incluea ,evseam In the northern Solomons. the fur- ious onslaught to blast beyond all use, the enemy air bases on Buka con-I tinued with Liberators dropping 721 tons of bombs and rendering the run- ways unserviceable. Within the past few days, Ameri- can warships have blasted those bases with 101 tons of shells and bombers have pounded them with upwards of 200 tons. Switzerland said they were uncertain Petain had not yet actually put his resignation into force but hoped by threatening it to bring about a show- down. Information leaking across the Swiss frontier said last night that a number of the Marshal's closest friends, including three generals, had been arrested. The Marshal's reported plan to draft a democratic constitution, which the Nazis prevented him from promulgating, was viewed in Swit- zerland as an attempt to make way for a regime that would be acceptable to the Allies when France is freed. The resignation of Hubert La Gardelle, Vichy Minister of Labor, was viewed in Switzerland as the first concrete evidence of a swerve of cabinet ministers away from Lay- al. Although he was brought into the government by Laval, La Gardelle always has been regarded as faithful to the Marshal. World News In Brief .... LONDON, Nov. 20.-(P)-British heavy bombers, striking for the third time in three nights at the sources of vast quantities of Germany's war chemicals and poison gases, last night pounded Luverkusen, an in- dustrial suburb of Cologne, and today lighter Allied planes followed up with a daylight foray against other tar- gets. Flare-Up Settled ... WASHINGTON, Nov. 20.-(P)- Spanish-American relations rolled back to an even keel today as both. Washington and Madrid let it be known that the incident of the Spanish note of congratulation to the Japanese puppet regime in Ma- nila is considered closed. Nazis Have Food Reserve ATLANTIC CITY, N.J., Nov. 20.- ( )-Great reserve stocks of food and supplies known still to be in Germany were being considered today by the United Nations Relief and Rehabili- tation Administration for use in re- lief of Axis-plundered nations. U.S. Transport Crashes RIO DE JANERO, Nov. 20.-UP) -A large U.S. Naval transport plane crashed into a moutainside about 30 miles east of here late Fri- day, it was announced tonight, kil- ling all of its 18 occupants, 17 of whom were Americans. Slavs Fight for Islands ... LONDON, Nov. 20.-(.P)-Yugoslav partisans under Gen. Josip Broz (Ti- to) grappled desperately with the Germans tonight for the islands which command the approaches to Fiume through which Hitler has been pouring reinforcements in the long, costly effort to beat down the ever- Eighth Army Takes Perano From Nazis Montgomery's Troops Threaten Important Sector Near Sangro By The Associated Press ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, AL-- GIERS, Nov. 20.-Breaking through German forward positions in the first heavy fighting on the Italian front in recent days, the British Eighth Army lunged forward five miles to capture Perano, it was announced today, thereby threatening an important in- land sector of the Nazi's heavily for- tified line behind the Sangro river. Against heavy artillery fire, wret: ched weather and difficult terrain, the Fifth army also made some gains above Venafro along the northern sector of its front. Montgomery's Troops near Bridge The capture of the village of Per- ano put the troops of General Ber- nard L. Montgomery within less than a mile of the only bridge crossing the Sangro river between the coastal road and a point ten miles from the Adri- atic. From their vantage points in and near the village Eighth Army units could look across the river at a short section of an extremely important la- teral road upon which the Germans are dependenthfor supplying large forces entrenched in the hills over- looking the Sangro. Allies Strongly Opposed This road extends from Sanvito Chietno on the Adriatic coast along a winding course inland through Cas- telfrentano, Casolini and Palena to Roccaraso. Along most of its distance it is well behind the river and screen- ed from the British, but opposite Per- and it loops down into a valley to within less than half a mile from the stream itself. All gains were made against sharp opposition. Big guns on both sides kept the Fifth Army front ablaze. Heavy rains, deep mud and swirling floods impeded all operations. Japanese Seize Town of Tzel CHUNGKING, Sunday, Nov. 21.- (/P)-The Chinese High Command announced today the Japanese lost more than 4,000 killed out of a force of 18,000 men in a continuing battle in which the Japanese seized Tzeli, a highway town 90 miles south of the Yangtze river port of Ichang. Describing the action there as one of the bitterest fights for any point in China since the fall of Hankow and Canton in October, 1938, the High Command announcemtns said the Japanese opened the offensive Wednesday with 6,000 infantry and cavalry troops and subsequently brought up reinforcements of 3,000 and 9,000 men and sent wave after %vai - ofnamna to a nam n f, n . aari1.. Youth Shoots Accidentally; Wounds Fatal After Long Grilling Jackie Wall Admits Hiding Body of Chum Jackie Wall, 11 years old, confessed last night to the accidental shooting of 12-year-old Barry Rothstein 9 hours after the boy's bloody body was discovered in a neighbor's back yard. Tearful and hysterical, Jackie ad- mitted that his friend was killed by the discharge of a .32 calibre German Mauser pistol in the Wall kitchen at 4:30 p.m. Friday. Gun Goes Off Accidentally Jackie's 'account of the killing is that Barry had come to his home at 952 Greenwood about 4 p.m. Friday to see a gun owned by his father, Albert R. Wall. The two boys were playing with the gun, cocked it, and laid it on the drainboard, which was the same height as Barry's chest. It suddenly discharged, and the bullet struck Barry, going through his lungs and spine and lodging in the cellar door behind him. The boys were alone in the house at the time. Chief of Police Sherman Morten- sen and Prosecuting Attorney Fran.. cis W. Kamman accept Jackie's story that the shooting was an accident. It was first believed that the bo ha been murdered. Wall had warned is son about the gun, telling him that it had a weak spring, and would go off if cocked. Wall's gun is not regis- tered. Parents Miss Son Friday Barry's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Sam- uel Rothstein, 939 Greenwood, missed their son when he did not return from school Friday afternoon. After searching for him all eveningr, they called the police at 2 air. Saturday and again at 7 a.m. Crying hysterically, Jackie inco- herently related how he dragged the boy's body into the back yard im- mediately after the shooting and par- tially concealed it under the porch steps. He then attempted to wipe the blood from the kitcheni floor, and carried the rags to the basement to See YOUTH, p. 3 Absentee Voting Bill Discussed GOP Senators Favor Change in Proposal WASHINGTON, Nov. 20.--P)-A- ware that the outcome of next year's presidential election might hinge on the balloting of 10,000,000 soldiers, sailors and niarines, Republican sen- ators tentatively decided today to campaign on the Senate floor for fundamental changes in the service- men's absentee voting bill. Revisions of the bill as approved by the elections committee were dis- cussed by a group which met in the office of Senator Vandenberg (R- Mic'h) today and the proposed amendments will be considered at a Republican caucus Monday before the Senate acts on the measure. One of the suggested changes would revise the method of appoint- ment of a war ballot commission to work with the War and Navy depart- ment in administering the act. The committee bill provides for appoint- ment by the President of two com- cissioners from each of the major parties. The Republicans want the President to select the commissioners from nominations made by the par- ties' central committees. Arms Production Peak in October WASHINGTON, Nov. 20.-(P)--- Arms production in October scored its biggest gain since April, Donald M. Nelson reported today, with air- craft output reaching a record- SUBSIDIES APPE A!R LOST: House Balks at Tax Rise; Threatens Price Control WASHINGTON, Nov. 20-(AP)-The WASHINGTON, Nov. 20. - (P) - Administration's price control mach- The powerful House Ways and inery collided with another challenge MC. .r today-a threat to remove coal and chors clare. tn bicacan oil from OPA jurisdiction-as Presi- chorus, declared today the public can dent Roosevelt's stalwarts waged an , stand no more taxes and told the apparently losing battle to save the administration to cut down spending consumer subsidy program. if it wants to block inflation. With the subsidy showdown due The committee said its second war- Monday in the House. a bloc of law- makers from coal and oil producing time revenue measure, calling for states announced that 209 signatures 1$2,140,000,000 in new taxes-is all -just nine short of the required 218 I that "can reasonably be borne by the -had been collected on a petition to taxpayers at this time." The total force action on their proposal. was only a splash in the bucket to "We'll collect the rest of them the $10,500,000,000 the administra- Monday," asserted Representative Lion asked to fight the war and in- f'f Ix~in Tnhrn n P T1 p,, -, _ifniv