d+ It 431U 1 Weather Showers VOL. LIV No. 100 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 1944 O PRICE FIVE CENTS Ary Unit Here To Be Cut to 1 200 Japanese Forces Smash Across Indian Boundary TBy The Associated Press NEW DELHI, March 22.-Japanese columns have made their first pene- tration of India and are pushing on westward through the Manipur Mountain country in the direction of the key road junction of Imphal, 30 miles away. Enemy Moves West The Japanese drive into India was announced by Allied Headquarters today in a communique which stated little except that the enemy "con- tinued to move to the west." Imphal is the southern terminus of an all-weather road that winds 175 miles north through the Naga hill Nazi Stronghold Of Pervomaisk Falls to Soviets Fortified Rail Junction Captured; Reds Within Eight Miles of Nikolaev By The Associated Press LONDON, March 22.-The Red Ar- my after a two-day battle today cap- tured the important fortified railway junction of Pervomaisk which has been protecting the German with- drawal from the southern Ukraine and to the southeast drove to within eight miles-of the big city of Nikolaev anchoring the German eastern front line, Moscow announced tonight. Reds Close in on Three Sides The Russians closed in on Hikolaev from the northeast and south and had the Nazi defenders pinned back against the wide estuary of the Bug River. Soviet troops pushing up from the south captured the town of Bala- banovka, eight miles from Nlkolaev's outsirt, it as annouined in te Moscow daily communique, recorded by the Soviet monitor. The Germans, meanwhile announc- ed that the Russians had launched a big flanking offensive in the strate- gic Proskurov-Tarnopol hinge posi- tion in the western Ukraine and Po- land and had forced the Nazis to fall back before strong infantry and tank blows. Reds Take Towns The Russians reported advances throughout the southern front, tak- ing more than four score towns and villages on the various sectors. The daily bulletin said several pop- ulated places were taken in a con- tinuing advance westward in Poland toward the large city of Lwow. Burton Holmes To Speak Today Lecturer Will Show Slides, Discuss Italy "The Beautiful Italy We Knew" will be described by Burton Holmes, well known travel lecturer in an Ora- torical Association Lecture at 8:30 p.m. today in Hill Auditorium. Pictures of Naples, Mt. Vesuvius, the Vatican and other spots of inter- est in Italy will be shown. Many of the films were taken at places in Italy where American servicemen are fighting today. 1943 marked the fiftieth year in which Mr. Holmes has traveled over the globe, taken pictures and given travelogues. He became a lecturer in 1893 just after the Columbian Expo- sition in Chicago. He has spoken here twice before in this year's lecture series-once describing Russia and once showing pictures of North Africa. Also pictured in the lecture will be scenes of Italy's normal industrial life, including pictures of the cameo carvers and tortoise shell workers of the southern regions and the marble, workers and agricultural ventures of the mountain regions. Tickets for the lecture will be on sale from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m., 2 to 5 p.m. and 7 to 8:30 p.m. today in the box office at Hill Auditorium. Servicemen Invited To Special Smoker country to a junction with the India- Assam-China supply line, Allied jug- ular vein in the Burma theatre. Thrust Minimized Gen. Sir Claude J. E. Auchinleck Commander in Chief for India unde Admiral Lord Louis Mountbatten southeast Asia commander, mini- mized the seriousness of the Japanese threat. He said the Manipur drive was an effort "to divert Allied forces and relieve strong Allied pressure against their lines on the Arakar front." (The Arakan front is on the wesi Burma coast roughly 250' miles southwest of the enemy push int Manipur.) "No real threat can materialize unless and until the Japanese man- age to penetrate to points where they can attack our rails and river com- munications or our airfields in As- sam,"Gen. Auchinleck said. (Although Imphal is 175 miles by road from any point on the Allied lifeline in the upper Brahmaputra valley, it is only about 75 miles air- line across rugged country from key rail and river lines there.) Air Inferiority Significant Gen. Auchinleck based his dis- counting of the Japanese threat on their inferiority in the air, which will not permit them to supply their forward columns by plane, and will prevent them from interfering with air supply to Allied troops. The Japanese forces now in India apparently crossed the upper Chind- win virtually unmolested while Allied troops in the area were concerned with an open crossing of the river north of Homalin. Yanks Strik e Bombing Raid By The Associated Press LONDON, March 23, Thursday- American heavy bombers, escorted by powerful fighter formations, struck Berlin through heavy flak yesterday, losing 13 bombers and nine fighters, and the RAF followed up with a strong smash at Frankfurt and unspecified other German tar- gets in the night. The Berlin station said in a broad- cast shortly after midnight that "strong British bomber formations tonight bombed places in the Rhine- land." This enemy report was promptly confirmed in London, with identification of Frankfurt as the major objective. American heavy bombers had attacked the Frankfurt area Monday. The American daylight attack yes- terday on Berlin was the fifth in 19 days and the heavy bombers were estimated to have dropped 1,500 tons of explosives. They encountered no fighter opposition, but the flak was extremely heavy. A report early today from Stock- holm said telephone communication between the Swedish city and Berlin had been broken since the American attack on the Nazi capital. London Is Bombed By 100 Nazi Raiders LONDON, March 22.-(P)-Ger- man raiders returned to London to- night while the sprawling British capital still was cleaning up the damage caused by the attack of more than 100 Nazi planes early today. " Flares were dropped in one district of the capital and in southern Eng- land, indicating the small-scale effort may have been an armed re- connaissance mission, since the Nazis seldom brave daylight for "spying" on the island. PREPARING TO GO INTO THE FIGHT, a P-47 Thunderbolt is hoisted ashore from the deck of a Liberty ship at an English port. YANKS USE BUSHKNI VES: Infantry Drives On i Cassino Ag .ainst Bi.tter Nazi Resistan.ce e e e 0 By The Associated Press ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, NA- PLES, March 22.-Allied infantry- men, fighting withbeverything from Sflamethrowers to bush knives, ad- vanced slowly tonight against bitter German resistance and severe terrain handicaps in the battle for Cassino and the eastern slopes of Monastery Hill. Field guns supported the foot troops from close range. The Germans were ejected from several more of the fortified build- Ball1eng+er Says Police Cannot Join CIO Group DETROIT, March 22.-(A')-Po1ice Commissioner John F. Ballenger aft- er conferring this afternoon with of- ficials of the State, County and Mun- icipal Workers of America (CIO), said: "Police officers affiliating with the CIO will be violating their oath of office. Therefore they will be brought before the police trial board with a view to dismissal." 'No 1,000 Membership' Furay, who is secretary-treasurer of the SCMWA, asked Ballenger this afternoon: "Suppose I brought in the signatures of 1,000 policemen on membership cards, would you fire them?" "I don't believe you have any such membership," the Commissioner re- plied. Police Force Is Military "The Michigan Supreme Court, in a recent ruling, has decided that a police department is a military force. The Supreme Court of the United States has not reversed the decision. I, as Commissioner of Police, would be committing an unlawful act if I permitted members of the Police De- partment to affiliate with the CIO." Detroit policemen last year were barred from joining the Fraternal Order of Police on the grounds it resembled a labor organization. Ballenger said he was informed the F.O.P. was seeking affiliation with the CIO union, but today Edward N. Barnard, attorney for the F.O.P., said it "is not identified with the CIO in any way and is not in sympathy with its objectives." ings at the southwestern corner of the ruined town and Fifth Army troops wired and mined the newly captured areas to prevent enemy infiltration. (North of Cassino, German troops made a sustained, five-hour attack Wednesday morning against Allied troops on ,Castle Hill, but were re- pulsed, the British radio announced in a broadcast recorded by CBS. ("As the German troops made des- perate efforts to climb the hill," it said, "Allied rifle and machine-gun fire held them back. At the same time about 20 German fighter planes were sent over to straf Allied rear' areas.") Allied artillery was hauled up today to blast point-blank at fanatic German parachute troops clinging to the ruins of the Continental Hotel and a half-dozen other buildings at the southern edge of Cassino as the fight for that Nazi stronghold rose to its wildest pitch. Nazis Say Rome Will Be Open City LONDO}N, March 22. - (.') -- The Germans said today they would com- pletely demilitarize Rome in an ef- fort to place responsibility for bomb- ings on the Allies, but it was regard- ed as unlikely here that the Allies would take any cognizance of this unilateral declaration of an "open city." The move was made to divert the military traffic from the eternal city "so that responsibility for the bomb- ing of Rome will remain entirely with the Allies." Panel Held on- Jewish Question Discussion Sponsored By Post-War Council "We must open up the gates every- where to let the Jews in," Dr. James B. Klee of the psychology depart- ment said in a Post-War sponsored panel discussion on "A Homeland for the Jews" last night. Others participating in the discus- sion were the Rev. Edward H. Red- man of the -Ann Arbor Unitarian Church, Roy Plotkin, Sylvia Savin and Netta Siegel. "What shall be done with the Jew- ish homeland is a United Nations question," the Rev. Redman stated. "The British home office has been administering Palestine very badly, even perversly." Post-War Council panels are held each Wednesday and a seminar will be held at 3 p.m. Monday in the Union. f : 4I T Trvnit Nazis Extend Stranglehold On Satellites Troops Enter Rumania As Puppet Government Is Set Up in Hungary By The Associated Press LONDON, March 22.-With Hun-' gary occupied and a puppet govern- ment established, Germany was re- ported tonight extending a strangle- hold over neighboring satellites in a feverish rush to construct a fortress- within-a-fortress against the Rus- sians westward surge and other Al- lied threats. General Mobilization Is Aim A general mobilization of all south- eastern Europe was the announced aim. The Germans followed up their LONDON, Thursday, March 23. -()-The London Daily Mail said in a Madrid dispatch today that German airborne troops had occu- pied the Soviet embassy in the Bul- garian capital of Sofia and had de- tained the Russian diplomatic staff, plunge into Hungary, where Nazi bayonets erected a Quisling Premier to direct a fuller Hungarian part in the German war effort, by penetrat- ing into Bulgaria, Rumania and So- vakia, said dispatches from neutral capitals. Germany's seizure of once-favored, but often recalcitrant Hungary was officially told by the Berlin radio to- day, and tonight it declared "Ger- man troops are still arriving." The first announcement said the Hun- garian Government had resigned and that the Nazi forces "arrived in Hun- gary as the result of a mutual under- standing."- Horthy Names Cabinet The German-controlled Budapest radio told the Hungarian people that Regent Nicholas Horthy, widely re- ported under Nazi detention since the German invasion early Monday, had sworn in the new pro-Nazi cabinet in the ceremonial hall of the Royal cas- tle late today. The broadcast said Doeme Sztojay, a former Hungarian Army officer and Hungarian Minister to Berlin, had been named to head a new puppet government. DNB later announced that, to keep him in line, Hitler had appointed Dr. Edmund Veehsenmay- er as "Minister and trustee of the Greater German Reich in Hungary." Volunteers Are Needed To Aid Red Cross Drive Volunteers are needed to take up. Red Cross collections in the two cam- pus theatres today through Wednes-' day and women are asked to register' on the bulletin board in the Under-' graduate Office of the League, to work in the Liberty street theatres and to contact Louise Meyer at 334 S. State Street forassignments in the State Street theatre. Free admis- sion to the shows will be accorded' coeds helping the Red Cross drive in' this manner. Washtenaw County passed the 80 der cent mark in its drive yester- day as county totals of $75,904.71 were reported by Charles Henderson, chairman of the drive. $50,331.34 of that amount came from the city of Ann Arbor. , No further donations have been, turned in by the men on campus, according to John Clippert, head of the Union drive, but three houses contributed $49.50 to swell the wo- men's total returns to $422.76, Mar- jorie Hall, women's chairman, an- nounced. 400 ASTP To Be Left by April 10 Soldiers Released from ASTP Training Will Be Assigned to Ground Forces Under the curtailment order restricting the number of men in Army Specialized Training Program (ASTP) issued three weeks ago, the Army unit on campus will be reduced to 1,200 men by April 10, Army Head- quarters disclosed yesterday. According to University figures released at the beginning of the current semester, there were 2,239 Army trainees enrolled in the University. Under the curtailment order issued by the War Department, these men taken out of ASTP training will be assigned to Army Ground Forces to alleviate the shortage of 200,000 men due to mounting battle casualties and slack in service inductions. 400 ASTP Men Will Remain Of the 1,200 Army men who will remain on campus, 400 will be classified as ASTP trainees while the remaining 800 will be included in the Japanese Language Company, the Judge Advocate Generals' School, and medical and dental trainees. The 400 ASTP men will be divided according to the following pro- portions: area and language, 200; advanced engineering, 31; ASTP reserves, 74; preprofessional, 120. The advanced engineering students are studying sanitary engineer g. The JAG School-established here in the summer of 1941-is now training 247 men, the largest in its history, according to figures released Monday by Col. Edward H. Young, commandant. Under the curtailment order announced Feb. 19, the European and Persian area and language units, and the basic engineering units on campus are being completely liquidated. 110,000 Being Reassigned in U.S. More than 110,000 men in ASTP training program in 223 accredited colleges and universities in the nation are being reassigned to replacement training centers according to the liquidation deadline set for April 1. As a result of this curtailment program, the service picture on campus will be: Navy V-12 trainees, 1500; Army, 1,200. Recognized as one of the leading specialized training centers in the nation, the University had at its peak in January approximately 3,700 servicemen in training here. * * * 4: a Army Transfers 36,000 Airmen to Ground Duty By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, March 22.-Con- fronted with unfilled draft quotas and a general shortage of ground forces, the Army announced today the transfer to ground duty of 36,000 young men who had been ear-mark- ed for air training. Meantime, a high military offi- cial reported that draft boards had been failing for 13 months to meet the calls of the armed forces, and asserted that "the time has arrived when we must have the fighting men we need." This statement was the latest de- velopment in a tug of war between the armed forces and industry and agriculture for the services of thou- sands of young men under 27. An aviation industry official countered with a claim that blanket cancella- tions of draft deferments granted the young men would cripple war-neces- sary airlines. Plans for congressional inquiries into charges that the draft has been used as a lever to force farmers into Engineering Speech Society To Debate Sigma Rho Tau, Engineering Speech Society, will hold a debate with the University of Detroit at 8 p.m. today in the Michigan Union. The topic of the debate will be "Resolved: That graduate engineers should be unionized," with Michigan taking the affirmative and Detroit the negative. The public is invited. the government agriculture program gave the situation a new twist. The Army Airforces also aw' flounced the suspension of enlist- ments of 17-year-olds in its enlist- ed reserve, saying that under the circumstances it is inadvisable to' hold a reserve beyond immediate requirements. It was announced, however, that airforce applications from youths of 17 still will be ac- cepted and training will not stop. Cumulative shortages in inductions since July, thesWar Department said, have made it necessary to use every available man pending operations. The military official, who declined to permit use of his name, put the draft shortage even further back, saying it had run for 13 months. General H. H. Arnold, chief of the Army Airforces, testifying be- fore the House Military conunittee on a bill to give Army status to the Women's Airforce Service Pilots (WASPS) set the induction deficit at "over 200,000." The 36,000 released by the airforc- es are men who have completed basic training in the Army and have been accepted for instruction as pilots, navigators, and bombardiers. General George C. Marshall, Army Chief of Staff, explained that ano- ther factor in the Airforce cutback was the fact that American forces are "approaching complete air su- premacy in practically every the- atre in which they are in operation at a much faster pace than the Army had dared to hope. C'hurchill Says N_11ew.B ig:Three M eetingNeeded LONDON, March 22.-(JP)-Prime Minister Churchill, under increasing fire over the Atlantic Charter, said today that there must be new con- sultations on the subject among the big powers. Although the Prime Minister did not say what form these new consul- tations might take, his carefully cho- sen words left onen the nn tshiity nf THE GUILTY FINGER: Keep Off Gras' Campaign Started by Freshman Group THREE TIMES IN TWO DAYS: Fire Department Called Out To Fight Blazes in U' and City Sleepy students en route to their eight o'clocks yesterday morning were rudely awakened by a voice over a public address system shouting: when he heard a booming voice over a loudspeaker shout, "YOU are being watched! We see you on that grass!" The accusing voices that shouted The Ann Arbor Fire Department was called out three times during the past two days for fires in two Uni- versity buildings and in a professor's Hospital reported a fire in the dry garbage room where chemicals were kept. It was believed that spontan- enns rnmbinanin wm. nrnhahly +he