ig 4&igmi Dait&H WEAT 1HER Clear and Warmer Today VOL. LV, No. 101 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN THURSDAY, MARCH 22, 1945 PRICE FIVE CENTS 'U',Local Veteran Rally ToBe Today Blanchard, M~a jor Buirlingame Will Discuss Yes Pro lem s Opportn ities World War II Veterans from Ann Arbor, those attending the Univer- sity, and the families of all local servicemen will be present at a rally, 8 p. m. today in the Rackham Amphitheatre to discuss problems relating to the returning veteran. Carl H. Blanchard, representing Governor Kelly, will be the main speaker. Blanchard, a member of the State Office of Veterans' Affairs, a veteran of World War I and a holder of the Purple Heart, will deliver the Yanks Seize Nazi Chemical Center 4 * * * * * * * * Engineers To Revive Honor System Veterans Can Aid Wounded Service-Disabled Vets To Be Offered Jobs Disabled veterans in Washtenaw County who are interested in helping their own battle-wounded comrades as a career were urged by James R. Slocum, Commander of Washtenaw County Chapter, Disabled American Veterans, to apply at the meeting of the D. A. V. at 8 p. m. tomorrow at the VFW Club Rooms. A training program is being spon- sored jointly by the DAV and the U. S. Veterans Administration to train disabled veterans of World War II for jobs as national service offic- ers of the DAV. Must Have Honorable Discharge Commander Slocum urged service- disabled veterans to inquire about the training program. To be eligi- ble for this special training program, for which the veteran is paid by both the Veterans Administration and the DAV, the applicant must have an honorable discharge and service-con- nected disability incurred in World War II, as well as necessary educa- tional background. Includes 5 Months College Training The program, the DAV Command- er said, includes five months of aca- demic work at American University, Washington, D. C., and up to eight- een months of on-the-job training under the supervision of DAV na- tional service officers in the field. The first class began last fall. The program will be continued to enable the DAV to place service of- ficers at each of the 504 discharge centers throughout the nation. from which disabled veterans are being re- leased. Walla.e Will Talk on Drugs Protecting the public and dental profession from harmful and use- less patent drugs will be discussed at 11 a. m. Monday, in Kellogg Audi- torium, by Dr. Donald A. Wallace, Director of the American Dental As- sociation, Bureau of Chemistry. Making a nationwide tour under the sponsorship of the American Dental Association, Dr. Wallace, for- merly of the Northwestern Univer- sity faculty, plans to acquaint dental students with reasons and results of the Council. This Council, composed of dentists, includes Dr. Floyd D. Os- trander, professor of Dentistry, in charge of materia medica andthera- peutics at the University. Refresher Course Offered Veterans A call is being sent out to all vet- erans interested in a refresher course in the mechanics of English compo- sition. Those veterans having trou- ble with English grammar and com- position, and those who are now enrolled or plan to enroll in Englis. 1 or 2, are asked to contact Mr Davis, Rm. 19, Angell Hall, to mak arrangements for the course. CAMPUS EVENTS Today Dr. Fisher to lecture on Intercultural Activity 4:10 p. m. Rackham Amphi- theatre. - Today Veterans' Rally meets at 8 p. m. in Rackham Am- phitheatre. Today Student Town Hall forum discusses compulsory post-war military train- ing at 7:45 p. m. Lane Hall lecture hall. March 23 Dr. Felix Gross speaks on "The Small States in 'speech expressing the opinions of Governor Kelly who was unable to come. This rally is sponsored by the four local veterans organizations, the Am- erican Legion, VFW, DAV, the Vet- erans' Organization, and the two committees, the Veterans' Bureau and Veterans Committee of Ann Ar- bor. Representative of each of these organizations will be gven the op- portunity to tell what that organiza- tion has to offer the veteran regard- ing the work it is doing and expects to do for the veteran. Major Garnet J. Burlingame, also of the Office of the Veterans' Affairs, will be present at this rally and will speak. There will be opportunity for any person to present a question to any of the representatives of any organ- ization and receive authoritative answers. The families of servicemen are in- vited to attend so that they may understand what is being done for the veterans and what pensions, loans, and grants will be available. Many men and women in the Arm- ed Services have written home desir- ing such information and this is an opportunity 'to get it from the direct sources. This Rally will also help acquaint the new veterans on campus and those who are Ann Arbor residents. All veterans are urged to attend this meeting and to present any prob- lems they may have. Assembly Will Sponsor Red Cross Program Assembly Organization in coopera- tion with the Red Cross will sponsor Red Cross Night at 7:30 p. m. Mon- day in the Rackham Amphitheatre. The purpose of the program is to familiarize students with the work of the Red Cross at home and abroad and to tell the public in a concrete way how their contributions are be- ing used. It is an effort to inform college students of the opportunities that are open to them now and after graduation in the ranks of the Red Cross. Campus Servicemen Featured Featured on 'Red Cross Night will be three campus servicehen, all of whom have served overseas. They will give first hand accounts of their experiences with Red Cross units abroad. Movies showing Red Cross workers in action will also be pres- ented. Red Cross Work Discussed The opportunities' offered to, the Organization's workers will be dis- cussed by a Red Cross represent- ative, who will speak on the differ- "nt phases of volunteer work and of the career possibilities in the Red Cross. Nurse's aid work, motor corps, and home nursing are part of the volun- tary duties of the Red Cross. The positions of field directors and over- seas recreation workers are full time jobs, which may be developed into Life time careers. Following the representative's talk there will be a question period. Reds Drive To Six Miles 'From Danzi g Mass Huge Forces Along Oder River By The Associated Press LONDON, March 21-Russian troops drove a new spearhead within six miles southwest- of Danzig today, as Soviet commanders to the west massed powerful formations along the Oder all the way from besieged and flaming Stettin upriver to cap- tured Kuestrin. The Germans said that Russian shock troops already had begun new attacks west of the Oder River with- in 32 miles of gutted Berlin. Russians Take Nine Towns Driving into the enemy's Danzig- Gdynia pocket, Russian troops swept up nine towns and villages including Klien Boelkau, six miles southwest of the former free city, and captured 600 Germans, Moscow announced. The Germans said the Russians were employing 500,000 men in the Dan- zig Bay battle. Split East Prussian Pocket To the east other Soviet forma- tions further split the lower end of the East Prussian pocket southwest of Koenigsberg, gaining complete control of the mouth of the Passarge River and capturing the road town of Grunau, three miles southwest of Heiligenbeil, the enemy's only re- maining stronghold in the area. Stettin was being pounded by a torrent of Russian shells hurled from siege lines less than three miles of that Pomeranian capital and port which protects Berlin on the north. Within 58 Miles of Austria Far to the south another Soviet army attacking within 58 miles of Austria threatened the big Danube River stronghold of Komarom (Ko- marno) in northwestern Hungary, half-way between Budapest and the Bratislava gap to Vienna, Berlin said. One Soviet wing also crashed into Szekesfehervar, big road junction and former Hungarian capital 32 miles southwest of Budapest, the enemy said. Soviets Prepare Offensive Girdling for the great all-out So- viet offensive toward Berlin and Dresden Marshal Ivan S. Konev's First Ukraine army was reported ready to vault the Neisse River in an assault toward Cottbus, big commu- nications center 47 miles from the Reich capital, and toward Sprem- berg, 13 miles to the south. IRA To Hold Social Meeting Inter-Racial Association will hold a social tomorrow at 8:30 p.m. in the Unitarian Church. Members and their friends are invited as well as those interested in becoming members of the organiza- tion. There will be entertainment, dancing, and refreshments. Claudia Jones, editor of Spotlight magazine, and Prof. Leslie White of the Department of Anthropology ad- dressed I.R.A. members last semester. Action Effective Only in), Junior, Senior lasses The Honor System of Examina- tion, long the pride of the College of Engineering, will be revived for jun- iors and seniors before April 15, ac- cording to the program set up last night by the Engineering Council. Jahn Sorice, named chairman of the Honor Council, in announcing the revived examination system, declared, "We feel that the Honor System lost its prestige on campus after it wvas nearly abolished last fall. We believe that it must be revived quickly to save it from total collapse." Acting on the urging of many en- gineering students who last semester "had their first taste of proctored examinations," the Engineering Council has set up the machinery for unsupervised tests to "see if once again the Honor System can be oper- ated as successfully as it was in pre- war days." Although still affected by un- settled wartime conditions that necessitated abridging the Honor System last fall, the Council has acted to renew the Honor System for "the security of future engi- neers." "The engineering student takes pride in the Honor System, and so that incoming students and returning civilians may share that pride, the Council has taken this step before the Honor System has a chance to die completely,"' Sorice affirmed. Announced last fal as a curtail- ment of the system only in the fresh- man and sophomore classes, with the instructor's option on other classes, many of the examinations in all classes were proctored last term. "The Honor Council hopes as soon. as possible to make the system uni- versal in all classes, but for the time being, only juniors and seniors will be tested by the honor method," Sor- ice declared. The Honor System, since its in- ception in 1916, has always been under the jurisdiction of the stu- dents through the Engineering Coun- ci. In case any civilian student vio- lates his no-assistance pledge, his case is tried by the student Honor Council. Four Nominated To Fill Vacant Union Positions Four men have been endorsed by the Union Nominations committee as candidates for election to the office of Vice-President of the Union, to be chosen tomorrow in a special election from 8:45 a.m. to 2:45 p.m. in Uni- versity Hall. John Timms of the law school will run unopposed. Morton Scholnick, Frank Ruck and Don Lund will be candidates for the vice-presidency representing the combined Schools of Music, Education, Forestry, Busi- ness Administration, and Public Hea- lth. Members of the nominations com- mittee endorsing the nominees are Ross Hume, Thomas Donnelly, Rob- ert Bennett, Richard Seitz, and Michael J. Cancilla. Election rules set up by the Judi- ciary Council provide for: 1-At least two persons stationed at ballot boxes during polling hours. 2--Election rules and directions will be printed in The Daily preced- ing every election. 3-Campaign issues will be made clear and candidates' petitions will be published in The Daily. 4-Call for petitions will be made at least one week before petition deadline, and election date will be set five days after Judiciary Council announcement. 5-Campaigning will be prohibited within 50 feet of polling places, and electors will vote only once except in multiple choice elections. 6-Identification will be checked and closesupervision will be main- tained over balloting by attendants. Statements of candidates appear on page 4. ® CO-®GNEi' hiP1e RtverP Juehch * rUChI Siegbutg S M. bU. Bonn GERMANY ______ t t Superhighwo] J t\ -i / REMAGEN "\i *We Neuwred ' "COBLENZ Ltmburq j Mayen 1 arFR ANKFUR T j alnt oWIESBADEN r.- Bburg r O*dARMA ' IN Z . TRIE Alzey. SaotR Wa ___ Kaiserslautern MANNHEIM 1er ziLudwgshafen Merv-z p,,A ,R.Neunk npIACLA Speyer Zweibruecken r®®, Saarbruecken _PFmmasen5 Metz Satreguemancs fKARLSRUHE Bltche 4 A/,ssembourg( Lauterbourg FR ANCE F R NENa n c y 7 h R Y a d e n Baden 05 Strasbou'rg. STATUTE MILES s WHERE AMERICANS RACE THROUGH GERMAN DEFENSES- Arrows locate main American drives along the western front (heavy solid line). The U. S. Third Army reached Mainz, captured Worms and passed Kaiserslautern, nearing a junction with Seventh Army units driving from the south. The First Army continued to expand the bridgehead to the north. BUILDS GOOD WILL: Fisher Says Exchanging of Students Increases Tolerance Patton Routs Disorganized German Forces "Challenge to Intercultural Activ- ity" will be the subject of Dr. Edgar J. Fisher, assistant director of Inter- national Education, in a lecture 4:10 p. m. today in Rackham Amphithea- tre. Dr. Fisher will be introduced by Dean Keniston. "The exchange of students is a fundamental and important way of building up this thing we call inter- national understanding," Dr. Ed- gar J. Fisher stated in a Daily inter- view yesterday. Citing the success of a project known as the Junior Year, under which groups. of American students studied abroad during their third year in college, Dr. Fisher empha- sized that "the tolerance and under- standing of which students are cap- able can make up something far more important to good will than Employment Is Subject of Griffen' s Talk "The most pressing problem of post-war employment is maintaining a high level of production," Dr. Clare Griffen, professor of Business Eco- nomics in the School of Business stated in a lecture before the Veter- ans' Organization yesterday. Dr. Griffen pointed out the magni- tude of the problem by saying that post-wartproduction should see the greatest increase in output that the world has ever witnessed and that this will enable us to gain a higher standard of living. A wrong slant is achieved, he stat- ed, if we think merely in terms of jobs. The emphasis must be placed on productivity. The rate at which businessmen will produce determines the road we will follow. Conversion is the most important aspect of this, and we -hould take steps promptly to facili- tatn it he stated. the work of business men and diplo- mats." Dr. Fisher, who is visiting the Uni- versity for a series of discussion meetings with campus groups, ex- plained that the Junior Year pro- gram, when discontinued at the out- break of war, incl.uded branches in France, Spain, Germany, Mexico and Switzerland. "It will probably be revived in 1946 or 1947, expanded to include Russia, England and various South American countries," he com- mented. "We have a very considerable re- sponsibility in the education of Euro- pean youth, which has had little op- portunity for learning during the war. They will study our systems .and re- turn prepared to assist in the re- habilitation of their own countries," Dr. Fisher noted. 425 Foreign Students in U. S. Discussing the increasing move- ment in international education, Dr. Fisher remarked that there are at present 425 foreign studenas in the United States under the Institute of International Education alone, as compared to 25 previously. There is a growing interest in the facilities of American universities, he said. "It all adds up to a much finer type of understanding. We used to meet on a basis of mutual ignorance," he com- mented. Dr. Fisher revealed that from two to three thousand applications for British universities have already been sent in by American soldiers. These men will form a group who appre- ciate what has gone, on in' Europe, and will be of great value in post- war cooperation, Dr. Fisher stated. Prof. Wilicox Will Lecture The question of how we will use our power in the post-war world will be discussed by Prof. William B. Willcox of the history department at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow at the B'nai Brith Hillel Foundation in a lecture n*m+flnr 61 - r nan p . . fr mhn. By The Associated Press PARIS, Thursday, March 22-Am- erican tanks crashed through the great German chemical center of Ludwigshafen on the Rhine today as the U. S. Third and Seventh Ar- mies continued to grind disorganized German forces west of the river in the maw of disaster that may cost the enemy as many as 100,000 men in killed, wounded and captured. Lt. Gen. George S. Patton's rac- ing Third Army armored forces plunged straight through Ludwig- shafen and reached the Rhine inside that city of 150,000 population. They sent another column slashing south- ward to the highway junction of Neustadt, where it was within 19 miles of another junction with the Seventh Army-a new giant poten- tial trap around the Nazis. First Army Reinforced At the same time doughboys of Gen. Courtney H. Hodges' U. S. First Army east of the Rhine, reinforced by armor for the first time since the original crossing two weeks ago, en- larged the Remagen bridgehead northward as much as three miles and fanned out along a seven mile stretch of the Seig River which flows into the Rhine north of Bonn. Patton's Third Army, still running wild, made advances of as much as ten miles during the day, cleared 20 towns and entered four. Thousands of prisoners were taken. Ludwigshafen, fourth big German city entered or taken by the Third Army in two days, was pierced by an armored division which headquarters has not identified. Another column of the same division also reached the Rhine a mile north of the city after an eastward thrust of 7'/ miles. Fleeing German troops blew up the imposing bridge which connected Ludwigshafen with its twin industrial city of Mannheim on the east side of the river. JAG School's Cu~rriculum Cut Two Courses Dropped Until After V-E Day The monthly courses in Contracts and Readjustment, part of the JAG School curriculum, have been tem- porarily suspended probably till after V-E Day, Lt.-Col. Reginald Miller, Commandant of the School, announc- ed recently. Reasons for the suspension were given as the availability_ of suffi- cient number of trained officers to meet present requirements and the shifted emphasis from readjustment problems to procurement and the production of war materiel. Instructors Will Be Rotated As resumption of the course is foreseen by high-ranking officers in the Office of the Under Secretary of War, instructors in Contracts and Readjustment at the JAG School will remain at their stations as a unit. Instructors will be rotated on tours of temporary duty in the field until classes are resumed so that they will maintain a first hand knowledge of field developments. Officers Assigned Temporary Duty Temporary duty has already been assigned to Captain Leslie L. Ander- son and First Lieutenant Norman Roth. Capt. Anderson has been as- signed to the Office of the Director of Materiel, Readjustment Division, Army Service Forces, and Lt. Roth to the Procurement Office, Chemical Warfare Service, New York Office. 484 Officers Trained Instruction in the regular advanced officer training course and 'the of- ficer candidate course will continue, emphasis being applied upon advance planning for terminations to permit rapid conversion of industry at the appropriate time. Since May, a total of 484 officers- have been trained in nine Contracts and Readjustment courses. Professors' Association COMPULSORY TRAINING: Student Town Hall Meeting Is Open for Campus Discussion Compulsory post-war military training is the student affairs topic that will be discussed at the first meeting of Student Town Hall at 7:45 p. m. today in Lane Hall lec- ture hall. Organized for the purpose of giv- ing students an opportunity to ex- press their own opinions informally, the Town Hall will consist of a series of three discussion meetings. held Campbell, George N. Spaulding, and Marvin Shafer. Richard Scatterday, (Law '48), former varsity debater, has been named as student moderator of the forum that will follow the debate. He will direct the discussion to which all students are invited to contribute their views. Faculty Members Welcome Although these meetings are pri- marily designed for student partici-