Jr 46F Aw t DaIIMI WEATHER Fair and Warmer 0 VOL. LV, No. 100 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN WEDNESDAY, MARCH 21, 1945 PRICE FIVE CENTS Yanks Wipe Out Nazi Resistance in Saar _ : Stettin Laid Open to Final Red Assault Soviets Take Last Outpost of Atdamir, By The Associated Press LONDON, March 20 - Russian troops, laying open flaming Stettin to a final assault, today captured the Pomeranian capital's last outpost of Altdamm, 70 miles northeast of Ber- lin, and wiped out the powerfully fortified German bridgehead there on the east bank of the swampy lower Oder River, Moscow announced. Far to the east other Soviet forces slashed into the enemy's partly-flood- ed east Prussian pocket southwest of Koenigsberg, capturing the ancient bastion of Braunsberg and 40 other towns and hamlets. Captured Men and Guns Moscow announced these victories in two orders of the day, and a com- munique and said that more than 3,000 German officers and men and more than 300 guns were captured in the fighting in East Prussia yesterday and today. At the same time the Germans said that Marshal Feodor I. Tolbukhin had hurled 200,000 of his Third Ukraine Army troops, and supporting armor, into a new offensive in north- western Hungary, sweeping within 58 miles of the Austrian frontier on the road to Vienna. Moscow has not confirmed this operation, which the Germans said' began last weekend, and created a' "temporary critical situation" for the Nazis. Berlin said the Russians were beyond Tata, which is 10 miles south- east of the big Danube River strong- hold of Komarom (Komarno). Drive Into Cechoslovakia Another German broadcast indi- cated that Marshal Ivan S. Konev's First Ukraine Army had smashed across the Moravian-Upper Silesian frontier into Czechoslovakia in a drive] outfianking Moravska - Ostrava,i Czechoslovakia's third city and gate-1 way to the Moravian gap leading to Vienna and Prague. The Germans told of fighting near Troppau (Opava), two miles inside Moravia, and 17 aniles northwest of Moravska-Ostrava. Factories Captured at Bresla Moscow dispatches said meanwhile that Russian shock troops, fighting inside besieged 'Breslau, upper Sile- sian capital 100 miles northwest of Moravska-Ostrava, had captured a number of buildings of the Junkers Auto Factory and had gained on the approaches to the Central Freight Station. Five German counterat- tacks were repulsed at Hindenburg Square in the southern part of Bres- lau, a city of 630,000 and the Reich's eighth largest. arrer Midway , Joins U.S. Fleet NEWPORT NEWS, Va., Mar. 20.- (A)-The 45,000-ton aircraft carrier Midway, largest warship ever built and which will carry a type of air- craft so new that it has not yet seen combat action, joined the United{ State fleet today. The giant carrier was launched at the Newport News Shipbuilding and Drydock Company ways in ceremon-] ies at which Artemus L. Gates, assis-I tant secretary of the Navy for air, was the principal speaker. Assistant Secretary Gates termed the Midway a "two fisted fighter." To safeguard the Midway, the as-1 sistant secretary declared, it has been given heavy armor, intricate water-tight compartments and im- proved damage control representing "great strides in the direction of in- vulnerability." CAMPUS EVENTS Today Sophomores may sign tpt for Soph Cabaret Com- mittees from 1 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. in the League. Today American Chemical Soci- ety will hold monthly meeting at 7:45 p.m. in Rm. 303, Chemistry Bldg. Today Prof. A. W. Binder will begin lecture series on sacred music sponsored by SRA and the School King George Hails Fall Of Mandalay to British Also Capture Mogok, Crush Ft. Dufferini By The Associated Press CALCUTTA, Mar. 20.-Mandalay, Burmna's second city, fell today to British 14th Army troops. King George VI hailed the con- quest as a "notable landmark" of the war in a congratulatory message to Admiral Lord Louis Mountbatten, supreme Allied commander in south- east Asia. The fabled city was secured after British and Indian troops crushed the last, fanatical resistance in thick- waledFort Dufferin, last Japanese stronghold. Mountbatten said the conquest and the entire Burma campaign was ac- FoodShortatsre Threat Cited President To Explain Scarce Supply Friday By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, March 20-Gov- ernment attention clung on the na- tional food situation today and Pres- ident Roosevelt promised a state- ment. He will give it Friday to his news conference. He said he thinks the country should know what has hap- pened. Congress moved swiftly toward a food investigation in both domestic and foreign aspects. A special sen- ate subcommittee was formed with Senator Thomas (D.-Okla,) as its. chairman. From the farmers themselves came news that planted acreage this year, will be almost on a par with that of last year when it was the highest of the war. Production is expected to be 5 to 10 per cent lower. The house received from its ap- propriations committee a $833,801,- 932 supply bill for the agriculture department about like those in the past. The committee had turned down two proposals to cut payments to farmers. It approved continu- ance of the school lunch program. Some congressmen pooh-poohed talk of food shortages. Aorieulture Appropriatioi1 D111 Proposed WASHINGTON, March 20-(/P)- Testimony that two agriculture de- partment sub-officials had "criminal records" was submitted to the house today along with a bill to appropri- ate $833,801,932 for the department. The bill, which reflected appropri- ations committee opposition to pro- posals of the budget bureau for cuts on farm benefit payments, followed the usual pattern of agriculture ap- propriation bills. But its accompanying testimony on1 police records, and on complaints that the Commodity Credit Corpora- tion had bungled some food pur-I chases to the extent of spoilage, pro-s vided the house with new debate ma- terial.- The men referred to as having had criminal records were identified by their superiors in the qCC as: Edmund G. Benser of Bethesda, Md., former chief fiscal officer of the CCC's office of distribution. Joseph Hatch, acting chief of the CCC's program liaison branch. Dr. Gross To Speak Friday Dr. Feliks Gross, editor of "New Europe," New York monthly review of international affairs, will lecture1 on "Small Nations in Post-War Eur- complished "against a background of what are perhaps the most difficult lines of communications in any the- ater of war." 36th Occupies Mogok British 36th Division troops, mean- while, occupied Mogok, the ruby cap- ital of the world which is 65 miles west of Lashio on the Burma Road and 65 miles northeast of Mandalay. These troops were driving to clear all of the area north of the Manda- lay-Lashio road. The battle for Mandalay was one of the bitterest of the entire Burma campaign. Japanese had holed up in the mile and a half square, thick- walled fort and resisted bitterly. Japs Say Garrison Doomed The Japanese high command has advised the doomed garrison that no reinforcements were possible and the only recourse was "glorious death." With the fall of Mogok, enemy re- sistance north of the Burma Road virtually ended. Chinese troops are mopping up near Hsipaw and the whole center of fighting in Burma now shifts to south of Mandalay. The enemy has been reacting strongly in the Meiktia sector where all escape routes are cut off and an estimated 30,000 Japanese are trap- ped west and north of Meiktila. Probe of State Prison Follo'ws Medley Escape By The Associated Press JACKSON, Mich., Mar. 20.-State officials today began a formal inves- tigation of conditions at state prison of southern Michigan, centering their attention on the escape of Jos- eph Medley, convicted kidnaper, on Nov. 27. Investigators also probed reported importation of liquor and narcotics into the prison and a four-day "holi- day" enjoyed by a prisoner, who was sent to Detroit to "peddle" a song written by two convicts and a prison employe. Suspend Guard Lt. Howard Freeland, a state pris- on guard, who had charge of Medley at the time of the latter's escape, was suspended by Warden Harry H. Jackson as the probe got under way. Jackson said Freeland "told conflict- ing stories about the incident." Medley became the object of a nation-wide police hunt shortly after his escape, when police and federal agents sought him for questioning in the slaying of two women and the death of a third. He was arrested Sunday by FBI agents at St. Louis and was taken to Washington where he will face a charge in the slaying of Mrs. Nancy Boyer. Tells Conflicting Stories Warden Jackson and state correc- tions director Garrett Heyns said Freeland originally told them that M'edley fled while he was being taken into Jackson to buy $700 worth of war bonds for prison inmates. He said Medley made his get-away while Freeland was parking their automo- bile. The state officials reported today that Freeland had told them Medley escaped after the two men visited Freeland's home. Prison officials and one inmate were interrogated at today's hearing, which was closed to newspapermen. Assistant attorney-general Harry W. Jackson and state police captain Har- old Mulbar joined warden Jackson and Heyns in the investigation. COLOGNE CjRhineRive /7fc 0 Buh Siegburg Siegen Dueren,.Ai Mar burgo iedR GERMANY ! ARMY / REMAGEN ./ Suerhighway Neuwe Wertz far BELGIUM .COBLENZ Limburg Mayden ' r FRANKFURT, WIESBADEN BaiburgĀ® - : 3ARMYBngeMAINZ ' Bad Kreuznach LUX.Nahe TR EIdar-Oberstein Kaiserslautern - M St.Wendel MANNHEM Merzg P AL\ Zweibruecken Saatbruecken Pirmasens Metz Sarreguemines KARLSRUHE Bitche Wassembourg It* W Lauterbourg 7th ARMYs Nancy aden Baden 0 25 __ Stfasbourg. STATUTE MILES -- c- WHERE YANKS CLOSED IN ON GERMANS--Arrows locate advances by U. S. Seventh and Third armies which formed a junction, capturing the historic cities of Saarbruecken, Zweibruecken and Worms. Con- tact was made about 12 miles west of Kaiserlautern. Prof. Binder To Open Sacred Music Lecture Series Today Tak TreepCiies In Juncture Drive, Armies Seize Zweibruecken, Worms, Saarbruecken; Third Reaches Mainz By The Associated Press PARIS, Wednesday, March 21-The U. S. Seventh and Third Armies formed a junction in the Saarland yesterday in a great coordinated assault that virtually wiped out the last German resistance west of the Rhine and captured the historic cities of Saarbruecken, Zweibruecken and Worms. Contact between the two armies was made at a point about 12 miles west of Kaiserslautern by elements of the Seventh Army's Sixth Armored Division and the Third Army's 26th Infantry Division. Third Army Reaches Mainz The Third Army, which drove through Kaiserslautern, reached the ancient Rhine-bank city of Mainz. Saarbruecken, a city of 135,000 pop- Prof. A. W. Binder of the Jewish Institute of Religion will give the first of a series of three lectures in sacred music at 8 p.m. today in Kel- logg Auditorium under the sponsor- - BULLETIN - Workers Riot in Berlin ON THE GERMAN - SWISS FRONTIER, Mar. 20.-(P)-Near- ly 1,200 demonstrators, mostly wo- men, marched through the work- ing class sections of Berlin March 10 demanding that the capital be declared an open city, it was re- ported here today. These reports said that in east- ern and northern Berlin regular police patrols had been replaced by SS (Elite Guards) in armored cars. The Nazis reportedly fear more open action and are talkigg of martial law for the whole Berlin area. Italian Patriots Hit Nazi Forces ROME, March 20-(P)-Patriots in northern Italy are carrying out in- creasingly widespread attacks against German forces and vital enemy tar- gets, a 15th army group communique said today. Land operations along the Italian battlefront again were limited to patrol clashes. A 12th Air Force staff officer de- clared that Allied aerial activity against the Brenner pass line and other enemy transport routes had made it questionable whether ' the Germans could evacuate their ground forces from northern Italy if they wanted to do so. ship of the School of Music and the Student Religious Association. Lecturing on "Jewish Life in Jew- ish Music," Prof. Binder will illus- trate his lecture both vocally and instrumentally. He now holds the position as director of the depart- ment of music of the Young Men's Hebrew Association. In 1917 he was awarded the Mosenthal Fellowship in composition and also has pub- lished a collection of the Songs of New, Palestine And the Chalutsim, the first collection of this kind ever to be made. Both Composer and Conductor Prof. Binder is choirmaster of the Free Synagogue, Carnegie Hall, of which Dr. Stephen S. Wise is rabbi. While in Palestine in 1931, he per- formed a clarinet-quintet, art songs set to Hebrew texts and an overture "Ha-Chalutsim." This was the first time in the history of musica'l life in Palestine that a Jewish composer had presented the premiere of a Jew- ish orchestral work there. The con- certs were given by the Palestine Symphonic Assembly under Prof. Binder's direction in both Tel-Aviv and Jerusalem. Music Seminar Postponed This lecture will be followed by a talk on "The Place of Music in Prot- estant Worship" by Dr. Helen A. Dickinson of the Union Theological Seminary on April 18 and "Gregor- ian Chant" by the Rev. Frank J. Flynn of the Sacred Heart Seminary on May 23. The regular SRA Wednesday Mu- sic Seminar will be postponed this week in order that its members may attend Prof. Binder's lecture.. ulation and the capital and economic center of the industrial Saar, fell to Lt. Gen. Alexander M. Patch's sev- enth Army as did Zweibruecken, 17 miles to the east. Worms Seized Worms, on the Rhine about midway between Mainz and Ludwigshafen- Mannheim, was seized in a lightning stab by the Fourth Armored and 90th Infantry Divisions of Lt. Gen. George S. Patton's Third Army. The sensational drive by the two American armies operating in unison disposed of the German Seventh Ar- my and bottled up much of the Ger- man First Army-the last two enemy armies west of the Rhine. Under the unrelenting assault, the enemy's defenses in the Saarland sa- lient collapsed and Nazi troops were attempting to flee eastward by the thousands under a storm of explo- sives from American warplanes. Knockout Blow It was the knockout blow against Nazi forces in the Rhine-Moselle- Saar triangle as Patton's veteran ar- mored divisions and infantry raced virtually unchecked for gains ranging up to 11 miles and approached an im- minent junction with Lt. Gen. Alex- ander M. Patch's U. S. Seventh Army, drilling across the Saarland from the south. , Mainz, a city of 160,000 at the con- fluence of the Rhine and Main rivers, was reached after a spectacular dash by the Fourth Armored Division and the 90th Infantry working together. The Fourth also made the plunge to Worms, a city of 50,000 which lies 16 miles north of the twin industrial cities of Mannheim and Ludwigs- hafen. Word was lacking immediately on whether the Germans succeeded in blowing the Rhine bridge at Worms. It still was standing at last account. Means Loss of Saar Kaiserslautern, from which a sup- er-military highway runs 23 miles east to the Rhine, was the main sup- ply point for Nazi forces in the Saar- See WESTERN FRONT, Page 2 Red Cross Boothl Will Be Placed on Diagonal Tomorrow A booth at which civilian men on campus may give their Red Cross War Fund contributions will be set up from 8:45 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. to- morrow on the diagonal. The booth, which will be manned by members of the Union staff, will be opened in an effort to contact all men who have not already been soli- cited through their houses. Tom Donnelly, AJS, chairman of the Un- ion drive, emphasized the fact that each man will be buying a member- ship in the Red Cross, not just do- nating his dollar. Complete reports on the progress of the League and Union Red Cross drives are not yet available. Archbishop of York Demands Hitler Be Killed Speaks Before War Crimes Commission By The Associated Press LONDON, Mar. 2.-A demand by the Archbishop of York that "the master criminals Hitler and Himmler and their gang" should be killed on the spot when captured was followed today in the House of Lords by offi- cial disclosure that the war crimes commission already is screening Nazi prisoners for trial. The Archbishop, Dr. Cyril Garbett, broke into the war crimes debate to declare, "Sometimes justice has to take precedence over mercy," and asked instant death for Hitler and Himmler "by those who catch them," stern treatment for their torturing subordinates, and punishment for the whole German people. The Archbishop of York based his demand for instant death of the Nazi leaders on the ground that "public trial with its excitement and sensation" should be avoided. Reciting some of the horrors he said he had learned about in Holland only last week, including the beat- ing to death of a ten-year-old boy, the Archbishop contended that not only master criminals but their sub- ordinates who relayed or carried out their orders should be killed. "I am thinking," he said, "of the horrible tortures in concentration camps, of the burning of women and children in that church in southern France where the who epopulation was massacred, of the grimes which no man ought to commit, however strong the orders given to him." Fair, Warmer Promised as Spring Arrives By The Associated Press The weather bureau says spring Is officially here. It arrived at 7:38 p. in. (EWT) last night. Residents of the middle Atlantic states would agree. From that re- gion southward, temperatures were balmy and skies were clear yester- iay. Boston's high of 77 equaled the record for March 20, and New York City's 80 beat the 1921 record of 74. But when New England's hopes of greeting the new season with spring- like weather were dampened by con- tinuing showers, and rain drenched the upper Ohio valley, colder weather moved into the lower lake region, lowering temperatures to freezing and below. Temperatures were below normal in the northern plains states and the lower Mississippi valley, and the Paci- fic coast states, while recording nor- mal temperatures of from 45 to 50 degrees, were soaked by spring rains. Washington, D. C., however, re- ported a harbinger of spring's "eth- ereal mildness." The famed cherry trees (once "Japanese," now "Kor- ean") are in bloom. 0 0 OPA Bans Tie-in Sales of Cigarets Stipulations by local merchants that cigarettes be purchased together WASHINGTON ROUNDUP: Study of Guaranteed Wage Ordered by FDR By D. HAROLD OLIVER WASHINGTON, March 20--('P)- President Roosevelt today ordered a study of plans for a guaranteed annual wage, described by the War Labor.Board as "one of the main aspirations of American workers." He told his news conference the inquiry-requested by the WLB will be made by the Office of War Mob- ilization's advisory board of 12 head- any action against New York for re- laxing the ban. 2-Promised a statement Friday on the food situations saying the country ought to know what's happened. 3-Described as "iffy" a question whether the government had any plans to keep the coal mines running in event of failure of the operators and unions to reach a contract agree- ment. 4-Said it would depend on the in- has been talked about for ten years, but only lately the unions have be- come interested. He made public a letter to Byrnes asking. the study and said Byrnes promised to get it under way im- mediately. The President added that the inquiry is "closely con- nected with the problems of recon- version and the transition from a war economy to a peace economy." With the letter he made public a for a guaranteed annual wage is part of the search for "continuity of employment which is perhapsj the most vital economic and social objective of our times." The president commented that guaranteed wages would be relative- ly simple in some industries and dif- ficult in others. The WLB, for example, in its re- port to the White House recommend-