America at war! (1941--) -- Part 2

Jap evacuees in Arkansas threaten officials’ lives

Investigations show strikes, turmoil, suspicion and huge waste of food at Denson Center
By Eugene Rutland, Scripps-Howard staff writer

Salary ceiling starts New Year as headache for everyone in radio

‘Will get their quotas and quit,’ says spokesman for stars on leading network programs
By Si Steinhauser

I DARE SAY —
Make way for Walt Disney’s Bambi and his little friends

By Florence Fisher Parry

Millett: Education, not husbands, is luring girls to college

Most of nation’s universities are intent on training coeds for specific jobs
By Ruth Millett

Federal debt $112.5 billion

It’s $48,108,785,114.57 redder than year ago

Women likely to fill uniform ranks in 1943

200,000 WAACs, WAVES, SPARS will release fighting men

Japan’s ‘soft belly’ near China offers best place for U.S. kick

Chain of bases in south are too tough
By B. M. McQuaid

Editorial: Delay won’t help

Editorial: In final analysis, military

Allies swarm over Burma in air offensive

U.S. units pacing non-stop attacks on Jap positions
By Darrell Berrigan, United Press staff writer

Guerrilla band keeps Japs tied to defense of Timor

Australians, left stranded by the invasion, hold out after 59 days in jungle
By Brydon Taves, United Press staff writer

Westinghouse delivers half-billion of war goods

Electrical devices to aim guns operate planes among material shipped

U.S. sets spending, owing and borrowing records

Expenditures climb to more than $6 billion each month as war costs mount; public debt is nearly doubled in year
By Charles B. Deggers, United Press staff writer

GE blueprints job plan for post-war era

Full employment is major objective of peace, Swope says

War stimulates invention of photographic devices

U.S. controls check rise in commodities

Price increase is half of that recorded in World War I
By Gilbert E. Busch, United Press staff writer

Repair record set for ships

Over 12,000 vessels made seaworthy in year

L for London is L for love in new Anglo-Yank code

British canteen girls, too, warned not to affront Americans
By Nat A. Barrows

year in review

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The first days of 1943 find the greatest number of nations in world history engaged in one common conflict – with 80% of the area and 60% of the population of the earth on the United Nations side. Even the 21 remaining neutrals, some of which have broken relations with the Axis, are greater in area than the Axis and occupied areas, but Germany and Japan control some of the world’s most populous regions. The maps show the world at war as it enters 1943 and as it looked on previous New Years.

January

1st – Americans fight Japs in Philippines. British admit loss of Sarawak, fight Japs in Malaya, battle Italians in Libya. Chinese troops aid in Burma battle. Russians hit Nazis in winter counteroffensive. Roosevelt, Churchill confer on state of war. OPA bans auto, truck sales. Wickard says U.S. food supply greatest in history.

2nd – Manila falls. Washington announces 26-power United Nations alliance.

3rd – Gen. Sir Archibald Wavell becomes Allied commander in Southwest Pacific.

5th – 77th Congress convenes.

6th – President Roosevelt sets production goals: 60,000 planes in 1942, 125,000 in 1943; 45,000 tanks this year, 75,000 next; 20,000 anti-aircraft guns this year, 35,000 next; 8,000,000 tons shipping this year, 10,000,000 next.

7th – President submits world-record budget: 1943 expenditures to be $58,927,000,000 – $52,786,000,000 for war; $35,440,000,000 deficit.

8th – Coldest weather in six years hits Pittsburgh as temperature drops to -9°F.

9th – Allegheny County struck a “gold mine” filled with coal on old Bell Farm which was purchased for $3-million airport. Country purchased farm for $260,000 and coal believed to be worth $200,000.

12th – William Davis named Chairman of War Labor Board of 12. Joe Louis signs to fight for Uncle Sam for $21 cut.

13th – Japs’ Bataan attack beaten off after 24-hour artillery duel. Donald Nelson named sole chief of war production.

15th – President orders Army enlarged to 3,600,000 in 1942.

16th – William S. Knudsen shifted to job of war production chief in War Department.

17th – Navy announces sinking of three Jap ships off Tokyo Harbor by U.S. submarine. Berlin announces death by “apoplexy” of Field Marshal Walther von Reichenau.

19th – Foreign ministers at Rio Conference decide to vote Axis break irrespective of Chile and Argentina. Former County Treasurer William M. Turner, central figure in $62,000 delinquent tax scandal of 1939, declared “unfit” to stand trial by two court physicians. Carole Lombard dies in plane crash in Nevada.

21st – WASHINGTON: Western Hemisphere plan announced at Rio Conference, provides abolition of trade barriers, common currency.

22nd – Japs launch New Britain attack.

24th – Pearl Harbor investigation blames inexcusable negligence by responsible officers. U.S. announces sinking of three Jap ships in Battle of Macassar Strait. Peru, Uruguay announce break with Axis under Rio Conference decision. Governor James maintained legal right to fire any State Civil Service employee without cause or hearing, defying Federal Security Board.

26th – U.S. troops land in Northern Ireland.

28th – Two hundred and fifty lose lives in torpedoing of Canadian liner Lady Hawkins off Puerto Rico.

29th – Germans recapture Benghazi.

30th – Grand jury recommended indictments of 78 members of district election boards.


February

1st – Huge truck and trailer hurtled down into upper Hays Borough, smashed auto and killed its driver, tore front off a house, splintered two garages and smashed another car. Driver and helper injured slightly.

2nd – President asks $500-million loan to China.

3rd – Finnish President says defensive war against Russia must go on at side of Germans. War deaths in 1941 placed at 1,250,000 or more.

6th – Pacific War Councils of United Nations set up in Washington.

8th – Maj. Gen. Fritz Todt, builder of Nazi super highways and Siegfried Line, killed in air crash.

9th – Liner Lafayette (Normandie) burns in New York Harbor. Adm. William Standley nominated as Ambassador to Russia. House passes $100-million Office of Civilian Defense bill with ban on frills, including dancers.

10th – Chiang Kai-shek, Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru meet to talk mobilization of Indian forces. La Guardia quits as OCD head; James Landis succeeds him.

11th – Women and children evacuated from Singapore as Japs pour onto the island.

12th – Nazi battleships Gneisenau and Scharnhorst, cruiser Prinz Eugen dash from Brest to Heligoland.

13th – Aviatrix Laura Ingalls convicted as unregistered Nazi agent.

14th – Joseph Libonati, 59-year-old stationary engineer, was sentenced to life imprisonment for the murder of Carrie Kolb, Elliot divorcée. A 78-year-old truant officer, Charles Atkinson, was reinstated following a three-day strike by Millvale students over his dismissal.

15th – Singapore falls.

16th – First father-and-son draft registration as all men born between Feb. 17, 1897, and Dec. 31, 1921, registered. Bandits tie up manager of Stanley Theater and seize $8,000.

17th – Jesse Levy, Brookline “numbers prince,” walked out of courtroom a free man because, as the state puts it, he allowed his 64-year-old father “to take the rap” for him.

18th – Stanley Theater bandits arrested in Akron, Ohio. Lightweight champion Sammy Angott unknowing driver for gang.

19th – Churchill shuffles cabinet; Capt. Oliver Lyttleton named production chief, replacing Beaverbrook.

20th – Japs invade Timor.

22nd – Soviet troops retake Kerch.

24th – Bomb in Ankara, Turkey, narrowly misses Nazi Minister von Papen.

25th – Government employees reported to number 4,800,000 – one in 11 of workers.

26th – Russian Ambassador Maxim Litvinov urges two spring offensives on separate fronts.

28th – Maj. Gen. Walter Short, Adm. Husband E. Kimmel, Pearl Harbor commanders, retired from service pending future court-martial.


March

1st – IN SEA BATTLE OFF JAVA: Nine Jap warships, 17 transports reported sunk; for United Nations, three cruisers and two destroyers, bulk of Dutch East Indies Navy.

3rd – British bomb Paris munitions factories. Worst snowstorm in Pittsburgh history, 18.2 inches deep, paralyzed city for 24 hours. Transportation system changed.

6th – U.S., Canada agree to start Alaskan (Alcan) highway.

8th – Japs land in New Guinea.

9th – British announce withdrawal from Rangoon.

10th – Lt. Gen. Joseph W. Stilwell appointed Chief of Staff to Com. Chiang Kai-shek.

15th – Hitler prophesies defeat of Russia in coming summer.

17th – Gen. Douglas MacArthur arrives in Australia.

18th – U.S. headquarters in Australia announces Yanks have been arriving for two months.

19th – Lt. Gen. Joseph W. Stilwell takes command of two Chinese armies in Burma.

20th – Dr. Ben G. Graham, superintendent of schools since 1930, died of a heart attack.

22nd – Sir Stafford Cripps arrives in India on errand to settle British-Indian political differences.

23rd – Occupational questionnaires to be sent to men in third draft.

24th – Japs occupy Andaman Islands south of Burma.

26th – Thirty-one men were killed in an explosion of 20 tons of dynamite in a cement quarry near Easton, Pennsylvania.

27th – British send hundreds of bombs over Ruhr industrial areas, Belgium, Holland in opening of spring air offensive.

28th – British Commandos raid Saint-Nazaire, Nazi sub base.

29th – Sir Stafford Cripps announces offer of Dominion status to India – after the war.

30th – Twenty-one American republics form Inter-American Defense Board in Washington.

31st – Japs bomb plainly-marked base hospital on Bataan.


April

2nd – Japs seize Akyab, Burma, threatening oil fields.

3rd – Navy reveals loss of seaplane tender USS Langley. Lloyd Wilson, USN, shot and slain while sitting in a parked car with his fiancé near Erie.

4th – U.S. recognizes Free French control of Cameroon and French Equatorial Africa.

6th – Japs bomb India, Mandalay.

7th – Youthful gang of four auto thieves arrested after stripping and stealing 150 cars in Pittsburgh District during previous nine months.

8th – Gen. George Marshall, U.S. Chief of Staff, arrives in London.

9th – Bataan falls.

10th – Jap dive bombers sink British carrier HMS Hermes off Ceylon.

11th – British withdraw India offers after Indian rejection.

15th – Hugh S. Johnson, columnist and former NRA administrator, dies at 59. Mayor Scully charges Councilman McArdle with attempted political blackmail in choice of police inspector. A 12-year-old Hazelwood boy was seriously injured when he inadvertently set off a bomb planted in a parked car in Hazelwood. Bomb believed placed there by numbers racketmen in attempt to “get” confectionery storeowner.

16th – Ruhr, Saint-Nazaire, Le Havre, Low Countries undergo greatest daylight raid of war by more than 400 planes.

18th – U.S. bomber squadron raids Tokyo, Yokohama, Kobe, Nagoya. New Vichy “Chief of the Government” Pierre Laval forms cabinet.

19th – Treasury asks public to invest tenth of income in war bonds.

20th – Department of Justice files suits in federal court against Carnegie Illinois Steel Company and Jones & Laughlin Steel Corporation, charging violations of priority regulations on selling steel.

21st – Ten-day furloughs granted automatically to accepted draftees upon recommendation of their local draft boards.

22nd – Mother of six children leaped to her death and two others suffocated when fire burned a section of Highland Building in East Liberty.

25th – $50,000 fire razes Carnegie Department Store. U.S. troops occupy New Caledonia, joining Free French for first time. Gen. Henri Giraud, popular French hero, escapes Nazi prison.

26th – Draft registration for men 45-65.

28th – Rents frozen at March 1, 1942, level for $86 million.

29th – Five thousand idle at Bethlehem Steel Corporation, Cambria Works, because of unauthorized strike of 500 coke oven workers.


May

1st – Explosion kills 8, injures 13 in Central Railways Signal Company plant in Versailles. Army decides to enroll 150,000 women as non-combatants – the WAACs.

3rd – Sugar rationing launched by OPA.

4th – British force starts taking over Madagascar, Vichy French island.

6th – Corregidor falls.

8th – Navy sinks 11 Jap warships in Coral Sea battle, loses carrier USS Lexington. No gasoline rationing in Pittsburgh and Western Pennsylvania, says Leon Henderson.

9th – Three gallons of gasoline fixed as pleasure driving quota in East.

11th – Billy Conn breaks hand in brawl with father-in-law. Japs broadcast Philippine conquest is complete.

12th – Nazi spring offensive opens in Russia.

13th – Fifty-six men killed in mine explosion six miles northwest of Morgantown, West Virginia.

14th – French conquest to immobilization of French warships at Martinique, Guadeloupe, French Guiana.

15th – Enemy sinks cargo vessel mile and a half from mouth of Mississippi.

16th – President frees Earl Browder, communist leader convicted of passport falsification.

17th – Retail price ceilings go into effect to cut living cost.

18th – U.S. force including tanks arrives in Britain in largest convoy thus far.

19th – President decorates Brig. Gen. James H. Doolittle, disclosing it was he who led air raid on Tokyo.

20th – British drop 40,000 incendiary bombs on Mannheim and Reich Marshal Hermann Göring says in speech that it’s toughest war yet. Gen. Edward Martin, Republican, and F. Clair Ross, Democrat, nominated for Governor.

22nd – President orders registration of 3,100,000 males in 18-20 age group.

23rd – Ninety-seven more hostages reported executed by Nazis.

25th – Mexico declares war on Axis.

26th – U.S. offers Russia regular United Nations Lend-Lease status.

27th – Reinhard Heydrich, deputy Protector of Bohemia, seriously injured by bomb. Martial law proclaimed.

28th – Seven Czechs executed in Heydrich investigation.

30th – Prague radio announces 44 more Heydrich executions. Actor John Barrymore dies at 60.

31st – British launch record raid on Cologne with 1,250 planes dropping 3,000 tons of bombs in 90 minutes.


June

1st – Twenty-seven Czechs reported executed in Heydrich case.

2nd – Brookline-Overbrook hooded bandit caught as he stalked sixth victim. More than 1,000 British planes drop 3,000 tons of bombs on Essen, home of Krupp armament works.

3rd – Jap planes bomb Dutch Harbor, Aleutians base; enemy occupies Attu, Agattu and Kiska in Aleutians. House votes war declarations against Bulgaria, Romania, Hungary.

4th – Japs bomb Midway Island. “Hangman” Reinhard Heydrich dies of bomb wounds; Nazis shoot 25 more Czechs. Total reaches 200.

5th – Naval and air battle of Midway Island begins.

6th – U.S. forces sink four Jap aircraft carriers, two cruisers, damage three battleships, four cruisers, three transports at Midway. We lose carrier USS Yorktown.

8th – Strike hits 10 A&P stores as 400 clerks stage sympathy strike in support of bakers who walked out.

10th – Nazis raze Lidice, Czech village, executing all men, sending women to concentration camps, children to “educational centers.”

11th – Five killed, 20 hurt in chemical explosion at North Side paint factory. Senate votes servicemen’s pay boost to $50.

12th – Decisive battle for Libya opens.

13th – Office of War Information formed, Elmer Davis named chief.

18th – Hooded bandit, 18, gets 20- to 40-year sentence. Winston Churchill arrives in Washington.

20th – Bardia, Libya, seven miles from Egyptian frontier, falls to Rommel.

21st – Tobruk taken by Nazis.

22nd – French Underground and de Gaulle sign accord.

25th – Maj. Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower placed in command of new “European Theater” of U.S. Army.

26th – Pittsburgh experiences first test blackout of the war.

27th – Washington-London statement promises attack to ease pressure on Russia.

28th – Accomplices of eight Nazi saboteurs landed by submarine on East Coast arrested.

30th – Youths in 18, 19, 20 age groups register for draft.


July

2nd – British flank Rommel and halt 350-mile drive 70 miles from Alexandria at El Alamein. Sevastopol falls after siege of eight months.

4th – U.S. bombers with Yankee crews make debut over Europe.

7th – Twenty-nine Bund leaders indicted.

9th – Army swears in first WAACs.

10th – Russians withdraw as Germans establish two bridgeheads over Don River.

11th – Army of 250,000 Yugoslavs opens guerilla offensive against occupation forces. Jock Sutherland quits as coach of Brooklyn pro football team to enter Navy as lieutenant commander.

12th – Illinois village takes name of Lidice.

14th – German Gestapo chief of Croatia assassinated on Zagreb’s principal square; victim’s bodyguard massacres 700 in retaliation.

15th – Russell Roddy, 18-year-old Latrobe youth, deliberately ran down stepfather, then accidentally crashed his auto into bridge killing his mother who was a passenger.

16th – Marshal Rommel assaults British positions at El Alamein in desperate bid for a breakthrough.

21st – Adm. Leahy named President’s military adviser.

22nd – Dr. Henry H. Hill, dean of University of Kentucky, appointed superintendent of Pittsburgh schools.

23rd – British call up 18-year-olds for military service.

26th – Polish government-in-exile reports 250,000 Poles murdered by Nazis thus far in campaign to eliminate Polish intellectualism. Ten-ton trailer truck gets out of control of Lawrenceville Hill, killing 3, injuring 3. Chauncey McDonald, 25, a former suitor of Isabel Shaw, killed her, then shot self on Sharon St.

31st – U.S. launches new aircraft carrier USS Essex.


August

1st – British air armada of 600 planes bombs Düsseldorf and German operations bases.

3rd – A hundred stores in Triangle open at night for shoppers.

4th – Fifty animals die in Ringling Bros. circus fire.

5th – Pope Pius protests mass deportation of Jews from occupied zones.

6th – Max Stephan of Detroit sentenced to hang for aiding escaped Nazi flier.

8th – U.S. forces launch offensive in Solomon Islands and bombard Jap-held Kiska in Aleutians. Six Nazi saboteurs executed and two others get life. Harry Dankert, the fake John Steinbeck, recognized by truck driver at Ligonier and arrested.

9th – Three U.S. cruisers sunk in Solomons.

10th – Navy announces U.S. troops on Tulagi Island of Solomons after three-day battle.

11th – Indian troops called to help suppress riots in Bombay and New Delhi.

12th – Winston Churchill flies to Moscow for conference with Joseph Stalin.

13th – U.S. troops win Henderson Field on Guadalcanal Island.

17th – Flying Fortresses make first raid on Europe, bomb Rouen.

18th – British place Gen. Bernard L. Montgomery in command of the 8th Army in Africa.

19th – Some 10,000 Commandos, including U.S. Rangers, with tanks and heavy guns, raid Dieppe, France.

21st – U.S. Marines raid Makin Island in the Gilbert group.

22nd – Brazil declares war on Germany and Italy.

23rd – American Legion brands strikes and lockouts as “treason” at convention here.

25th – Duke of Kent, the King’s younger brother, killed in air crash en route to Iceland on military mission.

26th – U.S. fliers bomb Jap counterattack force in Solomons. First daylight air-raid test successful here.

27th – Battleship USS Iowa (45,000 tons) launched in New York.

28th – Chinese retake “bomb-Tokyo” Chuhsien and Lishui air bases.

30th – Soviet fliers raid Berlin.


September

1st – Japanese Foreign Minister Tōgō quits and job is taken over by Premier Tōjō.

2nd – Germans manacle Dieppe prisoners.

3rd – Britain marks third anniversary of war by sending several hundred planes to unload bombs over Karlsruhe, railway and production center.

4th – Forty Nazi divisions and 1,000 planes bounce off Stalingrad defenses.

5th – Rommel’s forces start slow retreat in Libya.

6th – Laborers forced to pay fees to union to get jobs at Meadville war plant.

8th – Japs lose heavily in New Guinea mountain assault.

9th – Millvale police go on strike; want chief ousted.

10th – Baltimore customer awarded $50 from retailer in instance of 2¢ overcharge.

11th – Nazis advance to Volga above and below Stalingrad.

12th – Japs massacre wounded Marines on Guadalcanal. David H. Diehl, General State Authority director, charges “bungling” at Oakland Hospital dedication attended by Governor James.

14th – British Commandos raid Tobruk.

15th – William M. Jeffers named rubber administrator. Carrier USS Wasp sunk in Solomons.

17th – U.S. tanks and artillery beat Japs at Tenaru on Guadalcanal.

18th – British announce use of four-ton bombs.

21st – Nazi executions in occupied nations at 207,000. Overbrook Junior High School teacher branded “petty chiseler” for obtaining extra sugar under a phantom daughter’s name.

22nd – Stalingrad defenders hold Nazis in house-to-house fighting.

23rd – Willkie sees Stalin. Morton Kagen, 26-year-old attorney, slugged by Patrolman Martin O’Toole, president of Fraternal Order of Police. Kagen said he thought O’Toole was a thug and called for police.

24th – Fifteen dead, five missing, in B&O train wreck near Dickerson, Maryland.

25th – Victory Fleet builders round out one year with record of 488 ships (5,450,000 tons).

28th – Census says U.S. population on Jan. 1 was 133,965,000, contributed to by 2,728,000 births during the previous year. Three-year-old Eleanor Hughes, with a sewing needle imbedded in her heart, dies in Children’s Hospital following failure of attempted operation.

29th – Nazis bomb southern England; direct hit kills 38 at boys’ school. J. A. Witt, 79-year-old Brushton storekeeper, found shot to death in grocery store; unknown bandit believed killer.

30th – Governor James orders 35 mph speed limit in Pennsylvania. Hitler promises to take Stalingrad.


October

1st – Germans make costly advance in Stalingrad streets.

2nd – Patrolman Martin O’Toole ordered dismissed by police trial board for slugging attorney. Willkie welcomed in Chungking.

3rd – U.S. Army occupies Andreanof Islands in Aleutians group. State liquor store employees stage one-day walkout in protest of low wages.

4th – State liquor clerks suspended for walkout. Stalin says Allied aid far below contribution of Russia to the cause.

8th – Lord Halifax visits Pittsburgh war plants.

9th – Liquor drought near in county and state stores remain closed for sixth day.

11th – 2nd Lt. William Abbott granted divorce from Mrs. Ann Eaton Abbott, charging wife “too extravagant.” Australian fliers in Egypt bomb Crete, leave fires visible 50 miles.

12th – Malta reports downing 37 planes during resumption of Axis assaults, the assaults themselves indicating convoys to Africa.

13th – Jap cruiser, four destroyers, transport sunk off Savo Island; U.S. loses one destroyer.

14th – Japs bombard Henderson Field on Guadalcanal as they land reinforcements on north coast.

15th – John M. Hopwood, Pittsburgh industrialist, resigns as chief of War Materials, Inc.

16th – Liquor clerks get 15% raise. RAF (350 planes strong) gives it to Cologne again.

17th – U.S. troops reported in Liberia, Africa.

18th – Vichy reported granting citizenship to 100 Gestapo agents to facilitate German activity in unoccupied zone.

19th – Japs broadcast they’ll “severely punish” U.S. fliers captured after Tokyo air raid April 18.

20th – British Admiralty announces toll of 530 Axis ships sunk by British and U.S. navies so far; also, launching of HMS Howe and HMS Anson, two 35,000-ton battleships. May Robson, stage and screen actress, dies at 84. Floyd Shawley, 25-year-old Army deserter, eludes Army posse in Ligonier Mountains, after daring Military Police to come after him. William Lyngvar shoots and seriously injures eight-year-old sister in Monroeville home.

21st – Submarine toll in Western Atlantic reaches 501. Twenty-four Bundists get five-year prison terms, the maximum.

22nd – U.S. forces repel Jap land attack on Guadalcanal.

23rd – RAF raids Genoa and Turin in heaviest attack of war on Italy. Frank Philips, chairman of board of Philadelphia Co., dies at age of 65.

24th – British 8th Army, with air superiority, opens third offensive in Africa. RAdm. William F. Halsey Jr. replaces VAdm. Robert L. Ghormley as chief of Solomons action.

25th – RAF bombs Milan, Italy.

26th – Major land, sea, air battle underway in Solomons. U.S. loses aircraft carrier.

29th – Hitler reported to have ordered Stalingrad taken regardless of cost.

30th – Jap fleet reported fleeing Guadalcanal area.


November

1st – Japanese naval forces withdraw northward after suffering severe damages at Guadalcanal, Navy reports.

2nd – Australians capture Kokoda, Jap base on New Guinea.

3rd – Dewey wins governorship of New York, ending 20-year Democratic state rule. Henry J. Yute, City Director of Supplies and head of scrap salvage drive, dies a victim of overwork.

4th – Gen. Martin defeats F. Clair Ross by 215,000 votes for Governor. Republicans show high gains. Rommel’s forces in Egypt declared to be in full retreat. British capture 9,000 full prisoners, including Gen. Ritter von Thoma, commander of Afrika Korps.

5th – Republicans gain seats in Congress, imperil Democratic control. Employees of three large Pittsburgh department stores go on strike.

6th – British sign armistice with French at Madagascar. Wages are “frozen” at Sept. 15 level, and income is limited to $25,000 a year.

7th – Powerful U.S.-British forces land on Atlantic and Mediterranean coasts of French North Africa.

8th – Allies take over Algiers. Vichy breaks off relations with United States.

9th – Strike ends at department stores.

11th – Nazi troops pour into unoccupied France as Hitler declares armistice broken.

12th – Gen. Eisenhower reveals that Gen. Mark Clark and other officers paved way for North African campaign in underground visit three weeks before. WPB extends gas rationing to entire nation.

14th – British bombers blast Genoa. Capt. Eddie Rickenbacker and all but one of his companions, missing in South Pacific since Oct. 21, found alive.

15th – Adm. Darlan appoints Gen. Giraud as French military chief in Africa.

16th – Three-day naval battle in Solomons ends in destruction of 28 Japanese warships, including two battleships and five cruisers.

19th – RAF raids Italy’s Fiat airplane works at Turin.

21st – Half of Jap forces landed on Guadalcanal wiped out, remainder dispersed, Navy announces.

23rd – Dakar and French West Africa join territories under control of United Nations without military action, with Adm. Darlan as administrator.

27th – French scuttle major part of fleet as Germans march on Toulon.

28th – Boston nightclub fire kills nearly 500.

29th – Prime Minister Churchill warns Italy to get out of war or face prolonged air attack from Britain and from Allied North African bases.


December

1st – Adm. Darlan assumes post of Chief of State in French Africa. Mileage rationing begins. Bus, trolley, rail lines here groan as Pittsburgh gets “first taste” of gasoline rationing.

2nd – Mystery baby found abandoned in 10th St. Hotel.

3rd – Lt. Col. Boyd “Buzz” Wagner missing for four days on flight from Florida to Alabama.

5th – Navy lists official Pearl Harbor losses. Paul V. McNutt named manpower administrator.

6th – Claude Wickard named food production, rationing administrator.

7th – Tank battle rages among Tebourba hills; air activity increases. Nation remembers Pearl Harbor.

8th – Steps taken to place French ships in Dakar at disposal of the United Nations. Public Utilities Commission orders Peoples Natural Gas Company to reduce gas rates about 15% and to refund $3 million to 160,000 Western Pennsylvania consumers.

9th – Pat Fagan ousted as District 5 president of UMWA after 22 years of service. British drop two- and four-ton bombs on Turin, Italy, knocking city’s industry out of the war.

10th – Hitler again revamps lineup: Gen. Kurt Zeitzler goes in for Gen. Franz Halder as Chief of Staff; Col. Gen. Hans Jeschonnek, 44, and youngest of his rank, placed in charge of Air Force staff; Adm. Frick becomes Navy Chief of Staff. Gen. MacArthur’s headquarters reports all Gona in U.S. hands.

11th – Strike at D. L. Clark Candy Company on North Side cuts flow of “pogie bait” to fighting men.

13th – Allies raid from Italy to France.

14th – Bootlegging crops up in liquor shortage here.

15th – One fireman killed, 233 injured as smoke, fire does more than $75,000 damage to William Penn Hotel. Fifteen hundred Italians lost as subs sink British prison ship.

16th – WLB denies right to enter municipal labor disputes.

17th – Canada curbs drinking for duration.

18th – Gas sales halted on Atlantic Seaboard. Henderson resigns OPA.

19th – British invade Burma. War workers get gas.

20th – B and C gas coupons cut to three gallons. Pittsburgh’s mystery baby identified as son of ex-convict.

21st – Zero weather hits here (coldest December on record). 43,260 Nazi prisoners taken on Don Front.

22nd – RAF bombs blast Munich.

23rd – Germans bomb own troops to halt Russian retreat. Ossified bride weds. Twenty-two die, three seriously injured as huge rocks crush bus near Aliquippa.

24th – RAF bombs Italian factories near Turin. Darlan assassinated.

25th – White House has tenth Christmas with Roosevelts.

26th – Darlan’s assassin executed. Allies drive on Tunisia.

27th – 300,000 Nazis face annihilation.

28th – Reds gain on six fronts.

29th – Red Army speeds Rostov drive. Smoking banned on streetcars, buses in Pittsburgh city limits.

30th – Pittsburgh has second biggest flood in history as waters rise to 36.6 crest.

31st – Flood waters subside slowly as damage runs to millions. Thousands made homeless.

Anything can happen – and did!
Led by football, sports contributed daffy chapter to country’s war year

Upsets so common they cease to be upsets
By Robert Mellace

New York – (Jan. 2)
Sports made the most of its last big fling until victory is achieved.

The year 1942 was a spectacular year of upsets. There were, among other things:

The dethroning of the proud Yankees by the upstart St. Louis Cardinals.

The comeback of overworked Alsab.

The phenomenal pole-vaulting of Cornelius Warmerdam and distance running of Gunder Hägg, the swift Swede who broke a record every time he stepped up to the track.

‘Skins get even

The Washington Redskins getting hunk with the Chicago Bears for the 73–0 pasting of two years ago.

It was perhaps the craziest season in football history.

The young St. Louis Cardinals started rolling, Aug. 4. Theirs was an unprecedented rush that was never checked. Although the Brooklyn Dodgers closed well, such was the drive of the Redbirds that they overcame a 10-game deficit. Then they outplayed, outran, outfought and outsmarted the Yankees and freshman Johnny Beazley came through in the clutches.

College football struggled through a season marked by startling reversals of form and transportation difficulties to finish with precisely one unbeaten major team – Tulsa. The consensus was that Ohio State turned out the most powerful combination among the rah-rah boys. Georgia Tech and Alabama gave the Southeastern Conference priority on New Year’s Day Bowl games by drawing UCLA, Tulsa, Texas and Boston College, in that order.

Sinkwich No. 1

Georgia had the college player of the year in Frankie Sinkwich. Holy Cross powered the biggest upset by exploding the invincibility myth of unbeaten Boston College.

The Great Lakes Naval Training Station turned out the top service team.

A mass movement of champions and foremost contenders to the services left little first-class boxing talent.

The outstanding developments of the year were Beau Jack, an Augusta Negro who came from nowhere to win the lightweight leadership by successive knockouts; Tami Mauriello, who made rapid strides among the heavyweights; and Ray Robinson, flashy Harlem welter.

Boxing muddled

Jimmy Bivins of Cleveland repelled everybody of consequence except Joe Louis and Billy Conn, but disappointed in his New York bow.

Joe Louis defended his title – once for Navy and again for Army Relief, but the biggest one of all – the rematch with Billy Conn – was called off because the arrangements shocked Secretary of War Stimson.

Ben Hogan, the top money winner, bagged the Hale America tournament at Chicago’s Ridgemoor. This tournament passed for the U.S. Open, which was cancelled.

Sam Snead finally won a major tournament – the PGA at Absecon, near Atlantic City.

Alsab comes back

Ted Schroeder, of Glendale, California, won the national tennis singles convincingly enough to be ranked with the more accomplished players who have attained that status.

Closing with racing, Alsab finished one up in three meetings with Whirlaway. Shut Out helped Greentree to the Kentucky Derby and Belmont Stakes, among other rich events, lost to Alsab twice and beat him twice. Occupation won the Belmont Futurity, but Count Fleet set a world mile record for two-year-olds, won the Pimlico Futurity and generally was recognized as the finest juvenile.

Betting soared to new heights, and racing contributed nearly $3,000,000 to war funds. Taxes in New York alone amounted to $10,000,000.

If he cared for one, which he doesn’t, that is the one excuse the sucker who bets on horses could offer.