' F it'. 4~U 4 aitli Wei ather Riand tWarmenr VOL. LIV No. 101 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, MARCH 24, 1944 PRICE FIVE CENTS Soviets !n Key Indiar Jap Armies ,: From Imphal Tokyo, Berlin, Allied Commnuniques Give 2i Differing Accounts By CHARLES A. GRUMICH Associated Press Correspondent NEW DELHI, INDIA, March 23.- Japanese forces' driving northward from Burma into India up to the Manipur River Valley have pushed to a point 30 miles south of Imphal, I key road center already threatened by another Japanese army moving westward1 through the jungles into W India, it was announced today by Al- lied Headquarters. I A communique disclosing the sec -H ond invasion of India by Japanese HOU within the last 48 hours said the Japs had slamme'd northward 80 miles T( from the Tiddim area in Burma. Yes- O C terday a communique announced A another Japanese force had 'crossed Acts the upper Chindwin River near Thaungdut and had advanced to a Bill point 30 miles east of Imphal. (The Tokyo radio said tonight in a For4 broadcast reported by NBC that Jap- Join anese troops now are "in complete control" of a 700-mile strip of Indian WASHI territory along the Indo -Burmese Arue border. -Aosd (The Berlin radio said Indian have beenr troops led by Subhas Chandra Bose, Triple A leader of the National Indian Free- tions an dom Movement, were fighting with House lat the Japanese against Allied forces on practices the Inido-Burmese frontier.) The latest Allied communique said .partment the Japanese troops which had ad- On a VC vanced ,northward from Tiddim re- approved gion wei'e standing on the west salary pa shores of Lake Logtak, 30 miles due demands south of Imphal. riculture There was no suggestion that the "as a co] force had dashed 80 miles north to or for thE constitute the southern arm of a pin- tificate f cers movement threatening to spill commodit from the hills onto the Imphal Plain. Rep. T ________________to no av from ado Couny Gves until ac complaini to act on letters an The c To edCros Rep.Hr To RedCross an Agric of a lette: Washtenaw County has contribut- in Mariox ed $77,824.68 to the local Red Cross w~,as told 1 Drive, according to yesterday's tabU- show ac lation, $51,819.06 of which has come ship or b from the city of Ann Arbor, Charles immediat Henderson, W ash tenaw County "Select chairman, announced yesterday. A said LIh With only seven days remaining to condone complete the drive, the county has neverthe yet to collect wergo $15,000 if it is to wregi make its quota. Four 'women's U S houses turned inl contributions to the campus drive yesterday and brought the wo- WASH men's total up to A lingeri $641.06, Marjor- tVE MORE out of t ie Hall, women's - , g complete chairman, an- 'States a nounced. Betsy Barbour House con- partner o tributed $188.30 to the drive, more Secreta than $50 above its quota. Pickerill, ence the Asman and Freeman Houses also hopes F made contributions. away fro. John Clippert,,head of the men's far as he Red Cross Drive, reported that no mistice n further returns had been tabulated terminate in their drive. Willkie Answers Epi Critic in Senate T RACINE, Wis., March 23.-(/P- n Wendell L. Willkie declared tonight that charges of "campaign oratory" made against him because of his An ep promises and pledges in the 1940 been swe presidential campaign were "purely weeks ac false." cials and H e said that the Senator who made especially that charge against him in a Con- gressional hearing "later in the pres- Coats, ence of 50 newspapermen told me to classroom my face that he had tod aa falsehood afer tear and he had the good grace to apol- and ans Smash 43 Miles into Old Poland z Road Center Threatened by Jap Forces Reds Enter f I N D Y F L I G H T D E C K...i-Marine gunners lean into a brisk wind to keep their balance on the flight deck of a U. S. aircraft carrier somewhere in the Pacific. se Seeks ib Unfai of AA.A. Bans Practice of cing Farmers To i or Be Drafted INGTON, March 23.-to})- by charges that farmers compelled to sign up with or risk losing their gas ra- d draft deferments, the e today wrote a ban on such into the Agriculture De- appropriation bill. ote of 93 to 68, it tentatively an amendment denying yments to any person who that a farmer join the Ag- Adjustment Administration rndition of draft deferment e granting of a priority cer- or any rationed article or ty." 'arver (Dem., Ga.) pleaded ail that the House refrain. opting such an amendment committee could study the ts. He urged the House not "the basis of two or three Ld post cards." arges have been made by ness (Rep., Ind.), who told ulture subcommittee today r he received from a farmer n, Ind. The farmer said he by his draft board he had to certificate of AAA member- e placed in lA, subject to e induction. ive Service and the Triple hey do not countenance nor this," Harness said, "but Less they are doing it and ng to stop it." INGTON, March 23.-()- ng hope that Finland will get he war forstalled tonight a break between the United nd that northern fighting of Germany. " ary Hull told a news confer- American government still inland may finally work m Germany, adding that, so knew, Russian-Finnish ar- negotiations have not been ed. U.S. Planes Smashr Five Nazi Targets in Raids 20 Enemy Ships Shot Down, Americans Lose 27 Bombers, Six Fighters in Battle By The Associated Press LONDON, March 22.-Strong forces of American bombers, following up a record 3,360-ton bombardment of Frankfurt by the RAF last night, carried out a sweeping series of daylight attacks against five other German targets today, shooting down at least 20 enemy planes as the Nazi air force came up in strength to battle.- Twenty-seven American bombers and six fighters were lost as the U.S. Eighth Air Force used probably more than 1,500 planes in bombing rail yards, war factories and air bases in' northwest Germany.7 It was the 13th attack against Ger-] man targets in March and the sixtht strong blow in nine days. It was the 18th operation for the month for the heavies and equalled the record set in February-indicat- ing that the record number of day- light attacks made in one month would be easily exceeded by the end of March. The Germans had no time to re- cover from the daylight operations before air raid warnings were sound- ed in the Reich against RAF night attackers. At 9 p.m. the Berlin radio+ warning system broadcast: "A num- ber of nuisance raiders are over northwestern Germany." U.S. Strategic Air Force headquar- ters announced strong formations of Liberators and Fortresses hit: The railway yards at Hamm; an air station at Achmer; a bomber base at Handorf; a war factory at Muen- ster and the Messerschmitt produc- tion center at Brunswick. In the latest raids all the scattered targets were bombed visually in good weather with good results, the Air. Allies Destroy ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, South- west Pacific, March 24, Friday.-()- Allied bombers have destroyed two small Japanese freighters, seven coastal vessels and 23 barges off We- wak, the enemy base on the north- eastern NewGuinea coast, Allied Headquarters reported today. The airmen swept the coast from Wewak to Aitape, about 90 miles to the northwest, dropping a totalof 200 tons of bombs on airfields and supply dumps, destroying parked planes, warehouses and gun positions. Force communique said, except Brunswick, where clouds required the use of instruments. This was the first time the German air force had given battle since1 March 18. I London Feels Third Successive A ttckC LONDON, March 24, Friday-V)- Nazi fire raiders dropped incendiar- ies on some sections of London early this morning in a short attack on the capital-causing the third alarm in three nights. The Germans came last night on armed reconnaissance, apparently primarily to survey results of the big attempt the night before to set fire to the capital. Gunfire opened soon after the alarm sounded and the raiders over- head signal was heard in some build- ings. Engineers in Unions Debated U. of D., Sigma Rho Tau,7 a Wn by Dcfault In a debate. between Sigma Rho Tau, Engineering speech society, and the University of Detroit, two debate teams discussed the question of the unionization of registered engineers last night in the Union. Since it started late, both teams won by default. The affirmative side of the de- bate was taken by Michigan. Robert Dangl, '44E, Jerry Cardillo, '44E, and Philip Snyder, '46E, represented the Michigan team. The affirmative pointed out that the engineer aver- ages $1.15 an hour during his life- time. It was stated that engineers as all other occupational groups need an organization to represent them- selves in Congress and raise their standards. The negative, taken by the Detroit team, stated that engineering is a professional occupation and the per- sonal individuality and integrity of the engineer should not be lowered by the leveling process of unioniza- tion. Warbasse To Ankara Reports Nazi Occupation Of Rumania Hitler Begins Scheme To Bully Balkans into Position Against Reds LONDON, March 23.-()-In a desperate demonstration of Nazi pow- er, Adolf Hitler, holding Hungary under his thumb today, launched a campaign of bullying the other south- eastern European nations into a stand-or-perish position with Ger- many against the onrushing Red Ar- my. A strongly-supported Ankara re- port said that German troops began the formal occupation of Rumania early today. Telephone communica- tions between the Rumanian capital of Bucharest and Sofia in Bulgaria were interrupted. (A London broadcast said a dis- patch from Switzerland declared that Prince Cyril of Bulgaria and Regent Bogdan Philov "have been ordered to the headquarters of Hitler next Mon- day." This broadcast was reported by CBS.) Germany's present moves appar- ently were designed to stem the rising tide of peace sentiment in that sec- tion of war-weary Europe and pre- vent-temporarily at least-a repeti-' tion of the disintegration which led to Germany's downfall in 1918. Even as Hitler rode herd over Hun- gary through a new Quisling premier, there were indications that all Nazi satellites were being given the choice of providing complete military co- operation with Nazi direction, or of being occupied by Nazi troops. Some London quarters maintained the Hitler pressure could only delay and would not prevent the ultimate collapse in the Balkans. It was elsewhere indicated that Hitler was preparing to "kidnap" Ru- mania to shore up his tottering Bal- kan edifice. There were widespread rumors that Premier Ion Antonescu had been summoned to Hitler's pres- ence as Admiral Nicholas Horthy, Re- gent of Hungary, had gone before him. Kaiser To Build Sips for Dutch Gove rnment WASHINGTON, March 23.-(P)- In a major move to cushion the im- pact on industry and labor' of con- verting from war to peace produc- tion, Henry J. Kaiser today announced plans to build 30 coastwise cargo ships for the Dutch East Indies gov- ernment for war and peace-time use among the South Pacific Islands. The contract is a cash deal with the Netherlands Indies government and therefore does not require ap- proval of lend-lease officials. Kaiser told reporters he .expects men and materials will be available when the time comes to start building the ves- sels, probably before the first of the year. All will be constructed at Kaiser's Yard No. 4 at Richmond, Calif., where Kaiser said he will be finished in a relatively short time with government contracts on a number of larger type coastwise ships. "The government is cancelling some war contracts and stock piles are beginning to appear," he told re- porters. "We must use available fac- ilities, and foreign governments are as good a market as domestic if it will keep our men at work." TNature Does Her ' Patriotic Duty! Nature came to the rescue of the Buildings and Grounds Depart- ment yesterday. Since the icy storms last week the campus flag has been "flapping merrily in the breeze" day and night contrary to the law which states that "the flag of the United States shall not fly after sundown,c except on a battlefield."1 Buildings and Grounds did notc deliberately break a law. The flag1 was caught at the top of the flag-t pole when the flag rope froze and broke. Officials hunted high and lowz for some brave person to climb the pole but even for patriotict reasons no one would volunteer; until the weather became warmer. Nature took matters into her1 own hands yesterday. The rain thawed out the rope and weightedz down the flag enough for it to slide from the top without artifi- cial means. Now the only problem which re- mains is to climb the pole and re- place the rope.t House Moves To Supervise Lend-Lease Committee Attaches Watchdog Clause to Bill Extending Act WASHINGTON, March 23.-(A)- Backed by the Foreign Affairs Com- mittee, a move started in the House today to give Congress watchdog power over the President in final settlement of lend-lease contracts. This authority was written into the bill extending President Roose- velt's lend-lease program for another year beyond June 30. The revised bill was ordered reported for action by the entire House. The committee conceded that it may be the fuse for a pointed argument and so a vote probably will not be sought until after the Easter vacation. The amendment is phrased this way: That extension 'of lend-lease is not to be construed to give the President any authority to "assume" obliga- tions on the part of the United States without established constitu- tional procedure, in other words con- gressional review. Allied. Shooting O U' .S. Planes Is Explained WASHINGTON, March 23.-(')- - War Secretary Stimson said today the Allied gunfire which shot down 23' American transport planes during the invasion of Sicily was the result of "one of those terrible hazards that must be taken in any bold, compli- cated modern maneuver." "However, I wish to emphatically scotch here and now," he told a news conference, "any report that the shooting down of the transports -with the loss of 410 lives-could be traced to a lack of coordination among land, sea and air services. Without identifying the dispatch, he said a foreign correspondent who reported the air forces operated sep- arately during the invasion did "a complete disservice to a splendid Air Force." Kovel on Road To Warsaw Russians Announce 37 Mile Breakthrough Into Tarnopol Area By TOM YARBROUGH Associated Press Correspondent LONDON, March 23. -The Rus- sians tonight announced a 37-mile- deep breakthrough in the stubborn- ly - defended Tarnopol hinge area of the eastern front, and Berlin re- ported that other Red Army forces to the northwest in a 43-mile advance deep inside old Poland had broken into the town of Kovel on the main road to Warsaw. The smash into Kovel, on which the Russians were silent, carried the swift-rolling Russians to a point only 33 miles from the German-Russian partition boundary established in 1939-the line from which the Ger- mans invaded Russia June 22, 1941. Might Trap Nazis The Russian announcement of the big Tarnopol breakthrough came 24 hours after Berlin had reported the offensive, describing it as a powerful flanking maneuver to the south to meet Russian forces on the Dniester. Such a thrust could trap large Ger- man forces pocketed to the northeast up as far as the Vinnitsa area. The Russian daily communique broadcast tonight disclosed that the First Ukraine Army had driven di- rectly between the hard German cores of defense at Tarnopol and Proskurov and swirled right and left in maneu- vers designed to encircle those cities and thus smash the pivot pins on which the Nazis' Ukraine forces de- pend. Offensive Rolls Forward With Tarnopol already cut off on the north, east and south, the Rus- sians said they had taken 32 miles of the railway running south, from a point three miles south of the city to the junction of Kopchintse, 35 miles south of Tarnopol. Bitter Struggle For Cassino Still Continues ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, NA- PLES, March 23.-(P)-The .latest phase of the bitter struggle for Cas- sino, Nazi stronghold defending the Roman valleys, raged through its eighth day today with battle-weary New Zealand troops still fighting at the town's southern edge and other, Allied forces clinging stubbornly to several hard-won heights west of the town. No important change of position had been reported. The enemy threw two strong coun- terattacks against Castle Hill, an in- termediate peak only a few hundred yards from Cassino's western edge, yesterday, but each time was thrown back with heavy losses. French artil- lery repulsed two other Nazi stabs near Monte Castellone, three miles northwest of Cassmo. German artillery and mortars em- placed in the hills maintained a heavy fire on Allied positions. Co-Chairmen of Group Elect ed At the first meeting of the spring term yesterday Inter-Racial Associa- tion elected Ethel Sherwindt and Margaret Stevens as co-Chairmen. Included in the general outline drawn up for this term at the meet- ing are: the distribution of Fair Employment Practices Committee and anti-poll tax petitions, presenta- tion of a series of lectures and for- ums and picnics and hikes to Saline. The other officers elected are: Florence Jhung, secretary; Warren Ambrose, treasurer; Phyllis Hornby and Mary Penick, co-chairmen of the Minorities Committee, and Na#- cy Groberg, chairman of the Pub- licity Committee. Weber To Discuss U' Athletics Today demic of Petty Thievery U' Buildings Hits Campus Whitney Chief Pharmacist at U' Hospital T'o Leave May 1 demic of petty thievery has eeping the campus in recent ccording to University offi- students were warned to be ly careful of their belongings. purses and billfolds left in ms, corridors and study halls mpting bait to the pilferers increasing number of thefts ,n rnnr.ta University buildings with money and all marks of identification carefully removed. "Evidently," he said, "the ones who stole them took everything of value and then left the empty purse where it would be found." Report to Lost and Found When students find that some- thing of theirs has been taken or misplaced, they should report it in th nma +ra +hf th irlinr in whiCh ., t t Speak Tonight Dr. James P. Warbasse, president .«". ,i .. . .F - - - - e - ' r~r - ~ n . .. 7 Harvey A. K. Whitney, who has been chief pharmacist at the Univer- sity Hospital since 1927, will leave the staff of the hospital May 1 to join the Medical Service Department of the E. I. Du Pont de Nemours Co. in Richland, Wash. Francke To Be Successor }T7'ic rncie na:t +hA haniial mll h30 He is a member of the American Pharmaceutical Association and a former vice-president of that organi- zation. He is also a member of the association's National Formulary Re- vision Committee. Prominent in Field The founder and first vice-presi- dent of the American Assoiatinn nf