-F it0 4 aiIl Wesatier Cloudy VOL. LIV No. 54 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, JAN. 15, 1944 PRICE FIVE CENTS 1,400 Allied Planes Hit Northern France Allies Asked To Hold Red, Polish Talks Cabinet Requests U.S., Britain To Help Mend Diplomatic Relations By The Associated Press LONDON, Jan. 15, Saturday.- The Polish government- in- exile after four successive days of cabinet study of Russia's Curzon line bound- ery proposal announced in a con- ciliatory statement early today that it was asking the United States and Great Britain to bring Poland and. Russia together to discuss all out- standing Russian-Polish problems. The Polish announcement, which in effect asked the United States and Britain to mend broken diplomatic relations between the Polish London government and the Soviet Union, was hailed immediately in official British quarters as "an ecouraging response" to the Soviet government's Jan. 11 declaration suggesting the Curzon line as the Russian-Polish boundary. "In their, earnest anxiety to safe- guard complete solidarity of te United Nations especially at the de- cisive stage of their struggle against the common enemy, the Polish gov- ernment consider. it to be preferable now to refrain from further public discussions," said the Polish state- Asserting that they could not "recognize unilateral decisions or ac- complished facts which have taken, place or might take place on the ter- ritory of the Polish republic," the Poles said that they had repeatedly -sought a just' Pgl sh-Soviet agre- ment. U.S Exami sPol sh equest WASHINGTON, Jan. 14..--P) The State Department announed1 tonight it had ree1ved and was giving immediate attention to the request by the Polish government- in-exile for aid in solving Russian- Polish problems. The request was made of both the United States and the British governments to help bring the neighboring nations together for a discussion of ways to achieve per- manent cooperation" Soldier Speaks At Bond Rally Lt. McLean Calls On All To Give to War "If you could see the soldiers back from all theaters of the war in hos- pitals of this country," declared Lt. Leo F. McLean, "you would have the people who hold on to their money buying bonds to help their sons who are fighting the war." Lt. McLean who has been at the Percy Jones Hospital at Battle Creek recuperating from wounds, appeared last night at a bon rally in the Rackham Auditorium heralding the Fourth War Loan Drive. One thing that should not creep into the minds of those at home, he warned, is the idea that the war is won. The men who travel on ships for unknown destinations and fight the enemy, Lt. Mc Lean said, think about those people at home. They, have no greater pleasure, he declared, than knowing that those at home are. sup- porting them by contributing money for the purpose of buying weapox for war. Lt. McLean's speech was given be- tween reels of the OWI film, "Battle of Russia," which showed how the Russian people have defended their homeland throughout the ages, es-. pecially during the present conflict.- GI Stomp Will Be Today in Union Dancing to the music of juke box tunes will be the main feature at the GI Stomp from 3 to 5 p.m. today Campus Favors Federal Soldier Vote Bill! Federal War Ballot Rejected BY Committee House Group Favors State Regulation of Servicemen's Vote WASHINGTON, Jan. 14.-(7)-- Congressional advocates of a federal "war ballot" for the armed services suffered another reversal today when the House Elections committee, re- jecting this idea, approved 7 to 5 a measure leaving the problem of sol- diers' voting up to the states. Since the Senate already has taken a similar stand, the chances for a federal ballot appear doubtful al- though these new moves to bring one about were launched today: 1. Senator Tydings (Dem., Md) introduced a measure which would give afederal war ballot to members of the armed services only after their home states declare them eligible to vote. 2. The Senate Elections Commit- tee began . efforts to work out some compromise acceptable to both sides in the hot controversy. It considered, but. deferred action at least until next Thursday, two new bills, one by Senator Lodge (Rep., Mass) would authorize the Army and Navy to circulate federal ballots overseas but would leave to the' states the question whether or'not to accept them. The other, by Senator Lucas (Dem., Ill) would set up a federal ballot com- mission. with: authority only to get ballots to' and from the armed ser- vices. I4 addition, backers of a federal bellot promised a floor fight to over- turn the decision of the House Elec- tions Committee. The committee- approved ill probably wll come up in the House next week. President Roosevelt joined the de- bate by saying in his annual mes- sage that the "overwhelming ma- 'jority" of fighting men would be de- prived of the right to vote if it is left to the states. 3000 japs Die In Invasion of New Britain ADVANCED ALLIED HEADQUAR- TERS. New Guinea, Jan. 15., Satur- day-('P)-Japanese defenders of Al- lied-invaded Cape Gloucester, New Britain, have lost nearly 3,000 dead since American Marines landed three weeks ago, General MacArthur's com- munique reported today.1 This marks an increase of approxi- mately 600 dead at the Cape Glouce- ster battlefront since the last Allied reports a few days ago. American airmen continued their daily assaults against the Japanese defenses' of Madang, supply base on the north coast of New Guinea. Bombers poured tons of explosives on Alexishafen and Bogadjim air- fields protecting the Madang base, the 'communiqhe reported. Other American bombers ranged over New Britain to strike Rabaul, big enemy bastion on the northeast tip of the island, and winged more- than 2,000 round trip miles to hit Makassar and Balikpapan in the Celebes in the Dutch East Indies. Continuing their squeeze play against trapped Japanese forces on the north coast of Guinea, Austra- lian jungle forces have advanced within artillery range of Sio. Poll Records 1,732 for, 95 Against Plan MYDA, Daily Conduct Survey Among Navy, Army Men, Civilians In an overwhelming vote of 1,732 to 95, students and servicemen Thursday registered their support of the Green-Lucas bill for federal con- trol of service voting in 1944. Civilian students, army trainees and men in the Navy V-12 Program were reached iri the all-campus poll conducted by Michigan Youth for Democratic Action, new anti-fascist group, in conjunction with The Daily. Breaking down the results in- to three categories they were: Army -707 for, 49 against, V-12 and Mar- ines-343 for, 19 against, and Civil- ians-682 for, 27 against. Allied Ships Explode Depth Bombs on Nazi Submarine Commenting on the issue one ser- viceman stated, "Depriving us of the ballot becausemwe are in service would be the most monstrous and paradoxical travesty on democracy possible." A civilian wrote, "It would be an impossibility to ask the army to handle absentee ballots under 48 different systems. One federal ballot is the only efficient and democratic method possible." Of the servicemen who expressed their disapproval of the federal sol- dier vote bill one said, "I believe that it would endanger the rights of states, putting too much power into the hands of the federal govern- ment." Others said, "I'll worry about politics after the war," and "Do they know enough to vote intelligently?" Lowering the voting age to 18 was mentioned by many of thase' polled in remarks like these: "The average 18 year old is better qualified to vote than other civilians, and all service- men, 18 or otherwise, are certainly entitled to vote," "The bill should permit the 18-21 year old group to vote also," and "Let the 18 year olds vote too." One serviceman summed up the typical feeling by saying, "Congress should reflect on its responsibility in denying democratic rights to ser- vicemen during a war fought in de- fense of democratic rights. The fed- eral ballot alone will guarantee all servicemen the vote. The morale of our troops is concerned, and the ef- fectiveness of our foreign propa- ganda." War Plant Told To Cut Prices Government Says '42 Profits Are 'Excessive' WASHINGTON, Jan. 14.-OP)-- The War Department ordered' Jack & Heintz Inc., of Cleveland, Ohio, to- day to reduce by $7,000,000 the cost of aircraft parts it sold the govern- ment during 1942, saying that the company's good record as a supplier "cannot be allowed to serve as an excuse for war profiteering." The firm, said the Department, made a profit of $8,361,000 in fiscal 1942 before deductions for taxes, and this figure "-over 23 times what the owners had in the business at the be- ginning of the year and more than 35 cents on each dollar of sales-was deemed excessive." In the Atlantic, Allied ships and planes put a crimp in Hitler's U-Boat campaign. Here a depth bomb explodes on a Nazi submarine, another (circle) drops alongside. Regional City, Rail Juncture Taken by Reds Germans Fall Back 20 Miles After Losing Kalinkovichi, Mozyr By JAMES F. KING Associated Press Correspondent LONDON, Jan. 15, Saturday-Gen. Constantine Rokossoysky's army ini southern =White Russia captured the important rail junction of Kalinko- vichi and the nearby regional center of Mozyr yesterday, inflicting "tre- mendous losses" on the fleeing Ger- mans, and forged on 20 miles west- ward through the frozen Pripet marshes gMoscow announced today. Another Red Army under Gen. Nikolai Vatutin crossed the Horyn River, 46 miles inside old Poland, and extended its front in the area by the capture of Stepan and more than 30 other towns and villages. Stepan is 17 miles south of Tutovichi and 35 miles north of Rovno. Skrigalov Taken Both of these drives were advanc- ing along the only two east-west rail- roads in the Pripet marshes. Rokos-- sovsky's drive. captured Skrigalov, only 40 miles from the old Polish frontier on the south bank of the Pripet River, as it rolled on toward the industrial town and waterways center of Pinsk, only 95 miles away. The two railroads are 60 miles apart. More than 40 other populated places were overrun by the White Russian advance, including the rail station of Kotsury, 16 miles west of Kalinkovichi. Nazis Lose Heavily The midnight Moscow communi- que, recorded by the Soviet Monitor, said of this sector: "The enemy sus- tained tremendous losses in man- power and equipment. Retreating in disorder the Germans abandoned many guns, lorries, stores of am- munition and military supplies. A considerable number of prisoners were taken." A separate Mscow radio broad- cast said the Russian attack had been so swift the Germans had no time to set the two towns afire as they usually do before retreating. More than 3,000 Germans were wiped out, 27 tanks and 40 big guns destroyed and in one area alone 11 tanks and 20big guns were captured, the late bulletin said. Vatutin's drive into old Poland, where the Russians now have a con- tinuous front 85-miles long across the former frontier, killed 600 Ger- mans in its advance and with the aid of guerrillas routed a column of German infantry on a highway. Ruthveni Will Give Radio Talk Today President Alexander G. Ruthven will speak on "Victory FOB" at 3:30 'GUSTAV LINE' HOLDS: Yanks Meet Strong German Resistance in Cassino Defense ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, AL- GIERS, Jan. 14. -(P)- American troops advancing yard by yard from the southeast slugged doggedly to- day at the maze of weapon pits, barbed entanglements and mine- .fields comprising the "Gustav line" defenses of Cassino, Nazi stronghold on the Fifth Army front in Italy. German resistance was extremely fierce in this final three-mile deep Railroad Wage e.e Dispute Settled By Arbitration WASHINGTON, Jan. 14.-(1P)-The Railroad Operating Brotherhoods' wage dispute was settled tonight when the firemen, conductors, and switch- men accepted the same pay increase -an over-all boost of nine cents an hour - that President Roosevelt awarded the, engineers and trainmen in arbitration proceedings. This removed from controversy the wages of 350,000 men who operate the trains and possibly opened the way for early return of the railroads to private management. The Army took over control of the roads Dec. 27 because of a strike threat. Still to be settled are the demands of 1,100,000 non-operating railroad workers-the shopmen, clerks and others who do not operate trains-- for a pay increase in lieu of overtime. A special Presidential Board is con- sidering these demands, however, and the unions have recalled strike orders, originally set for Dec. 30, which led to government seizure of the roads. In another development during the day, a House interstate commerce subcommittee approved legislation stripping Stabilization Director Fred M. Vinson of all authority over rail- way workers' wages. The measure would place exclusive jurisdiction with the Railway Mediation Board. Passage of Tax Bill Is Delayed WASHINGTON, Jan. 14.--(A)- Completion of' revenue sections of the $2,275,600,000 tax bill, confident- ly undertaken by the Senate today, was washed out by a flood of unex- pected oratory on subjects ranging from the soldiers' vote to interna- tional relations and food subsidies. As a result the Senators were forced into a Saturday session, to clear the way for action on contro- versial amendments to the war con- tracts renegotiation law Monday. An indication that some of the defensive belt before Cassino, and Lt. Gen. Mark W. Clark's doughboys were forced to fight off a desperate enemy counterattack on the captured village of Cervaro Wednesday night before they could continue their frontal assault. British and French troops fought in toward Cassino from the south and northeast, respectively. The ground offensive was coupled with a typical Allied air blow at Nazi airdromes in the Rome area by AmericanFlying, Fortresses, Liberat- ors, medium bombers and fighters. Three fields from which German planes have been taking off to inter- vene in the ground struggle were re- duced to flaming wreckage. Flying Fortresses and mediums left smoking ruins from one end to the other of the modern Guidonia ex- perimental airport, 15 miles north- east of Rome, and at Centocelle, sev- en miles east of Italy's capital. The Fortresses and their Lightning fight- er escort shot down eight out of 40 Nazi planes that rose to challenge them, against a loss of three Ameri- can fighters. Liberators blasted an enemy field at Perugia, 90 milesI north of Rome.1 Nazi prisoners taken in recent days boasted of the impregnability of what they call the "Gustav Line" de- fending Cassino, a strategically sit- uated town of perhaps 7,000 popula- tion on the main inland highway and railroad 70 airline miles from Rome. Noted Pianist To Play Here Artur Rubinstein Will Give Concert Tuesday Artur Rubinstein, "the most excit- ing pianist of our time," will be heard in the seventh Choral Union concert to be given at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday in Hill Auditorium. Rubinstein, who was born in Lodz, Poland, in 1890, displayed musical talents at the age of three. He was only eight when Joseph Joachim, the great Hungarian violinist and friend of Brahms, assumed responsibility for the boy's future.t At 11 he made his formal musical debut in Berlin, playing the Mozart" Concerto in A major, with Joachim conducting the orchestra. By the time he was 15, young Rubinstein had spread his talents to encompass most of Germany and Poland. Already a specialist in Chopin, Beethoven, Brahms and Liszt, Ru- binstein made his first appearance with the Philadelphia orchestra in the United States in 1906. This tour lasted three months during which he1 gave 75 concerts.- 'Roeket-Gun' Coast Suffers New Pounding Germans Announce RAF Raid in Reich; Target Areas Cleared By W. W. HERCHER Associated Press Correspondent LONDON, Jan. 15, Saturday,-A powerful Allied aerial force of pos- sibly 1,400 planes blasted military ob- jectives along the "rocket gun coast" of northern France yesterday and the German DNB news agency reported early today that the RAF had fol- lowed up with a night attack on Ger- many. #An interruption of telephone ser- ice between Berlin and Stockholm from 7:15 to 8:45 p.m last night in- dicated that the German capital may have been raided. Hundreds of U. S. heavy bombers were included in the mixed aerial armada that struck the massive blow against northern France. Berlin Has Alert The German announcement of the new attack on the Reich said that Nazi night fighters offered strong resistance to the British bombers.n Stockholm reported that a brief alert was sounded in jittery Berlin shortly after 1 p.m. yesterday but n bombs were dropped. Making their first attack since the mammoth air battle over the heart tof Germany Tuesday; the "'BtI based Flying Fortresses and Liber- ators were escorted yesterday by Thunderbolts, Lightnings and long- range Mustangs. These shepherding planes pushed the Nazi fighters back from the target areas so that the bombing runs could be made almost without inter- ruption. Nazi Opposition Light In contrast to the Tuesday attack when a 'reeord numbet' of '60 Amenri can heavy bombers and five fighters were lost and 152 German planes were shot down, Nazi opposition over the French coast was light and pre- liminary reports indicated that the heavy bombers' escorting planes scored better than four to one in air combats with the Germans. It was the fifth major operation of the month for the American planes. Heavy, medium, light and fighter bombers and fighters were included in the Allied force. Bomb Kills 7 in London Theatre LONDON, Jan. 15., SaturdayiyP - A lone enemy plane slipped through London's bristling air raid defenses last night and dropped a bomb on a crowded movie theatre in a suburban business area, killing seven persons and injuring 31. No alert was sounded, and there was immediate speculation that the Nazis have a new type of near noise- less plane-possibly bombing from the stratosphere to escape detection. It was the first time in several years that an enemy plane was known to have penetrated to subur- ban London without arousing the elaborate coast defense or radio loca- tion system. The sound of plane engines was heard a moment before the whistle of the falling bomb. There was no gunfire. Indications were that the raider was alone, said the British Press Association. Dean To Advise Forestry Group Dr. Dana Will Aid in Survey on Resources Discussing his position on the ad- visory council of the American For- estry Association's national survey of national forest resources, Dean S. T. Dana of the Forestry School said last night that "this is an important project and will be valuable in shap- ing future plans." Preparations for this survey which is exploring the effect of the war on the national forest resources have been in progress since mid summer, he said, but were only begun January 300 LEADER TO A TTEND: RPastors' Conference on World Problems Will Open Monday With three hundred ministers and religious educators expected to at- tend, the fifth annual Michigan Pas- tors' Conference will open at 3 p.m. Monday in the Rackham Building when the Rev. Rolland W. Schloerb will speak on "Implications for Christians in the World Today." One of the principal leaders of the Conference will be Dr. Hornell Hart, professor of social ethics at Duke which will be held at 8 p.m. Monday, will include a farmer, a businessman, a member of the C.I.O., anc the ex- ecutive secretary of the Department of Race Relations for the Federal Council of Churches. A second panel on "Effective Means for World Order" will be con- ducted at 7:30 p.m. in the Rackham Building Tuesday. Prof. Preston Slosson of the history department,