Jr Lie i~jrn tIait~i WEATlHER Mild with Little Change in Temperature. VOL. LV, No. 104 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN SUNDAY, MARCH 25, 1945 PRICE FIVE CENTS 'End-the- ar Offensive oves Deep into Ruhr Allied Forces Push Ahead k *k 0 %k. * : TRUCKS CROSS RHINE ON PONTOON BRIDGE-Heavy supply trucks cross the Rhine River on a pontoon bridge erected by U. S. Army Engineers. The War Department does not reveal where this bridge is located. Censorship also has toned down background of picture. STALIN CALLS HIS SHOT: RedsRoll OWthin 40 MilesfAustria By The Associated Press LONDON, March 25, Sunday - Russian tanks and infantry, smash- ing within 40 miles of Austria and 81 miles southeast of Vienna, have surged 43 miles across western Hun- gary along a 62-mile front in a great new. offensive timed with the Allied assault in the west, Premier Stalin disclosed last night. Moscow said 76,000 Germans had been killed or captured recently in Hungary. The massive break-through in Hungary, thrusting to southern Germany's "mountain redoubt," where the Nazis are-expected to make their last-ditch stand, came as Berlin reported a savage, sway- ing battle raging in the Nazi capi- tal's outer defenses 31 miles east of the city. The Vienna-bound offensive ex- ploded as the enemy said the Red Army had built up a 17-mile long, six-mile deep bridgehead across the Oder River before Berlin and had hurled new powerful forces into the assault. At the same time, Moscow an- nounced that Soviet forces in up- per Silesia had captured the indus- trial cities of Neisse and Loeb- schuetz and were probing the Sude- ten mountain defenses leading from Silesia to Brno, Prague, and Hitler's Czechoslovak arsenal. Far to the north, the battle for the twin isolated Baltic ports of Danzig and Gdynia was drawing to a close French Movie 'Grand Iallusion' To Be Shown Designed to bring films of artistic value to the campus and to pro- mote interest in these films, the Art Cinema League will present "Grandl Illusion" starring Jean Gabin and Eric von Stroheim at 8:30 p. m. Thursday, Friday and Saturday at Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Tickets for this second Art Cinema League presentation since its reor- ganization at the beginning of the semester may be purchased at the Lydia Mendelssohn box office starting Wednesday. Proclaimed "best film of the year" by the National Board of Review, "Grand Illusion" ran six months on Broadway. The film is a French production with English subtitles. CAMPUS EVENTS Today Kathleen Rinck presents an all-Beethoven piano recital in School of Music faculty series at 8:30 p. m. in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. March 27 Assembly Red Cross Night at 7:30 p. m. in Rackham Amphitheatre. March 27 Study group to discuss "Workshop on Anti-Sem- itism: Its Causes and as Russian forces ground to within three miles of Danzig and less than two miles from Gdynia. In Hungary, Marshal Feodor I. Tolbukhin's Third Ukrainian Army captured the great rail city of Vesz- prem and swept up more than 350 other towns and villages, Marshal Stalin announced. Routing the Germans, Tolbu- khin's troops killed 70,000 and cap- tured more than 6,000, Moscow said. Soviet communiques during the last three days have announc- ed the capture or annihilation of Wolverines Win econd Purdue elays Crown Special to The Daily LAFAYETTE, Ind., March 24. - Scoring heavily in the distance relay events and displaying traditional team balance, Michigan's track team successfully defended its title in the University division of the Purdue Relays here last night. The Wolverines, although they fell far below last year's record 49-point total, almost doubled Illinois, their nearest competitor, as they scored 36V2 points to 20 for the Illini. Miami' 'U' Repeats Miami University also pulled off a repeat performance in the College division by rolling up a new record 43-point total in that division. West- ern Michigan placed second to Miami with 25. Records fell with reckless abandon as the select field of cinder stars from all over the nation showed top form. Competition was unusually keen in all events. As expected, Michigan piled up its winning margin in the four relays, placing first in the two-mile and dis- tance medley, and second in the mile and sprint medley. Individual per- formers picked up points in the 60- yard low hurdles and the pole vault. Relay ream Wins The two-mile quartet got the Wol- verines off on the right foot, breezing home in 7:52. Chuck Birdsall, Archie Parsons, George Vetter. and Dick Barnard formed the winning team. In the distance medley, Bob Thom- ason got Michigan off in front with a fast quarter mile. He was followed by Dick Forrestal, Ross Hume, and Bob Hume, running a half mile, three-quarter, and mile respectively. See WOLVERINE, Page 3 Beethoven Program To Be Given Tonight Kathleen Rinck, teaching assist- ant in the School of Music, will pres- ent the third program in a series of faculty piano recitals at 8:30 p. m. today in the Lydia Mendelssohn The- atre. Opening her all-Beethoven recital with the "Sonata, Op. 2, No. 3" in for movenn+e Miss Riner wil a 121,000 enemy troops. Some 745 German tanks and 800 guns were destroyed in the Hungarian drive. The Russians recaptured the great rail center of Szekesferhvar, 32 miles southwest of Budapest, then rolled forward as much as 27 miles beyond their December positions. They seized Bakonyszentlaszio, 40 miles from the Austrian frontier and 81 miles southeast of the Aus- trial capital, and thus moved to within 22 miles southeast of Gyor, the greatest communication center in western Hungary and one of the outer defense fortresses of Vienna. Ten miles east of Veszprem and 18 miles southwest of Szekesferhvar, the Russians reached the north shore of Lake Balaton at Balaton Kenese. There were indications a sizeable enemy force that had driven east toward the Danube south of Buda- pest had been trapped and wiped out there. The battle before Berlin-which Moscow has not yet announced and which the Nazis called a bloody preliminary to an impending all- out Russian frontal assault on the capital-was "now raging to a cli- max," the Nazi DNB agency said. The Nazis said that Marshal Greg- ory K. Zhukov's First White Rus- sian Army troops had been at least, temporarily held at Golzow, six miles west of captured Oder fortress of Kuestrin. Manpower Bill Gives Byrnes New Anthority WASHINGTON, Mar. 24-(AP)-A compromise manlpower bill giving War Mobilizer James F. Byrnes auth- ority to regulate employment, with fines and jail sentences backing up his edicts, was approved by a Senate- House conference committee today. Eliminated was a House provision vesting local draft boards with power to order workers from job to job, on pain of being drafted, fined or sent to jail. Chairman Thomas (D.-Utah) of the Senate conferees announced th'e vote of agreement on the comprom- ise was substantial but not unani- mous. Yank Panes Hit HUge Jap Aircraft Plant 225 B-29s Bomb Nippon Homeland By The Associated Press 21ST U.S. BOMBER COMMAND HEADQUARTERS, Guam, March 25 -One of Japan's biggest aircraft engine plants on the outskirts of Nagoya was the target of the greatest Superfortress demolition raid against the Nippon homeland an hour after midnight this morning. A force of B29's estimated to total at least 225 swept in over the sprawl- ing Mitsubishi plant at unprecedent- ly low level for a high explosive raid, it was learned unofficially at head- quarters here. Weather Was 'Stinko' The weather according to pre-raid, reports was "stinko," possibly pre- venting visual bombing even from the low level of 6,000 feet. It was the fifth attack against the great plane engine plant which is located there March 12 and March 19. The raid was the third on Nagoya's big aircraft production center by large fleets of Superforts since March 12, when two square miles in the heart of the city were destroyed by incendiary bombs. Nagoya Smashed In another pre-dawn attack March 19, 350 Superfortresses destroyed more of Nagoya with a record 2,500- ton incendiary bomb shower. The new raid was the fifth by great fleets of Marianas-based Super- fortresses since March 10 on Japan's industrial cities. Other cities hit were Tokyo, Osaja and Kobe. Prior to these raids, the B-29s had carried on a series of attacks in smaller force. Today's was the first great demolition, attack. Aircraft Plant Objective Smaller attacks were made on Na- goya, starting Dec. 13 of last year. The city's aircraft plants were raided seven times in this type of attack. The Kokuki factory of the Mitsu- bishi company was hard hit in a Dec, 18 raid. Bombs knocked the plant at least 40 per cent out of commission in that raid, headquar- ters here said. * * * Navy Discloses Four-Day Air Attack on Japan U. S. PACIFIC FLEET HEAD- QUARTERS, Guam, Sunday, Mar. 25-(P)-Vice Adm. Marc A. Mit- scher's carrier task force extended its attacks, begun March 18 on south- ern Japan, through four straight days, the Navy disclosed today. Then it sent carrier raids Friday and Sat- urday against the Ryukyu Islands despite bad weather. The communique said a heavy toll of Japanese planes was taken dur- ing raids on southern Japan March 20 and 21 which took the Kyushu, Shikoku and Honshu Islands. During the attacks, a destroyer of the task force was seriously damaged and a heavier warship suffered some damage. Adm. Chester M. Nimitz, who pre- viously had disclosed that 17 enemy warships were crippled and more than 700 enemy planes destroyed or damaged in the raid on southern Japan, said the March 21 action was so intense that in one phase alone 50 enemy aircraft were downed at a cost of three American fighters. 'Mightiest' Air Attack Rocks German Capital Bombers Hit Berlin From Base in Italy By The Associated Press LONDON, March 25, Sunday-Mos- quitoes lashed Berlin last night for the 33rd consecutive night, continu- ing unchecked the mightiest aerial offensive in history, which yesterday saw 11,000 planes join the assault across the Rhine in support of troops charging toward the heart of the Reich. The huge airmada, which con- verged on the Rhine crossing area from England and continent-based airdromes, laid a protective wall of fire in front of the Allied trcops. Defense Thrown into Turmoil 'With Nazi defenses thrown into turmoil by this tremendous attack from the west, American heavy bom- bers from Italy leaped the Alps and smashed a tank factory in Berlin in a 1,600-mile round trip, the longest escorted mission ever flown over Eur- ope. From dawn to dusk one great pro- cession of bombers and fighters swept across the channel to be joined over the continent by thousands of other warplanes streaming up from ad- vanced bases in Belgium, Germany, Holland and France. Each phase of the mammoth oper- ation was run off with split-second timing, with as many as five layers of planes roaring toward their objec- tives at the same time or criss-cross- ing at different altitudes. Airborne Troops Sixty seconds after a group of transports towing gliders filled with combat troops passed over one Bel- gian city there came the roar of 200 swift American fighters diving into the fray. A. total of 1,500 transports and gliders showered fighting men into the seething battle east of the Rhine. A force of 240 Liberators dropped 600 tons of supplies to the airborne troops. In the crucial hours before day- break 1,900 American bombers and fighters beat un a dozen Nazi air- fields around the battle zone and made searing attacks on German positions near the Rhine. Late in the day another 450 Flying Fortresses and Liberators smashed four enemy night fighter bases in Germany and Holland. And on Friday night RAF Lancasters smashed the German gar- rison in Wesel, paving the way for British commando assaults. Germans Face Death or Defeat WASHINGTON, March 24-(P)- Germany's choice now is between un- conditional surrender and pulveriza- tion, and if they choose pulverization, they will have only themselves to blame for following vicious leader- ship, a government official said to- night. This point in Allied policy toward Germany was outlined in a radio broadcast by assistant Secretary of State James C. Dunn, Robert Mur- phy, political adviser to General Eisenhower, and assistant secretary Archibald MacLeish. "This time," said Murphy, "The Germans will not be able to claim that they were duped into laying down their arms. They are now wit- nessing the thing they understand best-superior force of arms." Other points of Allied policy towards Germany the speakers out- lined were: (See ALLIED, Page 5) March Fun Fest Is Scheduled at Hillel rrhp Mnrn 'E'rin "Wc' npr. on rori crossing two to four miles south of Wesel. It likewise ground out a solid 12-mile wide bridgehead, and was but four miles northwest of Duisburg, Europe's greatest inland port. Airborne troops and naval forces were thrown into the greatest opera- tion since D-Day. The First Air- borne Army plummeted possibly 40,- 000 troops down five miles beyond the Rhine north of the Ruhr's gate- way city of Wesel and joined with the British Second Army within six hours. The air train was at least 500 miles long. More than 10,000 Allied planes ruled inner Germany's skies, fer- rying parachute troops, scattering the ground defenders with bombs, bullets and rockets, or heaping fresh destruction on already bat- tered enemy communication lines to the flaming front. Eisenhower had committed possib- ly1,250,000 men to the Battle of the West with this latest offensive, and to the : South Lt. Gen. George S. Patton, Jr., crossed the Rhine per- sonally to direct the Third Army's See eye-witness account on Page Two. offensive into Middle Germany, now powered by tanks. The Rhine had been bridged 'by pontoons both in the Ruhr and the Third Army's middle Rhine crossings and the big and final push was on to knock Germany quickly from the war. Alarmed German broadcasts said that more Allied troops of the air were descending tonight over a broad front north of the Ruhr, whose loss will rob the enemy of power to resist. German forces, stunned by the terrible drum fire of 1,100 guns massed on the Rhine's west bank, 'began surrendering by the hundreds as the first waves plunged out on the east bank from naval landing craft like those used on Normandy's beaches. Smashing into open country 290 miles from Berlin the troops of Field Marshal Sir Bernard L. Montgomery were told by the 21st Army Group commander that "the enemy is driv- en into a corner." "It will be interesting to see how much longer the enemy can stand it; the complete and decisive defeat of the Germans is certain," declared Montgomery. The long-rested British Second Ar- my, out of action since last Septem- ber, opened the attack by crossing on the north flank at 8 p. m. last night. An hour later waves began moving across on the south flank. The Third, exploiting to the hilt its surprise crossing between Worms and Mainz, bridged the river with pon- toons and poured tanks across onto the mid-German plain-natural ave- nue to Berlin, 262 miles in front off Lt. Gen. George S. Patton's north wing. SKY ARMADA: Rhine Observer Tells of Mighty Air Offensive By ALEX H. SINGLETON Associated Press Correspondent ABOARD A GLIDER TUG EAST OF THE RHINE, March 24.-I saw history's mightiest air armada-of- ficially 500 miles long-soar trium- phantly across the placid Rhine to- day, and deposit thousands of battle- toughened American and British air- borne troops in the thick of an en- emy defense zone plastered in ad- vance by an unprecedented artillery and bomb barrage. The size of the airborne army was not announced-although some said it ranged up to 40,000 men. Paratroopers Descend by Thousands But. from a bird's-eye view in the co-pilot's seat of a sturdy RAF Stir- ling transport, I saw thousands of American paratroopers spill into the air and descend to the smoke-shrou- ded battlefield within sight of the Rhine. Simultaneously, gliders carrying British troops cut loose from tugs and swooped gracefully to the shell- pocked ground. Sharp fire bursts around gliders showed the troops almost immediately wheeled into ac- tion. Flak Brings Down Tug and Glider For a few breathless minutes, it was an aerial traffic jam made dou- bly hazardous by bursts of flak which brought down at least one transport tug and one glider. Swirling, darting, and curving in a dance of the sky to the tune of en- gines of 1,500 transports, overtoned by those of hundreds of fighters, the air armada poured out at least 16,000 to 18,000 men in one area. alone. victory Near,' Churchill Says LONDON, March 24--(P)-Prime Minister Churchill, at Field Marshal Sir Bernard L. Montgomery's head- quarters, told troops of the 21st Army group today that the "decisive victory in Europe will be near" once the Rhine River line is pierced and the crust of German resistance brok- en. A similar message of confidence in speedy victory was issued by Mont- gomery while Gen. Eisenhower warn- ed German officers, soldiers and civil- ians that the Allies would hold them to strictest account and punish them' according to their deserts if they be- came involved in the execution of Allied airborne troops. On Front 25 Miles Wide British Second Army, Canadians Secure New Bridgehead Between Rees and Wesel for Plunge Into Munitions Center By The Associated Press PARIS, Sunday, March 25-Four Allied armies ripped Germany's Rhine River line in a historic crossing yesterday, invaded the flaming Ruhr' afid north German plain on a solid front of more than 25 miles, and plowed four to five miles inland in the long-awaited end-the-waroffensive. In the most massive operation since D-Day, the British Second Army and elements of the Canadian First Army gouged out a 12-mile wide bridgehead stretching from Rees to Wesel, northwestern gateway to the vital Ruhr's huge munitions cities. The U. S. Ninth Army, with Gen. Eisenhower looking on, plunged four miles east into the Ruhr itself with a crossing two to four miles east into the Ruhr itself with a C' * * MARTHA COOK MUSICAL: Variety Program To Be Given Today for U' Foreign Students $79,000 WORTH OF MERCY: Ann Arbor Exceeds Its Quota In Red Cross War Fund Drive A musical variety program will be presented by Martha Cook dormitory for the International Center at 7:30 p. m. today in Rm. 320, the Union. The program, under the direction of Bethine Clark, social chairman of Martha Cook, is sponsored annually by Mrs. Leona Diekema, director, as a nart of the norintation of fnrign Betty Godwin will give interpretive readings of two numbers by Ogden Nash, "Spring Song" and "Waiting for the Birdie." "West Wind" by Masefield will be given by Dorothy Servis, and music by Debussy will be played by Lou Dell, pianist. The tunes of Duke Ellington will be furnished Ann Arbor went over the top in it. Red Cross War Fund Drive yesterday with a total of $79,129.15, exceeding the quota of $79,100, set by county officials. This increases the total for Wash- tenaw County to $142,481.16. The county quota of $134,300 was reached last Wednesday, and returns ax still coIning in from outlying commumi- ties. U~nivnemityChnrt of Ona. groups, $5,359.21; public employees, $1,865.75; bank booths, $1,56138; group contributions, $1,767.25; and a credit from the area office in St. Louis of $10.00. Drive To Continue Through March The Red Cross War Fund Drive will continue until the end of March. The campus drive, under the com- bined direction of the Union and Traft urillmm zfritra fn r--aa h fh