R -- - - - - - -,..---~ .- 0o THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, JUNE 16, 1944 Students To Be. Given Awards - In Mathematics' John R. Stock, '46E, and Lynn G. Albers, Grad., will receive the first awards from the Edwin Wilkinson Miller Fund for students in the mathematics department, it was an- nounced yesterday. Given to recognize outstanding scholarship, the award consists of an advanced mathematical work, selec- ted to suit the tastes of the student. The annual award is made to stu- dents in undergraduate engineering mathematics courses and to graduate mathematics students and was estab- lished in memory of the late Prof. Edwin W. Miller of the mathematics department. The fund is made up of contributions from former friends, faculty colleagues and alumni., Prof. Miller had attracted interna- tional attention with his research publications. He received his Ph.D. here in 1930 and was a member of the mathematics department staff until his death in 1942. BUY WAR BONDS & STAMPS TYPEWRITERS Office and Portable Models of all makes Bought, Rented, Repaired. STATIONERY & SUPPLIES 0.D. MORRILL 314 South State St. ..........1944 Clerk of the City or Township of ..................., Michigan Being in the armed forces of the United States and desiring to vote in the coming election, I hereby apply for an official war ballot. My home address is .................................. in the city, town or village of .............................. in the county of Michigan. I desire that the ballot be sent to me at the following address: Jury Selection Still Pending Little Sign of Headway Seen in Graft Trial MASON, MICH., June 15- (AP)- The tedious task of selecting a jury to try 23 defendants named in a Leg- islative Graft Conspiracy warrant dragged through its fourth day in the Ingham County Circuit court today with little sign of real head- way. Of the first panels of 160 prospect- ive jurors, 13 were seated tentatively in the jury box at the close of to- day's session of court; all the rest but two had been excused, and only 25 of the 230 peremptory challenges allowed the prosecution and defense had been used. The defense ex- pended 16 of its 15 challenges,- th( prosecution nine. A special panel of 100 prospective jurors is to report to the court to- morrow. The defendants are accused of conspiracy to corrupt the Legislature through the passing of bribes. (ONFERENCES CITED: Peace Plans Progress in Capitol (Signed) ......................................... NOTE: Whether you are registered or not you are eligible to receive a ballot and ..vote if you attain the age of 21 on or before November 7th, 1944.......... CLIP THIS APPLICATION BLANK FOR ABSENTEE BALLOTING-- This clipping is a replica of the application card each serviceman must fill in to vote in the coming election. Absentee voters will receive Michigan ballots when this card is filed with their county clerk. Either this clipping or an application blank obtainable at the county clerk's office or from Local 38 (UAW-CIO), 208 W. Washington, may be used. TIME TABLE CAUSE: Company G Storms Castle At Monte Cave in Alban Hills By The Washington Staff of The Associated Press WASHINGTON, June 15.- --There is great hope in official Washington that real progress is being made toward an enduring peace after the war; President Roosevelt recently said that we now are much farther along with planning than we were at the same time during the past war. He cited the Teheran. Moscow and Cairo conferences, the food conferences, the UNRRA agreement and the forthcoming world monetary confer- ence. Hull's Agreement A strong contributing factor to this hope naturally is Secretary Hull's agreement with Senate leaders on general principles for a post-war world organizatio# to keep the peace, and the invitation to Russia, China and Britain to discuss it. This step was designed to avoid the error made by the Wilson Administration in World War I when failure to nail down Senate support first reacted unfavorably upon Wilson's position later. Although reckoned by many ob- servers as the most conservative in international affairs of the great powers, the U.S. now has psychologi- cal approaches to China, Britain and Russia for post-war settlements which they appear to lack among themselves and which America might not enjoy after the war. .Diplomacy Snail-Paced Diplomacy appears snail-paced, but its task now is enormous. At present Secretary Hull seeks to com- mit this Government to principles only, but he is going ahead on that basis before the war ends. Details of the design may until much later. GOP Problem- Republicans are looking around for a middle-of-the- road chairman for their convention resolutions committee to avoid tag- ging their platform in advance as "isolationist" or "internationalist." The group may face warm sessions when it meets a week before the June 26 convention, as it includes members of such divergent views as Rep. Clare Luce of Connecticut, Sen- ators Taft of Ohio, Danaher of Con- necticut, Austin of Vermont and Brooks of Illinois. not become clear _____MRRILYN SHOPPE 'COVL ter Our selection of frocks for Sum- mer - every conceivable coo . ffq By KENNETH L. DIXON Associated Press Correspondent WITH THE AEF IN ITALY, June 15.-Except for a. three hour differ- ence in the German and American armies' time table, men of Company G never would have stormed the castle at Monte Cave here high in the Alban Hills. But they had to do it and they scaled this rock wall which defied t4 9amwu4 4i--A at ANN ARBOR'S MOST FAMOUS RESTAURANT modern warfare's mortars and ba- zookas, going over the emplacements on one another's shoulders like knights of old, yelling and shouting and shooting into the smoke. And they took the castle mirac- ulously, without a casualty, while killing more than half of those in- side and capturing the rest. It was just before 6 o'clock in the evening when the batallion surround- ed the stone castle, about 125 yards long, 100 yards wide and three stories high. Nazi riflemen, machine gun- ners and machine pistol experts cut loose at them from the four huge blockhouses on the corners and from the slits in the stone. Inside were about 70 Germans. The battalion had to capture the castle and move on over the moun- tain-Hill 949 the military maps call- ed it-to keep from exposing the flanks of their advancing comrades on both sides. They made their plan for storm- ing the castle, got the mortar com- pany ready to throw down a pre- liminary barrage and men of Com- pany G moved through the trees up as close as possible. But Company G was willing to give the Germans a chance. Up to within 75 yards of the castle crawled Pfc. Herman J. Kemmer, 20, of Buffalo, N.Y., who was born in Germany. "Come on out and surrender," he called in German. "We have you surrounded. We will give you a free ride back to America. It's nice over there. Otherwise we will fire on the castle." In perfect English a voice replied: "Sorry, but we have 6rders to hold this castle until 9 o'clock. You know the army. We can't do it. Sorry." Company G was sorry too, but they had their orders and they knew the army, too. They signaled to Lt. James F. Strader, 22, of Amarillo, Tex., the forward observer for the mortar com- pany, and he started calling the shots in the castle positions. From 6 until 7 o'clock the mortar men laid down more than 400 rounds on everything that moved in the castle. They did it in three separate barrages and between each barrage Kemmer again called out to the Ger- mans inside to surrender. Each time the answer was the same. Each time it was accompanied by bursts of machine gun fire from the castle windows. Bazookas dented the stone walls and the mortars obviously weren't going to do the job alone. So Captain Matney called the men of Company G to scale the walls and storm the castle. at at Gsolfside Ri ing Stables PRIVATE OR GROUP INSTRUCTION WOODED BRIDLE PATH SPECIAL RATES FOR SERVICEMEN COURTESY CAR Phone 2-3441 3250 East Huron River Drive fabric - al l colors - and so many to look at! SHEERS mCREPES - WASHABLES OCe- and two-piece stles the scintillating 795 to G 2 E.LbrgLYN hr r 529-531 E.Lbet St. Michigan Theatre 131dg9 .o 4- -r - y ti 1 i I d Take time for a pause during your studying for a last visit to the ALLENEL before leaving campus. Have one of their FAMOUS DISHES - BROILED LOBSTER, CHICKEN, BROILED OR FRIED, FISH, CURED HAM, or TENDER CHOPS. lhe 41lenel /ktel i i t 'I 126 Eqst Huron Phone 4241 it I, - -- __ _ _I_ WAR BONDS ISSUED HERE! * CONTINUOUS DAILY FROM 1 P.M. BARGAIN MATINEES WEEKDAYS 30c to 5 P.M. E7--Wwwqw.v---WT wwwww-, -,w lw- T- T V- 7 1 NOW PLAYING ".4"CCtLon 4 dEYtG X~ I MORRIS! IS MY : f -,- - BN USD5l Ii