q ! u, ..., 'N wrgrn 4~ at W'eather i lroudy VOL. LIV No. 114 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, APRIL 20, 1944 Allies Carr Out Greatest Sustained erial PRICE FIVE CENTS ssault Nazis Counterattack In Southeast Poland Fierce New German Drive Is Attempt To Save Lwow; Reds Fail To Advance. By The Associated Press LONDON, April 20, Thursday.-The Germans, lashing out fiercely to save their big base at Lwow, have launched a large-scale attack in the southeastern corner of Old Poland, and some lands -have changed hands south and east of Stanislawow, the Russians announced last night, but declared the enemy was repulsed. The Soviet communique, which for the first time in weeks did not record some notable Red Army advance, said that in the Crimea the Ger- mans launched several vain counterattacks on the Sevastopol-Simferopol highway, but the Russians gained several strongly-fortified defense centers around Sevastopol itself, notably Fedyukhiny Heights, south of Inkerman 'lanes Hit Nazis For Thirty Hours Five Tons of Bombs Dropped Every Minute in 'Air Invasion of Germany' GOP' Names Coy. Warren As Keynoter Californian Selected In Apparent Bid for West Coast Support By The Associated Press1 CHICAGO, April 19.-The Repub- licans called on tall, handsome Gov. Earl Warren of California today to sound the keynote for their June no- minating convention in an apparent bid for West Coast support in the No- vember election. ' Warren, 53-year-old veteran lead- er of the California Republican or- ganization, was the unanimous choice of the party's 24-member arrange- ments committee for the temporary chairman and keynoter. House minority leader Joseph Mar- tin of Massachusetts was recom- mended as permanent chairman, a post the convention itself officially fills. Backed by national chairman Harrison E. Spangler and Walter Hailanan,. chairman of the arrange- ments group, Warren was chosen af- ter the names of a dozen other can- didates had been brought before the committee's closed session. These included several governors and senators as well as Representa- tive Clare Booth Luce of Connecti- cut, for whom J. Kenneth Bradley, Connecticut national committeeman, made a personal campaign. Although leaders opposed the selection of a wo- man as keynoter, it was reported that Mrs. Luce would be invited to make an important speech. Irish Attempt To Spare Rome Proves Futile WASHINGTON, April 19.-An ef- fort by the Irish government to secure assurances from the Germans and the Allies that Rome will be spared the ravages of war apparently ended futilely today. The attempt was disclosed with publication of an exchange of notes between Premier Eamon De Valera of Eire and President Roosevelt. De- Valera's was a plea that the belliger- ents "seek through appropriate inter- mediary channels an agreement by which Rome may be saved." He said a similar note was sent to Berlin. Mr. Roosevelt's reply was a reiter- ation of the Allied position--that the Allies are deeply concerned over the possibility that the Holy City may suffer, but its fate is up to the Germans. "If the German forces were not entrenched in Rome, no question would arise concerning the city's pieservation," Mr. Roosevelt told the Irish Prime Minister. De Valera's note told the President that destruction of Rome would be "a major calamity for the human race" and added: "Future generations will forget the military considerations which may now seem to dictate the occupation or possession of Rome; but should the city be destroyed, the fact of its destruction would be remembered forever. "So too, should the city by agree- ment be spared, future generations will remember with enduring grati- tude those states and their leaders who will have preserved for the en- noblement of mankind this great center of Christian faith and civiliza- tion." >about five miles from the center of the city. Nazis Shoot Deserters Captured and deserter Romanian troops said German machine-gun- ners were shooting down Romanians who tried to leave the Sevastopol de- fense trenches, the communique add- ed. Many of the enemy were slain and many captured as the survivors were pressed inexorably back into the sea, the Russians reported. The Sevastopol battle took on more and more the character of a siege, however. The Russians announced they were heavily shelling German positions there. Reds Take Towns On the Bessarabian front the Rus- sians reported they took several pop- ulated places and enlarged their bridgeheads on the west bank of the Dnestr River in the Chisinau area, killing 800 of the enemy and beating off German attempts to regain lost ground. . A news dispatch from Moscow said the offensive appeared to be a strong, well-organized and systematic at- tack by Germans and Hungarians designed to stave off a drive in the Lwow direction by troops of Marshal Gregory K. Zhukov's First Ukrainian Army. A secondary purpose would be to try to keep the Russians from driving on through the Czechoslovak fron- tier passes that they reached April 8. Halifax To Talk At Convocation Here Tomorrow Viscount Halifax, British Ambassa- dor to the United States, will address the 21st annual meeting of the Hon- ors Convocation at 11 a.m. tomorrow in Hill Auditorium. All classes, with the exception of. clinics, will be dismissed at 10:45 a.m. to permit students to attend the Convocation. Honor students will be presented with 653 citations recognizing their academic achievements. Viscount Halifax has had a long career as a representative of the British government, serving as a Miember of Parliament, Undersecre- tary for the Colonies, President of the Bureau of Education and Viceroy for India. In pre-war days, he was Secretary of State for War and For- eign Minister under Chamberlain. He has been the British Ambassador at Washington since 1940. There will be 122 seniors with at least a B average and ranking in the highest ten per cent of their class who will be honored at the Convo- cation. Also 5 juniors, 61 sopho- mores and 97 freshmen who earned a 3.5 or higher average will receive recognition. Ninety-nine members of the Army Specialized Training Pro- gram who achieved at least half A and half B averages as well as 61 other students will also be honored. Fellowships and scholarships will be presented to 87 graduate students and 68 will receive special awards. TWO MEN IN DIVING SUITS ride one of Britain's newly-revealed weapons-the "Human Torpedo." London has announced that this device, used against the enemy naval base at Palerno, Sicily, in January of 1943, is ridden by two men who guide it near its target, set off the explosive charge with a time fuse and then ride the propulsion part to saf ety. EVERYTHING BUT DIPLOMAS- 'U' Commencement Exercises Will Be Held Saturday, June 17 Dr. Frank E. Robbins, assistant to the President of the University, is- sued a statement yesterday answer- ing numerous inquiries he has had concerning plans for Commencement and the ending of the spring term. His statement follows:j "The term ends Saturday, June 24, and presumably the last week beginning with June 19 will be devot- ed to examinations. The details of the examination period of course are determined by the appropriate com- mittees or officers of the "various schools and colleges, and I cannot say exactly what the examination schedule will be. Graduation June 17 "The graduation exercises will be held on Saturday, June 17, and will be of the same character as those which have been held at the end of the summer and fall terms of this year. In other words, whereas the traditional program of graduation exercises will be carried through, the members of the graduating classes will have to be presented as candi- dates for their degrees rather than as recipients of them. "The reason why this type of grad- uation exercises has to be held is the following: the civilian teaching pro- gram of the University has been made to conform to the schedule of Navy To Grant Cornmissions All students graduating inJune may apply for commissions in the Navy, but they must secure their application blanks and other in- formation as soon as possible, C. T. Olmstead, assistant Dean of Students, said yesterday. "It is imperative," he pointed out, "that the applications be 'matured,' as the Navy terms it. Since this takes from three to six week, any students interested should get things started imme- diately." Application blanks and infor- mation may be obtained from the Director of Naval Officer Pro- curement in the Book Building, Detroit. This information was received last week in Chicago at the meet- ing of the National Association of Deans and Advisers of Men. the Navy V-12 program. This is a real necessity for otherwise we would have to carry on two schedules in- stead of one and the amalgamation of the two is made possible by the fact that Navy and Marine students are quite generally permitted to en- roll in the same classes as civilians. 16 Week Courses Required "Our contract with the Navy speci- fies that there shall be sixteen full weeks, of instruction in each term into which the time taken for exami- nations is reckoned. The Navy pro- gram, however, does not permit us to include in the sixteen, weeks term the three or four days after the final examinations which are necessary at the end of .a term if diplomas are to be issued to recipients at the gradua- tion exercises. Such a period is need- ed in order to get in all the examina- tion reports, complete the records of the graduates and to make the final lists of those who have satisfied the requirements for degrees. Conditions Set "Under these circumstances it-seems unavoidable to hold the type of graduating exercise that we have since the University began its work for the Navy. The only alternative would be to hold over all the gradu- ates until the Wednesday or Thurs- day after June 24. If this were done diplomas could be prepared and handed out but we have hesitated to ask the graduates to remain in Ann Arbor after their work is really done for many reasons, especially in war- time, when the majority are presum- ably eager to get away as soon as they can." Billions Voted For Lend-Lease House OK's Program, But Adds Restriction WASHINGTON, April 19.-- UP) - The House voted today, 334 to 21, to extend the $22,000,000,000 lend-lease program another year but warily wrote into the law a curb on the President's power to take on any post-war obligations for the nation. Proponents, in the three-day de- bate, described the lend-lease idea as one of the most "magnificent weap- ons of warfare" devised by the United States in behalf of friendly countries. All 21 against the extension are Republicans, all but one from the Mid-west belt. Schoolmasters To Hold Annual Convention Here Three-Day Conference Is Expected To Draw 2,500 State Teachers The 58th annual meeting of the Michigan Schoolmasters' Club will start today with two conferences on education. A majority of the conferences and general meetings of the club will be held tomorrow and Saturday, drawing approximately 2,500 teachers and ed- ucators from all over the state. Members may register in Rm. 4, University Hall and programs may be secured there. The 15th annual conference on Teacher Education meets at 9:30 a.m. today in the auditorium of Univer- sity High School to discuss the Mich- igan and national studies of teacher education. At 2 p.m. the Bureau of Co-operation with Educational In- stitutions will sponsor a program at the Union on problems of adjusting higher institutions to war demands and at 4:15 p.m. in the Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre Boyd H. Bode will address the annual Convocation hon- oring students planning to enter the teaching profession. Winners of the Hinsdale and the Payne awards will also be announced at this meeting which is open to all interested per- sons. At 2 p.m. today in Rm. 316 of the Union, the tenth annual conference on Problems in School and College See SCHOOLMASTERS, Page 2 Variety Show To Be Saturday Broadcast To Salute Campus Servicemen Army, Navy and Marine trainees on campus will receive a national sa- lute Saturday when the last 25 min- utes of Victory Varieties will be broadcast coast-to-coast from the stage of Hill Auditorium. Open free of charge to servicemen, students and townspeople, the show will feature Eddy Howard and his or- chestra,, in a pre-broadcast concert, beginning at 8:15 p.m. followed by the Coca-Cola Company's "Victory Parade of Spotlight Bands" starting at 9:30 p.m. The program will be carried by 173 stations of the Blue Network and will focus attention on the University and its wartime activi- ties. The first floor of the auditorium will be reserved for men in uniform, students, faculty members and guests until 8:30 p.m. Heard six nights a week, the Spot- light Band Program is now in its 83rd week, having traveled more than 607,000 "Spotlight miles" and being broadcast from Army, Navy, Marine, Coast Guard and war production centers. GI Stomp Will Be Held By The Associated Press LONDON, April 19.-American and British warplanes developed the greatest sustained aerial assault of the war today, rounding out a 30- hour offensive against Germany and Nazi - occupied territories during which bombs were dropped almost continuously at the average rate of 300 tons an hour, or five tons a minute. The Allies in more than 6,000 flights between noon Tuesday and 6 p.m. today poured 9,000 tons of bombs on selected German targets, the Americans capping the period with a blow by 2,000 heavy bombers and fighters against plane factories and parking fields near Kassel and Hamm in Germany and installations near Calais in France. Air Invasion of Germany The U.S. Air Forces communique referred to the offensive as "the aid invasion of Germany." The more enthusiastic protagonists of air power in London began speaking of the pos- sibility of breaking the back of the German Air Force in two or three weeks if the weather holds out. The German Air Force apparent- ly was driven to the earth today. Although conditions were ideal for combat and the American heavies were ferreting out some of Germany's most vital targets, the Germans put up only a token resistance. End Nowhere in Sight Aerial warfare never before has witnessed a bombardment of such sustained volume and violence, and the end is nowhere in sight. Those who have followed the European air war closely the last few months felt certain that the present pace of the attack can not only be maintained, but can be increased from British bases augmented further from the Italian theatre. The Allied 30-hour offensive cost less than one per cent of the at- tacking force. All today's operations cost six bombers and two fighters, the Am- erican communique said. This brought total U.S. and RAF losses for the entire around-the-clock onslaughts to 42 bombers and seven fighters. The Americans today reported they shot down 21 of the small forces of Jap Blocks in India Broken British Relief Contacts Surrounded Garrison By The Associated Press A British relief column has broken through a series of Japanese blocks in eastern India and established con- tact with the surrounded garrison at Kohima, which has been under con- tinuous attack by a numerically su- perior invading force. Dispatches from Calcutta yester- day (Wednesday) said the main body of British drove down from the stra- tegic -nd threatened Bengal-Assam railway to within 1,000 yards of the garrison's defense line and was pre- paring to attack the Japanese from the rear. Sixty miles to the south, tanks led British and Indian infantrymen from Imphal in smashing at encircling enemy troops. Allied southeast Asia headquarters announced 4,000 dead Nipponese soldiers had been counted during the six weeks they've been trying to capture the two British bases. In the central Pacific American )ombers rounded out four weeks of daily raids on Japan's Caroline Is- lands. During that period 15 atolls in the 2,000 mile long chain have been hit. 100 Tickets To Be Sold for Engine Ball "There are only one hundred tic- kets left on sale for the Slide Rule Ball," Joe Linker, '44E, who is in charge of sales for the dance, an- nounced last night. Late comers may still purchase theirs at the Tnion Dessk in the German fighters that rose to meet them. Today another 2,000-plane Ameri- an force made the grand assault on fighter factories in the vicinity of Kassel, Germany, and on hangars, barracks and parked rows of new German planes at Eschwege, Pader- born, Gutersloh, Lippstadt and Werl, all in the Kassel and Hamm vicini- ties. Results were declared to be "generally satisfactory." Pad gett Found Guilty of First Degree Murder Prisoner Still Pleads Innocence; Sentence Is Life Imprisonment A jury of eleven men and one wo- man handed down a verdict of guilty of first degree murder against Will- iam H. Padgett in Ann Arbor Circuit Court yesterday. Padgett, 50 years old, was on re- trial for the murder of Clifford A. Stang, Ann Arbor patrolman, at the Conlin and Weatherbee clothing store on Main Street nine years ago. Judge James E. Chenot, Wayne County Circuit Judge especially ap- pointed b the State Supreme Court to handle the case, sentenced Padg ett to life imprisonment with solitary confinement and hard labor at Jack- son State Prison. Padgett told the judge, "I still maintain I am innocent. I was never in the city of Ann Arbor in my life, and definitely was not at the scene of the crime." As Padgett was led away by a Washtenaw County Deputy Sheriff he asked for a conference with the Prosecutor and his own attorney. Padgett took the stand at 10 a.m. yesterday to testify in his own behalf. He maintained that he knew nothing about the store, and that he had nev- er been in Ann Arbor in his life. He established his whereabouts on the day of the crime as in or about York or Harrisburg, Pa. Padgett has been in Marquette State Prison and Jackson State Pri- son since the previous trial, which took place in June of 1936. He was in Marquette Prison for seven years, and in Jackson Prison for the past seven months. Danube Mined By RAF Fliers ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN NAPLES, April 19.--MP-The strain on battered and overloaded Nazi communications supplying German forces on the southern Russian front was disclosed today to have been increased tremendously by the min- ing of 300 miles of the Danube River, historic and all-important commer- cial lifeline of southeastern Europe. British bombers spent several nights dropping mines along the river and shooting up vessels from Budapest to Bucharest. The Axis radio announced that all traffic had been halted on the great waterway. The river has been the principal channel along which Romanian oil, as well as grain and other loot from the Balkans, flowed toward Germany. Its importance to Nazi war plans has become even more vital as the Rus- sian Army pushed into Romania. Anti-Poll Tax Law Petitions Continue Continuing their drive to obtain signatures on Anti-Poll Tax Bill peti- tions, Michigan Youth for Democra- tic Action and Inter-Racial Associa- tion will again sponsor a booth in front of the Library today. Yesterday, members of the two organizations distributed literature and obtained signatures both on campus and downtown. *ow * n. FUEHRER WEATHERS STORMS: 'Rally Behind Hitler, ' Goebbels Asks LONDON, April 19.-(Al)- Nazi Propaganda Minister Paul Joseph Goebbels addressed an unusual appeal to the German people to- night to rally behind Adolf Hitler, who celebrates his 55th birthday tomorrow, reminding them that, "Even the greatest leaders of his- individual war events and factors which have been decisive in the war until the war is over. . . . It needs a well-trained eye to discern the trend of historical develop- ments while a war is still going on." Suggesting that many Germans may not approve of Hitler. Goeb- defined but unalterable. So to serve our aims means to be loyal to the Fuehrer and to follow him through all the storms of war . . . "It is difficult to remain true to the cause in a continuous embit- tered fight for the life of a nation." For Germans who might wonder