~1 i t 4 ailli Weaiher VOL. LIV No. 102 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, MARCH 25, 1944 Soviets Reach Dniester in 62-Mile S PRICE FIVE CENTS nash RAF Bomber Command Blasts Berlin Roosevelt Asks Balkan People To Protect Jews from NaZis Free Europeans, Asiatics Urged To Aid Intended Victims of German Oppression By The Associated Press s WASHINGTON, March 24.-Pres- ident Roosevelt, saying hundreds of thousands of Jews face death as a re- sult of Hitler's grasp of the Balkans, called on the peoples of those coun- tries and the Germans themslves to- day to hide intended victims from the Nazi executioners. The chief executive also asked in a statement that "the free peoples of Europe and Asia temporarily open their frontiers to all victims of op- pression. Refugee Committee Successful Mr. Roosevelt, in a voice heavy with the cold which kept him to his living qi threatened area were superior to the Japanese both on the ground and in the air. The new enemy column pushing up the Manipur River valley south of Imphal had established road blocks at several points, which the British were countering with the defensive "box system" they earlier used with success in Arakan. Heavy fighting was reported in progress north of Tunzan, which is 17 miles north of Tiddim in Burma. Nelson, Eceles Urge Program Of Stabailization Top Men Ask Federal Control of Country Beyond End of War WASHINGTON, March 24.-(IP)- Two of tlie administration's top men -War Production Chief Donald M. Nelson and Federal Reserve Chair- man Marriner S. Eccles-urged Con- gress today to keep the country un- der stabilization controls beyond the war's end. Nelson declared, however, that the need has passed for a National Ser- vice Act, recommended some time ago by President Rosevelt to author- ize the drafting of civilian labor for essential industries. He did say a li- mited service law would help the manpower situation. Eccles told the Senate Banking Committee Congress should keep the stabilization program alive two years after the end of the war "to maintain the public faith and the value of the dollar." The committee is consider- ing legislation to extend the price control act a year beyond June 30. A sudden release of pent-up spend- ing as soon as hostilities end "might well be fatal to the nation's econo- my," he said. Without stabilization controls bus- iness will be reluctant to undertake long-term postwar projects," Eccles declared. The Federal Reserve chair- man etimated "inflationary pressure" on June 30-expiration date of the price control act-would reach $194,- 000,000,000 compared with $79,000,- 000,000 on the same date in 1941. 'Dr. Warbasse Talks to Coops "Buiness for profit is in a state of decay," stated Dr. James P. War- busse, president emeritus of the Co- operative league of the United States, in a speech before the Inter-Coop- erative Council given last night at Robert Owen Cooperative House. The topic of his speech was "Co- operation in World Relief and Re- construction." Dr. Warbusse was in- troduced by Prof. A. K. Stevens of Dr. Warbusse pointed out that the r..._ n of __s - - _-.n _t - ,- 1, i - 7.n i"" Takes Toll Moscow Announces 20,000 Nazis Killed By The Associated Press LONDON, Maroh 25, Saturday- Russia's First Ukraine Army broke through to the Dniester River at the Balkan gateway city of Zaleshchiki yesterday, killing 20,000 Germans and capturing 3,500 in a four-day offen- sive which put the Red Army within five miles of the former Rumanian province of Bucovina and 60 miles from old Czechoslovakia, a Moscow communique announced last night. The 62-mile flanking smash below Tarnopol threatened to trap thous- ands of battered German troops to the east, part of the 50 German div- isions of more than 500,000 men al- ready threatened with encirclement in the Odesso area of southern Rus- sia. Reds Cut Railway Other Soviet units cut the Lwow- Tarnopol railway northwest of Tar- nopol, fought their way into Prosku- rov, 62 miles east of Tarnopol, sever- ed another German escape railway from lower Russia into Bessarabia, and toppled the German Bug River stronghold of Voznesensk above Odessa, the Soviet command an- nounced. Whole enemy garrisons were wiped out in the newsmash to the Dniester at captured Zaleshchiki, said a mid- night Russian bulletin recorded by the Soviet monitor, German troops also abandoned great piles of equip- ment, it said. Troops Overrun 40 Towns Marshal Gregory K. Zhukov's troops were. declared to have overrun 400 towns and villages in reaching the river n the southeastern corner of old Poland, and the thrust placed Soviet troops just 26 miles north of Czernowitz, big Rumanian rail junction controlling lines into Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary and south- ern Rumania. The 23,540 casualties inflicted on the enemy boosted to nearly 250,000 the German dead and captured in the Ukraine offensive, on the basis of Moscow announcements. Funds Mount Drive Proceeds Delta Gamma topped its quota by $100 or 331 per cent in the current Red Cross Drive, Marjorie Hall, '45, women's chairman, announced yester- day, as that house contributed $143.20 to the drive, the highest amount from a percentage standpoint yet to be reported. Other houses turning in contribu- tions included Stockwell Hall, $346 (partial returns); Couzens Hall, $251.25; Collegiate Sorosis, $57.50; Delta Smith league house, $10; and Magincalda league house, $5.00; thus bringing the total number of wo- men's contributions up to $1,452.46 for the local drive which has anoth- er week to run. John Clippert, '45E, head of the Union Red Cross Drive, reported that $1,300 has ben turned in to date, with Sigma Chi, Phi Kappa Psi, Oxford House, Chicago Lodge, meeting their quotas one hundred per cent, Contributions from Army person- nel have amounted to over $1,000. Navy men are forbidden by law to contribute. Washtenaw County has turned in $80,274.68, Charles Henderson reveal- ed yesterday, $53,858.56 of that amount coming from Ann Arbor which has a quota of $61,500. The county total is $92,500, The Univer- sity faculty exceeded its, $3,000 quota earlier this week, and the women and men on campus have quotas of $3,500 and $1,500 respectively. T'41 nc1?frduate7+ d f~rt Beoe ao T HEY'R E A RMYdBOUND: Selective Service Rules Tightened r ~~ By STERLIN F. GREEN associated Press Correspondent TASHINGT ;N, March 24,-Se- lective Service tonight intensified its drive for able-bodied young men in a series of sharp new in- structions to draft boards, while government agencies agreed on a plan to save a few "indispensible" youths for vital war industry. Aimed directly at faster induc- tion of men 25. and younger for . - ,, .c-vi. te rarsfrmm chosen key industries, and gave other agencies just three days to submit figures on the number of men proposed by them for defer- ment. McNutt had created the new committee to ration out occupa- tional deferments, for men under 26, and secured agreement of the Army and Navy that deferments should be considered for key men in railroading, logging, coal mining reclassify them as 1-A or other- wise as rapidly as the review is carried out. 2. To let men 26 and older stay in their present classifications un- til the boards have gone through the lists of all men under 26 in class 3-A as well as those deferred in industry and agriculture. 3. To order up for pre-induction physical examination all men und- er 26 who hold occupational defer- .. __.__ __ L L _. .. ." . .i . . , . i