Y Sit i ait& WEATHER Partly Cloudy with Little Change in Teepecratjure VOL. LV, No. 105 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN TUESDAY, MARCH 27, 1945 PRICE FIVE CENTS zis REEL U DER * SS LLIED DRI E * * * * * * * * * * * * * Three-Pronged Red Drive Races cross Hungary .} , Russians Only 69, eliesfrom Vienna Other Forces Are Battering Through Caripal ianus of Czechoslovakia By The Associated Press LONDON, March 26-Russian tank spearheads, pursuing mauled enemy forces across western Hungary, raced within 31 miles of Austria and 69 miles southeast of Vienna tonight as Moscow disclosed that a great three- pronged push toward that backdoor to Germany now was underway. While elements of the Second and Third Ukraine armies swept toward Vienna along the south bank of the Danube River, Marshal Stalin announc- ed that the drive had been extended beyond the river's north bank where Soviet forces were battering across Czechoslovakia's Carpathian mountains. - As the triple offensive swept toward 200 B-29s Hit Kyushu Bases From Marianas GUAM, Tuesday, March 27-(P)- A "very large" force of Marinas-bas- ed B-29s-presumably more than 200 -battered the southern Japanese island of Kyshu shortly before noon today, attacking airfields and bases all the way to the coast fronting on the east China Sea. The targets attacked included a big aircraft plant at Omura on the west side of Kyushu between Sasebo and Nagasaki. This area once was hit by Superfortresses from the China-Bur- ma-India theater. Thus for the first time, the 21st Bomber Command hit a target with the 20th Bomber Com- mand had attacked from another di- rection. lIt was the first Superfortress at- tack from the Marianaseon any other Japanese island except the mainone of Honshu, where the targets have included Tokyo, Nagoya, Osaka and Kobe. Yanks Land on yCebu Ibland, Tokyo Reports By The Associated Press Radio Tokyo reported Tuesday that American troops began landing on Cebu island between Leyte and Ne- gros in the central Philippines at 7 a. m. Monday, Japanese time, (5. p. m. Sunday, Eastern War Time). The enemy announcement was not con- firmed. The report by invasion-jittery Tok- yo followed by about 24 hours still unconfirmed enemy broadcasts that American troops had "attempted" landings on two little islands off Ok- inawa in the central Ryukyus, 400 miles' south of Japan. Fleet Adm. Chester W. Nimitz did announce however that big guns of fast Ameri- can battleships and carrier based air- craft renewed their attacks on stra- tegic Okinawa Monday. Tokyo said six cruisers and a num- ber of destroyers shelled Cebu to pro-! tect the reported landings. Cebu and Negros are the only two Philippine islands of importance not recaptured by Gen. Douglas MacArthur's for- ces. CAMPUS EVENTS the Bratislava Gap, key to Vienna, Russian forces in northern Europe took 21,000 trapped enemy prisoners along the East Prussian beaches and lunged to little more than a mile from the big Baltic port of Danzig, Moscow announced. Supported by American bombers from Italy which blasted cities in the path of the onrushing Soviets, Mar- shal Feodor I. Tolbukhin's Third Ukraine Army plunged into the key Hungarian town of Papa, 31 miles from the Austrian border, and moved within 69 miles of Vienna's city lim- its by taking Lovaszpatona. The capture of Lovaszpatona, an- nounced in Moscow's nightly war bul- letin, carried the Russians to a'point 16 miles south of the rail city of Gyor, greatest transport center in northwestern Hungary and a major point in Vienna's defense system. Simultaneously, Marshal Stalin dis- closed in an order of the day that Tolbukhin's troops, who swept up more than 100 towns and villages, had stormed and captured Devecser, 38 miles east of American-bombed Szombathely, another vital strong- hold in Vienna's southeastern defense triangle. In a second order of the day, Stalin announced that Marshal Ro- dion Y. Malinovsky's Second Uk- raine Army was plunging toward Vi- enna across Czechoslovakia. Malin- ovsky's troops won the city of Ban- ska-Bystrica and more than 50 other places. Banska-Bystrica lies 125 miles east of Vienna. Its capture was made in a crossing of the Hron River. Farther west, the Germans said that Malinov- sky's troops were in a full-scale offen- sive and had established three bridge- heads across the Hron near Leva (Levice), 92 miles east of the Austrian capital. The Germans said Malinovsky was pouring powerful forces across the Hron, on the north bank of the Dan- ube River, into a battle aimed at breaking across the Bratislava plain leading 68 miles westward to that capital of Slovakia. Tolbukhin's army broke into Papa and Devecser, which Stalin described as "large road junctions and power- ful strongpoints of German defenses covering the approaches to the fron- tiers of Austria," in advances of four and seven miles. WAR AT A GLANCE By The Associated Press WESTERN FRONT-Yank Seventh crosses Rhine; Third moves 40 miles from Mainz-Worms bridgehead; first drives to Heckholzhausen and Lim- berg. EASTERN FRONT-Reds race a- cross Hungary within 31 miles of Austria. Fiianeial AIdI Provided for War Veterans Bomber Scholarship Funds Now Avalable Discharged veterans who satisfac- torily completed at least two semes- ters at the University before entering the armed forces are now eligible to apply to the Bomber Scholarship Committee for financial aid which is intended to supplement the G.. Bill of Rights. Fund Begun by 'U' Students The Bomber Scholarship Fund was initiated by University students in the spring of 1941 and has since been sustained and augmented by under- graduate and alumni contributions. The project was named the Bomber Scholarship Fund as all money was to be invested in Uiited States War Bonds which would be liquidated as the return of veterans necessitated. The goal of the originators was $100,- 000 in war bonds which would be comparable to the price of a bomber. Veterans may obtain information concerning Bomber Scholarships at the Veterans' Bureau in the Rack- ham Building or in Rm. 2, University Hall. Application blanks are also obtainable in University Hall. Pri- vate interviews will be held to deter- mine the need of the applicants. The previous record made at the Univer- sity, the mlitary record and charac- ter of the applicant as well as his need will be among the most impor- tant considerations. $29,000 Netted for Fund Various projects such as the Mich- ibomber Carnival, Victory Varieties, numerous Bomber Scholarship spon- sored dances, and contributions from dormitories, fraternities, sororities and other campus organizations have netted approximately $29,000 for the Fund. Plans are now under way for fur- ther Bomber Scholarship projects including an all-campus show fea- turing student and professorial tal- ent. The central committee has been newly organized with Nancy Pottin- ger as chairman. Former Dean of Dental School Will Speak Today Dr. Marcus L. Ward, Dean Emer- itus of the University of Michigan School of Dentistry, will speak on "The Educational Program of Xi Psi Phi" at 6:30 p. m. today at 1805 Washtenaw Avenue. EARL LLOYD GEORGE statesman is dead Lloyd George, British Leader, Is Dead at 82 NORTH WALES, Mar. 26-()- David Lloyd George, who as Prime Minister guided Britain to victory in the first World War and as a vocal elder statesman awakened her to im- pending disaster in this war by damn- ing military measures as "too late or too little," died tonight. Death came peacefully in his farm home near here. He was 82 years old on Jan. 17. Became Earl, January 1 King George VI named him Earl Lloyd George of Dwyfor last New Year's Day, but this fierce champion of the common man never sat in the House of Lords. His second wife, the former Miss Frances Stevenson whom he married Oct. 23, 1943, was at his bedside when he died. She was his secretary for 30 years and the "Glamour Girl" of the Versailles Peace Conference. She was 25 years his junior. His first wife, Dame Margaret Lloyd George, whom he married in 1888 when he was an unknown solicitor of 25, died in 1941. Was Ill Previously Lloyd George, a small, but robust, man, had shaken off serious illnesses many times before, but he suffered an attack of influenza in January from which he never rallied. Since Jan. 20 he had been in grave condition and under the care of a heart special- ist. . His death leaves Vittorio Orlando of Italy as the only survivor of the famous Big Four of Wilson, Clemen- ceau, Lloyd George and Orlando at the Versailles Conference where the peace treaty was written after Ger- many's defeat in 1918. Family at Bedside As the British elder statesman gradually grew weaker, the Countess remained with him as much as pos- sible. So did his daughters, Lads Olwen Carey Evans, and Lady Me gan Lloyd George, and his son Maj Gwilym Lloyd George, Minister o fuel and power inthe Churchill cab- inet. A second son Maj. Richard Lloyd George, is in a sanatorium in Wales. Both of Lloyd George's sons served in the first World War and emerged as majors. Lloyd George has held a seat i the House of Commons from Car- narvon for 54 years, alternatel cheered and jeered by Britons as his unshakable beliefs found him thei champion or their whipping boy. Harvard Irofesor Will Give Lecture at Rackhain A Consideration of Oceanographi Methods for Great Lakes Problem will be the topic of an address by Dr George Leonard Clarke, associate F.D.R. Asks For Power To Slash Tariffs Republicans Predict Hot Fight gin Congress By{ The Associated Press WASHINGTON, March 26.-Presi- dent Roosevelt asked Congress today for new power to slash tariffs to help "build an economically healthy wor- ld." Stormy objections from Republi- cans who, said the move would be an economic blow to the tUnited States, indicated that Capitol Hill was head- ing into the hottest tariff fight since the Smoot-Hawley Bill was written in 1930. Specifically the President, in a surprise special message to Congress, endorsed a bill by Chairman Dough- ton (Dem., N.C.) of the Ways and Means Committee. This would ex- tend the Reciprocal Trade Agree- ments Act for three more years and add authority to cut levies on imports 50 per cent below the levels of Jan. 1, 1945 in return for concessions from other countries. The original trade agreements act of 1934 permitted cuts to 50 per cent of the Smoot-Hawley rates, so that on items which already have had the full permitted cut, the overall reduc- ticn might run 75 per cent. Mr. Roosevelt declared that under the act as it now stands, the United States does not have enough to offer foreign countries "to serve as a basis for the further concessions we want from them." Dog Quarantine To Be Enforced' Dog owners violating the recently, imposed Washtenaw County dog quarantine order will be fined or im- prisoned or both, county sheriff's of- ficials said yesterday. Following numerous reports that rabid dogs were running loose in the county, health director Dr. Otto En- gelke announced the necessity for the quarantine stating its purpose was to avoid a reocurrence of 1944's wide- spread rabies epidemic. Under the quarantine, each dog must be penned or tied and under control of its master at all times. U.S. Seventh Crosses Rhine AsFirst Smses3ies By The Associated Press PARIS, Tuesday, March 27-The American Seventh Army hurdled the Rhine early yesterday, joining six other Allied armies in the drive on Berlin. The Germans reeled back from a series of breakthroughs, in one of which the U. S. First Army drove 35 miles. A bulletin from the First Army front said power ful tank forces of Lt. Gen. Courtney H. Hodges had penetrated to the highway town of Heckholzhausen in a 35-mile thrust out of the Remagen-Erpel bridgehead, while other armored units smashed into the junction city of Limburg in a 22-mile thrust. Heckholzhausen is eight miles northeast of Limburg. 0i_(German advices to Madrid said, the big push was the greatest in size and intensity ever mounted by the Allies in Europe and declared the British and American armies were using new arms and tactics.) Seventh Amry veterans struck without artillery or air preparation in a surprise assault at an undisclosed point. Earlier the Germans had said the Americans were hammering at the gates of the big traffic ,enter of Karlsruhe, on the south part of the front. Power-laden U. S. First Army tankt teams raced unchecked into the city of Limburg. Other armored forces smashed 15 miles eastward, trying tot crush the Germans before they couldE escape a pincers being formed by the 1 First and U. S. Ninth Armies., Rip To Reich Center The U. S. Third Army's originalr breakthrough forces of the Fourth Armored Division were ripping into the middle of Germany under a secur- ity blackout, probably well beyondi positions reported yesterday, when1 they were 40 miles east of the Rhine.- Mop-up forces swung north intot Frankfurt-on-Main, 32 miles from the First Army tanks in Limburg. As these twin drives threatened to1 split all German armies in the west,t the British Second and U. S. NinthI Armies struck with such force in the Ruhr and on the North German Plain that a high officer of the first Allied Airborne Army said "there is noth- ing to halt a breakthrough." That was the same sort of word which came from the U. S. First Army front, where a field dispatch said "There is no solid line in front of the First Army now." 17 Miles Beyond Rhine The U. S. Ninth Army drove 17 miles beyond the Rhine against be- wildered resistance, fought into the northern suburbs of the Ruhr Port of Duisburg, and was by-passing Es- sen, biggest arsenal city in the Ruhr. The British Second Army had spilled out 15 miles onto the North German plain, and was driving east /of Wesel. (The BBC heard by NBC said the' American-British bridgehead had been doubled in size in 24 hours, and another BBC report said the Ninth Army was only about three miles from Essen.) Limburg, 255 miles southwest of Berlin, was being cleared swiftly. s The U. S. Third Army entered the south section of Frankfurt, Ger- many's ninth largest city, with a peacetime population of 546,000, and the U. S. Ninth Army was battling in the northern suburbs of the great Ruhr port of Duisburg. Georges' Music Will Be Given Tomorrow Eve Faculty, Students, Guests To Perform Students and faculty members of the School of Music, Hugh Norton of the speech department and a Detroit guest soloist will sing the lead roles in "The Way of the Cross" (Chemin de Croix), an oratorio, to be present- ed by the Senior Choir of the First Methodist Church at 8 p.m. tomor- row in the church sanctuary. Preseited in connection with Holy Week, the work is scored for nar- rator, quartet of soloists, chorus, vio- lin, cello, piano and organ. Hugh Norton, narrator in the Choral Un- ion's "Messiah" performance last December, will read the translations from the original French by Alexan- dre Georges. Bonnie Ruth Van Deursen, soprano soloist and Youth Choir director at the church, Harriet Porter, '448M, contralto, Prof. Hardin Van Deursen, baritone, and Avery Crew, tenor solo- ist at St. Paul's Episcopal Cathedral in Detroit, will sing the solo parts with the Senior Choir. Bernard M- son, graduatesviolin student in the School of Music; Mary Oyer, cellist; Ruby Kuhlman, senior piano student and Choral Union accompanist, and Frieda Vogan, instructor in organ and theory here, will assist in the performance. Solon Alberti, New York composer, accompanist and coach, organist and director of music in the Central Christian Church of New York City, who edited, arranged and produced the oratorio for the first time in America two years ago, is now. visit- ing in Ann Arbor. He will be guest director of this performance of "The Way of the Cross." The presentation is open to the general public 'M' Men Give Less than $200 To Red Cross Less than $200 has been contribut- ed by Michigan men in the current Red Cross Drive, according to the report yesterday of the Executive Council of the Michigan Union. Nearly all men's residences have been contacted in the drive. In view of the many needs of the Red Cross and the splendid service that organ- ization has rendered to fighting men all over the world, the returns from the men in this contribution cam- paign have been astonishingly small," Tom Donnelly, drive director, af- firmed yesterday. Returns from two men's residences show that Fletcher Hall has con- tributed $71.35, nearly 100 per cent of its quota and Allen Rumsey slight- ly over 55 per cent with $62.50. Navy personnel in the West Quad will have a chance to contribute to the Red Cross between 11:30 a.m. and 1 p.m. on Thursday when members of the Union staff will be on hand to collect contributions. 'U Servicemen Tell Of Redl Cross W ork. Activities of the Red Cross overseas A Observers Predict Franco May Re-Establish Monarchy Description Is Given of First Army Advance into Limburg. i Today Study group to discuss "Workshop on Anti- Semitism: Its Causes and Cures" at 7:30 p. m. at B'nai Brith Hillel Foun- dation. March 28 Deutschter Verein re- sumes activities at 8 p.m. in League. March 28 Prof. Antoine Jobin speaks to Le Cercle Fran- cais at 4:10 p. m. Tues- day in Rm. D. Alumni Memorial Hall. March 28 George Leonard Clark, assistant professor of zoology at Harvard will speak on "Consideration of Methods for Great Lakes Problems" at 4:15 By The Associated Press Observers of Spanish affairs long have expected that Generalissimo Franco, beset at home and abroad, eventually would cut away from his largely-discredited Falange party and re-establish a monarchial govern- ment. Periodically, for five years, he has been deported on the verge of recalling Prince Juan. Now,, even while the dictator is faced with the necessity of switch- ing to some semblance of co-opera- tion with the United Nations, Juan has placed the shoe on the other foot by demanding the throne. For Franco, a king restored by Franco is one thing, a king returning on his own an entirely different mat- ter. By going to war with Japan, with opposition of Franco's police and the Communists, have united on a na- tional scale for the first time since the bloody days of 1939-40, when Franco's execution squads were busi- est. This has been confirmed by a number of travelers from Spain, some of whom have copies of the organization's first manifesto. They say that, contrary to reports from Republican exiles and Spanish 'Communists, there was, until last october, no unified Republican movement. Coimunists, shunned by most Re- publicans in Spain, created the "Ju- nta Suprema de la Union Nacional" By DON WHITEHEAD and HAL BOYLE WITH THE U.S. FIRST ARMY, March 26.-(AP)-Unleashing the most powerful tank force ever assembled on the western front, Lt.-Gen. Court- ney Hodges drove an armored spear- head of the First Army 22 miles east- ward today into historic Limburg, and tonight this city on the Lahr River was being cleared of enemy troops. The armored column burst into Limburg at 3:45 p.m. to climax a whirlwind attack that started at dawn five miles northeast of Co - blenz. Tanks iolled forward in the gray the First Army were in their surprise dash to the east. The only thing that slowed the tanks were demolished bridges and debris piled on roads. Vngineers quickly cleared paths with bulldozers and the armor kept driving on. South of Limburg, vehicles were racing to get away from the advan- cing Shermans. The towns of Open- rod and Nentershousen, which strad- dle the road to Limburg, were left in flames. And in Obererbach north rf Nentershousen, civilians were in the streets waving white flags. This was a day much like the Nor - mandy break-through, With tanks plowing forward hell-for-leather and