wY it 43UU mitj W4Deather Cloudly VOL. LIV No. 152 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, JUNE 4, 1944 PRICE FIVE CENTS Germans Crumble As Allies Near Rome AP Relays False Announcement of Invasion. Nazis Rome, May Abandon Message Sent By Young Girl 'For Practice' Report Denied Two Minutes Later; Wired Throughout Aericas By The Associated Press NEW YORK, June 3.-A young British girl teletype operator em- ployed in the London bureau of the Associated Press punched out a strip of practice tape tonight and within a matter of moments was responsible for transmission throughout the United States and Latin America of an erroneous announcement that the Allies had landed in France. Through almost incredible cir- cumstances, the error sl ip p ed through the most elaborate system of safeguards and censorship ever established both by the Associated Press and Allied authorities. The girl, Joan Ellis, had been prac- ticing on a disconnected machine. and in violation of instructions in- dluded in her exercise this urgent message "Flash Eisenhower's headquar- ters announce Allied landings France." At 4:39 p.m., Eastern War Time. the flash appeared on the A.P.'s direct London printer in New York and was relayed immediately throughout the United States and to Latin America. Less than two minutes later came a message, "Bust that flash," and word was sent out at once to editors to withhold publication. At 4:44 p.m. another London message directed that the flash be "killed," and this was done. In the two-minute interlude be- tween the erroneous flash and the withhold order, however, the incor- rect news had been announced over many radio stations in America and at some baseball parks. In New York's polo grounds the crowd observed on minute of silence after the word was given over the loudspeaker system. Possibly the calmest city in the country was Washington, where few seemed surprised at the report and, when it was subsequently cor- rected, many officials said they were confident it was "only slightly premature." Clergymen hurried to .call special services which had been announced for D-Day when they heard the "flash" and many church bells were rung to summon congregations to special prayers. Air raid sirens sounded in Valdosta, Ga. Radio Station WOL at Washing- ton remained silent for a full min- ute after it it ceived the flash to honor invasion soldiers. Revised Senior Swng-Out To Be Held Sunda' Senior Swing-Out, a revised Uni- versity tradition, will begin at 7 p.m. next Sunday in front of the general library, Gerry Stadleman, secretary of 'the literary school senior class announced yesterday. Swing-Out, the traditional march of seniors, was abolished in 1940, supposedly for the duration, but has been revised to give new students on campus the benefit of some old Mich- igan spirit. The march was formerly followed by a lecture program in Hill Auditorium. A campus sing on the library steps will be substituted this year, however. Seniors who will graduate in Octo- ber or February are invited to take part in the parade. Marchers will be grouped according to their school in the University. The same order to be used during the commencement exer- cises will be followed. Literary seniors will lead, followed by seniors from the School of Education, from the engineering, medicine, nursing, law, pharmacy,, dental, business adminis- tration, forestry, music, public health and graduate schools. The line of march will proceed from the library toward Alumni Memorial Hall on South University. A turn onto State Street will be made which ...mt ho snln...a a ~nNrtTTnct~cit Vichy Says Europe Blasted In Two U- S. Aerial Assaults Attacks Strike Invasion Coast By The Associated Press LONDON, June 3.--The ramparts of Europe-under vast new aerial pressure of shuttle raids by American planes using Russian bases- were blasted on the west twice today by U.S. Fortresses and Liberators with- out the loss of a single bomber. Both the assaults by U.S. heavies were directed against the Nazis' in- vasion coast of northern France and out of a total force of perhaps 1,000 bombers and fighters taking part in the double operation, only one fighter failed to return. The Pas de Calais region also was hit Friday by Fortresses and Libera- tors without loss. Thus the cost of three attacks on Hitler's vaunted west LONDON, June 4, Sunday.-()-- RAF bombers were "over enemy- occupied territory last night," it was announced today. wall by nearly 2,500 planes dropping an estimated 4,500 tons of explosives has been one single-engined plane. This means that only one man is missing from a total of nearly 16,000 airmen flying against Pas de Calais in the last two days-an example of the way in which air units are paving the way for the landing of ground forces at a minimum loss of life. While the heavy bombers were hit- ing the coastal fortifications, hun- dreds of fighters and fighter-bombers of both the American and British sec- tions of the Allied Expeditionary Air Force ranged back and forth across France and the low countries in a series of attacks on the enemy's transport and communications. Half of the 6,000-ton load was hurled yesterday by 1,000 bombers on emplacements that the Germans, awaiting invasion, have installed in the Pas de Calais area. Other bombers raided the Boulogne area. From bases in Italy, U.S. heavy bombers attacked targets in Romania yesterday and streaked on to newly- prepared American bases in Russia in the first west-east shuttle raid. In today's double-barreled assaults on the west wall, bombers were able to carry maximum loads because of the short distance involved. House Passes Lend-Lease Bill By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, June 3. - After hearing a hint that the Allied inva- sion of western Europe may come within "the next ten days," the House passed by a record vote of 280 to 23 today a $3,920,070,000 supply bill to finance Lend-Lease, the Foreign Ec- onomic Administration (FEA) and the United Nations Relief and Reha- bilitation Administration (UNRRA) for the fiscal year starting July 1. Trhe measure went to the Senate after Chairman Cannon (Dem., Mo. of the Appropriations Committee de- plored talk about "Juggled funds and the New Deal" and added solemnly: "Now who wants to juggle funds,! when over across the seas within the next few days I hesitate to mention the number of men who are going to be wiped out?" Off the floor, Cannon declined to elaborate. Efforts to restore a technical cut of $350,000,000 in UNRRA funds fail- ed despite a final administration fight and a warning that the reduction would "cripple" the legislation. T hree Islets of f New Guinea Are Invaded by Yanks, Aussies U.S. Troops Make Landings on Owi, Owendi; Lone Liberator Carries Out Raid on Woleai By The Associated Press American and Australian amphibious troops invaded three more islands off the New Guinea coast Friday, Gen. Douglas MacArthur announced today. All three landings were unopposed.' The three-fold operation, flanking ground action on Biak and New Guinea, was carried out while Japanese armies were being driven southward in Burma and southwest China, and themselves made another big stride in their sweep through central China,, _ __ -- U.S. Sixth Army troops splashed ashore on Owi and Owendi islets, both within artillery range of the Japanese positions on Biak, major island of the Schouten group. On Biak other Sixth Army troops drove Nipponese from open ground north of Bosnek, the American base. One hundred Japanese suicides were found after one counterattack was repulsed. Seven of 15 raiding Japanese planes were shot down over Biak. The Australians landing was on Karkar, 35 miles northeast of Madang and offshore from their advance up the coast toward by-passed enemy garrisons. Only last night Tokyo radio announced Lt. Gen. Shigeru Katagiri, commander of the Madang garrison, was killed in action two months ago. That was before the Aussies took the town. In one of the most sensational sorties over Japan's Caroline Islands a solitary Liberator was credited with inflicting 500 Japanese casualties in a surprise raid on Woleai. Truk and Puluwat were again hit in daily Caro- lines strikes while other bombers swept deep into the Dutch Indies. Rocket-firing Allied planes and the "grim courage and determination" of Chinese infantrymen forced Japan- ese troops southward in the battle for Nazis Fortify South French B order Area LONDON, June 3.-(P)--The Ger- mans were reported today to have fortified the Pyrenees border between Spain and France in an extension of the Atlantic Wall to joint with Med- iterranean defenses. German newspapers boasted of de- fense techniques against invasion with pictures of a"one-man bunker system" along the Atlantic Wall, describing it as a network of single- soldier foxholes each fitted with machine-guns throughout the depth of the coastal defenses. Tension was heightened as the Nazis intensified their campaign against civilians to throttle resistance in the occupied countries. The French radio, at Brazzaville, North Africa, reported that 28 hostages had been executed in St. Quentin, France, after the kill- ing of a Vichy military leader. Amid reports of mounting sabotage in France, Hitler has apparently sum-. monecd Vichy Propaganda Minister Philippe Henriot to Berlin. The Vichy radio said Henriot left for Ge- many today and would have the op- portunity to meet some "high Ger- man personalities." lume3 Break Record For details concerning the Hume twins' spectacular achievements in the central collegiate track meet consult the sports page in today's Daily. There also appears a story on the baseball team's 6-4 wn over Notre Dame. the Burma Road, dispatches from the Orient said yesterday. The first use of flying rocket bat- teries by fighters and bombers in the Asiatic theatre broke ui Nipponese attempts to relieve beleaguered gar- risons in north Burma. The airborne bazookas blasted trains and river- craft headed for Myitkyina and Mo- gaung. Much Japanese ammunition and equipment was captured by Ameri- cans inching forward inside Myitky- me. Seniors Ma Get Tickets EXercises To Be Held at Hill There should be plenty of room in Hill Auditorium for all who need tickets to the 100th annual Com- mencement exercises to be held at 2:30 p.m., Saturday, June 24, Herbert G. Watkins, assistant secretary of the University, said yesterday. His statement came as a result of a request made by a student that the exercises be moved to Ferry Field where they have been held in former years. 700 To Graduate Present indications are that only slightly more than 700 students will graduate at the end of this semester, he said, and Hill Auditorium's seating capacity of more than 4,000 should provide ample room for all who have a legitimate reason for attending. Tickets for the Commencement ex- ercises will be ready for distribution starting tomorrow at the information desk in the business office, Rm. 1, University Hall. Upon presentation of their identification cards, candi- dates fo'r degrees may obtain tickets for their families and friends. Grad- uates marching in the academic pro- cession will not need tickets. Outdoor Difficulties Reasons given for not holding the Commencement outdoors included the necessity for two set-ups-one on Ferry Field and one in Yost Field House in case of rain-and the added expense of building special platforms and renting folding chairs and a public address system. In addition, the labor is not available to make the necessary preparations. It was also announced yesterday that Rev. Edward H. Redmond of the Unitarian Church will give the invo- cation at the Commencement exer- cises and that Prof. Warner G. Rice will be master of ceremonies. Shirley W. Smith, vice-president and secre- tary of the University will deliver the annual Commencement address. Graduates will not receive their diplomas on the day of Commence- ment because it is impossible to com- plete student records and certifica- tion of individuals for their degrees in time for the graduation ceremon- ies. Therefore, seniors will be pre- sented as candidates for degrees on June 24, receiving their diplomas later if their final marks entitle them to graduation. Shuttle Bombing Demonstrated To Russians U.S. Efficiency in Operation Seen By The Associated Press MOSCOW, June 3-American shut- tle bombing between Russian and Al- lied bases was established with clock- work precision, it was learned to- night, giving Russians an impressive view of the United States efficiency of which they had heard so much. U.S. Ambassador W. Averell Harri- man and Major Gen. John R. Deane, head of the American military mis- sion to Russia, returned to Moscow today from the dramatic first Amer- ican landing yesterday at a Russian base. The newspaper Izvestia located the base in the Ukraine. They were delighted with the smoothness with which this initial operation was carried out, and a large Russian military delegation, which witnessed the action, also was understood to have been visibly im- pressed by the modern equipment at the base and the perfect organization of the flight. The landing was executed with the same neatness as on American bases in England and Italy, scores of Flying Fortresses roaring over in formation. They were called in by the control tower and refuelled immediately for the return flight. S tucdents Ask For Repeated C'o-Hop Dances "Let's have Co-Hops every after- noon and every evening," said one soldier last night at the street dance sponsored by the Inter-Cooperative Council. With the driveway behind Univer- sity Hall crowded with dancers in formals and street clothes the en- thusiastic crowd called for another outdoor dance with its conga lines and spontaneous singing. One soldier said that "this takes me back to Philadelphia." Another said, "I came prepared to laugh and I am leaving very much impressed." Using the University public address system for music, the dance records could be heard over the entire cam- pus. Sand was placed on the drie- way for the dancers and refresh- ments were sold at one corner. Ev- eryone called for more street dances In the near future and Irv Statler, president of ICC, stated that the Co- ops are prepared to give the campus more as soon as possible. Gen; Clark Sees Destruction of Many Enemy Forces as Most Immediate Task By The Associated Press ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, NAPLES, June 3.-American troops raced through Rome's outer approaches from the south and southeast tonight under orders to destroy the retreating German armies, five of whose 18 divisions already have been practically annihilated and whose defensive lines have been blasted apart. With the city's skyline in easy view of the advancing American armor and infantry, it appeared that within a matter of hours Rome might become the first European capital to be liberated from the Nazis. Lt. Gen. Mark W. Clark, commander of the Fifth Army, instructed his subordinates, however, that the immediate task was to pursue and destroy as much as possible of the German T Rome's Safet Up to Gesrmansi By The Associated Press ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, NA- PLES, June 3.-With its armies near- ing Rome, the Allied "command to- day placed upon the Nazi military the responsibility for making the city a bloody battlefield or withdrawing and sparing it further ravages of war, and the Germans countered quickly with a claim that Rome, "can be re- garded as a city free from armed forces.". Issuing a special communique, one day after Pope Pius expressed hope that Rome "at all costs may be saved from becoming a theatre of war," the Allied conimand'said the United Na- tions forces "have only taken and will only take military action against Rome insofar as the Germans Use the city, its railways and roads for military purposes." Promptly the German propaganda agency Transocean countered with what it called an official statement by a German foreign office spokes- man concerning the Pontiff's plea. It said: "On the German side, everything has been done for months to preserve Rome from such fate. Rome today can be regarded as a city free of armed forces." Germans, Reds LONDON, June 4, Sunday.-(IP)- German forces fighting a bloody bat- tle for a strategic hill position near Stanca, north of Iasi in Romania, brought up reinforcements and at- tacked incessantly yesterday for the fifth consecutiveday, but were re- pulsed in every thrust, Moscow said early today. The broadcast midnight supple- ment to the Russian communique de- clared that Soviet troops "by power- ful fire from all types of arms" check- ed the enemy and inflicted heavy damage. In the day's savage fighting the Russians "wiped out up to a regi- ment of German infantry and burned out and disabled 17 enemy tanks and self-propelled guns as well as eight armored troop carriers and three ar- mored cars," Moscow stated. 'enth and Fourteenth Armies and that entry into Rome would come after- wards. Besides the five Nazi divisions, vir- tually destroyed since the present Al- lied offensive began May 11, several others have been battered badly, and front-line dispatches tonight said further progress was being made to- wards the goal of annihilation. There was no word as to how many Germans might be caught by the Am- erican, British and French troops converging below Rome and be add- ed to the 16,000 prisoners already in the Allied bag. The belief grew, however, that the Allied forces closing in on a pocket in the northern edge of the Sacco Val- ley still held by the enemy could hope to trap only a relatively small pro- portion of the German units which earlier had been reported there. ' This was supported by front-line accounts tonight showing that, de- pite its apparent speed, the, Ger- man retreat was not a rout. He said further that the Germans were taking time in their flight to pillage the countryside and were leaving snipers behind to try to de- lay the Allies. The Americans were thrusting up both the Appian and Casilinian Ways and across open country, while other Allied troops converged on routes leading up to the city. Fifth Army fighters smashed apart the Germans' last mountainous po- sitions guarding Rome by seizing most of the Alban Hills mass dominating the capital on the south. Descent from the hills would put them with- in ten miles of Rome's outskirts. The Berlin radio broadcast that Rome now was "free of armed forces," indicating the possibility that the city might not be defended. Tonight the Allied command broad- ,cast over the free Italian radio at Naples to Italian Partisan forces in- side Rome, declaring "Rome's liber- ation is at hand" and apprising them of their duty to locate mines and booby traps which the Germans might leave behind and to prevent German sabotage. Stuidents Denied Requ ests for Earlier Exams A flood of requests from students asking permission to take their final examinations earlier than officially scheduled have received a flat "No" in most cases from the Administrative Board of the College of Literature, Science and the Arts. Are Exceptions With the exception of men leaving school for military service or stu- dents who have unavoidable con- flicts, permission to take final exam- inations at other than the specified times will not be granted, according to Assistant Dean Erich A. Walter. After considering the matter at their Friday meeting, the Board vot- ed to confirm the official practice of the College which is stated in the following regulation: "Students are in no case examined at any other time than that set for the examination of the class in which the work has been done. In case of unavoidable conflicts a special ex- amination during examination week may be arranged for a class by the instructor, with the consent of the Examining Schedule Committee." Calendar Was Known It was pointed out in the discussion that students knew the dates of the University calendar when thv ra- 31ST SPRING CONCERT: War Bond To Be Presented ' To Outstanding Band Member A twenty-five dollar United States war bond, gift of Mr. Frank Com- manday, will be presented to an out- standing member of the University Concert band just before the 82-piece organization plays the finale, Mor- ton Gould's "American Salute," on its 31st annual spring concert to be given at 4:15 p. m. today in Hill Au- ditorium., Commanday, who with his wife has been visiting their son, Bob Com- manday, Co. D and flutist with the band, was so impressed by the band's rehearsals that he decided to give a bond 'to the band member who has progressed the most throughout the year. A musician himself, he has played French horn with the New York Symphony, Boston Philhar- monic and the Westehester Sym- phony. "American Salute" The haunting melody of "When Johnny Comes Marching Home" will hb featurer in the "Americnn a- bers are now scattered throughout the world, but one of them will ap- CANADIAN EXCLUSION ACT: Student BringsA bout Law Revision- By VIRGINIA ROCK Because of the determination of a Chinese-American student at the University and repercussions of sev- eral articles by The New Republic, the f,,anaci,, ylonrnment h has train in Buffalo because she was "Chinese," Miss Chong declared, "I shall never be able to under- stand why, even after I produced legal proof of my American citi- zenshin T e fnrcead tn p't nff the those members of Canada's Parlia- ment who applauded China's first lady so heartily ask the Government whether such action as described by the American magazine is a part of I Governmen nolicv While Par- i < > ........................................................a