" M t , 4ir 4ir 4 aij Weather tilit ii no VOL. LIV No. 10 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, NOV. 12, 1943 PRICE FIVE CENTS Walkout Ends At Willow Run Bomber Plant Union Asks Improved Working Conditions; Raise Referred to WLB .All grievances in the Willow Run bomber plant strike which ended yes- terday morning when the wildcat strikers returned to work for the 7 o'clock shift have been satisfactorily settled for the union, Glenn Brayton, president of Local 50 UAW (CI), said last night. Negotiations on the points in dis- pute were begun immediately upon resumption of work yesterday. Bray- ton stated that regardless of the pre- sent settlement, there would have to be a big improvement in conditions at the plant or he could not guaran- tee that there would be no recurrence of -the strike. The union was granted the seniori- ty respect they demanded, and re- classification of die setters and press operators. It was again agreed that die setters shall operate any light or heavy press when those employes have no dies to set, the company add- ed. A joint company-union recom- mendation. for a five-cent hourly wh e increase for press operators Va8 sent to the regional War Labor Bord, the company said. The two men charged with insti- gating the strike were reinstated in their former positions. "he 1,217 die setters returned to wor t in response to an appeal from ni nleaders, thus ending a two-day work stoppage. Rumors That wuhen Will uit Are Denied Politicians Hint That 'Prent ' M. Brown Will Be Successor branding as "utterly false" reports it.;itB irsintf te 'niversity, 151- er . thven, would resign, ? it ficI ld fy denied last e of a change of !le report, publisheduin yester- da's Detroit Timres, quoted both IDeiocratic and Republican politi- cians as saying President Ruthven "Qt oon re lgn and named Prentiss Y 'rown, former OPA administra- torarid United States Senator, his successor. Prof. Marvin Niehuss, director of Energency Training, declared last night that "the story is groundless and this is the first I have heard of the president resigning." I -lbr. Ruthven is in England survey- ing educational methods at the re- quest of the Federal government. He left Ann Arbor four weeks ago and is expected back within a few days. John D. Lynch and David H. Cr45wley, members of the Board of Iegentsfrom Detroit, said the rumor of fresident Ruthven's resignation is n annual occurrence. They said that no definite word had been received from the president and the Board of Regents had not been notified of his intent to leave the University. Other University officials contac- ted last night refused to comment on the story directly, but all flatly denied any knowledge that Dr. Ruth- ven 'planned to tender his resigna- tion. Dr. Ruthven was unanimously elected President of the University by the Board of Regents on Oct. 4, 1929, succeeding Clarence C. Little who had resigned earlier in the year. Over 100 inter-plant truckers em- ployed by the Chrysler Corporation also ended their strike at noon today and a Chrysler spokesman said nor- mal operations were expected to be resumed tomorrow morning at the Dodge Truck Plant where assembly lines werehhalted and 2,300 workers were sent home. Social Welfare To Be Studied Here The Community Fund Board yes- terday set up a committee to study all social welfare problems in the Ann Arbor community, and to con- sider methods through which the ac- tivities of the fund relating to these problems may be brought before the public, Walker Geski, chairman of the board, stated last night. I 'ENSIAN POSITIONS: Editors Appointed to Edit, Business Staffs American Forces Win First Stage Of Battle To Liberate Solomons; Reds Drive Ne arer Polish Border Two men and two women were named to the senior business and editorial staffs of the 1944 Michigan- ensian when Sue Simms, managing editor and June Gustafson, business manager, announced appointments yesterday following a meeting of the Board in Control of Student Publi- cations. Edward M. Anthony, '44, of De- troit, a member of Alpha Tau Omega, and Betty Anne Kranich, '44, of To- ledo, of Alpha Gamma Delta, will take over the jobs of associate edi- tors. Clare Blackford, '44, of Findlay, O., a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma, was named associate business mana- ger, replacing the position of wo- men's business manager. Griff Young, '44, of Canisteo, N.Y., will be the art editor. Junior Positions Announced Those holding junior editorial po- sitions are Mickey Theilen, '45, of Chicago, features; Pat Page, '44, of St. Paul, Minn., organizations; Betty Peat, '44, of Detroit, house groups; Alfred A. Srere, '45, of Detroit, Kournakoff To Be Speaker Will Discuss Russian Army and Its Strategy Capt Sergei N. Kournakoff, who served as a cavalry subaltern in the Russian Imperial Army during the first World War, will speak at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Rackham Auditor- ium on "The Red Army and Its Stra- tegy " Captain Kournakoff comes from a Russian family which has been iden- tified with Russia's fighting forces schools and colleges; Wally Schroth, '44, of Webster Groves, Mo., sports. New appointments on the business staff were also made. These include Rosemary Klein, '46, of*Caro, sales manager, and Janet Gray, '45 of Aruba, N.Y.I., accounts manager. Junior assistants on the staff are Jean Pines, '46, secretary, and Doro- thy del Sienta, '45, publicity. Published in Three Parts "Something new will be tried this year, Sue Simms said, when we pub- lish the 'Ensian in three installments to allow for distribution in January, May and September. Each of the three magazines will contain the pic- tures of the class graduating at that time, and all three will be put to- gether as one complete yearbook with a leather binder. "Such an 'Ensian will have many advantages," Miss Simms said. "It will be more inclusive and less dated than the ordinary annual; spring sports, for example will have their rightful place. Sorority pictures will be published in the fall edition, and pledges, hitherto not included, will be pictured in the spring edition." Ensians may be purchased, as one complete book, or as separate edi- tions. Copies will be mailed to those who have left Ann Arbor before the date of distribution. Pictures Due ,Jan. 1 "We urge all seniors who plan to graduate in February and who wish to have their pictures included in the Ensian to have their pictures at the Publications Building before Jan. 1," Miss Simms said. Public Health Delegates Form New Society In a round table discussion the delegates to the first Inter-American and second World' Conference of the Schools of Public Health, which ad- journed yesterday noon, resolved that public health' and preventive medicine education in the Americas should be promoted by the formation of a permanent :organization, to be known as the Association for the Advancement of Public Health and Preventive Medicine in the Americas. It also recommended that a com- mittee be appointed to formulate definite plans for such an organiza- tion by drafting a constitution and by-laws. Representatives from the various public health schools in Argentina, Br zil, Mexico, Uruguay, Cuba -md Ch le asserted that since the needs in public health are continental ra- ther than national in character, the development of adequate facilities for the protection of public health shouldebe a hemispheric problem. The representatives also recom- mended that the teaching of pre- ventive medicine in schools of medi- cine, engineering, and nursing be continued and expanded. The conference accepted the pro- posal to promote a greater exchange of informative data .between health schools in the Western Hemisphere. Other proposals that were accep- ted were the development of a pro- gram of studied tours for students of public health from the various coun- tries, the encouragement of Inter- American Fellowships, and the full utilization of available instruction in the professions. The next Inter-American Confer- ence on Professional Education in Public Health will be held in 1945, in Sao Paulo, Brazil. The Pan-Ameri- can Sanitary Bureau in Washington under the direction of Gen. Hugh Cummings will decide the exact date. Nazi Forces Face New Trap Near Rechitsa New Drive Liberates 100 Villages; Crimean Gains Also Reported By The Associated Press LONDON, Nov. 11.-The Red Army smashed through more than 100 vil- lages today to within 25 miles of the Korosten-Berdichev Railway in a de- termined effort to snap that link connecting the German northern and southern Ukraine forces, and reached a point only 85 miles from the old Polish border. With the Germans in the south facing disaster and the threat of being split into two disorganized camps ripe for entrapment or anni- hilation, the daily Russian commu- nique also announced a new offensive beyond the Dnieper at a point south- west of Gomel. A Russian column which weeks ago crossed the Dnieper near Loev, 35 miles below Gomel, sprang ahead and overpowered six German strong- holds on the road northward to Re- chitsa, 28 miles west of Gomel. Thus the Russians were threatening to topple that White Russian citadel by snapping its westward feeder line at Rechitsa. Berlin military commenators grud- gingly marvelled at the huge display of Russian power on multiple fronts, and one said the Red Army was try- ing "to force a turning point of the entire war.. Other Russian columns were re- ported battling German reinforce- ments hurled into action to stem the Soviet southwestward swing toward Rumania which, if unhalted, would seal the fate of more than 200,000 Germans presently fighting frontal attacks in the Krivoi Rog, Nikopol, and Kherson areas far to the east. South of Kiev Gen. Nikolai F. Va- tutin's First Ukraine Army was be- lieved to have linked up with ad- vance units of another Soviet army which weeks ago won a deep bridge- head across the Dnieper beyond Per- eyslav, 50 miles below Kiev. U.S. Gets Aid From Britain $1,174,000,000 of Lend-Lease Sent Here WASHINGTON, Nov. 11.- (P)- President Roosevelt told Congress to- day that the British Empire has sup- plied $1,174,000,000 of reverse lend- lease aid to the United States but members critical of the program's operations immediately demanded more detailed information. The President's special message, covering British reverse lend-lease through last June 30, included fig- ures indicating it is steadily expand- ing and advised that certain raw materials, such as rubber and sisal from the British colonies, for which the United States has paid hereto- fore are' being brought under the program. It was sent to the Capitol coincident with the British govern- ment's issuance of a "white paper" on mutual aid, as the program is called there. The British report placed the mon- etary value of aid from the United Kingdom alone to the United' States as $871,000,000 but said there were many items. tangible and intangible, which could not be brought into the bookkeeping. It also said that up to the middle of 1943 the United King- dom's payments to other United Na- tions, in excess of sums received from them, amounted to over $9,- 000,000,000. Men Prefer Gob Suits, Too The Navy easily whined the Army PresidentialCandidate GOV. JOHN W. BRICKER CAPT. SERGEI KOURNAKOFF for several centuries. His maternal ancestor was one of the Tartar chief- tains who settled down in Russia in the thirteenth century. Capt. Kournakoff is the author of "Savage Squadrons" and "Russia's Fighting Forces." He has written many technical as well as popular articles on the Red Army. The speech was scheduled for to- morrow night because this week has been proclaimed American - Soviet Friendship Week in Michigan by Governor Kelly, and will be given under the auspices of the national Council for American-Soviet Friend- ship. Prof. John F. Shepard is chair- man of the Ann Arbor branch. Prof. Everett S. Brown will introduce the speaker. Proceeds from the lecture will go to Russian War Relief. Tickets will be onsale at Wahr's book store today and tomorrow and at the box office in Rackham tomorrow night. of Ohio is the first Republi- can candidate who has formally announced his intention to enter the presidential primaries although Wilikie has made it clear that he is seeking the nomination. Hoover Replies TO Blockade Ex-President Wants To Send Food to Europe . WASHINGTON, Nov. 11-tm)-Re- plying. to Britain's refusal to relax the. blockade of Europe. Herbert Hoover today emphasized that a food-to-Europe program he is back- ing would be confined to relieving the hunger of women and children, par- ticularly in western European demo- cracies. : In the House of commons yeste- day Dingle M. Foot, Parliamentary Secretary of the British Ministy' of Economic Warfare, said that if food were shipped to occupied countries, the Germans would merely "create more starvation and shortages." He said the impression that the "whole of Europe is in a condition of famine is entirely misleading" and asserted the British government has no inten- tion of repeating the Hoover plan of the last war, when food was shipped to Belgium. Former President Hoover, who testified before a Senate Foreign Re- lations subcommittee last week in f a- vor of a resolution calling for imme- diate action on the food shipments, telegraphed chairman Thomas (D- Utah) a spirited comment on the views expressed by Foot. He asserted that he had not con- templated the large and systematic relief of whole populations. Allied Bombs Bloch Passes LONDON, Nov. il.(P)-U.S. and British bombers apparently dammed the Nazis strategic Brenner Pass and Mont Cenis Tunnel entrances into North Italy in crippling blows from both Britain and the Mediterranean area yesterday and last night, and today American Flying Fortresses based in Britain pounded targets in Muenster for the second time in a week. In yesterday's day and night as- saultsthe Allied bombs were aimed at bottlenecks on those trans-Alp supply lines used by Germany to move reinforcements into Italy. Flying Fortresses from the African Command shot down two Nazi fight- ,ers and chased off 20 or 30 more as they loosed a shower of high explo- sives on the railway center of Bolzano below Brenner Pass, and the British- based RAF did not lose a single plane ma coordinated night blow 'across France to the border town of Mo- dane, at the mouth of the Mont Cenis Tunnel. Two Italian1 w Ports Being Destroyed By The Associated Press ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, AL- GIERS, Nov. 11.-German engineers have begun demolishing the big Ital- ian ports of Leghorn and Pescara in the face of an American drive which threatens to crack their latest de- fense line near the mountain strong- hold of Mignano, the Allied Com- mand disclosed today.A American mountain troops yester- n day stormed two strategic heightsf near Mignano, including Mount Ro- tondo, a mile-and-a-half northwestp of that strongly-fortified enemy bas- tion, and took up positions overlook-c ing the broad valley leading to Cas-i sino, a main highway point only 73w miles from Rome. (The German-controlled Rome ra- dio reported Lt. Gen. Mark W. Clark's Fifth Army "has again1 launched a powerful attack in theB Upper Volturno Valley. A fierce bat-J tle now is raging."I (A broadcast by Robert Dunnet of the British Broadcasting Corporationz declared the fall of Mignano was im-t minent. Radio France at Algiers saidt Cassion, eight miles north of Mngna-P no, was encircled by Allied troops.) Though the end of the struggle in Italy was far from being in sight toB Allied troops battering forward through mud and snow this Armistice2 Day, aerial photographs of Nazi de- 1 molitions at Leghorn and PescaraJ provided a hopeful sign that the en- emy was resigned to losing the penin- sula at least as far as the Tuscans Mountains, which form the last bar-s rier to the Po Valley in northern Ita- ly.r Leghorn, largest port between Na- ples and Genoa, is nearly 250 miles upn the western Italian coast from the present fighting front, while Pesca r. is some 25 miles up the Adriatic coast from the Eighth Army's, posi- tion along the Sangro River. Dr. Furstenburg Is Elected to National Office Dr. Albert C. Furstenburg, Dean of the Medical School, was chosen president-elect of the Association of American Medical Colleges in a re- cent meeting in Cleveland, O. The first University of Michigan man to be elected to this high post, he will take office in October, 1944.1 Organized for the betterment of medical teaching and medical re-t search, this medical association ist now working in close collaborationI with the Army and -Navy in adjust-t ing medical curriculums to meet theI present day, needs of military ser- vice. It is also cooperating with the War Manpower Commission in the selection of medical students, and in the deferment of essential teachers1 in the medical schools throughoutI the country. Dr. Furstenburg is known as an1 authority in his field, both as scholar and practitioner. He has built an extensive practice in Ann Arbor spe- cializing in the diseases of the ear, nose, and throat. CAMPUS DIM-OUT DILE 'M' Coeds Obj Panhellenic Li Marme, Army Troops Pierce Enemy Lines U.S. Forces Now Behind Foe's Line in Position To Cut Jap Supply Line By The Associated Press SOUTHWEST PACIFIC ALLED HEADQUARTERS, Friday, Nov. 12- American Marines, reinforced by Ar- my troops, definitely have won the first round of the vital battle for Bougainville and attempts of the Ja- panese to becloud that fact by wild claims of having sunk many warships in the area are "without any basis whatsoever," Gen. Douglas MacAr- thur's spokesman said today. In announcing that the six mile- long beachhead at Empress Augusta Bay-the opening wedge to drive the Japanese out of the -last Solomons Island before Rabaul-was "firmly secured," the spokesman took cogni- ance of repeated Tokyo broadcasts that American warships had suffered, their most crushing defeat "since Pearl Harbor. "Japanese claims of sinking, war- ships and of a naval battle sube. quent to the naval action reported off Bouganville the night of November 1 2 are without any basis whatsoeve:." the spokesman said. In the naval action referred to a Japanese cruiser and four destrogrs were sunk, 'two cruisers and two .de- stroyers damaged without loss qt'a single American warship, headquar. ters :.previously had reported. Tha battle prevented ,a Japanese force from getting closer than miles to. the Marine beachhlad, pe tablished several hours earlie...g;n (The ...only comparatively reEgt American warship .losses in the N-, '. cific to be announced by the NaVy were two destroyers. (Tokyo Radio has been floodingth air lanes with .reports of 95. Ae war vessels. sunk by naval;and air ^,ction within a period of less than two weeks, of the Japanese naval commander-in-chief being congratu- lated and of speculation that it will be a long time before the American Navy can recover from such an alleged setback.) Churchill Sets Up Reconstruction Post LONDON, Friday, Nov. 12.--P- Prime Minister Churchill has created a Ministry of Reconstruction with the task of rebuilding Britain after the peace, it was announced today. Lord Woolton has been shifted' from the food ministry to direct the vast program. Creation of this over-all recon- struction post, which had been fore- cast for several weeks, is Churchill's answer to long-continuing criticism that he was neglecting post-war planning. The selection of Woolton was a political surprise but it was almost certain to receive public applause. Col. J. J. Llewellin will be brought home from his post as minister resi- dent in Washington to become the new Minister of Food. ect to Proposed .ghts Out Edict coeds' benefit, was condemned °bY Mary Essig, freshman resident at Stockwell Hall. Describing the plan, as "purely undemocratic," Miss Es- sig added, "Being on one's own is an essential part of going to college. If people who are college material don't know enough to get to bed eatly and have their studies done, it's their own fault if they become too tired and ill." While "lights- out at 11:30" may comnel some airls to retire earlier. 50-50 CHANCE TO LIVE: Cpl. Dunn Fights for Life after Accidentally Shooting Himself A courageous soldier is fighting the toughest battle of his life in St. Joseph's Hospital today with a 50-50 chance to live. The soldier is 18-year-old Cpl. Robert J. Dunn who suffered a near- fatal wound from a .22 calibre rifle that discharged as he was holding it between his knees Wednesday after- noon in Milan. The bullet entered his abdomen, traveled through both walls of his stomach and pierced never fully recovered from the loss of his elder and closestrbrother. He has three surviving brothers and nine sisters. Two years ago while the family was living on a farm near Milan, the house, on which the insurance had just run out, was burned to the ground by a midnight fire which started when Mr. Dunn was firing a coal furnace with kerosene. The kerosene exploded. Mr. Dunn was Reaction of Michigan coeds to the new "lights out" program, unexpec- tedly announced Wednesdayn at a meeting for all house presidents, is generally that the plan shouldn't, couldn't and wouldn't be successful. One of the main objections raised by the coeds is the fact that the 11:30 p.m. "lights out" program was literally dropped into their midst without any chance for them to voice their opinions. The "lights out" plan, although passed by Panhellenic and NOTICE