o us f 'C. 4.fit tI 4 ait1 Weather Snow VOL. LIV No. 58 ANN ARBOR, 1UCHIGAN, THURSDAY, JAN. 20, 1944 Russians Make ains in Leningrad I PRICE FIVE CENTS 1rive British Launch NewOensive They Fight Our Battle, Garigliano Is Crossed; Bombers Cut Railways Bulk of Supplies to Eternal City Are Stopped, New Offensive Advances Along Appian Way Red Forces Take Two Main Points Smash on 12 Miles hr oug h City's Outskirts along Twenty-five Mile Front By The Associated Press LONDON, Jan. 19.-In terrific twin thrusts to free Leningrad entirely from its two and one-half-year siege, the Red Army smashed 12 miles ahead through the city's outskirts on a 25-mile front today, seizing by storm two key fortresses, and a broad outflanking movement farther south ripped 19 miles across three strategic railways. The second drive, on a 31-mile break-through in the German lines north and west of Lake Ilmen, threatened to let the Russians in behind the Nazis who face Leningrad, and already had outflanked the important city of Novgorod both to the north By The Associated Press ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, Al- giers, Jan. 19.-Loosing a strong new offensive along the ancient Appian way to Rome, British troops have smashed across the lower Garigliano River and established bridgeheads at three points in the face of furious German resistance, Allied headquar- ters announced today as American artillery rained shells into Cassino preparatory to. an assault on that Nazi stronghold. Latest reports said the British were holding firmly to their footholds on the western bank of the Garigliano despite repeated Nazi counter-attacks supported by tanks and heavy artil- lery fire. German Broadcast Heard An official German broadcast heard here said the Fifth Army had launch- ed "several divisions" against Nazi positions east of the Gulf of Gaeta, and that ''fighting is in full swing."~ The Garigliano empties into the Gulf of Gaeta 80 miles southeast of Rome. This was the first important action in the coastal area of the Fifth Army front since Lt. Gen. Mark W. Clark's forces reached the eastern bank of the Garigliano over two months ago. * At that time the wind- ing stream was swollen and shortly after broke its banks for a width of a mile, but it since has receded. Strike in Darkness Three British assault forces struck in darkness early Monday ight arid met a curtain of fire from the strong- ly entrenched enemy. The right wing fought its way across the river near the village of Suio, seven miles inland from the coast, where it still was lock- ed in hard combat.. A second force hit at a point about four miles from the sea, where a railroad from Capua to Rome reaches the Garigliano and turns southward seeking an easy crossing of the stream. Still a third bridgehead was established at the village of Argento, almost on the coast itself. The Ap- pian way at this point is only two miles from the sea. The Nazis lashed back with a strong but futile tank attack at Argento. ~Bond Belles' Collect $5,950 In First Days Messenger Service Made Available to All University Employees 'Bond Belles' covered the far cor- ners of the campus to sell $5,950 in war bonds during the first days of the Fourth War Loan Drive, Deborah Parry, '45, chairman of Junior Girls' Project which is sponsoring the "Belles," said yesterday. Averaging six calls a day, the Bond Belles offer a messenger service by which anyone on the University pay- roll may, upon calling the Michigan League, have a coed come personally to take orders and deliver bonds the following day. Service Available on Week Days The service is available from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. every week day, and is in operation for the convenience of the University staff in supporting the Fourth War Loan. Advances are being made in every direction of the Ann Arbor front, but exact figures on the amount of bonds sold are still unavailable. An audit will be made today. Belles Only Part of Network The University's Bond Belles and Ann Arbor organizations are only part of a far-flung nation-wide net- work of issuing agents which total 53,000, a record-breaking number in comparison to the first three War Loan drives. Figures recently re- leased from Washington show that it.. n. mnrn nf . finr fl . .n'Cnd-, n By The Associated Press A U.S. 15th AIR FORCE BOMBER STATION IN ITALY, Jan. 19.-Am- erican bombers have cut all the rail- ways carrying the bulk of supplies in- to Rome from the north, Air Force experts said today after examining reconnaissance photographs of the area. ' Of the three major lines down the Italian peninsula, only one is open at present. This is the east coast from Ancona to Pescara, which sup- plies the Germans opposing the Bri- tish Eighth Army. Recent raids have at least tempo- rarily blockedsthe others and the ef- fects of these disastrous bombings will be more acutely felt by the Ger- mans when supplies now being used are exhausted, experts said. Supplies still may be brought in, however, via bomb-scarred highways. (London reported a Rome radio broadcast saying that the capital's waterworks were "destroyed in an Allied air attack today on the out- skirts of the city. Residents were urged to use water sparingly.) Heavy bombers on the 15th Air Force and medium bombers of the 12th have made Rome's major supply arteries virtually useless. The important central line was re- ported blocked at several points and the west coast line has been out of operation for some time. Subsidiary lines also have been cut and the rail- road'in' central Tuscany, south of Florence, which serves as an alter- nate to the central and west coast lines, is unuseable. Flying Fortresses, in their recent raids, put out of commission the Cen- tral line from Florence 'to Rome on their raids at Pistoia, Prato and Pon- tassieve, all near Florence. Union Social To Be Repeated This Sunday The second Union Sunday Social will be held from 2:30 to 5:30 p.m. Sunday in the North Lounge on the first floor of the Union, the Coopera- tive Committee announced yesterday. The committe feels that the re- sponse last Sunday was not so great as expected because of the interfer- ence of sorority pledging which was held at the same time. The event is planned to fill a need for some kind of organized entertain- ment Sunday afternoons, and all servicemen and civilian students are invited to attend with their dates. Bridge tables, cards and various games will be provided. There will be continuous music, and couples are welcome to come and talk if they do not wish to play games. WA VEKS Will Interview Girls This Week "The Navy not only needs WAVES but wants them, too; there is a def- inite job for you and every other wo- man in the Navy," Lt. (j.g.) Helen M. Stewart stressed in an interview ,yesterday. Lt. Stewart and Harriet M. Simon- son, Sp. (R) 3/c, will be in the lobby of the Michigan League from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. today and tomorrow to talk with women who are interested in joining the U.S. Naval Reserve. In explaining the purpose of their visit, Lt. Stewart said, "We are here to give information; we are not pre- pared to give tests or anything like that. We are glad to answer any questions, even if they seem like trivial points. Our particular inter- est is to speak with women who are The Marine Raiders in the picture above are fighting for the liberty of mankind in the dense jungle undergrowth on the beachheads of Torokina in the Bougainville campaign. These men are sacrificing their lives that our democracy shall endure. But they are thousands of miles from home, and cannot fight for their right to vote. it is up to us to protect their rights as they are protecting ours. It is up to us to force Congress to pass a federal vote bill. * * * * * * * * * But They Can't Vote ... Clip This Out, Send It to Your Congressman Immediately: A federal bill guaranteeing our fighting soldiers their right to vote has already been turned down by the Senate and by the House Election Committee. The issue is now in the hands of the House Rules Committee. As a citizen of the United States, I; the undersigned, demand immediate Massage of a federal soldier-vote bill that will give the 11,000,000 men and women in service a voice in the government of the country for which they are sacrificing so much. Nr4... University of Michigan, Senate Group Passes Bill To Ban Subsidies Proposal Turns Down Administration Plan To Reduce Food Prices By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Jan. 19.-Presi- dent Roosevelt's domestic legislative program suffered another setback to- day when the Senate Banking com- mittee approved a bill which would ban all consumer food subsidies after June 30. In so doing, the committee reject-' ed the Administration's request for authority to spend $1,500,000,000this year to hold down retail prices of food and turned thumbs down on one of the major proposals in the Presi- dent's annual message. The measure approved by the com- mittee is a two-point bill by Senator Bankhead (Dem., Ala.) It would con- tinue the life of the Commodity Cre- dit Corporation, which makes pro- duction loans to farmers, and ban the use of food subsidies after this fiscal year which ends June 30. The vote sending the bill to the Senate floor, where it is certain to provoke prolonged debate, was 10 to 9. Earlier this session the committee had disapproved the bill, but Senat- ors Taft of Ohio and Tobey of New Hampshire, Republicans, swung over to support of it in the new vote. Chairman Wagner (Dem., NY) said he hoped for early floor consid- eration since the Commodity Credit Corporation's life will expire Feb. 17. Opposition to subsidies has come chiefly from legislators from farm states who contend the public is well able to pay higher prices for food. President Roosevelt has vigorously advocated them for months and has told Congress the ministration will not be able to hold the line on wages unless food prices are held down. Methodists Hold Meeting Here Stamson Says Men Overseas Resent Strikes Asserts People Favor National Service Act To Senate Committee By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Jan. 19.-Secre- tary Stimson told a Senate Commit-, tee today that men overseas are "bit- terly resentful" of strikes at home and the public is for a national ser- vice law-"only Congress needs im- pressing." The House Military Committee yesterday pigeonholed President Roosevelt's request for a law to sub- ject civilians to war production as- signments. The. Senate's compar- able committee, despite Stimson's sharply-phrased urging showed little disposition to hurry a decision today. The members quizzed the Secretary for three hours, decided to recall him next Wednesday and Senator Austin (Rep., Vt) said it might be spring be- fore the Committee acts. Stimson told the Senate group the labor draft bill introduced more than a year ago by Austin and another Republican, Rep. Wadsworth of New York, is the best approach to the idea he has seen. At one point Stimson differed slightly from the stand taken by the President who had asked a five-point program and said that national ser- vice was so interlinked with the other proposals that it should not be adopted without them. Stimson said national service would be a good idea even without the rest of the program. Stimson hastened to say, however, that renegotiations and war profit taxes are needed. Prof. Kraus To Speak Today "War and the Conflict of Ideolo- gies" is the topic of a lecture to be given by Prof. Wolfgang Kraus of the political science department at 7:30 p.m. today in the Union under Russian Soviets Remain Silent on Denial Of Peace Story British, Americans Troubled by Pravda's Report on Armistice By The Associated Press MOSCOW, Jan. 19.-The relation- ship between Russia and her Allies, Britain and the United States, was the *biggest single topic of conversa- tion in the Soviet capital tonight and the subject has the whole town jit- tery. Pravda's peace rumor story Mon- day had developed as the biggest political news In Russia since the be- ginning of the war, excepting per- haps the Teheran Conference. Russians Are Serious Persons who might not have at- tached much importance to Pravda's publication of the Cairo dispatch concerning a reported meeting of. two Britbns and Nazi Foreign Min- ister Joachim Von Ribbentrop now have changed their minds. Now they are attaching great importance to it. Foreign observers do not like the situation at all, chiefly because they do not know what to make of it. As one well informed source said: "I didn't know whether the Rus- sians were serious about this at first. Now I know they are downright ser- ious." SOfficially, the Russian government remains silent. British Agency Quoted The Soviet press gave the Russian people news of the British Foreign Office denial of the rumor that the British had been discussing peace with German Foreign Minister Von Ribbentrop, but it carried only a brief news dispatch on the denial and it made no comment, editorial or otherwise. Failure to publish the text of the British denial gave some worry to British authorities there. They felt that it would have been better if the Russian press had printed the text of theddenial rather than the item they did carry: A one-paragraph story from Tass, the official Russian agency, quoting the British agency Reuters. * * * Red Magazine Affirms Solidarity Among Allies LONDON, Jan. 19.- (P)- The Moscow magazine "War and the Working Class" said today that Hit- ler's hopes of splitting the Allies were- buried forever by the decisions of the Moscow and Teheran confer- ences and added that "the peoples of the countries allied with us and their responsible leaders must under- stand the efforts being made by Nazi elements." MYDA Asks House Action On Soldier Vote Demanding immediate action on the federal soldier vote bill, Michi- gan Youth for Democratic Action sent a night letter to the House Rules Committee after a unanimous vote of approvalforrthe measure by the membership at a meeting yesterday. Results of the campus poll taken and the south. The push immediately before Len- ingrad, however, was by all odds the day's most signal victory. There, the Russian communique said, 20,000 Germans have been slaughtered since Saturday. In addition, said the communique and an order of the day by Premier Marshal Stalin, that five-day offen- sive of Gen. Leonid Gorov has: Gains Listed Stormed and captured the heavily- fortified towns of Krasnoye Selo and Ropsha; retaken Peterhof, summer home of the czars; captured more than 1,000 Germans, smashed seven German divisions; and taken many of the great 16-inch guns with which the Nazis have constantly shelled em- battled Leningrad. I In all, 195 guns were captured, in- cluding 36 of 152 to 406-millimeter calibres (6 to 16-inch), which had been shelling the city from 15-mile range. Seventy-five to 100 miles south, on the Volkhov River front north of Novgorod and on Lake Ilmen directly south of that city, the Russians an- nounced that Gen. K. A. Meretskov's forces had cut the Leningrad-Nov- gorod direct rail line at Bolotnaya, a more easterly line at Podberechye, and both the highway and railway be- tween Novgorod and Shimsk to the southwest. Novgorod Practically Isolated This left Novgorod isolated except for the new railway running through the marshlands due west to Luga. Still farther south, 300 miles below Leningrad in the area north of Novo- sokolniki, the Russians announced capture of sveral more populated places in a continuing offensive, while on the first Ukraine front they took Goshcha, 18 miles east of Rovno on the main highway to that threatened Nazi rail center in old Poland. The Germans continued to counter- attack in the far south, around Khristinovka, but all their attempts were reported repulsed with heavy losses. Roth Quartet To Play Here Fourth Music Festival To Start Tomorrow The Roth String Quartet will re- turn to Ann Arbor for the third con- secutive year to perform at the Fourth Chamber Music Festival, the first concert of which will be given at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Rack- ham Building. Quartets by Haydn, Ravel and Schubert will be performed on the opening program of the Festival, composed of three concerts, the other two of'which will be presented Saturday. The Quartet in F major will be the featured work on Saturday after- noon's program, while the Schu- mann Quartet in F major will high.. light the final concert at 8:30 p.m. Saturday. Harold Morris', Quartet No. 2 will be heard for the first tine here at the third concert. Among thedother unusual works to be performed dur- ing the Chamber Music Festival are the Italian Serenade of Hugo Wolff and the First String Quartet of Casella. Lance Wade, RAF Ace, Killed in Crash ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, AL- GIERS, Jan. 19.-( P)-Wing Com- mander Lance C. Wade, regarded in The Red Army by terrific twin thrusts has advanced 12 miles in the Leningrad area (A). A 31 mile break-through in the area north and west of Lake Ilmen threatens the entire Nazi position in the Leningrad area, and already has outflanked the important city of Novograd. Still farther south, on the first Ukrainian front, the Russians have taken Goshcha, 18 miles east of Rovno (D). Leland Stowe To Talk Here Will Discuss Russia In Lecture Tuesday Leland Stowe, ace war correspond- ent, will discuss "What I Saw in Rus- sia" in a lecture at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday in Hill Auditorium under the auspic- es of the Oratorical Association. Stowe has covered almost every important political and diplomatic event in Europe and South America. Since July, 1941, he has been in the Far East-Burma, Rangoon, Chung-