k w 00, .4Ittgau a14 Colder VOL. LIV No. 27 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, DEC. 3, 1943 A "W - PRICE FIVE CENTS Allies Join in Huge Drive Toward Rome Germany Allied HeadsN Propose To I Free Reich FDR, Churchill, Have Gone to Teheran To Meet Russia's Stalin By The Associated Press LONDON, Dec. 2.-An ultima- tum to Germany to surrender or be bombed to destruction, is being drawn up by President Roosevelt, Prime Minister Churchill and Pre- mier Stalin in a meeting at Tabriz in northwest Iran, unconfirmed press reports from Turkey assert- ed today. ** * LONDON, Dec. 2.-eA forthright' promise to grant Germany post- war freedom from slavery under any power, however heavily she must pay for the war, appears to be a possible result of the predicted conference of President Roosevelt, Prime Minister Churchilland Premier Stalin. The American and British chiefs of state have gone to Iran to meet Stalin, said reports from Axis and neutral sources, after their epochal Pacific war talks with Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek in North Africa. Coference Is Underway These reports abroad said the new conference already was under way, and they placed it variously in the Persian capital, Teheran, in the country home of the former ruler, Reza Shah Pahlavi, near Teheran, and at Tabriz, in northwest Iran. Vital decisions for the defeat of Germany, abolition of Hitlerism in Europe, the future of Germany and her satellites and possibly a settle- ment of the differences between Po- land and Russia, were forecast in these reports. Proclamationa May Come German and neutral commentators predict the conference will be follow- ed by a proclamation from the Al- lied leaders to the German people calling on them to drop out of the war, with a threat of intensified air attacks if the war continues. They expect a similar demand of the satellite states to withdraw their troops from the fighting fronts and to break their alliance with Berlin. - Be A Goodfeliow - Campus Drive Starts Monday With fraternities, sororities, and many other campus societies organiz- ing the annual Goodfellow Drive, the campaign promises to be a complete success when the special Goodfellow Daily appears on the streets Monday. Since' 1935 the proceeds of the campaign have been helping Ann Ar- bor's needy families and University students. The money raised by the drive will be turned over to the Dean of Stu- dents' office which will handle the division of the funds to students and to the Family Child and Service. Will Not Be Enslaved in Post-War Period WASTE 59,168 HOURS: Bonds Purchased in Remembrance of Pearl Harbor 3nly Half of 'U' Coeds Are Doing War Work By MAVIS KENNEDY STATISTICS from the Office of the Dean of Women and the League Undergraduate offices show that 1,849 out of 3,070 University women are carrying on no activities beyond their school work and their amusements. It is these 1,849 who must prove that an opportunity for independent initiative will result in more than additional hours over a coke, a bridge game, or at a show. At present, women are asked to devote at least two hours a week to extracurricular activities. On this basis, THESE 1,849 COEDS WHO ARE HAVING A PRE- PEARL HARBOR GOOD TIME ARE WASTING 3,698 MAN-HOURS OF WORK A WEEK. THAT IS 59,168 HOURS OF POTENTIAL WORK LOST IN A 16- WEEK SEMESTER. Two hours of work a week, not necessarily war work at that, is so little as to be 'pitiful when women are needed for every conceivable job-on campus. It is so little that a coed who 'gives only that much should be ashamed. Yet the amount of necessary work that goes undone because 1,849 coeds cannot even stir out of their larval lethargy for a minimum of two hours weekly is proof that these women are not ready to undertake any action which does not con- tribute to their own pleasure. Women demanded co-education for years before they got it. They had to prove themselves worthy of education before they received that right. Women demanded the right to vote; the right to assume leadership. They got what they wanted, but they didn't get it by complaining. They got it by hard work.; by proving their capability to assume responsibility. The battle isn't won yet. University coeds cannot rest on their laurels. They must prove that they can rise to a wartime emergency; that they are deserving of this educa- tion. WHAT ARE THEY GOING TO DO ABOUT IT? If they won't work because work isn't fun, University authorities should treat them like babies; they are babies. Folding sheets in a laundry isn't anyone's idea of a lifetime job, but laundries have to keep operating, espe- cially when a large hospital depends on them for clean bed linen and uniforms. Rolling bandages gets tiresome, but wounded men don't stop needing them because coeds have blue books coming up and just haven't had time to study' between cokes. The 1,849 wonen who refuse to work aren't unpatri- otic. They are lazy. They want the war to be over, but they want someone else to do the work and make the sacri- fices. They are still wrapped in a pre-Pearl Harbor dream of ideal' colle gelife. German Defenses Are Split Joint Attack of 5th, 8th Armies Cracks Axis inter-Line Defenses By NOLAND NORGAARD Associated Press Correspondent ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, Al- giers, Dec. 2.-Demoralized German troops streamed back toward Romhe n fufl retreat today from their shat- tered defenses near the Adriatic and began demolishing the key city of Cassino in the central sector as Lt. Gen. Mark W. Clark's American Fifth Army joined their British allies in splintering the enemy's "Winter Line." The four - day - old battlefield of Sangro Ridgedwas littered with en- emy dead and wounded and wrecked equipment. Gen. Sir Bernard L. Montgomery's. victorious Eighth Army hammered and tore at the withdrawing Nazis in comparatively open country, while hundreds of Al- lied warplanes worried the enemy- from the sky. Nazis Blast Cassino Allied reconnaissance pilots' re- ported the Nazis were setting , of huge explosions at Cassino in ap- parent preparation for abandonitg that important stronghold. Cassido, only eight miles from the last re- ported Allied line, is on the via Casll- ina, main inland highway to Rome 80 miles away. (The Berlin radio in a broadcast recorded by the Associated Press said that the American Fifth Army had launched large - scale attacks all along its front, supported, at; the coastal end by three destroyers.) AAF Batters Nazi Front The demolitions were observed aft- er Allied Air Forces battered the.20- mile German front guarding the" Cas- sino area for three hours in one of the most concentrated attacks of the Italian campaign. At 10-minute intervals waves of warplanes swept over German gun emplacements and other defense works and smashed them into heaps of rubble. Invader and Warhawk fighter- bombers gave the Nazi positions the same type of pasting they gave San- gro Ridge. -Be A Goodlfellow -.F it h a To Talk Today At Conference Tom Cogan (left) and Robert Allen (center), apprentice seamen stationed here under the V-12 pro- gram purchase bonds- from Lt. N. A. Pananides, USN retired and Communication Officer of the V-12 program, to open the Navy Pearl Harbor Day bond drive which the Navy is now holding among personnel stationed here. --Daily Photo by Cpl. Robert L. Lewin, 3651st S. U., Co. A. Ruthven Outlines Role, Of Post-War Education President Compares American, British Adult Educational Systems, Leadership, Reforms Advancing a comprehensive pro- ("the organ through which the British gram of adult education as an "im- portant tool in securing the peace" and emphasizing the paramount role universities will play in moulding leadersdfor the post-war world, Dr. Alexander G. Ruthven, President of the University, presented a detailed report of his recent trip to England to the faculties of the University yes- terday in the Rackham Auditorium. Dr. Ruthven went to England on invitation of the Ministry of Educa- tion and the British Council "to stu- dy first hand post-war educational needs and plans." He pointed out that "the British are far ahead of us in preparing now for post-war educational needs. "In England now the workers and fighters are getting a broad under- standing through an effort which in this country has been sporadic, dis- organized and amateurish. "The British have learned that it is imperative for soldiers of dem- ocracy know what they are fight- ing for while they are fighting." He detailed the work of the Work- ers Education Association (WEA), Remember, 1,849, neither, can be won without a fight. your fight. peace nor post-war freedom It's your world, your job, adult education program is being car- ried on. "The WEA is an organization with which the government, labor and ed- ucational institutions cooperate and which promoteswthecultural ad- vancement of war workers and sol- diers," he stated.1 Discussing the relative advance- ment of the English system as com- See RUTHVEN, p. 4 - Be A Goodfellow - Galens Annual Tag Day Drive To Start Today Fourteen Galens men, armed with tags and buckets, will hit campus to- I day in the first day of their two-day ; drive to raise funds to give children] confined in University Hospital a; merry Christmas. Galens, an honorary society for junior and senior medical students, has set a goal of $2,500 in this their fifteenth annual campaign. Funds are used mostly to support, the ninth-floor Galens workshop in the hospital, according to Pfc. Rich- ard Bates, chairman of the drive. However, the group also furnishes books, films and games to those un- able to leave their beds and sponsors a Christmas party for all children in the hospital. "Col. Frederick C. Rogers has con- sistently supported the Galens," Pfc. Robert Taylor, publicity chairman for the drive, said, "and he has given his permission for Galens members in the Army to take their posts on campus." Exhibits now on display in store windows both downtown and on State street give a graphic portrayal of the type of thing the hospitalized children do in the Galens workshop. Examples of woodcraft, painting and pieces of pottery which they have formed and heated in a minature kiln are among the things to be seen. - Be A Goodfellow - University To Get Post-War Grait The State Planning Commission Officer Tells Of Harmon's Experiences Pilot Was Protected For 10 Days Behind f Jap Lines by Guerrillast Lt. Tom Harmon was shot downt by a swarm of Zeros darting out of the sun, while he and three other pilots were furnishing fighter protec- tion for a bombing mission, accord- ing to the commanding officer of his squadron's ground crew who arrived in the United States from China Wednesday. This was the first personal account of Harmon's experiences during the 25 days he was reported missing. The officer phoned Mrs. Louis A. Harmon Wednesday night to tell her of her< son's escape from Jap-held territory. The bombing mission had been successfully completed and the planes were about five minutes away from the target of Kiuking when they were attacked. Tom was flying in "tail" position, one of the most dangerous, and his plane was among the four that were downed. After he jumped from the burning plane, the remaining pilots circled1 his parachute to protect him from Jap machinegun fire during his des- cent into enemy-held territory. A' band of Chinese guerrillas rescued him and he remained under their protection for ten days before he was able to make his way back to an advanced American base several hun- dred miles away. His safety was rumored by a "won- derful grapevine" system of the guer- rillas a number of days before it was' officially announced. Mrs. Harmon has received a letter reporting that the commander of Harmon's squadron had died Nov. 11 of wounds received in the raid in which the gridiron hero was reported missing. - Be A Goodfellow -- Leaders .Debate Service Credits The question of granting college credit for work now being done by service trainees on the campuses of Michigan colleges will be discussed here tomorrow by two committees of the Michigan College Association. This group is composed of the Fr. F. J. Quinn, University of Detroit; Rev. itor of deliver Mr. Stephen Fritchman, ed- the "Christian Register" will a lecture at 8 p.m. today in PRESENTS EDUCATION, POST-WAR PLANS: War Strategists To Discuss World Problems The Rev. Stanton Lautenschlager, who spoke yesterday before several Ann Arbor audiences will continue his discussions on the various aspects of the situation in China here today and tomorrow. At 8:30 a.m. today he will speak before students at the Ann Arbor High School and at 3 p.m. will ad- dress members of the Women's Asso- ciation of the First Presbyterian Church. He will participate Sunday in one of the panels held by the Post- War Council at the Union and will conclude his local visit with a speech at 8 p.m. Saturday before the Young Married People's group of the church. In a lecture yesterday in Kellogg Auditorium he stated, "What China needs isn't manpower but equipment Mr. Lautenschlager continued, "is that of preventing a civil war in China. However, as long as Gener- - 2" Sr|--7 7 ----M- said, "China does not want an empire after the war." Mr. Lautenschlager's brother Roy, whose wife lives here in Ann Arbor, was one of those who disembarked Wednesday from the exchange ship Gripsholm. Culbertson To Talk On Post-War Period' Presenting to an Ann Arbor audi- ence his famous "Plan for World Settlement," Ely Culbertson, noted author and world strategist, will speak at 7:15 p.m. today in Rackham Auditorium. Culbertson, whose lecture will open the annual Post-War Council Con- the Rackham Building called "Youth Demands" to high-light a public rec- reation conference sponsored by the Willow Run Community Council. Unitarian students on campus will have a chance to meet Rev. Mr. Fritchman, who is also executive secretary of the Unitarian Youth Commission, at a dinner which will be given for him at 6 p.m. today In the Russian Tea Room of the League. Dr. Eduard C. Lindeman, of the New York School of Social Work, will also address the conference on "Am- erica's Post-War Choices." These talks are open to the public. This is the first in a series of in, stitutes for professional workers on social problems in the Willow Run area. The conference will be offic- ially opened this afternoon in Yp- silanti when Spencer Gordon, Hans J. Schmidt and Dr. Lindeman will speak. - Be A Goodfellow ---- Arrau To Give Concert Today Latin Pianist Makes First 'U' Appearance A varied program of piano music will be given by Claudio Arrau, famed South American artist, in his first Ann Arbor appearance at 8:30 p.m. today in Hill Auditorium. Mozart's Rondo in A Major, the first number on the program, will be followed by a performance of Beetho- ven's "Fifteen Variations and Fugue" Op. 35. Two selections by Liszt and two selections by Chopin will make Place of Education and Propaganda in World Organization" and "Types of World Organization" are the dis- .L.' .S: ' ' ' r. .A.......... .. ,: i