i .; , . iu N 2U.tr tgan 4~ a1 W eFather I ~ Fair VOL. LIV No. 20 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 24, 1943 PRICE FIVE CENTS a Berlin Bombed Second Successive Night House Rejects Subsidies Program by Huge Administration Gets Set-Back; Jap Bombers Burn Near U.S. Carrier 0 Vote Is 278-17 Plurality Is Sufficient To Override Expected Veto by White House By ALEX H. SINGLETON Associated Press Correspondent WASHINGTON, Nov. 23- In a sledge-hammer assault upon the ad- ministration's "hold-the-line" pro- gram, the House late today passed and sent to the Senate a measure outlawing future use of consumer subsidies to hold down food prices. Amid cries from subsidy supporters that the move would result in infla- tion, the opposition piled up a roll call vote of 278 to 117-enough, if the line-up remains unchanged, to override an anticipated veto by'Pres- ident Roosevelt. Not a True Test The vote was not an absolutely clear-cut test on the subsidy issue, however, because the bill contained two parts: the ban on subsidies, and a provision continuing the life of the Commodity Credit Corporation. Some legislators voted for the bill although opposed to one of its pro- visions. For example, Rep. Patman (D.-Tex.), a leader in the fight to save subsidies, voted for the bill, ex- plAning that he wanted to see C.C.C. continued "and I expect to get a second whack at this thing when the President sends up a veto. The one-sided result constituted the first vital blow struck in the sec- and round of the bitter subsidy bat- tle between President Roosevelt and a Capitol Hill coalition of Republican legislators and Democratic lawmak- ers from the farm states. Veto Expected Majority leader McCormack said there is a "reasonable inference" the President will veto the present bill. Voting by Michigan representa- tives on legislation- outlawing the administration subsidy program and extending the life of the Commodity Credit Corporation followed strictly the party line. All 12 Republican congressmen from Michigan-Bennett, Blackney, Bradley, Crawford, Dondero, Engel, Hoffman, Jonkman, Michener, Sha- fer, Wolcott and Woodruff-voted for the bill. The state's five Democratic repre- sentatives- Dingell, Lesinski, O'- Brien, Rabaut and Sadowski-voted against the measure. STuberculosis Seal Drive Is Now Underway With one man out of every hundred turned away at the induction center because of tuberculosis, the attention of the nation is called to the thirty- seventh annual Christmas seal sale. Mail sale started Monday morning in Ann Arbor and is scheduled to be- gin Friday throughout the rest of Washtenaw County. Last year $8,000 was contributed in Ann Arbor, and this year it is hoped that the sum will be doubled, according to Mrs. Flora Brown, of the county branch of the Michigan Tuberculosis Asso- ciation. 10,000 Letters Now Mailed A total of 10,000 letters containing 100 seals each has already been mailed to Ann Arbor residents, with 25,300 letters going to the entire county. Rural areas are to be handled through the schools. Under ordinary conditions approx- imately 100 cases from this city are in sanatoria. Patients are sent to the University Hospital, Howell, Leand, and the American Legion Hospital at Battle Creek. The local load has been greatly in- creased by the influx of people to the Willow Run area, Mrs. Brown said. There workers are given a pre-em- ployment X-ray, and if signs of tuberculosis are shown, the workers are referred to local ag.encies. Seals Support Prevention Of the money collectel by the sale of seals, 80% stays in the city, 15% goes to the state agency,- and 5% is Two columns of smoke are all that remain of two Japanese dive bombers that tried to attack a U.S. Navy task force of enemy planes that struck at the task force while the carrier-based planes were hitting the Japs at Rabaul. Note the curve of the carrier's wake, showing how the ship swung to avoid the attackers. FIT OF NERVES: Patton Apologies to His Men In Person for Striking Soldier By The Associated Press ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, AL- GIERS, Nov. 23.-Lt. Gen. George S. Patton, Jr., who led the American Se- venth Army through a brilliant con- quest of Sicily, at the close of that of- fensive apologized in person to his Army for having struck a shell- shocked soldier in a hospital tent in a fit of rage while the campaign was in a critical stage. The incident led to an investigation to determine whether animosity of his men toward Patton was so great as to impair his usefulness as a com- mander. This investigation appar- ently convinced Gen. Dwight D. Eis- enhower and the War Department that this was not the case, as Patton retained his command and was pro- moted in his permanent army rank from Brigadier General to Major General. Strange War Story The incident was disclosed official- ly by Allied Headquarters today three and a half months after it occurred. Behind the Headquarters announce- ment is one of the strangest war sto- ries ever told. It is a tale of a General, whose me- rit is recognized by.everyone, slapping and swearing at a distraut soldier whom he believed to be a malingerer and denouncing the soldier as a cow- ard before other soldiers who lay wounded in their cots. As it turned out, the soldier in question was not a coward, but a 24- year-old southern boy with an excel- lent record who had gone through the grimmest fighting of the Tunis- ian and Sicilian campaigns and who had left the front only when ordered out by his commanding doctor. The soldier, on being called a coward by his commanding general, felt that his whole world had disintegrated. Eisenhower, commenting on the in- cident, described Patton's conduct as Navy Men Take Qualifying Tests A Comprehensive Achievement Test will be given to certain groups of V-12 students on Tuesday in the Rackham Auditorium. All v-12> nd inpiin Ma- "despicable," but at the same time the Commander-in-Chief expressed the greatest confidence in Patton as a general and said that, like many other officers in this theater, he was of the opinion that no other com- mander could have achieved such re- sults as Patton did in Sicily. "Took the Hide Off" Gen. Eisenhower, upon hearing the incident, immediately wrote Patton a letter in which he denounced his con- duct and ordered him to make a- mends or be removed from his com- mand. "The old man certainly took the hide off him," a Headquarters spokesman said. The incident for which Eisenhower rebuked one of his ablest battle lead- ers occurred early in August, when the Sicilian campaign was at a cri- tical period. Patton, visiting an eva- cuation hospital, was walking among the wounded, patting some on the head and sympathizing with them, when he came upon the soldier sit- ting on a cot with his head in his hands, weeping. Menuhin Voices Music Criticism American Composers Lack Craftsmanship "American composers have greatj fantasy and imagination, however, their craftsmanship is not yet well developed," said Yehudi Menuhin, internationally famous violinist in an interview yesterday at his suite in the Union. "Their greatest failure," he con- tended, "is their inability to develop a work out of a single germ. Subse- quently, there are few American composers who have produced works of importance in the larger forms of the symphony and concerto." "Tonight," Menuhin continued, "I am going to play here the first Amer- ican performance of the Premiere Sonata, by the modern Hungarian composer Bela Bartok. It is one of the finest modern works which I have heard. Despite the fact that it is a rather long sonata, it has a very Reds Pushed Back by Nazi Counterattack 2,000 German Men Are Killed in Fierce Hand-to-Hand Fighting By The Associated Press LONDON, Wednesday, Nov. 24- The German counterattack in Russia, rising to new intensity, wrested sev- eral populated places from the Rus- sians after hand-to-hand fighting and savage gun duels in which more than 100 German tanks were de- stroyed and 2,000 Nazi soldiers were killed, Moscow announced today. The Russians failed. to locate the places they evacuated, but said the Germans were flinging large forces of tanks and infantry into their counterattacks in the Chernyakhov- Brusilov area of the Northern Ukraine. Here, where the Russians reach farthest west, and have retreated from Zhitomir, the Germans were smashing at the flank of the Soviet Army's Kiev salient. Chernyakhov is 13 miles north of Zhitomir on the Zhitomir-Korosten railway, while Brusilov - mentioned for the first time by the Russians - is 36 miles east of Zhitomir and only 45 miles west of Kiev - suggesting new German gains toward the Ukraine capital. The Moscow midnight communique, recorded by the Soviet Monitor from a broadcast, said the Germans were paying a high price for their assault as Soviet infantrymen, tankmen and gunners put up stiff resistance. Rus- sian planes struck massed blows at German lines "and at their reserves which were brought up," it said. General's Wife To Lecture in Hill' Saturday Mrs. Mark Clark To Air Soldiers' Future; Veterans To Benefit Mrs. Mark W. Clark, wife of Amer- ica's famed commanding general of the Fifth Army, will speak on "When the Boys Come Home" in a lecture at 8:15 p. m. Saturday in Hill Audi- torium. The proceeds of Mrs. Clark's lec- ture, which is sponsored by the Mich- igan Alumnae Club of Ann Arbor, will be given to the Calp and Hos- pital Committee for the Christmas Fund for Disabled Servicemen. Committee Aids Servicemen This committee supplies home comforts to well and disabled service men. In the beginning their respon- sibilities were concerned largely with 'recreational facilities. Now, however, with that field well cared for, major interest centers around comforts for disabled, soldiers. Home-made cookies by the thousands, books and games have all been sent to them and now the committee is planning on giving them as happy a Christmas as pos- sible. Mrs. Clark's work on the recent bond drive was acclaimed. She drew tremendous crowds wherever she ap- peared. In her talk she will discuss the problems that face the boys when they come home, and will also show slides made from photos taken by Gen. Clark and members of his staff. Will Show Pictures the pictures she will show include some of the African invasion, among them pictures of the house in which her husband held pre-invasion meet- ings with French officials in Africa. Others are of the Casablanca confer- ence and the present Italian cam- paign. Tickets for the lecture are on sale at several of the local stores or can be obtained at the League or Union or from alumnae saleswomen. Elusive Dog Disrupts Studying in Library Japs Told U.S. Invasion of Gilberts Is Major Threat NEW YORK, Nov. 23.-(P)-The Tokyo radio told the Japanese today that the United States invasion of the Gilbert Islands constituted a threat to the Japanese-mandated Marshall Islands and "presages a real decisive battle of the fleets." Juvenile Code To be Revised LANSING, Nov. 23.-W)-A study commission of probate judges, law enforcement officials and social wor- kers today drew a broad blueprint for a new juvenile code, designed to modernize Michigan's attack on ju- venile delinquency. Led by the judges, the committee indicated it was not intending to sweep away all of the present code, but would confine itself to tightening some provisions of the present law and rewriting some troublesome fea- tures. x l b t a , r T Begins Nov. 25 Fred Perry Clarifies Restriction on Venders City Clerk Fred Perry announcegI yesterday that the ban on hawkers and peddlers operating on football weekends went into effect after last Saturday's Ohio State game. This clarified the ordinance which had been interpreted as going into effect before last week's contest by many Ann Arbor residents. The ordinance reads as follows: "On account of the increased popula- tion, and the traffic hazards which occur in the City of Ann Arbor on those Saturdays when football games are played in the stadium of the Uni- versity of Michigan, all hawking and peddling except regular deliveries of food, is prohibited on such days, and no license may be issued by the City Clerk for hawking or peddling on said days." 'Allies Take Gilberts in. Final Drive By The Associated Press PEARL HARBOR, T.H., Nov. 23.- The Gilbert Islands now are securely in the hands of United States land and sea forces, Admiral Chester W. Nimitz, commander in chief of the U.S. Pacific fleet announced today. The invasion of the Japanese-held central Pacific island group, under- taken Nov. 29, is "another road to Tokyo," he said at a press conference. Already the 27th division has cap- tured Makin Atoll. The capture of Tarawa, where the Marines have consolidated their positions, is cer- tain. Amphibious forces cracked the beach defenses of both places last Saturday. The situation on Abemma Atoll, 80 miles south of Tarawa, was reported well in hand. The Marines' landing there was announced only yesterday. An excellent bomber field within striking distance of strong Japanese bases in the Marshall Islands to the north will become available with the capture of Tarawa. Fighting on Ta- rawa was believed. to be confined to Betio Island, which has air base fa- cilities. The enemy was strongly en- trenched on Betio, at the southwest- ern tail of Tarawa Atoll. The island is a sand waste- less- than two miles long and about a thousand yards wide. * * * Majority Canadians Halt German Attack Near Agnone Nazi Troops Withdraw To Winter Line; Burn All Towns in Sector By The Associated Press ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, AL- GIERS, Nov. 23.-Charging before a backdrop of burning towns and vil- lages being destroyed in a "scorched earth" withdrawal to their winter line, German troops struck sharply at Canadian units of the Eighth Ar- my northwest of Agnone in the cen- tral Italian sector but were repulsed after a hard two-hour battle, the Al- lied command said today. Throughout the mountainous in- land sector the enemy was firing and dynamiting everything he could not carry with him to his powerful new gun-studded defense line. Smoke shrouded the horizon as the sizable cities of Castel Di Sangro and Alfed- ena burned through the second day. Yesterday's counterattack east of those cities evidently was designed to give the Nazi demolition squads time to complete their task of destruction. (The German High Command re- ported Montgomery's reinforced troops had launched violent attacks against Nazi defenses north of the Sangro river at the extreme eastern end of the battle line-an action not confirmed by Allied sources. "Nume- rous violent attacks were repulsed and one local dent was sealed off," the Nazi communique reported. Ban on Hawkers RAF Looses 2,300 Tons On Capital German Radio Reports Assault, States Special Defense Steps Taken By GLADWIN HILL Associated Press Correspondent LONDON, Nov. 24.-A mighty force of RAF bombers was reported today to have pounded Berlin for the se- cond successive night last night as the German capital lay smashed and smoking from a 1,000-bomber raid which hurled more than 2,300 long tons of high explosives and incendi- aries on the Nazi capital Monday night. Germany's radio Zeesen announced last night's attack after British wat- chers saw the bombers cross the coast in a procession which took 45 mn- utes to pass. Capital Left Smoking The Reich capital, a city of 332 square miles, was still smoking froh the greatest aerial blow ever struck in warfare when the German an- nouncer took the air to say the new attack was expected "and special de- fense precautions were taken. The weather favored the defense more than the previous night, the ra- dio said and it declared that a "con- siderable number of attacking planes were shot down." There were indications that last night's assault, the third on erl1i in the last six days, might be as 1e0- vy as the history-making 77-ton-per minute bombing of the previous night. Allies Reverse Nazi Dream The Allies did last night what the Germans once dreamed of doirg to London, but on five times the scale the Germans ever attained. The record raid on the Nazi capt- tal, which German leaders once boasted never would feel the terror of Allied bombs, was made despite bad weather, and the huge black night bombers of the RAF flying through thick clouds not only smash- ed the industrial suburbs but flit gov- ernment buildings in the great city withtheir record weight of explosives. The previous record 'weight of just 2,300 long tons poured down on Ham- burg last Aug. 23. Reports tonight from Stockholm said a heavy pall of smoke hung over the stricken Nazi capital all day, and tonight parts of the city still were in flames with fire fighters and other air raid workers, already weary fromn coping with a heavy attack four nights before, still toiling desperate- ly. As was the case last night, com- munications between Stockholm and Berlin were cut, suggesting that the Nazi capital again was the target. Sale of Tic*kets To Start Friday Union To Hold Annual Formal in Ballroom Stating that 350 tickets and Yio more" will be sold for the annual Union Formal, Rupert Straub, ticket. chairman, announced yesterday that the general sale will open Friday. Tickets will be available from 5 p. m. to 7 p. m. at the Union Ticket Resale Desk. Until further notice, this sale will be the only time that tickets for the formal, which will be held in the Union Ballroom from 9 p. m. to midnight, Saturday, Dec. 4, may be purchased. Bill Sawyer and his orchestra will play for the dance, the first formal to be held on campus this semester. Wartime restrictions have put the ban on formals, but in keeping with tradition, the Union was able to ar- range for the formal. Preceding the dance a banquet will be held for the Union Executive Council at which time the activities of the Council will be reviewed. Milk Producers Threateu To Hold Un Detroit Sunnl POST PUBLICITY: Magazine Picks Muriel Lester House To Illustrate Co-op Life Muriel Lester House, cooperative on campus, has been chosen to typifyj life in college co-ops in a four-page feature in today's Saturday Evening Post. Illustrated with pictures of the va- rious phases of co-op activity, the article tells how more than 100,000 students, living in cooperatives all over the country, run their lives on the principle of share the work and the expense. Show Mode of Living The pictures, taken by Serge Bal- kin early last spring, graphically por- tray the mode of living of the Lester- ite girls. Morning cleanup, the exer- cise period, dinner prep and an Inter- Cooperative Council party were photographed to show just how the life of the co-op girl differs from that of other students. One snapshot shows the bulletin board with a list of guffables, guffables being food which may be eaten between meals. In the article itself, the Post dis- cusses all the details and problems which arise when a group of more than a dozen and a half girls com- pense." Thus the Post describes the basis for all co-operative living. To meet their problems effectively and in an organized manner, the girls at Lester House hold weekly house meetings, thrashing out difficult de- tails among themselves. At the begin- ning of each year a house manager is chosen to arrange a schedule of when and by whom the work of the house is to be done. Purchasers, an ac- countant, a president and secretary, are all chosen by the house to carry on the business of paying the rent, gas and water bills, and seeing that the girls have a nutritious diet. Committees Are Chosen Education, personnel, social and athletic committees are also chosen to take care of the social side of life. These committees function both for the individual houses on campus, and also in co-ordination with the ICC. Individual house committees get to- gether to plan all ICC activities, as parties, educationals and conferences. The Post article states, "The co-op coeds at Muriel Lester more than merely clean their rooms, make their beds, eat, and wash the dishes. They