I! pl _l.1 , r \:Y h 4op 4W t t 4.A Weather Cloudy and Colder VOL. LIV No. 106' ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 1944 PRICE FIVE CENTS Subcommittee Backs Labor Battalions for 4-F's Flying Forts Hit Nazi Plane Factory Area German Resistance Routed by Eighth Air Force in Heavy Battle By The Associated Press LONDON, March 29. - American Flying Fortresses bomber the Bruns- wick area of central Germany today, and Nazi fighters for the first time since March 23 rose to give serious battle over that vital aircraft fac- tory area, only to be routed by es- corting Eighth Air Force fighters who shot down 39 of the Nazis. Simultaneously American Libera- tors bombed the Pas-De-Calais area of the French coast, meeting oppo- sition only from moderate to heavy anti-aircraft fire. From all opera- tions, nine American bombers and nine fighters failed to return, it was announced tonight. It was the third coniecutive day of American operations aimed pri- marily at the German Air Force, and the communique said it was the fif- teenth attack on Germany and the 24th on all enemy targets in this record-breaking month of March. The Germans always have defend- ed the Brunswick area vigorously against repeated American attacks, one of the most recent Feb. 10, when 84 German fighters and 29 American bombers and eight fighters were lost there. Both today's attacks were made through clouds and bad flying weath- er. Man Tosses $5 000 Out The window WINDSOR, Ont., March 29.-(R) -Dollar bills and silver, as well as rain, sprinkled down on Windsor streets today when Harry F. Mc- Lean, wealthy Toronto contractor, tossed $5,000 from windows of two hotels to scrambling pedestrians. McLean, whose hobby is giving away his money, had bank messen- gers bring thecash and bills first to the Prince Edward hotel. Cars screeched to a stop and drivers joined the crowd pushing and jam- ming the street. When McLean fi- nished some 500 people were mill- ing about in the rain underneath his fourth floor window. Later he went to the Norton-Pal-; mer hotel and repeated the money- sprinkling. To reporters he said, "I like to see people happy. This is the way I spread joy among man- kind."+ Union Petitions Due Tomorrow Petitions of candidates for Union vice-presidents are due tomorrow ini the student offices of the Union, with; interviews scheduled from 3 to 5 p.m. tomorrow., Two vice-presidents are to be elec-i ted in the campus election Wednes- day, one from the engineering col- lege and one from the combined col-; leges, Navy, Marine and civilian students may submit petitions. No signaturesa are necessary. Candidates will be selected at the interviews by the, Union nominating committee. Senior class officers will also be named at the election Wednesday. Red Army Troops Smash Across, Prut River; Near Carpathian Mts. Balta Captured by Soviets in Ukraine By The Associated Press LONDON, March 29.- Russian troops forged across the Prut River today, fought into the outskirts of Czernowitz (Cernauti), capital of Bucovina, and captured Kolomea, Prut River railway town in the foot- hills of the Carpathian Mountains only 30 miles from the Czecho-Slovak border, Moscow announced tonight. Other Soviet gains were announced in Bessarabia and the southern Ukraine, notably the capture of Balta. 2,000 Germans Are Killed More than 2,000 German dead were counted in the streets of Balta alone, a communique said, and many of sev- eral hundred prisoners proved to be Nazi SS Elite Guards. Another 2,000 were declared slain in the area south of Yarmolintsi at the top of the Ka- menets-Podolsk pocket. The Prut crossing, reported by to- night's Soviet communique,' is a sig- nificant victory but does not, in the Russian view, place the Red Army inside Rumania as yet, since it is in the portion of Bucovina ceded to Russia by the Rumanians in 1940.' Kolomea, 44 miles up the river from Czernowitz and on the left bank, was described by Marshal Sta- lin, who announced its fall, as "an, important strongpoint in the German defenses at the foothills of the Car- pathians." It once was Polish terri- tory. Both at Kolomea and Czernowitz, the Russians cut the Lwow-Buchar- est railroad. Capture. of Kolomea represented an 11-mile gain. For the third day since reaching Rumania's vulnerable borders, theI Red Army apparently refrained de- liberately from crossing, and instead ,Lwow. . POLANDl p Berdichev' \Tarno o Proskurov \\ RUSSIA Zhernka Koropets Gar denka 't " *Kamenets-Pocjolsk. f ' , uzovts ,>Soroki Czernow *BaiitaS ~N \%. ~yel ybsise1 WHERE REDS DRIVE WEST AND SOUTH-Upper arrows indicate where Marshal Zhukov's First Ukrainian Army, after taking Sadagura and Kamenets-Podosk, fanned westward to capture Koropets and Goro- denka, while Marshal Konev's Second Ukrainian Army took Buzovitsky and Skulyany (lower arrows) placing the Soviet forces along the north bank of the upper Prut for a distance of 80 miles. concentrated much strength on the task of dismantling the big German- held area north of Odessa. The Russians steadily continued' to clear the Germans away from the railway running southwest from Per- vomisk to the Rumanian border town of Iasi, evidently seeking to prepare the line for their own use. German Positions Collapsing The German positions in the great semicircle around Odessa appeared to be collapsing as the Russian regi- ments rolled down on them from three main directions-from Balti (Baltshi), Balta, and Vozhesensk-in advances that swept through 150 more towns and villages. Balta, captured today, is 115 miles northwest of Odessa. In the battle for Czernowitz-100,- 000 population-Red Army Marshal Gregory K. Zhukov was fighting to liberate his own constituency, which elected him a deputy to the Supreme Soviet from the Moldavian Soviet Republic in 1940. At that point, al- though it is on the righi bank of the Prut, it is about 20 miles above where the river forms the border between Rumania and the Moldavian Soviet Republic. Troops Slip Back from Italian Hill East Monastery Slope j f Lost as New Zealand, Indian Forces Escape By The Associated Press { ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, NA- PLES. March 29.-Indian and New Zealand troops have been withdrawn from the steep eastern face of Mon- astery Hill, and the bloody struggle to take that formidable height will have to be undertaken anew when the Allied drive for Cassino gains momentum again. Gurkhas Clung to Hill Wiry Indian Gurkhas who clung to their dangerous perch on Hang- man's Hill 100 yards below the ruin- ed Benedictine abbey for nearly two weeks came back down last night and they were followed by the tough New Zealanders who held Hill 202 farther down the slope. The Gurkhas, in their eagerness to conquer the forbidding, fortress-like Monastery Hill which commands the valley for miles around, passed com- pletely over two of their objectives in the night attack March 15 and landed on Hangman's Hill far ahead of schedule. They could be supplied there only by air. Operation Difficult This was a difficult operation, and some parachutes drifted away from the Gurkhas and into the hands of the Germans. Removal of Wounded also was a dangerous operation, as any movement by day or night brought a hail of fire from the Nazis on the crest. Hangman's Hill-so- called because a gallows once stood there-is 435 yards up the side of the Monastery Hill, which itself it 519 yards high. Both Hangman's Hill and Hill 202 are on the eastern side of Monastery Hill, both well in advance of present Allied positions. When the Gurkhas announced by field radio that they had reached Hangman's Hill in the inky blackness of the first night of the recent all-out attack, Allied of- ficers at Headquarters scarcely could credit their ears. Allied troops still held important Castle Hill just west. of Cassino. Turin, Milan Are Hit IBy.American Flyers ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, NA- PLES, March 29.-(IP)-U.S. bombers, campaigning to smash German sup- ply lines in northern Italy, rained ex- plosives on rail lines in Bolzano, Mi- lan, Turin and Ancona and also! hammered at port facilities feeding the fighting fronts, it was announced today. Liberators and Fortresses of the 15th Air Force ranged 300 miles north of Rome to hit Bolzano, Milan and Turin, while a - small formation of Liberators hit railroad yards at An- cona, on the Adriatic, and medium and fighter bombers hammered at xvwest coast ports. Army, Navy Join in Asking L gislation Basis for Farm Deferments Scra ped; Judgment Is Left to Local Boards By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, March 29.-In two major manpower moves, Selective Service today scrapped its measuring rod for deferment or farm workers, deciding to leave individual cases to the judgment of local draft boards, and a House military subcommittee agreed to draft legislation authorizing Army labor battalions of 4-F's. The Army and Navy joined in asking legislation under which 4-F's between the ages of 18 and 37 could be directed to go to work in essential industry at civilian pay or be inducted into labor battalions at Army pay but without veterans' benefits. The request was presented by Undersecretary of War Robert P. Pat- terson and Assistant Navy Secretary Ralph A. Bard who asked prompt action to cope with a "critical" man-a _ power problem. Chairman Costello (Dem., Calif.) of the House group promised that legislation in line with their views would be drafted during the forthcoming Easter recess. A plan also was being discussed to require that a farm worker classified as 4-F, physically unfit for military service, continue in farm work unless given permission by his draft board to change occupations. Senator Russel (Dem., Ga.) said this would be considered by the Sen- ate Agriculture Committee. Russel and Senator Tydings (Dem., Md.) announced Selective Service was scrapping its "unit system" for farm deferments after a conferencel with Major General Lewis B. Her- shey, Selective Service director, and War Food Administrator Marvin Jones. Air Corps May1 Accept YouthS By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, March 29. - The Air Forces said today that when re- cruiting of 17-year-olds in the Air Corps Enlisted Reserve is resumed, first consideration will be given to applications which were under study and were invalidated by last week'sl order halting enlistments. Temporary suspension of such en- listments coincided with the trans- fer of 36,000 men from flight train- ing to ground forces to help meet the manpower shortages in ground combat units. The ban on further enlistments in the Air Corps Reserve will not affect those 17-year-olds whose applications already have been accepted. They will not be discharged to make them available for other branches of the armed forces, officials said, but will be called to active duty for training as they reach their 18th birthdays and as . AAF training schedules re- quire. Onderdonk To .~ U-P Chinese Forces Encircle 1,000 Enemy Troops Japs on Burma Front Are Outflanked Near Mogaung Valley Road By THOBURN WIANT Associated Press Correspondent With AMERICAN and CHINESE TROOPS in the MOGAUNG VAL- LEY, BURMA, March 28. (Delayed.) -About 1,000 Japanese troops were trapped today by a compact unit of Lt. Gen. Joseph W. Stilwell's Chinese forces which swung through the jun- gly foothills fringing the northeast- ern part of the Mogaung valley and cut the Mogaung road four miles south of Shaduzup. The Japanese forces had been strongly resisting frontal assaults by the Chinese. The strategy was similar to that which netted Brig. Gen. Frank D. Merrill's American marauders and Chinese more than 2,000 dead Japan- ese in the Maingkwan-Walabum area during the week ending March 10. The Japanese now are caught in a goose-egg shaped sector north of Shaduzup. Gen. Stilwell's forces are drawing the noose tight as quickly as possible, but some of the enemy may escape by cutting trails and filtering through the northwestern foothills. The Chinese troops are anxious to bag as much artillery as possible, in- cluding the Japanese' two 150-milli- meter guns which have done more psychological than physical damage. The road is the only avenue of es- cape for heavy artillery and when trapped the Japanese usually shoot off all the shells and bury the artil- lery piece by piece. In the operations such as the Chi- nese now have established at Laban south of Shaduzup the Chinese are fighting in the south as well as the north. Informal Dance Inter-A erican Affairs Final To, Be Held Here The sixth region finals of the Na- tional Discussion Contest on Inter- American Affairs will open tomorrow with eight students from colleges and universities of the central region par- ticipating in a round table discussion at 2 p.m. in the Rackham West Con- ference Room. Competing for a $500 scholarship for study in Mexico this summer and a chance to enter the national con- test being held in Washington on Pan-American Day, April 13, each contestant will also giye a seven-mi- nute prepared speech in the general symposium and forum being held at 8 p.m. in Rackham Amphitheatre. Judges will consider both partici- pation in the discussion and the pre- pared speech in selecting the winner. Prof. Arthur S. Aiton, professor of Latin American history, will lead the round table discussion and Dr. Esson M. Gale, director of the International Center, will preside at the evening session. Sponsored by the Office of the Co- ordinator of Inter-American Affairs in the State Department and the American Council on Education to Promote Inter-American Friendship and Cooperation, the contest opened in January when several hundred college and universities selected rep- resentatives to submit manuscripts. On the basis of the manuscripts, eight winners were chosen in each of six regions. National finalists will be selected this week in contests in each of the regions. RIGHT WING WITHDRAWS: American Labor Party Split Over Issue of Communism By The Associated Press NEW YORK, March 29.-The eight year-old American Labor Party, whose 400,000 votes helped President Roose- velt win New York State's 47 elec- toral votes in 1940, split today on the issue of communism. The right wing leadership, defeat- ed in yesterday's primary election for control of the state committee- the body which nominates the party's presidential candidate-withdrew on the ground that the left wing victory meant "Earl Browder has captured the American Labor Party." Browder is general secretary of the Communist Party in the U.S. A statement issued by the right wing liberal-labor committee, noting that the party was organized in 1936 World News at a Glance by The Associated Press Jap Base Bombed ... ALLIED HEADQUARTERS in the SOUTHWEST PACIFIC, March 30,1 Thursday.-Hollandia, Japanese base on the northwest coast of Dutch New Guinea, was bombed by Allied night raiders, and 93 tons of bombs were dropped on Rabaul, Gen. Douglas MacArthur's communique said today. Pwir-isans Attuc... LONDON, March 29.-New Par- tisan attacks in Eastern Bosnia were reported tonight by the Free Yugoslav radio, which said that the attempt of German, forces to take the offensive had baggeddown after earlier successes. New Turn Seen... STOCKHOLM, March 29,-A dra- matic new turn in the Finnish-Rus- sian armistice negotiations appeared imminent tonight. Reliable quarters said Juho K. Paasikivi, Finnish dip- lomat, was making a new contact with Soviet officials, perhaps in Mos- Co,. to support the New Deal and Presi- dent Roosevelt said its immediate concern was what effect "the disap- pearance of the ALP as a liberal- labor party may have on the Roose- velt strength in our state" should he seek re-election. The left wing, headed by Represen- tative Vito Marcantonio and support- ed by Sidney Hillman, chairman of the CIO Political Action Committee,! claimed it won more than 600 seats on the 750-member committee. Dies Calls CIO Rfed Inspired WASHINGTON, March 29.-(AP)--- The Dies Committee described the CIO Political Action Committee to- day as a Communist-inspired, organi- zation aiming to "discredit Con- gress," and drew the retort from labor leader Sidney Hillman that the findings were based on "researches of a warped mind." .Hillman is chairman of the CIO group which avowedly is out to make organized labor's weight felt in next fall's election. Hillman as well as2 some other leaders in the organiza- tion have urged a fourth term for President Roosevelt. Hillman replied in a statement, issued in New York, that the Dies Committee's charges were "the same shopworn smears which he (Dies) has been peddling to the American people for the past eight years in an! effort to stir up national discord and disunity." OPEN DISCUSSION NECE 11- A I _ _ -F!- MYDA Meeting To Be Held in Dr. Francis Skillman Onderdonk, P H unt fof architect, author and lecturer on in- ternational affairs, will speak on. "From United States to United Na- C ill M urderer tions." at a meeting of Michigan Youth for Democratic Action at 8 DETROIT, March 29.-(YP)-Detec- p.m. Tuesday in Rm. 316 in the Un- tives tracing events which led to the ion. fatal stabbing of Joyce Raulston, 14- Dr. Onderdonk, whose home is in year-old schoolgirl, on a city dump Ann Arbor, has traveled extensively Tuesday morning, hunted tonight for throughout Europe. He is a graduate a man about 30 years old who wasof the Royal Technical Institute in reported to have offered her $50 if she would meet him Monday night. Vienna, where he was active in stu- The story of this man's advances dent affairs and engaged in public to the girl was given to Russell Greg- service. ory, chief of county detectives, and In the last two months of the first other investigators by a 20-year-old World War, Dr. Onderdonk witnessed' war worker who said he spent much the collapse of the Hapsburg reign of the week-end with Joyce, after she and the creation of a republic in left her home Friday. Austria. IU ILLAJ .At L.f ~ILg( An informal dance to be held from 7:30 p.m. to midnight tomorrow in the north lounge will highlight ac- tivities at the Union this week-end. This dance, which is a new campus feature, is open to all servicemen and civilians with dates. A wide selection of records will provide the music and there will be no admission charge. Stag servicemen are invited to the G-I Stomp to be given from 3 to 5 p.m. Saturday in the Union's north lounge, with dancing to records. Hostesses at the Stomp will be Stockwell, Betsy Barbour, Kappa Al- pha Theta, Delta Gamma, Sororsis and Alpha Phi. The taproom and soda bar will be open. To wind up the week-end, the Un- ion will hold its regular Sunday So- cial from 3 to 5 p.m. Sunday, with funnies and bridge games providing the entertainment. Council Will Name COEDS COOPERATE : Michigan Women Go over Top In Current Red Cross Drive SSARY: i~ 1) i i i i ! i i 1 k r I J 1 University women yesterday joined the ranks of organizations which have topped the goals set up by Na- tional Red Cross Headquarters for the local drive, as contributions of $1,244.82 were received from 29 wo- men's residences, making the total for the women $3,517.04 to date, Marjorie Hall, women's chairman, announced. man, revealed, since theatre collec- tions have not been considered yet and should result in the $100,000 total. University faculty and men topped their quotas earlier in the week, and Washtenaw County and the City of Ann Arbor went "over the top" Tues- day. If intven warns oj rpressure t~o p ' In my opinion there was never a time in the history of this country when the schools were subjected to more pressure groups, and more pow- erful pressure groups, than they are today," President Alexander G. Ruth- ven said at a discussion sponsored war by international agreements, by talking about the unity of the human race. The only way is through ed- ucation. We must teach people what war means." He commended the British people on their realization of the imn rtn~,nrof nnst-war , iAd~vpa - He singled out three sain nhlDnG of post-war education: 1. The prob- New Appointments lem of returning veterans in read- justing and reeducating for civilian New committee appointments will life; 2. religious education; and 3. be announced today during a Post- international education for the pur- War Council meeting from 4 to 5