III ~~VA2 AOF 41P WEATHER flear and Slightly VOL. LV, No. 90 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN FRIDAY, MARCH 9, 1945 PRICE FIVE CENTS A r erican A=Wry ahes Across Rhine ti; Reds Are 25 Miles from Nazi Capital Soviets Dive Nearer Free City of Danzig By The Associated Press LONDON, Mar. 8.-Russian troops fought their way within 25 miles of greater Berlin today in an all-out frontal assault which the Germans said had reached the junction town of Seelow in a ten-mile advance in two days west of the broken Oder River defense line. The Soviet High Command com- munique again ignored this vital sector but announced that other Soviet forces had rolled within seven miles of the Pomeranian capital of Stettin, main port for Berlin, and within 12 miles of the former free city of Danzig ,far to the northeast. Reds Take Neuteic Berlin announced that Russian troops in a new offensive also had crossed the Nogat River boundary from East Prussia, reaching Neuteich, 19 miles southeast of Danzig, in a seven-mile advance inside Danzig territory north of fallen Marienburg. The First and Second White Rus- sian Armies together captured 360 towns and villages during the day, including the Pomeranian stronghold of Buetow, and the "Polish Corridor" bastions of Koscierzyna and Skars- zewy to the east, the Soviet commu- nique said. Berlin said the Pomer- anian junction town of Schlawe also had fallen. 5,000 German Prisoners Marshal K. K. Rokossovsky's Sec- ond Army captured 2,000 of the 5,000 German prisoners taken during the day and overran 300 localities on a 100-mile front between Schlawe in the west and the Vistula River in the east. A total of perhaps 200,000 Ger- mans were caught in the trap around Danzig, original estimates said. Enemy broadcasts told of "terrific fighting in the forefleld of Berlin" as Marshal Gregory K. Zhukov's tank-led First White Russian Army infantry surged forward in an all-out assault covered by broadsides from massed Red Army artillery. Two Towns on Luzon Captured Yanks Closing In on Bulk of Jap Forces MANILA, Friday, March 9-(P)- American forces of the 33rd Division drove 12 miles north along the west coast of Luzon to seize the town of Aringay, due west of the Philippine summer capital of Baguio, while Yanks on Luzon's south coast ad- vanced 13 miles east of Balaywan bay to capture Lemery. East of Baguio, the 25th Division was probing northward from Digdig and Carranglan toward, the Balete Pass, gateway to the extensive Gaga- yan valley of northern Luzon. The bulk of the remaining enemy garri- son is believed to be in this area. Capture of Lemery gave the Yanks a firm foothold on the southern shores of Luzon, just 30 miles across the vital Verde island passage from Am- erican-held Mindoro island. The 11th Airborne Division and the 158th Regiment of the Eighth Army reached Balayan bay on Tues- day. They moved eastward along the fringe of the bay on a good highway. East of Manila, in the bitterly-con- tested Marikina watershed area, the First Cavalry and Sixth Infantry Divisions maintained active patroll- ing of the front and continued steady pressure on the flanks of the Shimbu line, stretching along the mountains from Antipolo to Wawa. CAMPUS EVENTS Today First International Cen- ter Tea Dance Will Be Held from 4 to 6 p. m. Today President and Mrs. Alex- ander Ruthven will be guests at Student Reli- gious Association Coffee Hour at 4 p. m. today at Lane Hall. Today Victory Ball Dance, 9 p. m. at Intramural McIntyre Will Play for 3,000 Students at V-Ball Victory Dance To Present Striking Contrast To Junior, Seniors Hops of Former Years Manpower Bill Leaves U ::r House Expect Opposition For New Measure Vandenberg Comments On Problem of Poland * * * Nazis Caught Disorgamzed Tonight will mark the arrival of Michigan's long-awaited Victory Ball featuring the music of popular Hal McIntyre and his orchestra from 8 p. m. to midnight in the Intramural1 Building.r A crowd of more than 1,500 stu- dents and their guests as well as enthusiastic patrons, will fill the I. M. building when the third annual wartime edition of V-Ball will be presented as the highfight of thes semester's social entertainment. Striking Contrast In striking contrast to J-Hop and Senior Balls which were held before the advent of war, toniht's V-Ball will not attempt to hide the fact that the I. M. Buildings is not usual- ly used for formal dances. In addition, V-Ball, which has re- placed these traditional dances of former years, will be attended mainly by servicemen and their guests. Army, Navy and Marine uniforms will be much in evidence and these will be Miller's suggestion, started his pres- Dr. Krassovsky Will Address t Alumni Today Russian Sociologist f Is Michigan Alumna "Understanding the Russians" is the topic of an address to be deliver- ed by Dr. Collerohe Krassovsky to^ al meeting of the Ann Arbor Alumni Club at 2:30 today at the League. Born in Constantinople, Turkey of1 Russian parents, Dr. Krassovsky is a citizen of the United States, having resided here since 1925. 'U' Alumna An alumna of the University, she received her B. A. degree in 1929 and her M. A. in 1931. Dr. Krassov- sky is one of the few women to be awarded the Ph. D. degree in So- ciology since the founding of the department here. Having held teaching positions on the professorial rank at the Universi- ties of Virginia and Rochester, Sweet- briar College and the College of Wil- liam and Mary, Dr. Krassovsky is now teaching at Wayne University. Her great interest in the course in Intercultural and Intergroup Under- standing, which she is conducting in the Graduate School of that institu- tion, she expressed in a letter to the University. Conducts Program Dr. Krassovsky is also conducting discussion groups and lectures in the, general program of Adult Education; in Detroit on the topics of Intercul- tural Understanding and the Russian, People.. Dr. Krassovsky will be introduced by Dean Alice M. Lloyd. British Hang First American GI in Slaying LONDON, Mar, 8.-(P)-r-A United State parachute trooper was hanged today on a British prison gallows for slaying a taxi driver while one of England's most familiar opponents of capital punishment protested out- ide the walls. British prison officials and two American Army officers witnessed the execution in Pentonville Prison of Karl Gustav Hulten, of Cambridge, Mass. on his 23rd birthday, Hulten became the first United States sol- dier to be executed by British author- ities. In another prison, saved from a similar punishment by commutation -f sentence to life imprisonment, was his co - defendant, Elizabeth Jones, 18, a frail but pretty former Strip tease dancer. They were convicted of killing taxi driver George Edward Heath- "the man with the cleft chin"-who was shot in a robbery. The body was dumped into a ditch. contrasted by the soft feminine for- mals of their dates. Since a considerable number of the servicemen who will attend to- .,Iy'The Associated Press night's dance have been students at WASHINGTON, Mar. 8.-The Sen- other colleges, they will represent ate sent a completely remodeled most of the key universities of the Manpower Control Bill back to the country. House today, with all direct penalties One of the highlights of tonight's aimed at balking employers rather V-Ball will be the distribution of spe- than enIployes. cial V-Ball Dailies which are publish- Jammed in the Senate two full ed annually for the biggest dance of ,eeks, the substitute bill drawn by the year. A second edition of the the Senate Military Committee was Extra will be released on Saturday )blasted loose late today by a 63 to and it will contain nunr1erois p plt ue 16 roll call vote. Thirty-nine Demo- of V-Ball-goers. m mats, 23 Republicans and a Pro- The first two Victory-Balls were giesive voted for the measure, seven held during the between semester Democrats and nine Republicans winter vacation, but this year it was against. decided that the 1945 dance be held Reftisal Predicted during the first week of the new The House is expected to refuse to semester to enable a greater number take the Senate substitute, sending of students to attend the ball, the legislation to conference with Best New Band instructions to hold out for the Work- McIntyre and his orchestra were or-Jail Bill the Representatives ap- proved Feb. 1. voted the best new band of the year by Billboard magazine's poll of col-i The outcome there is doubtful. lege editors and the band is schedul- Senate majority leader Barkley has ed to make an overseas appearance said repeatedly that the Conference in the spring. It is expected that the Committee will write the final ver- tour will last six months and will set ion_ of the bill. the pace for other nationally-known Shortly before the final vote, the orchestras. Senate reversed a decision taken McIntyre started out originally Tuesday and wrote back into the bill with his own eight piece band, later a penalty of a year in jail or $10,000 joined Glenn Miller's band, and at fine for employers convicted of vio- ent orchestra which has been gain_ lating employment ceilings which the ing increased popularity. War' ]Manpower Commission chair- man would be authorized to establish Al Nobel Featured .wfor any tnd every place of business Among those featured with the in the nation, band are Al Nobel and Gloria Van. Noble has had experience as a vocal- 0 -,Vote ist on the networks and sang with The vote in favor of the penalty Eddie Land and Carl Hoff's band today was 40 to 36. Tuesday a simi- before joining McIntyre. lay clause was knocked out, 44 to 35. The orchestra has played at such The Senate also adopted a amend- outstanding spots as the Palladium, ment by Senator Morse (Rep., Ore.), Glen Island Casino, Commodore Ho- a former member of the War Labor tel and the Paramount and Strand card, which would give the Director Theatres in New York. After com- of War Mobilization (James F. pleting its overseas tour of hospitals, Byrnes) authority to set up tribunals isolated outposts, and behind-the- for appeal of challenged regulations. lines entertainment spots, the band The theories of the Senate and intends to make its second motion House bill are almost squarely op- picture. posed. MOST WORTHY CAUSE: Arm,/y Units-(HItCmp oraite $826 to Red Cross War Fund SEN. VANDENBERG . . . Polish question Army -heads To Be JAG Guests At Exercises Thirty-One Classes To Graduate Next Week Three Army generals will be guests of the JAG School when commence- ment exercises are held here for the 21 Officer and 10 Officer Candidate classs next Friday and Saturday. Guests at the exercises will be Ma- jor General Myron C. Cramer, Judge Advocate General, U. S. Army; Ma- jor General Russel B. Reynolds, Com- manding General, Sixth Service Com- mand;Brigadier General Arthur G. Trudeau, Deputy Director of the Mili- tary Training Division, Army Service Forces; Colonel William H. McCar- thy, Commanding Officer, District One, Sixth Service Command, De- troit; and Colonel Oscar Rand, Staff Judge Advocate, Sixth Service Com- mand. This will be the first visit of Gen. Reynolds to Ann Arbor and to the JAG School. Friday morning, the 74 members of the graduating classes will parade on the Law Quadrangle parade grounds and will be present at a din- ner to he held in the evening at the Allenel Hotel. The guest officers will also be at the dinner. Gen. Cramer will deliver the gradu- ation address at formal commence- ment exercises which will take place the following morning at Hutchins dHall. Student Lending Librar Needs Books Urgently Students owning used textbooks, which they no longer need, are asked to bring them to the Student Lend- ing Library, Angell Hall Study Hall, as soon as possible. Texts are urgently needed to fill the requests of those students who must borrow books in order to elect many of their courses, a library offi- cial revealed. A shortage of texts exists in all fields. Books brought to the Angell Hall Study Hall Library are loaned to needy students, who use the Lending Library by permission of the dean of their college or an academic coun- selor. Anyone interested in trying out for Daily columnist should leave three sample columns with the editorial director, Margaret Farm- er, by noon, Monday. By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, March 8-Senator Vandenberg (R.-Mich.) declared to- day that the American people will support the Moscow three-nation de- cisions on a Polish provisional gov- ernment only if it is "a truly repre- sentative coalition." The Republican delegate to the San Francisco World Security Conference voiced to the Senate "complete ap- proval" of British Foreign Minister Anthony Eden's warning to the So- viet-backed Lublin regime not to molest supporters of the London Pol- ish government. U. S. Should Be Frank Declaring that the American gov- ernment "should be equally frank about this situation," the Michigan senator told his colleagues: "There is no escaping the fact that the treatment accorded Poland-sym- bolizing generally the attitude of the' United Nations toward our smaller Allies in this war for liberation-will have a large effect upon the success of our ultimate plans for collective security and organized peace." Vandenberg said the "acid test" of the Moscow government will come when it is revealed whether General Anders and the Poles who fought at1 Cassino, as well as General Bor and his followers in the Polish under- ground, are to have a home and country under the new provisional government. Decisions To Pass in Review Beyond that, the Michigan senator said he thought the American people want the expedient decisions of war- time to pass in review at th peace, table for "full, free, fair study and for recommended correction." "Expediency and justice frequently are not even on speaking terms with each other," he declared. "The hopes of men for permanent peace cannot subordinate basic justice to expedi- ency." A Curious Process It is a curious process at best, he continued, for an American, a Brit- isher and a Russian to sit down with no Poles present to create a govern- ment for Poland. "But the fact that we have im- posed this trusteeship upon Poland and are participating in it ourselves simply accentuates and magnifies the importance of our own share of this responsibility to see to it that this new provisional government is a truly representative Polish coalition," he declared. State Senators Extend Tenure Measure Also Applies To County Officials LANSING, Mar. 8.-(A)-Proposed Constitutional amendments to ex- tend the terms of legislators and county officials from two to four years and move the state and county elections to come between presiden- tial elections passed the Senate to- day. A companion measure to give state elective officials four-year terms also was sidetracked until Tuesday after Senate leaders thought they scented a prankish move among the strate- gically-located Democratic minority to defeat that proposal. The Democrats earlier lost an at- tempt to fix the state and county elections in 1948 and every four years thereafter. Republicans said frankly they desired to have the four-year terms, if approved by the voters, start in 1946 and change every four years thereafter to avoid the presi- dential election. A Forest Practice Bill, generally similar to one defeated two years ago, was introduced in the Senate by Senators Harry F. Hittle, Lansing, George Girrbach, Sault Ste. Marie, H. D. Tripp, Allegan, and Otto W. Bishop, Alpena, all Republicans. 'U' Students Eligible For Civil Air Patrol University students are eligible to become cadets in the Ann Arbor Civil Air Patrol, Lt. Elizabeth Lam- bert, cadet coordinator, said yester- day. CAP cadets receive pre-flight in- cfrenirt i9 rh_ _ inh n n ci In New Blow Battling Yanks Face Weak Resistance By The Associated Press PARIS, March 8-Thousands of U. S. First Army troops, surging across the Rhine south of Cologne, drove east toward Germany's heart tonight against surprisingly light resistance after cracking the histo- ric western barrier in a brilliant coup heralding a speedier end to the war. The swift, sensational crossing was the biggest military triumph since the Normandy landings, and was a battle feat without parallel since Napoleon's conquering legions crossed the Rhine early in the last century. Germans Disorganized It caught the Germans so disorgan- ized that they met the assault waves with only scattered artillery and mor- tar fire, and they were quickly driven from strategic positions. The Allied High Command kept them confused by withholding the momentous news for 24 hours. The Luxembourg radio broadcast without official confirmation that the Americans crossed at Remagen, site of the great Ludendorff doubletrack rail- way bridge, 28 miles southeast of Co- logne and 12 miles southeast of Bonn. (Brussels radio carried the same re- port). Censorship on Yank Crossings Tight censorship prevented pin- pointing the location of the crossing and Supreme Headquarters late to- night still permitted, only the barest details to be disclosed in the hope of throwing the Germans off the scent except those immediately brought to battle. (Supreme Headquarters imposed its blackout on the First Army's south- ern wing yesterday after permitting disclosure that armored units were 10 miles south of Bonn, which would place them in the area of Remagen.) Eisenhower Sends Congratulations Lt. Gen. Courtney H. Hodges struck boldly while the Germans still reeled under tempestuous Allied blows that had driven them back to the east bank. Gen. Eisenhower sent warm congratulations to every soldier in the First Army, declaring; "The whole Allied force is delight- ed to cheer the First United States Army, whose speed and boldness have won the race to establish the first, bridgehead over the Rhine." Already the bridgehead was nearly out of small arms range, a front dis- patch said, and Associated Press cor- respondent Don Whitehead reported the Americans were fanning out swiftly, seizing strategic positions and driving to get the crossings out of ar- tillery range. Berlin 280 Miles The Americans burst across the river-never crossed in battle since Napoleon's day-at a point about 280 miles from Berlin, hurdling in one giant stride what the Germans throughout their history have regard- ed as an impregnable moat and a symbol of Teutonic greatness. * * * Rhine Crossing Described by Eye Witness By HOWARD COWAN Associated Press Correspondent ACROSS THE RHINE, Mar. 8.- Troops of the American First Army of Lt.-Gen. Courtney H. Hodges swept across the Rhine River late yesterday and were firmly entrenched on the east bank tonight after severe fighting. Three counterattacks were hurled at the bridgehead last night and one of them at 2:30 a.m. drove the Ameri- cans out of a command post and 500' yards up the river before they re- formed and threw the enemy back. "They had a 20 mm. gun they were using on us," said Lt. Lyman Smith, Jr., of East Ave., Naples, N.Y., "but we have got that knock- ed out now." The crossing itself was one of the "Men who had seen overseas ser- vice were most enthusiastic in their donations to the Red Cross War, Fund Drive," Captain C. P. Atkinson, commanding officer of Co. G, said today, as he reported a total of $826I contributed by the seven Army units" stationed on campus. Since all units have not turned in their reports, the figure is partial, but the contributions are expected to reach a total of $1,400 at the end of the drive, which will run through- out the month of March. There have been no figures on the results of the campus drive, which got under way today, but it is hoped that the quota of $5,500 set by the League and the Union will be filled. The League, under the direction oft Deborah Parry, '45, will solicit $4,000 Col. Young Is Judge Advocate in China Col. Edward H. Young, former Commandant of Army forces in Ann Arbor and of the JAG School, is now in Chungking, serving as Judge Advocate for China Theatre, it was announced recently. Col. Young was recalled from his duty in Ann Arbor during the Fall semester for reassignment. of the total quota, which means that each woman on campus should give at least $1.25. Stockwell Hall, as the largest dorm with approximately 400 residents, will contribute as its goal $500, and Mosher Hall, the sec- ond largest dorm, should collect $275 in its campaign. The Union staff, under the direction of Tom Donnelly, A/S, will solicit all civilian men's residences for the re- mainder of the quota. Dean ursley Comments On Vital Red Cross Aid There can be no question as to the part which the Red .Cross is llaying in the war. Both in this country and overseas, in camps, in hospitals and at the rest areas, Red Cross workers are giving in- valuable help in maintaining the morale of our men in the Army, Navy and Marine Corps. Their wark with the blood bank, the motor corps service and in making surgical dressings is well known to all. I hope that every student in the University will take advantage of the cpportunity now offered to assist in the work of the Red Cross by givinn what he or she can in the current drive. -Joseph A. Bursley, Dean of Students 'EDUCATIONAL PROBLEMS': Former Texas U'President Speak Here Nationally-known educator Dr. Homer Price Rainey will discuss "Ed- ucational Problems in the South" be- fore a meeting open to the entire Speaking before the faculty of the University of Texas at the height of the controversy involving himself and ardized the position of the Univer- sity in that its faculty would not feel, that their positions were secure nor