Sir igm 4:3atlij WEATHER Clear and Cold it VOL. LV, No. 88 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN WEDNESDAY, MARCH 7, 1945 PRICE FIVE CENTS Cologne Falls; Third Arm y Nears Rhine * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Reds Advance 25 Miles to Mouth of Oder Nazis Lose Last Chance To Stop Drive OVer 500 Towns Seized in One Day By The Associated Press LONDON, March 6-By the first White Russian army in a 25-mile ad- vance that captured more than 500 German towns in a single day reach- ed the northeastern mouth of the Oder River today and destroyed the reeling Nazis' last chance for an ef- fective flanking thrust against the central Soviet salient aimed at Ber- lin. Premier Stalin announced the tre- mendous northward drive through Pomerania in an order of the day, disclosing the capture of Kammin on the Oder Delta outlet stream of Drievenow, 37 miles north of Stet- tin; Treptow, 21 miles northeast of Kammin; and in the same region the big German strongpoints of Greifen- berg, Guelzow and Plathe. Within 15 Miles of Stettin The Soviet communique announced that the same Army shoved westward within 15 miles of Stettin, Berlin's Oder River gateway to the Baltic, and the Germans themselves said Stettin's suburbs were under Red Army artil- lery fire. The Second White Russian Army, operating northeast of the First White Russian group, toppled the holdout fortress of Grudziadz, 25 miles behind the lines and 55 miles south of Danzig. It cleared the way for a drive on Danzig itself, and the communique disclosed that this already was in pro- gress, the Second White Russian Ar- my reaching within 30 miles of that once-free city with the capture of Alt-Kischau. Belgrad Taken The First White Russian Army in its drive took a by-passed enemy fortress, the town of Belgard, and the two great armies together were ripping to ribbins the unnumbered, isolated thousands of German troops still within Pomerania. In a pattern that was growing typi- cal, the Moscow communique related also that a large enemy force cut off south of Schivelbein in central Pom- erania was being liquidated Cinema League T o Present French Movie Presentation Marks Group Reorganization The reorganization of the Art Cin- ema League, which has been inactive for the past two years because of the war, will be marked by the pres- entation of the film "Le Jour Se Leve" (Daybreak) starring Jean Ga- bin at 8:30 p. m. tomorrow through Saturday in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. According to Prof. Hereward T. Price of the Department of English and member of the Committee of the Art Cinema League, "when the war came, people wanted popular films, so the organization folded up. Now, the League is being reorganiz- ed with a large and important pro- gram in mind." To Present Films The purpose of the League is to present films of artistic value, espe- cially those which commercial thea- tres do not show. This means for- eign films as well, Dr. Price stated. "Foreign language films," he said, "in Russian, Spanish, French, and German, are shown for the benefit of the University departments concern- ed, and are invaluable to students in acquainting them with an active use of the language." Film Is Art "It is now clear," Dr. Price stated, "that the art of the film is one of the great arts, and it is important that students become acquainted with /Jarines Resume Attack On Northern Iwo Jima * :- e GENERAL--Maj.-Gen. Clifton B. Cates (above) is commander of the Fourth Marine division which took part in the first landings on the Japanese-held outpost of Iwo Jima. Union Banquet To Be Held for Interested Men New Students Wanted For Tryout Staff So that new men on campus and those eligible for extracurricular work for the first time may become ac- quainted with the activities of the Michigan Union, the Union Execu- tive Council has planned an intro- ductory banquet for Saturday, March 17, in the Anderson room. The move is designed to attract new students to the Union tryout staff, whose members act as com- mitteemen to assist the co-chair- men of the various Union committees. The Union'sserviceto the campus is directed by six committees, Ad- ministration, War Activities, Social, House, Orientation and Public Rela- tions. "The Union is generally regarded as one of the three large units that co-ordinate and direct campus acti- vities," Jim Plate, '45, president, pointed out. "The banquet will give new students a first hand knowledge of the Union and what it does, and will give students who are interested in extracurricular activities a chance to join the Union staff as soon as pos- sible," he said. All men, transfer students included, who are second semester freshmen or higher and who satisfy University eligibility rules are eligible for mem- bership with the tryout staff. Mem- bers to the Union Executive Council, the governing organization of Union activities, are chosen from the tryout staff each semester. Eligible men, interested in their Union, who would like to attend this introductory banquet may do so by registering, personally or by tele- phone, in the Student Offices of the Union before Wednesday, March 14. Office hours are from 3 to 5 p. m. Blanca Alvarez Will Lecture Blanca Alvarez will address La Sociedad Hispanica on "La Familia Venezolana" at 8 p. m. today in Rm. 316, the Union. Miss Alvarez, at the University on By The Associated Press U. S. PACIFIC FLEET HEAD- QUARTERS, Guam, Wednesday, Mar. 7-Preceded by the most intense ar- tillery bombardment of the Iwo cam- paign, three Marine divisions resum- ed the offensive on the north end of the tiny island Tuesday and en- gaged the Japanese in "heavy fight- ing." By 5:30 p. m. the Leather- necks had scored small local gains. The Marines were supported for the first time by land-based army fighter planes flying from the cap- tured Motoyama airfield No. 1 on the south end of the island. These fight- er planes thus began operating from a base which puts them within fly- ing range of Tokyo, 750 miles to the north. Gains on West The gains were scored on the west side by Ma.. Gen. Keller E. Rockey's Fifth Marine Division and near the center by May. Gen. Clifto B. Cates Fourth Marine Division which is on the right flank of Maj. Gen. Graves B. Erskline's Third. By nightfall, the Leathernecks still were approximately 600 yards from the northeast shoreline at the bulge which, if reached, would cut the thin- ning enemy garrison in two. The Fourth has about 250 yards to go to reach volcanic cliffs from where the heavily defended beach extends for 350 yards. The developments were announced in today's communique of Adm. Chester W. Nimitz. Breaks Stalemate The Marine offensive was aimed at winning the less than one third rocky north end of the island still in enemy hands. It broke a stalemate which had existed for two days. Although the campaign is 17 days old and the Nipponese garrison, or- iginally 20,000 strong, has been blast- ed constantly in a gradually con- stricting area, the foe's ability to fight back remains strong. Senate Okays Fred Vinson WASHINGTON, March 6 -(- The Senate confirmed today Presi- dent Roosevelt's nomination of Fred M. Vinson to be Federal Loan Admin- istrator. Acting with unusual speed, the Chamber approved the appointment of the 55-year old Kentuckian to head the $40,000,000,000 Reconstruction Fi- nance Corporation and allied agen- cies. The action was taken on a voice vote without a word of debate. Vinson thus steps out as Economic Stabilization Director to assume au- thority which Congress stripped from the Commerce Department before the Senate confirmed the cabinet nomi- nation of Henry A. Wallace. Deadlock Continues In Briggs Strike DETROIT, March 6-(A)-As a deadlock continued in the strike of nearly 13,000 employes in seven Briggs Manufacturing Co. plants here to- night, quick settlement was foreseen in another dispute which closed units of the Gar Wood Industries, Inc., here today. Approximately 2,000 Gar Wood workers were idle in the dispute over a change in shift hours from six eight-hour days weekly to five 10- hour days. First Meeting Of Veterans' Group Is Today Former Servicemen On Campus Invited First organizational meeting of the semester for all former servicemen interested in joining the Veteran's Organization will be held at 7 p. m. today in the basement of Lane Hall, according to Les Hetenyi, president. This meeting will be open to all veterans, whether a member or not, according to Hetenyi, and all former servicemen are invited who have serv- ed at least 60 days in the armed ser- vices since the passage of the Select- ive Service Act in 1940, excluding training received under a college nmili- tary program. To Plan Program At this meeting the program for the coming year will be discussed. Proposed topics for discussion include an all-veteran rally, a co-operative eating plan and admission of Mer- chant Marine and Allied nation vet- erans to the Veteran's Organization. Organization Approved Approved by the University, the Veteran's Organization was begun in the summer of 1944. During the fall term approximately 70 veterans of this war were active in the organ- ization last semester according to Hetenyi. The Veteran's havera spe- cial desk in Lane Hall where any veteran may obtain information re- garding the GI Bill of Rights and the opportunities open to veterans on this campus. Among the accomplishments listed by the Veteran's Organization last semester include the new ruling ex- empting former servicemen from the PEM requirement. According to Het- enyi, the Veteran's Organization "pro- vides an effective way of making the views of veterans on campus known and their problems appreciated." Churchill Tours Western Front WITH CHURCHILL IN GER- MANY, Mar. 4-(Delayed by censor) --(A)-Prime Minister Churchill, touring the Western Front in Ger- many, told Scottish troops in the northern Rhine sector today that "soon the enemy will be driven across the Rhine and anyone can see one strong heave will win the war." Puffing a cigar, the uniformed Prime Minister made no effort to disguise his personal satisfaction in stepping on German soil won by the victorious Allied armies. During his trip through the Cana- dian Army sector, Churchill stood on one of the highest points and gazed long and silently toward the mist- covered Rhine. Perhaps he was recalling that four years ago, when Hitler was trium- phantly planning a visit to London, he could promise the people of Brit- ain only "blood, sweat and tears" be- fore final victory. And there-across the Rhine-was victory, A tryout meeting for The Daily business staff will be held at 4 p. m. tomorrow and for The Daily news, women's and sports staffs at 5 p. m. tomorrow in the Stu- dent Publications Building. Stu- dents must conform to the eligibil- ity rules as printed in today's DOB. Anyone interested in try- ing out for a position as Daily columnist should leave three sam- ple columns with the editorial di- rector by noon Monday. American Forces Prepare for Final Phases of Luzon Battle Yank Bombers Sink Japanese Transport, Destroyer Escort; Hit Mindanao Airfield By The Associated Press MANILA, Wednesday, Mar. 7-Am- erican forces in all sectors "are re- grouping for the final phases of the Luzon campaign," Gen. Douglas Mac- Arthur said today in announcing only limited activity against the estimated four Japanese divisions still on the island. In the air war, however, American bombers were busy. They sank a 6,000-ton freighter- transport off Formosa and left a de- stroyer escort in flames. They sank a small freighter and damaged another southeast of Shanghai, and sent four small vessels to the bottom east of Hong Kong. Airdromes on Mindanao, southern- most of the Philippines, were heavily bombed. Coastal Vessel Sunk Naval patrol torpedo boats sank a coastal vessel loaded with "escaping" enemy troops off the west coast of Luzon. The critical and seemingly hopeless position of the Japanese on Luzon, main island of the Philip- pines and hub of Nippon's crumbling Greater East Asia co-prosperity sphere, was heavily emphasized by Gen. Douglas MacArthur in his Tues- day communique. What remains of the formidable army Japan had on the island when American forces hit it through Lin- gayen Gulf last Jan. 9, has been split into eight different segments. These are being forced into ever nar- rowing sectors by persistent Yank doughboys. Six Divisions Destroyed MacArthur's disclosure that six di- visions of Japanese-probably be- tween 90,000 and 100,000 men-have been destroyed together with their supporting elements and main supply depots, heavily underscores the great disaster the Rising Sun army has suffered on Luzon. Originally the Novelist Lewis Will Lecture Here Today "Tolstoy, Hemingway, and War" is the subject of a lecture to be pres- ented at 4:15 p. m. in the Rackham Amphitheatre by Wyndham Lewis, under the sponsorship of the Depart- ment of English. A satirical novelist and commentat- or on the modern world, Mr. Lewis was born in this country in 1884, but was educated at Rugby and Slade School in England where he has spent most of his life. An artist as well as an author his work is repre- sented in the Victoria and Albert Mu- seum. "America, I Presume", a novel of an English traveler in this country pub- lished in 1939, was described by Time Magazine as follows: "Visiting Eng- lishmen almost invariably have a lot to say about the United States. Al- most invariably it is pretty stale stuff . . . his "America, I Presume" is a bracing exception to the general rule." Time described Mr. Lewis as "one of the toughest, most provoca- tive satirists alive." Wyndham Lewis was formerly lead- er of the Vorticist Group and has been editor of two British magazines Blast and The Enemy. He is not to be confused with D. B. Wyndham Lewis, another British author, who has written on Francois Villon and others of that period. invaders were estimated to have had 10 divisions on the island. The main Japanese forces still on northern Luzon have been backed into the Benguet Mountains on the west and the Cagayan Valley and Sierra Madre Mountains on the east. Other Japanese segments are in the Sierras of east central Luzon, in southern Tayabas Province, on the Bicol Peninsula, in the rough volcanic areas of southern Laguna and Batan- gas Provinces, and in the Zambles Mountains. American forces are driving into most of these regions. They have greatly threatened the Japanese posi- tion in the Bicol country by invading two islands just off the west coast. WHAT TO DO? V-Ballers Give Coed Rushing Bum's Rush Oh for the life of a V-Ball com- mitteem an! He takes a beating from all sides. It seems a nu ber of servicemen and civilians made big plans to take their dates out to dinner before Friday's Victory Ball only to find their plans thwarted by Panhellenic rushing rules requiring rushees and Sorority actives to engage in the age-old prac- tice of rushing from 6 to 8 p.m. on the same Friday night as V-Ball is scheduled. Servicemen Riled Some of the servicemen stationed on campus are especially riled be- cause this is one of the first times that late permission has been granted for a big campus dance. They threa- ten to 1) break their dates with sorority girls who have to rush (which the sorority girls heartily disapprove of), 2) turn in their V- Ball tickets and not go at all (which the V-Ball Committee heartily dis- approves) and 3) write letters to The Daily (which would fill all the columns of a four-page paper and ooze over on page five.) But wait a minute! Pan-hel has its side of the story too. Pan-Hel Answers They say that 1) they can't drag rushing out any longer or it will in- terfere with five-week exams, 2) that they've been planning this ever since last summer and can't change now, 3) that they compromised and moved the originally scheduled rushing.time back from 7 to 9 p.m. to 6 to 8 p.m. and can't make it any earlier be- cause the rushees would miss their dinners at the dorms and might have to cut a late class to go a-rushin', and that 4) it's a comparatively small percentage of the 1,200 girls signed up for rushing who plan to go to V-Ball anyway. Sorority Girls Speak When contacted last night, the sorority girls claimed they didn't like to miss the dinners, but they owe it to their houses to rush, the rushees claimed they didn't like the idea of rushing on V-Ball night, but they did want to pledge a sorority; and Pan-hel said, they sympathized with the fellows, but they have everything set up and can't change things now. They suggested that we plan a bet- ter way of doing things where no one gets left out. We thought awhile and couldn't figure a solution. All we know is that our shoulder is all wet from people crying on it. Win Territory West of Ruhr Eisenhower Lifts News Censorship By The Associated Press PARIS, Mar. 7, Wednesday--Co- logne fell swiftly to the U.S. First Army in the climax of its great east ward drive yesterday as General Eis- enhower lifted the news blackout on operations of the American Third Army and revealed that its armor was racing toward the Rhine in a break- through that covered 32 miles in two days. These dramatic developments, com- ing when the Ninth Army and its British and Canadian allies had vir- tually completed occupation of all German territory west of the Ruhr, shifted the big punches to the middle Rhine farther south and opened the way for the Allies to push the enemy out of the area west of the Rhine and north of the Moselle. Sporadic Fighting The Supreme Allied Headquarters announcement of the capture of the bomb-blackened Rhineland capital said that only sporadic fighting con- tinued last night in Cologne's south- ern outskirts. Last night its beaten Nazi garri- son was being driven southward to, ward Bonn through a narrowing cor- ridor along the Rhine's west bank, Since the start of the slashing at- tack from east of captured Bitburg at dawn yesterday, Patton's armored forces had captured more than 1,00 Germans, including a corps com- mander, and had reached a point only 20 miles from the Rhine. Weather Slows Advance A field dispatch declared that "for the rampant Americans it was a surge which outdid anything wit- nessed in France." Weather, not the Germans, was said to be impeding the advance. A news blackout still prevented disclosure of the exact whereabouts of American spearheads. The German garrison of Cologne put up surprisingly weak resistance as the U.S. Third Armored Division and 104th Infantry smashed through to the Rhine near the cathedral, at the western end of the Hohenzollern Bridge. lied Cross War Fund To Open Campus Drive Opening the 1945 Red Cross War Fund drive on campus, the League and the Union will begin soliciting student contributions today and to- morrow, continuing through March 31. The Union drive, headed by Tom Donnelly, V-12, has again set as its goal $1,500, which was topped in last year's drive by $50. All civilian men's dorms and rooming houses will be covered by representatives of the Union or the house president begin- nling tomorrow. Deborah Parry, '45, chairman of the League Red Cross campaign, an- nounced that the goal set for women on campus is. $4,000, which means an approximate contribution of $1.25 from each coed. Through the com- bined efforts of Assembly and Pan- hellenic, membership cards and pins will be distributed beginning today. Washtenaw county has been asked to give as its quota $134,000, of which $79,100 must come from Ann Ar- bor. The Red Cross War Fund supports all Red Cross activities, which in dlude services not only to men over- seas, but to their families and civil- ian needs. Allied Armies t RETURNS HOME ON GRIPSHOLM: Released Prisoner Lauds Red Cross Packages By LOIS IVERSON "If it had not been for Red Cross packages received once a week at the internment camp, we never would have survived," Stanley Krajewski, the camps in Bavaria and from Lie- benau, Gieberch and Spittal who were also aboard the ship along with badly wounded American soldiers who were being exchanged. They arrived men alive because they received such poor food in the camps. The diet of the internee consisted of hot water with bread for break- fast, soup that was merely hot water ica also through the Red Cross. Krajewski was in Poland when war was declared by Germany but was not interned until October 1942 when he was sent to camps Tittmoning and CAMPUS EVENTS f' Today "There Is No Superior Race," lecture to be given by Dr. Amos Hawley at I