I. Ait A 4 aiil WEATHER Fair and Cooler- Winds VOL. LV, No. 107 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN THURSDAY, MARCH 29, 1945 PRICE FIVE CENTS U.S. First,Third rmiesPlunne27 ils in Reich - ,C;, * * * * * * * * C ) FDR Asks Action on Manpower Positive Betterment' Reported by McNutt By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, March 28-A re- newed plea today by President Roose- velt for manpower control legislation coincided with a report by Manpower Commissioner McNutt of a "positive betterment" in the employment situa- tion. Mr. Roosevelt's appeal for favor- able Senate action on the manpower control bill, with jail and fine en- forcement teeth, was made in a letter to chairman Thomas (D.-Utah) of the Senate Military Committee. The letter failed to quell a critical attack by the bill's opponents. The meas- ure, a compromise reached by Senate and House conferees, passed the House yesterday by a seven-vote mar- gin. 'Extra Push' McNutt's report said "an extra push" still is needed in getting more workers to leave non-essential indu- stries for jobs in war production plants if production schedules for the six month period of February 15- August 15 are to be met. His statement, issued to the press through the Office of War Informa- tion, did not figure in the Senate dis- cussions. The Manpower Commissioner's conclusion of "positive betterment" was reached through reports that levels of munitions plant employment achieved in December were maintain- ed in January and February. Defeat Predicted The impact of the President's ap- peal did not deter Senator O'Maho- ney (D.-Wyo.) from predicting de- feat of the legislation. A Republican, Senator Hart of Connecticut, asked the Senate to adopt the report as its way of dem- onstrating that it is backing Amer- ica's fighting men "to the limit." Addresses Senate In his first formal address to the Senate the former Admiral declared: "We not only owe it to the future of the country, but in the present- right now-we owe it to the fighting forces." "Maimed men are appearing among us, and women in black," he con- tinued. "The numbers are increas- ing. I wish to be able to look them in the eye. We all do." Backfires Halt Forest Blaze MUSKEGON-()-A forest fire, which swept over an area four miles long and a mile wide, was halted by backfires as it reached the outskirts of the village of Oscoda in Iosco County tonight. Several small buildings , on the northwest corner of the village were reported destroyed, but efforts of forest rangers, State Conservation Department firefighters and soldiers from the Oscoda Airbase saved the business district. State police at Lansing reported the airbase had been evacuated as the flames swept toward it, after missing the center of the municipality, and the firefighters were concentrating their efforts to save the hangars and other equipment. Elman To Address Alpha Omega Alpha Dr. Robert Elman, professor of surgery at the Washington Univer- sity School of Medicine in St. Louis, will speak before Alpha Omega Al-, pha, national honorary medical so- ciety, at 8 p. m. today in the Rack- ham Amphitheatre. All medical students and faculty members are invited to this annual initiation lecture of the society. CAMPUS EVENTS Today (Through March 31) "Gra- nd Illusion", French prize winning film with English sub - titles presented at ., Reds Hit Raba River'CU PCTR n Pines, b! e Cracked Michiga copy sol sma, a j Gdynia, Lebus Taken N. Y. for subs In All-Out Offensive sin, whi and pho LONDON, March 28.-(A)- Two activity o rampaging Russian armies captured four main German strongholds in northwestern Hungary today,crack- ing the Raba River defense line guarding Vienna and driving within ten miles of the Austrian border and 47 miles of the Austrian capital. The I disintegration of the Ger- mans' defenses in Hungary guarding the road to Vienna and Austrian wy production centers was announced by Premier-Maihal Stalin shortly. after he had proclaimed she capture by other Russian units of the Germa s major Baltic naval base of Gdyn ? 120-Mile Front: Attacking on a 120-mile front, t he combined second and 'bird Ukraine; Armies under Marshals Rodion Y. " Malinovsky and Feodor 1. Tolbukhin advanced up to 14 miles.: Malinovsky's troops, striking along . the south bank of the Danube brea- ched the Danube valley's defenses northwest of Budapest with the cap- ture of Gyor and Konarom, while Tolbukhin's men crossed the Raba River and seized Csorna and Sarvar. Zhukov ContinuesP Simultaneously the Germans de- clared that Marshal Gregory K. Zhu-m kov's First White Russian Army, stri- f king out in Berlin's defensive fore- fLeld, had seized the fortress town of Lehus, on the Oder River's west bank petitio five miles north of besieged Frank- Boardion hurt and 38 miles from the threat- B are ened Reich capital. othe are A Moscow dispatch said the Rus- oe sian supply system was "working all- announce out to prepare a spring offensive" on Judiciary this front efsest to Berlin. Any pe ___________versity eli tion. Pet Registration for atleastt tues, nE v before Ap ASTRPrExamn All tho terviewed Ends Saturday aeekiof qualificat activities, Men whose seventeenth birthday to studen falls between Oct. 1, 1944 and Aug. will be an 31, 1945 must register with Captain The Pu Erik L. L. Swyler, Army headquar- of six fa ters, 512 S. State, by :'tnrday if three st they wish to take the Army Special- group w ized Training Reserve Program qual- ifying test. tinal pn Michigan The test will be given at 9 a.m., Universit April 12, in the Rackham Lecture tween th Hall to eligible men. Eligibility re tions and ouirements state that the applicant ments to to the ASTI-tP will a, e graduate are made from lhigh ;'hool by July 1, 1945 or The st will have (c npleted oc:e semester oT ecliege by that time. E tudents wh. will have ccmpleted owe semester or term of co,ege work d-i ing July ana August, 1945, are also eligible pro- vide that they will not be older than Call 17 years, 9 months, on the first day of the following month. Depending upon his age when he ' Chapu begins training, a qualified applicant Councilp will be enrolled in the ASTRP for Conferenc two, three or four twelve-week terms. Con.eyen During this time he will study Eng- pi yest lish, geography, history, mathemat- "Chapn ics and pnysics, the amount of aca- but serve demic 'credit, received for this train- sre ing being determined by the institu- the Brazi tion to which he is assigned. Al- ued. "Th though the ASTRP student receives strengthe no pay, all expenses are met by the improving government. xiera com tariffs pr which is Petitionsthe Latin e l ns 01 of the cor dustrialn ouni DueBackgrou Backgi' Petitions for League Executive Conferenc wodeswr Council and Women's Judiciary egation a Council positions are due by noon at the m Saturday, March 31, according to March 8. Natalie Mattern, president of the Pact pfC Judicial Council. recommen Positions on the Executive Council were subs include those of president- vice-pres- come out ident, who will also serve as orienta- ference. tion chairman, and treasurer. The History S chairmanships of the tuorial-merit Blanca committee and child care-personnel history as Viennese Defenses 1400T1-I 'NSIAN IS SOLD -Photo by John Horeth titions for Board in rtrol Due by April 7 v ns to fill the vacancy on the Control of Student Publica- due in the Stfdent Offices. anion before April 7, it was d yesterday by the Men's Council. rson who satisfies the-Uni- igibility standards may peti- itions, which should contain twenty-five student signa- ay be picked up any day ril 7, in the Student Offices. se who petition will be in- by the Council during the April 9, concerning their ions, their extra curricular and their policy in regards t publications. Candidates nounced later that week. iblication Board, consisting culty men, two alumni and udents, is the supervisory hch dcetermines the func- licy of the Daily and the ensian. Set up through the y Regents, it is liaison be- e student-managed publica- the Regents. All appoint- the junior and senior staffs by the Board. udent representative to the riltepee Is ed Not Final itepec is not final," said Teixiera, in a Post-War panel on the Mexico City ce of March 5, held at 7:30 erday, at the Michigan Un- ltepec will not cure war, s as an apparatus for war," lian representative contin- he solution to war lies in ing the cultural bonds and economic difficulties." Tei- amented on the abolition of oposed by the United States not greeted with favor by American nations because )mparative youth of its in- machine. id Given ound of the Inter-American ce was given by Harry Daum ribed the United States del- nd what was Accomplished eetings between Feb. 20 and* He brought out that the Chapultepec and the other ndations of the conference sidiary to those which may of the San Francisco Con- Summarized Alvarez gave Venezuela's , a country which has been Board will be chosen in a general campus election on April 20, for a term of three semesters. The elec- tion has been called because the term of Bob Hume expires this semester. The person who is elected will take office immediately. A statement of the qualification of each of the candidates will be pub- lished in the Daily before the elec- tion. JAG School To Parade for Vistors Today The entire JAG School will be re- viewved on parade in the Law Club parade grounds at 5:15 p. m. today by 22 Latin American military legal officers and Maj.-Gen. Myron C. Cramer, Judge Advocate General of Army, who has made a special trip from Washington to greet the visit- ors. The visiting officers, representing 13 South and Central American re- publics, will be officially greeted at 10:15 a. m. in Hutchins Hall by Lt.- Col. Reginald C. Miller, Commandant of the JAG School, E. Blythe Stason, Dean of the Law School, President Alexander G. Ruthven and Gen. Cra- mer. A moot court trial, interpolated from English to Spanish by Maj. Jose G. Vivas, will be held at 1:15 p. m., followed by a campus tour. In the evening, the Latin Ameri- can officers, six of whom are generals, will be guests at the Judge Advocate Generals Dinner, held in their honor by the JAG School staff, faculty and their wives at the Allenel Hotel. Yanks Take City of Cebu Americans Land in Ryukyus, Japs Claim By The Associated Press PACIFIC-Capture of Japanese- ravaged Cebu, second city of the Philippines, by Yank doughboys of the Americal Division and continua- tion of the relentless hammering of the strategic Ryukyu Islands by U. S. naval guns and carrier planes were reported in Communiques late Wed- nesday. Fleet Adm. Chester W. Nimitz did not confirm Japanese claims that American forces have already landed in the Ryukyus. He said the naval gun and aerial bombardmentseof those islands continued without letup Wednesday, Japanese time. Cebu City Taken Gen. Douglas MacArthur said troops of the Americal Division took Cebu City with light losses after they invaded Cebu Island. The Yanks hit the elaborate Japanese defense sys- tem on the flank and rear. The city was badly damaged by the retreating Japanese but the port area was al- most intact. In their advance on Cebu the Americans liberated 11 towns. The Japanese were being pursued northward. The general said Nippon resistance in south and central Luzon Island had decreased due to irreplacable heavy losses. Resistance was strong on northern Luzon. Raid Jap Shipping Yank planes from the Philippines again blasted points in those islands and on Formosa and maintained the China Sea blockade with widespread raids on shipping. Admiral Nimitz, reporting on Ryu- kyus operations from March 25 to March 27 said preliminary checks showed three destroyers or destroyer escorts and five cargo ships damaged; many small craft wrecked; 25 planes shot down and 13 destroyed aground. Submarine pens, gun positions, landing craft, airfields and other prime military targets were heavily hit. Some American units were dam- aged. Bomb Kuriles, Bonins The Admiral also reported Yank air raids in the Kuriles and at Chichi Jima and Haha Jima in the Bonins. Japan's Kyushu Island, according to Radio Tokyo, was attacked by 90 carrier-based planes following two Superfortress raids there within 12 hours. Spanish Talk To Be Given Today "Desportes en Costa Rica" will be the subject of Francisco Villegas talk in the sixth of La Sociedad His- panica current lecture series to be given at 8 p.m. today at the Union. A native of Costa Rica, Villegas is a teaching fellow in the University Spanish department and was recent- ly elected secretary of the Latin American Club. Prof. Irving Leonar I will give the seventh and inal lecture on Wednes- day. Tickets for individual lectures will he on sale t the dior. Everyone i cordially irited to attend. Allied Whirlwind Gleans Up Gities Link-tip Near Deep Inside Germany; Armored Spearheads Pursue Nazis By The Asociated Press PARIS, Thursday, March 29-Gen. Eisenhower's Allied Armies made whirlwind advances up to 27 miles through collapsing German resistance yesterday as British tanks broke through north of the Ruhr and the U. S. First and Third Armies neared a link-up deep inside the Reich. -Cities and towns fell in wholesale lots to infantrymen following closely behind the armored spearheads which had broken completely through the German defensive crust and were overrunning the Reich under a veil of secrecy that prevented ninpointing their latest advances. The Fourth Armored Division of Lt. Gen. George S. Patton's Third Army raced 27 miles northward from Hanau to q point only six mles southeast of Giessen, through whichs * * * Lt. Gen. Courtney H. Hodges' First Army had passed earlier in the day. There was a possibility that these -two armies already had made a junction in that area, approximately 225 miles from Berlin, closing a trap around Nazi forces still fighting in Frankfurt, half of which had been cleared. North of the Ruhr the Germans were reported in wild retreat ahead of British tanks which broke out of Field Marshal Sir Montgomery's bridgehead, now exploding in all di- rections. Montgomery's armor, with British and American troops riding on the backs of the tanks, broke loose on. an 11-mile front and raced down broad highways toward Muenster and Berlin. Ca- nadian troops stormed into Em- merich, on the Rhine near the Dutch border. The American Ninth Army, still en- countering the fiercest opposition fac- ed by any of the seven Allied armies east of the Rhine, wheeled south into the industrial Ruhr and smashed through .the northern suburbs of Duisburg to the wharves along the Ruhr River. The U. S. Seventh Army cleared the northern part of the industrial city of Mannheim to the Neckar River while other units drove as much as 32 miles east of the Rhine, making contact with the 'Third Army along the Main River. The Fourth armored column did the last 25 miles of its spectacular dash in about 10 hours, meeting virtually no opposition and run- ning with open throttles much of the time. Another column of the Fourth drove into Altenstadt, 10 miles north of Hanau, and there pushed on- to the vicinity of Nieder Florstadt, 19 miles south of Giesseli. Army Aids eied Cross Campaign Averaging two dollar donations from each man, Army groups on cam- pus have contributed, to date, a total of $2,124.19 to the Red Cross Drive. Leading the seven Army units in the drive is the Civil Affairs Train- ing School with a contribution of $1,066, the Judge Advocate General following with a total of $448. Idi- Funds for the Red Cross will be solicited from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. to- day at a booth on the diagonal to give all students an opportunity to contribute to the drive. vidual contributions of $100 have been reported from officers in these two schools. Company 'A' leads East Quadran- gle units with a total of $367.30, and is followed in order by Company 'G', $85.89; Army headquarters, $82- .50; Company 'B', $54; and Company 'C', $20.50. Men of Company 'C', an ASTRP unit, receive no pay. German Radio Admits Hitler's Cause Is Lost By The Associated Press LONDON, March 2 GerR broadcasters virtually admitted today that Hitler's cause was lost, then shifted the propaganda line abruptly tonight and contended, "German r - sistance all along the Western Front is stiffening." Allied frontline dispatches report ed the drives from the west continF ing generally deeper into Geriny although much of the front was under a security blackout. The Germans, possibly fishing for information, claimed their defense was growing more successful, Claims Made The German broadcasters asserted that an American tank force had ee "encircled and completely an1Wl ed" at Gemuenden, dwelt upzt bitter house-to-house fightigig Frankfurt on the Main, and said tke British forces on the lower Rbinin had been held on both sides' ofthe Wesel Forest. Appeal For Sympathy In sharp contrast, an earlier, Gir man broadcast appealed directly t0 the Allied soldiers for sympathy, d claring "The German people can *e reproached for many things, but the would be as glad as you if the wva were to end soon." Students Asked To Enroll for Grad Exams Students who plan to take thll GraduatesRecord Examination Apl 16 and 17 must sign up at the Infor= mation Desk in the Rackham Build- ing by Friday, Chief Examiner "r. P. S. Dwyer announced yesterday. The examination, which is coi pulsbry for all candidates for degrees in the graduate schools, is also re- ommended for entrance to the Medt cal and Law Schools. It is offered tO seniors in the undergraduate sch on a voluntary basis. More than: 2 people have signed up for the exall- nation so far. Exam Required Airred at a standarchzed eval9 tion of the student's knowledge l6 comprwison v\ith that of others in all parts of the country the examina tion is icuired by many institutions and recommended by still more. O. ficials of the Horace E. Rackhuk Graduate School believe that in thi near future practically all recogn'zad instituhons will requi±': it. Basis for Fellowships The examination furnishes the stii- dent a clear view of his own schoIad tic achievements. It is expected to bG particularly valuable to veteranuas i others whose college careers iae been interrupted as a. means ., actermining their educational level It is also used by many institutions as a partial basis for awarding fel- lowishps. UMW Ready Th Follow Lewis WASHINGTON,, March 29, (Thurs day)-(AP)-- Soft coal miners ha"k given John L. Lewis a resounding v}4 of confidence-and the authority ,to call a strike if he so desires. With two-thirds of yesterday's bal. TOONERVILLE TROLLEY: Local Railroad Has Colorful history By PAT CAMERON The Ann Arbor Railroad, variously called the local Toonerville Trolley and the "slowest train in the coun- try," has a colorful history which includes high-pressure self sales- manship, forerunners of the stream- liner, use of steamers and, at present, transportation of a considerable a- mount of war material and supplies. Interest in the railroad was arous- ed when Edward J. Eggl commented litionist was hanged for his raid on Harper's Ferry, Va., in 1859, secured passage of the Fifteenth Amendment creating universal manhood suffrage, and brought forward the charges of impeachment against President An- drew Johnson, thereby aligning him- self with the radical Republicans, in power until the 1880's. Ashley lived in Ann Arbor while' his three sons and a daughter at- tended the University. At that time the Michigan Central was the only Scott, head of the Pennsylvania sys- tem, had been Secretary of War when Ashley was in Congress, and within ten minutes Ashley talked him into selling him the bonds and stocks of the rival company. "His bloody shirt-waving in the Reconstruction days may not direct- ly have helped him get the shares for the Ann Arbor Railroad, but it didn't , hinder him," Mr. Eggl said. Lake Michigan Freight The railroad was soon built to