u i fr4V Ak AL 0% A& jEl ti qqlpp, Weather Cloudy VOL. LIV No. 19 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, NOV. 23, 1943 PRICE FIVE CENTS Russians Smash Nazi Counteroffensive New Gilberts Landing Made By Marines Forces Advance on Karawa, Makin Atolls; Find Resistance Heavy By The Associated Press PEARL HARBOR, T.H., Nov. 22- U.S9 Marines have landed on Abe- mama atoll, 80 miles southeast of Tarawa in the northern Gilberts, and have improved their position on both Tarawa and Makin atolls. This was disclosed today in a com- munique from Adm. Chester W. Nim- itz as the public anxiously awaited news of progress of assaulting forces engaged in bitter fighting against Japanese artillery, machine guns and pill boxes on Tarawa. Communique Is Brief A communique from the comman- der-in-chief of the Pacific was en- couraging but brief on this phase. It stated only that "our troops have improved their position on Tarawa and Makin atolls, but are still en- countering considerableaground re- sistance." The Abemama (Apamama) assault was confined to one sentence: "We have landed Apamama atoll." This atoll was believed to belightly defended and the fact no mention. was made of opposition was seen as enccuraging. Simultaneously Admiral Nimitz dis- closed that Vice Adm. Raymond A. Spruance of Indianapolis is directing central Pacific operations and Rear Adm. Richmond K. Turner is in com- mand of amphibious forces. It further disclosed that the Tarawa landings were made by the second< Marines in command of Major Gen.1 Julian C. Smith of Elkton, Md., the Makin assault by troops of the 27th division commanded by Major Gen.' Ralph Smith of Tucson, Ariz., and that Major Gen. Holland McT. Smith of Montgomery, Ala., of the Marines3 is in command of landig forces. Hoover Directs Operations Additionally, it was learned that Vice Adm. John H. Hoover of GreatI Falls, Mont., has been directing allI combined Army and Navy ground-1 based aerial operations as commander1 of aircraft of the Central Pacific and that Marine Lt. Col. James Roosevelt3 had landed with the infantry on Makin. Roosevelt's landing is presumed to be primarily as an observer, since heE is with the Army instead of his own Leathernecks. The landings on Tarawa and Makin had thrown wide open the long-3 heralded campaign to dislodge the Japanese from their mid-Pacific strongholds. , El Culbertson T Speak Dec. 3 On Peace Plans Post-War Council $poinsors Appearance Of World Strategist Ely Culbertson, famed bridge ex- pert, author, and world strategist, will speak here on Dec. 3 on the bases for world peace, under the auspices of the Post-War Council. Culbertson, creator of the "Plan for World Federation," will be the fea- ture attraction at the annual Post- War Council Conference, Ruth Dan- iels, '44, chairman of the Council, announced yesterday. Well-known as a contract bridge expert, Culbertson's interest in world affairs has only recently come to public attention. His book, "Total Peace," just published, describes in detail the plan which he hopes will bring permanent peace to the world. Culbertson's proposed peace pro- gram has been called "the strongest and most realistic plan for creating a world police system that will pro- tect all in collective security" by Dor- othy Thompson, columnist. Stuart Chase, economist, called it "the only scheme I have ever seen specifically designed for getting around the rock nf nationalism." Targets in South Pacific 0 500 STATUTE MILES MARIANAS is Pacific Ocean WAKE 3 oMarsha ll GUAM Phihppme; = .TUK".. ~...P0N4APE CAROLINt ISLANDS 0r JALUITh FGilbert Isads M'ALOELAP T 0 f MAKIN TARAWA ADMIRALTY IS .. 'Kavieng e NEW IRELAND " a"-ABUKA E~a e eBOUGAINVILLE GUINEA NW BRITAIN SOLOMON , . . ISLANDS -* GUADALCANALf V SANTA CRUZ Carrier-based U.S. planes have made the biggest raid of a six-day offensive in the South Pacific by attacking Nauru (1), key Jap base, with Tarawa Atoll (2), also a target. American planes also hit Maloelap (3) in Marshall Islands. Strong anti-aircraft opposition was reported from Mili (4). Jaluit (5) has also been hit. In Buka-Bougainville area sea and air battles continued intermittently. ITALIAN FRONT: Eighth Army Captures More Towns; Nears Enemy Main Line ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, Algiers, Nov. 22-(AP)-Secretly reinforced by a heavy contingent of Canadian troops, General Sir Bernard L. Mont- gomery's Eighth Army has plunged ahead to capture two more towns near the center of the Italian front and was fighting tonight within two miles of the enemy's main defense line along the upper Sangro River. (A Berlin broadcast last (Monday) night said the Eighth Army had be- gun a large scale offensive, "preceded by strong artillery fire and supported by strong air formations," but it de- scribed British gains as negligible. Heavy losses were declared to have been inflicted upon the attacking troops.) The site of the Eighth Army's lat- est thrust, made under miserable weather conditions, is approximatelk 40 miles inland from the Adriatic seacoast. San Pietro Avellana, 10 miles due west of Agnone, and Vasto- girardi, between those two towns, fell before Montgomery's determined drive that was aimed at an important junction of interior highways leading to Rome. Seizure of six stoutly-defended Nazi strongpoints within two days tore the enemy's grip from the last points on the lateral Vastoisernia highway and delivered that valuable Parrot Opens Doors Today Restaurant Cleaned, Has New Equipment Complete with brightly colored booths and a 100 gallon auxiliary heater, the Parrot opens its doors to business at 7:30 a.m. today. Closed 12 days ago by the Health Department, the Parrot has been undergoing a thorough clean-up. Proprietor Richard Dick of Detroit and a number of students have spent the time scouring the Parrot from ceiling to floor. "Dick has done an excellent job in cleaning up the Parrot," Harold Barnum, Chief City Sanitarian, said last night. "The Parrot now meets all health requirements," he added. Barnum will make a final official check when the Parrot opens today. "Now that we've got the Parrot in good shape, I hope the students co- operate in keeping it that way," Dick said.- Pre-War Fathers Win Deferment WASHINGTON, Nov. 22.- (P)- Legislation designed to put pre-war fathers at the bottom of the draft Jackie Wall Alters Story Of Shooting Boy Admits He Held Gun Responsible for Death of Playmate In a new statement yesterday mor- ning, Jack Wall, 11-year old son of Mr. and Mrs. Elbert Wall, admitted holding the gun that discharged and killed Barry Rothstein, 12, Friday evening. The boy's new story contradicts his version of the fatal shooting that he told police Saturday, 12 hours after the accident. At that time he said the gun went off after he set it on the drain board in the kitchen. Jackie yesterday told Prosecutor Francis Kamman and Police Chief Sherman Mortinson that "we were playing cops and robbers" at the back door when the old German pistol went off. Father Fined Albert Wall, the boy's father, was fined $50.00 and $3.35 in costs yester- day afternoon in Muqicipal Court by Jude Jay H. Payne for possession of a gun without a registration certifi- cate. IAlthough he said he had no wish to add to the grief the family is bear- ing, Judge Payne told Wall that he felt "duty-bound to fine you as a de- terrent to others and to emphasize the need for having all guns properly registered and inspected." He point- ed out that to have the gun register- ed, it would have had to be repaired or rendered inoperative. Request Hearing City police yesterday submitted a petition to Probate Court asking that a hearing be held on the case to de- termine juvenile delinquency. Pro- bate Judge Jay Pray requested county agent Arch Wilson to-investigate the shooting and said that a hearing date will be set "as soon as the investiga- tion is completed." The weapon, a .32 calibre German pistol, was tested yesterday morning at police headquarters by Detective Sgt. Eugene Gehringer. He held the gun cocked for five minutes and it did not discharge. On Saturday morning the elder Wall had stated that the gun had a "weak spring" and was liable to go off if cocked. Jackie told police that he picked up the gun and was pointing it at Barry when it went off. He said he did not remember pulling the trigger, but Sgt. Gerhinger declared that he did not believe it could have been other- wise discharged. The new twist to the story permit- ted police to request a hearing on the case to determine Jack's delinquency. Although Probate Judge Pray is em- powered to commit the boy to a cor- rectional institution, court officials expect that he will probably be placed in his parents' custody. Milk Shortage Relieved DETROIT, Nov. 22.- ()- This city's milk shortage was relieved today with the receipt of a first sup- plemental shipment of approximate- ly 200,000 pounds of fluid milk from condenseries at Wauseon and Bryan, 0. This is one of "the new German giant transporting planes," accord- ing to the caption with this picture distributed by a Swedish picture agency. WORK HALTED FOR DAY: Vote To Ban Price Subsidies In House Delayed Deaths Giant German communications line to Montgomery's advancing forces.' Continued heavy downpours the' length of the front greatly restricted movement of men and guns and lim-l ited the Fifth Army at the western end of the battle line to patrol action and artillery duels, the Allied com- mand reported. Aerial reconnaissance showed the Nazis were working arduously tc strengthen their defenses° in depth, and it was estimated they now have 10 crack divisions (perhaps 150,000 men) dug in across the peninsula. Berlin Heavily Bombed by Night Attacks Allied Aircraft Pounds Nazi Capital in Second Raid Within Eight Days LONDON, Tuesday, Nov. 23.-(i)- The German radio said early today that Berlin was bombed last night by Allied aircraft returning to the attack, on the Nazi capital which was heav- ily pounded last Thursday night by the RAF. "A great deal of damage" was ad- mitted by the German broadcast, which said the raid was made by Bri- tish bombers. The attack was said to have been carried out despite dense clouds and complete lack of visibility. Earlier, telephone operators in Stockholm had reported communica- tions to Berlin cut because of an air raid on the Nazi capital. The raid was described as a "big terror attack" by the German propa- ganda agency International Informa- tion Bureau, this being the usual Na-! zi description for heavy, destructive assaults. The Agency said fires wore left burning in the capital. "This heavy terror raid," the Agen- cy said, "caused serious damage in many districts of the capital, especi- ally in the workers' section. Losses were caused among the civilian popu- lation:" The broadcast said the capital's fire fighting squads began battling the flames started by the block-bust- ers while the attack was still going on. Riots Raging in Lebanon Capital CAIRO, Nov. 22.-(P)-The Cham- 1 e_ ra Tmrn+ia n" r- lio n ae niia WASHINGTON, Nov. 22.-WP)- Senator W. Warren Barbour, 55, of New Jersey, died at his home tonight ---the third Congressman to die with- in the past 24 hours. The Senator's death at 10:45 p.m. (EWT) tonight of coronary thrombo- sis was announced by the capital physician, Dr. George W. Calver, as the House was observing a 24 hour recess out of respect to two of its late members, Henry B. Steagall of Ala- bama and J. William Ditter of Penn- sylvania. Steagall, Democratic chairman of the House banking committee and usually a stalwart supporter of the Administration, had led in the fight against its subsidy program. Seventy years old, he died in George Wash- ington Hospital this morning after a heart attack which associates said was brought on by an energetic speechdagainst the program last Thursday. Ditter, 55, chairman of the Re- publican congressional committee and recognized as one of the most eloquent speakers in Congress, crashed to his death last night in a Navy airplane near Columbia, Pa. A member of the appropriations sub- committee handling Navy funds, Dit- ter was enroute from the Squantum, President Reports On Trip to Faculty Dr. Alexander G. Ruthven, presi- dent of the University, announced yesterday that he would make a full report of his trip to England to the faculty at 4:15 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 2, in the Rackham lecture hall. President Ruthven returned tor campus Saturday after a five-week tour of British educational facilities. It is expected that the president will make a report to the meeting of the Board of Regents here Friday and to the Deans of the University sometime next week. Transport Mass., naval air base to the Navy base- at Willow Grove, Pa. The two deaths raised to six the mortalities among House members of the 78th Congress and brought from Dr. George W. Calver, Congres- sional physician. a warning to other members to "slow down and give more attention to their condition." They left the political line-up in the House at 219 Democrats, 207 Re- publicans, four minor party members and five vacancies. Steagall's death automatically. boosted to the Banking committee chairmanship Representative Brent Spence, Kentucky Democrat, who supports the silbsidy program. How- ever, no one in the House expects the eventual vote on subsidies, should it Reds Repulse Germans at Korostyshev Drives Intended To Relieve Pressure on Troops in Kiev Sector By The Associated Press LONDON, Tuesday, Nov. 23.-Red Army troops buttressed by fleets. of tanks smashed powerful new Nazi at- tacks. near Korostyshev, halting a savage counteroffensive toward Kiev, wrecking 80 enemy tanks and carpet- ing the battlefield with German dead, Moscow announced early today. Even as the Germans lunged des- perately on this narrow sector 20 miles east of Zhitomir, other Soviet armies on the distant flanks slashed deeper into the Dneiper bend to the southeast, and in the Rechitsa area to the north, killing, 2,500 Nazis, said the broadcast communique recorded by the Soviet Monitor. Drive Towards Rumania These drives apparently were in- tended to relieve pressure on the Kiev sector as well as to advance the gen- eral offensive toward the borders of Rumania and pre-war Poland. Another 600 Germans fell in battle 10 miles north of Zhitomir, the war bulletin declared, as Field Marhal Gen. Fritz Von Mannstein struck out in a new direction in the Chernyakov area, possibly aiming at Korosten Two attacks were repulsed near Chernyakhov. Ninth Day of Battle Holding firmly in the ninth day of battle in the Korostyshev sector, the Soviets were declared to have met and broken the tremendous new Nazi onslaughts yesterday, leaving the ap- proaches to the Russian positiope "covered with dead German officers and men." The twin-pronged Red Army clean- up of the Dneiper bend hammered closer to Krivoi Rog and Nikopol, the war bulletin said. Heavy Casualties South of Kremenchug, Gen. Niko- lai Vatutin's armored battalions were declared to have killed 1,000 Ger- mans, disabled 66 enemy tanks, and slashed through repeated Nazi cou- terblows to capture six strong defense centers, taking prisoners and seizing booty, including 100 German trucks with supplies. A night attack southwest of Dne- propetrovsk dislodged the Nazis from a strongly-fortified center, the com- munique continued, and during Mon- day the Russians threw back repeat- ed German counter-attacks, w~ipng out up to 600 Germans and wrecking 10 tanks. RedArmy cavalrymen encircled one town, the communique said, wip- ing out a company of Germans and taking prisoners. WAVES Open. Recruiting Desk [n League Today Students May Obtain Information On New Officer Candidates Ensign Jean Courtney and reserve Specialist 3/c Harriet Simonson, WAVE recruiters from the Office of Naval Procurement in Detroit, are now in Ann Arbor, with headquarters established in the Council Room of the Women's League. Emphasizing the need for 20,000 more WAVES to fill the 47,000 quota set by the Navy for the end of the year, they handed down this com- munique from their makeshift quar- terdeck today: "We are urging girls, especially those in the last half of their senior year, to come and see us now about information concerning the Officer Candidate V-9 program. Those eli- gible may sign up now, finish their college course, then go into Navy training at another college." Every day this week, from 2 to S p.m.,'the WAVE recruiting office will be open to all those interested in serving the war effort in their most useful capacity. Ensign Courtney and Specialist 3/c Simonson are both college graduates I +-,a tro. +10 +. a.1,ha n + a- come tomorrow or later, to be thing but flat rejection. any- Aussie Tanks 'Gain in Newv Guiiiea Jungles SOUTHWEST PACIFIC ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, Tuesday, Nov. 23. -(1P)-Australian- soldiers, supported by 26-ton Matilda (British type) tanks, have punched their way through the Northeastern New Gui- nea junmgles to within half a mile of the core of Jap defenses on high ground around Sattelberg. Gen. Douglas MacArthur's head-: quarters coupled this report today with others showing that during the past 48 hours aircraft flown by mem- bers of three Allied nations-the United States. Australia and the Netherlands-have sunk or damaged r19,000 tons of Japanese shipping. The drive on Sattelberg is one dir- ected inland eight miles northwest! of Allied held Finschhafen. on the Huon Peninsula coast against forces Iwhose jungle plateau positions over - look those of MacArthur's men. These were among the outstanding shipping blows: American Liberators in daylight Sunday sank a 4,000 ton vessel off Manokwari, Dutch New Guinea, and shot down two and damaged one of six intercepting float planes. Enemy anti-aircraft fire downed one of the SLiberators. Agencies Knock Army Venture WASHINGTON, No . 22.-1P- Spokesmen for three government ag- encies criticizedt he Army sharply to- day for its $130,000,000 Canadian oil centure and broke into the open a smouldering argument dating back a year and a half. Interior Secretary Ickes said flatly that the whole pro- ject "ought to be junked." y The Senate's Truman Committee, self-chosen umpire in the dispute, eheard from the Interior Department, the Budget Bureau and the War Pro- duction Board thats: THIRD CONCERT: Menuhin To Play Variety of Selections in Program Tonight Yehudi Menuhin, the child prodigy who has grown up to become one of hin argued when he was a young boy, the world's greatest violin virtuosi, and this attitude has remained a part will present the third Choral Union of his approach to music to this day. concert at 8:30 p.m. today in Hill Music Loving Family Auditorium. The thing has gotten into the blood Sonatas by Bach, Beethoven and of his family, for the first cable re- nartabyiBl h ,Bghttonight's re- ceived from Hepzibah, his sister, after Bartok will highlight f mght pro- she was married and reached her cital. The second half of the pro- home on a sheep station in Australia gram will be made up mainly of short read, "Please buy and send me imme- works by such composersas Debussy, diately all the 'Urtext' editions of Villa Lobos, and Grainger. Bach, Brahms, Beethoven, Mozart, Began at Age of Four Shubert, etc." Born in New York City in 1916, Many great musical figures have Menuhin began playing the violin at played a part in Menuhin's life. Dur- the age of four and at seven made his ing the time he lived in Paris Serge concert debut with the San Fran- Koussevitsky often dropped in for a cisco Orchestra. cup of tea and a chat. Frequent vi- Since his verv ear1v hildhood. he ci-nma tf fn T rfn,,v. llnm. w.a cu