. . ... .... ...... Ir x 4 Weather Warmer VM LIV No. 85 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, FEB. 20, 1944 PRICE FIVE CENTS Yanks Seize Air Base on Eniwetok Atoll; Allies Hold Anzio Line Against Nazi I nits German Casualties Rise' In Beachhead Struggle, Allied Airmen Shoot Down 15 Enemy Planes In Intensive Aerial Activity over Area By The Associated Press ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, Naples, Feb. 19.-American and Brit- ish troops have carpeted the ground before their Anzio beachhead line with German dead and in four days have wiped out as many as half of some Nazi units in one of the greatest and most crucial battles of the war, front dispatches reaching here disclosed tonight. Meeting the German attempt to push- them back into the sea with a hurricane of steel, Fifth Army troops fell back in one sector but kept their lines intact and prevented a break-through. The Allied soldiers were fighting doggedly to wear out the Germans. Against them the Germans have thrown at least four divisions of in- fantry and armor in this battle on the beachhead front south of Rome. Planes Destroyed Allied airmen in a day of intense activity over the beachhead todO shot down at least 15 Nazi planes and probably destroyed five others of the more than 100 enemy aircraft which - _ Pattern of Warfare in Allied March Against Japanese SIBERIA - ALASKA RUSSIA -i MANCHURIA- MONGOLIA PARAMUSHIRO ISLANDS HINA JAPANPacific Ocean TIBET t IDA IND IA -i°HAWAIIAN BURMA~rd' WAKE -. PHILIPPINE ENIWETOK SNEW "TR K '-MARSHALL IS. ." --------- .7 - G U IN EA --- - - __. EQUA TOR ' .-.-- f* bSOLOMON EUTR NETHERLANDS is.LMQ EATINDIEmS,- . S 2000S. TUAMOTU A USTR ALIA CLNEIW IS MILES AT EQUATORAL CALEDONA #{ I Engebi Isle Captured; U. S. Casualties Light Forces Now 750 Miles West of"Truk; Other Posts in Area Fall to Americans By The Associated Press U.S. PACIFIC FLEET HEADQUARTERS, Pearl Harbor, Feb. 19.-With a mighty smash American Marines captured Engebi Island with its im- portant air base one day after landing on Eniwetok atoll in the Marshalls. Several other islands in the northern portion also have fallen to the Americans. Adm. Chester W. Nimitz so announced today, saying that preliminary reports indicated American casualties have been light. Other islands of the atoll captured were not named, but islands from that area include Muzinbaarikku, Yeiri and Rujiyoru, southeast of Engebi, and Bogon, Bogar- Congress Hits Baruch Plan -rl attacked the British and American ground troops. In the day's air battles over the beachhead American medium bomb- ers shot down eight out of 20 Ger- man planes that tried to intercept their bombing of Nazi supply dumps around Carroceto. Returning pilots. said that five more German planes were so badly damaged that they probably crashed. The bombers blew up a gasoline dump which sent flames spouting 200 feet in the air. Seven German planes were shot down by British fighters and two by American fighter bombers. De Luce Tells Story A dispatch filed from the beach-t head at noon today by Daniel Det Luce, Associated Press correspond-( ent, summed up the situation as ofi that moment by saying: "Field Mar-'i shal Albert Kesselring's offensive is1 being held." Telling a story of swaying battlef in which the Germans attacked with "almost' reckless sacrifice' of lives," De Luce radioed: "I saw American doughboys and tankmen hit back and recover in two1 hours some ground that the Germans1 had paid for with a heavy loss of lives in 24 hours' continuous fighting a day earlier."7 Allies Prevent Breakthrough De Luce had filed a dispatch 12 hours previously declaring that Kes- selring by the weight of his infantry- armor blows, supported by artilleryt and air power, had forced the Alliest back in a sector four miles wide. The correspondent asserted, however, that the Allied troops had prevented a1 breakthrough and the Germans fail- ed to gain tactically decisive ground. The main front south of Cassino1 as well as on the Anzio beachhead the Allies were engaged in one of the decisive battles of the war against1 German forces brought from many parts of Europe. A new phase wasF indicated with a reinforcement of the Fifth Army at Cassino by In-1 dians and New Zealanders brought from the. Eighth Army on the oppo- site side of Italy. Swimmers, Wrestlers Take Meets special to The Daily EVANSTON, Feb. 20.-Michigan's high-powered swimmers amassed a staggering 72 point total to dethrone Ohio State as Big Ten champions in Patten Gymnasium yesterday, win- ning five out of the nine events and placing heavily in runner-up posi- tions to chalk up their 14th title in 19 years. The Wolverines, heavy favorites to win, left no doubt as to final out- come when they placed heavily in the preliminaries, qualifying men in every event except fancy diving. Northwestern, the only team fig- ured to press Michigan, came in sec- See SWIMMERS, Page 7 Grapplers Win, 28-27 By HANK MANTHO Special to The Daily EVANSTON, Ill., Feb. 20.-Coach Ray Courtright's grapplers fought an uphill battle against surprisingly stiff opposition from the Boilermakers at Evanston yesterday to co their first Reds Capture 18,200 Nazis In Ukraine Area Soviet Forces Move On Pskov, Take 130 Northern Communities By TOM YARBROUGH Associated Press Correspondent LONDON,. Feb. .20, Sunday.- The Russians announced last night that they had not only killed or cap- tured 73,200 Germans in the battle of the Korsun trap but had seized an immense armory of Nazi equipment, including 10,000 trucks,,618 guns and 116 tanks. The Nazi Eighth Army commander's body also was decla'ed found among the dead. The announcement said that 10,- 000 more Germans had been counted since figures on German losses in the great Dnieper Bend debacle had been made public first last Thursday. Among these were 3,000 dead, mak- ing a total of 55,000 slain, and 7,200 additional prisoners for a total of 18,200 captives. Later, a Moscow midnight bulletin gave details of steady Russian ad- vances in the north where 130 more communities were captured in the three-way drive on Pskov, gateway to the Baltic states. The rail station of Pyussa, 58 miles northeast of Phkov on the Len- ingrad-Prkov railway, was taken aft- er a tense fight which cost the Ger- mans hundreds of dead, the late bul- letin said. Much war material was captured on that front and many prisoners taken. Ski troops were ac- tive, making surprise raids behind enemy strongpoints and suddenly flanking positions the Germans had counted secure. To the east the Russian forces which captured Staraya Russa tore a great semi-circle of territory out of German hands to the west and southwesthofStarayaRussa. The rail station of Tuleblya, 11 miles west of Sttraya Russa on the railroad to Pskov, was captured and Harino, 21 miles southwest of the ancient city, also fell, the Russians said. Educators SMourn Loss Of ASTPv WASHINGTON, Feb. 19-(R)-Ed- ucators expressed concern today over the national loss of educated young men as well as the financial effect on colleges and universities from the Army's curtailment of its specialized training program. Dr. Ray Lyman Wilbur, chancellor of Stanford University, called it "one of the mistakes people in a democ- racy make because they do not look far enough ahead." An Associated Press survey indi- cated many smaller colleges would be particularly hard hit by the Army decision to withdraw about 110,000 of the 145,000 men assigned to special training courses in 20 colleges. Among schools which said they would be particularly hard hit by the Army's action was Niagara Univer- sity, which said it "will clean us out" onlA et n-a ,- ( V rimr. - Split arrow from Hawaiian Islands represents U. S. Navy attack on Truk,' Japan's Southwest Pacific Naval Bastion, which marks wane of Jap domination in waters extending westward to the" continent of Asia and north to the Philippines. Solid arrow coming from lower right points to Eniwetok in the Mar- shall Islands where Army and Marine assault troops landed and established beachheads. Open arrows indicate threats to Japan's Hearland from Allied for ces in the Southwest Pacific and Gen. MacArthur, in India and the Aleutians. I 'THE DEBT WE OWE': Hannah Addresses Graduates; Awarded Honorary Doctorate Cited "as an educator alive to both the immediate problems and ultimate purposes of teaching and research," Dr. John Hannah, President of Mich- igan State College who delivered the principal commencement address yesterday at the University's second midyear exercise in Hill Auditorium was awarded the honorary degree of Doctor of Laws by the University. President Alexander G. Ruthven conferred the degree upon Dr. Han- nah following a citation by Prof. John Winter. Dr. Hannah's speech called atten- tion to our aims both in this war and in the peace and stated "The coming peace will not necessarily make the world safe for democracy. The ques- tion is whether the victory over the Axis powers is to become the victory of an idea." Viewing the trend of the world stream of civilization, President Han- nah pointed to the destined role of the Western Hemisphere. "The world's center of gravity-in- tellectual, economic, and political- has crossed the Atlantic," he declared and continued, "The age of the Am- ericas has come, and that fact will Knutson Hits FDR on Veto have a profound effect upon our lives." Emphasizing the role of the pub- licly-supported colleges and univer- sities, he said that they ". . . were dedicated to the training of common people, and this dedication carries the responsibility of providing honest leadership for the best interests of the common good divorced from all selfish motives." World News in Brief E a .Rabaul -Bombed By Destroyears ' Y/f g ' For First Tire Kavieng Also Raided; Shore Installationfs, Shipping Hit Heavily ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN THE SOUTHWEST PACIFIC, Feb. 20, Sunday--(A)-American destroy- ers daringly shelled once mighty Ra- baul and its supplementary base of Kavieng early Friday for the first time in the war. Moving boldly to within four miles of those Japanese strongpoints on northeastern New Britain and north- western New Ireland, they duelled with shore batteries and silenced them. They damaged shipping heav- ily and blew up shore installations. Then they departed undamaged. At Rabaul, they smashed Simpson Har- bor which lies deep within Blanche Bay. Huge fires were set in dock areas. At Kavieng, the destroyers remained until after daybreak. The warships at Kavieng, 160 miles northwest of Rabaul, hit a tanker which exploded. Company C Men To Sing on Broadcast Cpl. Joseph Schamitz and Pfc. Robert Bentley, stars of "Bidin' Our Time," Company C's forthcoming musical comedy, are scheduled to sing in a nationwide broadcast over Sta- tion WXYZ. They were auditioned yesterday at the USO in Detroit. Every Saturday at 5 p.m. a broadcast is put on with servicemen who are stationed near Detroit to appear on this program. As Dictatorial George Attack Claims Proposal Gives Future Of Nation to Executive By JACK BELL Associated Press Correspondent WASHINGTON, Feb. 19.-The Ba- ruch plan for post-war reconversion of industry and manpower to civilian pursuits was challenged in Congress today on the grounds that it would deliver the future destiny of the na- tion into the hands of the executive. Chairman George, (Dem., Ga.), of the Senate post-war planning com- mittee, led the attack with an. asser- tion that the proposals submitted by Bernard M. Baruch, 73-year-old fin- ancier and presidential advisor, posed a basic issue whether Congress or the executive should lay down the gen- eral policies for the change over. Senator Vandiemnberg (Rep., Mich), a member, backed up this viewpoint with the declaration, that the committee is not willing to leave such decisions to "executive lieutenants" but will insist on the establishment of an overall auth- ority accountable to Congress for its actions. . In a statement, George charged that the Baruch plan for reconvert- ing industry, disposing of surpluses and war plants and channeling work- ers back to peacetime jobs was "to do the whole job by executive order un- der Justice Byrnes." "The two reports sharply outline the question of whether the econo- mic destiny of the country is to be settled by executive directives or by general policies established by the the elected representative." Campus Coeds Enter Contest Harriet Porter, '44SM, and Virginia Louise Zapf, '45SM, both pupils of Hardin Van Deursen of the School of Music, are two of four singers select- ed from 227 auditioned at the Detroit Conservatory of Music to enter final competition for a place with Phil Spitalny's All Girl Orchestra on the Sunday evening "Hour of Charm" program. The contest, conducted by the Gen- eral Electric Company, was started in quest of an undiscovered voice in America. Contestants must be over 18 years of age. sikk, Elugelab and Bogallua to the northwest. The victory in many ways rivaled the lightning victory at Kwajalein atoll 400 miles to the southeast. Assaults on other portions of the atoll are proceeding on schedule, Ad- miral Nimitz said. His announce- ment did not indicate how much re- sistance the Japanese offered the Am- erican invaders at Engebi with its 5,000-foot airstrip. Radio Silence Observed The capture of Engebi pt.ts our forces 750 statute miles west of the Japanese' great fortress of Truk which was attacked by a great force of American carrier-based planes and the result of which has not been disclosed because radio" silence must be observed by ships of the attack- ing forces. There was no indication of the size of the Japanese garrison defending Engebi and the surrounding islands, in the westernmost Marshalls, but it is probable preliminary ship bomg- bardment and plane bombing and strafing killed many of the defend- ers and knocked out many defense positions'beforeathe 22nd Marine Regiment charged ashore. Truk Within Range For the first time Truk is within range of American land-based planes. Ponape, 425 miles southwest of En- gebi, is within easy range even of medium Mitchells and their 75mm- cannon. There was no mention of Army troops in today's announcement. Nazi Bombs Raze London German Attack Marks Worst Blitz Since 1941 LONDON, Feb. 19.-VP)-Tough, truculent London shook off the ef- fects of the worst blitz in three years today and calmly prepared for what is expected to be a repetition of 1940- 41, although under far different cir- cumstances, as Hitler attempts to disrupt the western front military ef- fort. The early morning assault on this bomb-scarred city was more than a reprisal for RAF blasts at Berlin. For propaganda purposes, half a dozen planes would have served just as well for a reprisal raid, wih fewer German losses, but the Luftwaffe sent over more planes than at any time since 1941. The attack showed all the charac- teristics of the opening of German efforts to disrupt Allied western front preparations by blocking communi- cations and diverting civilian and military strength. WASHINGTON, Representative Feb. 19.-A')- Knutson, (Rep., Minn.) suggested today that Presi- dent Roosevelt's "reputedly unfriend- ly attitude" toward the newly-passed tax bill might be attributable to the provision which requires labor unionsI to file financial statements with the Treasury. "It should not be forgotten," he said in a statement, "that the CIO has urged the President to veto the bill, no doubt because of a fear of having to disclose its handling of theI dues exacted from its members.". Democratic leaders in Congress have expressed belief that Mr. Roose- velt will veto the bill and the Presi-I dent indicated yesterday that this is< a possibility, saying at his news con-j ference that he would send the bill to Congress Monday or Tuesday. Knutson, ranking R eopublican: member of the House Ways and, Meane Committee which handles tax legislation, said a veto would not af- fect the government's income to anyj vitaol vtent "since wea r adyodv1 Peace Plans Continue ... STOCKHOLM, Feb. 19.-(P-The delicate machinery needed to start the Finnish armistice negotiations with Russia rolled into motion slowly this week but at least ten days are expected to pass before even the pre- liminary decisions are made to get Finland out of the war. Diplomats tonight saw encourag- ing signs for agreement in the con- tinued presence here of the Finnish diplomat, Juhu K. Paasikivi, who came to Stockholm for "private busi- ness." Nazi Attache Released ... BUENOS AIRES, Feb 19.-(A)- Shertly after a federal police re- port named Gen. Friedrich Wolff German military attache, as the leader of an espionage organiza- tion in Argentina, the Under-Sec- retariat of Information and the press announced that he would not be subject to trial and had been re- leased from house arrest so that he could be repatriated. Stalin Reply Awaited ... LONDON, Feb. 19.-(A)-Marshal Stalin's reply to Prime Minister Churchill on the latest Polish pro- posals for settling the Russo-Polish boundary dispute is being awaited as an indicateion whether the Russians are willing to accept a compromise. Congyress' Deadlock Feared on Vote WASHINGTON, Feb. 19. - -P)- Concern that a Congressional dead- lock over service voting legislation might roh the arnmi foresP of a vote t , l LECTURE WITH FILMS: Holmes To Discuss North Africa Algeria, Tunis, Libya, Morocco, Gi- braltar, Dakar, and Suez will pass in review Tuesday evening when Burton Holmes gives his second travelogue at Hill Auditorium, as the sixth at- traction of the current Lecture Course. The lecture entitled "Our Fronts in North Africa" will not be on the pre- sent war in Africa, but was designed to show the wives and sweethearts of American soldiers on that battle front what that part of the world was like. The vnstness of North African rific air raids, with its happy, Peace- loving people. Shots of Casablanca, now a city of major importance, are also included. Holmes gives the French great cre- dit for the roads they have made, the cities they have restored, and the fighters they have trained. This is the second in a series of travelogues with films which Holmes has presented on the campus. His first lecture and set of films dealt with Russia in connection with her part in the war. This second lecture program will stress the French im- ... .. s