Sir igan tIi WEATHER Partly Cloudy and Warmer, Moderate Winds VOL. LV, No. 91 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN SATURDAY, MARCH 10, 1945 PRICE FIVE CENTS B-29's Blast Tokyo in Surprise Mission * r * r 46 A6 .1.. L.P ,A- ,. . A- _i ac a* *f'7F:X *I t* * Campus Naval Unit Will Not Be Decreased Japanese apital _______ ___________ V-12 Students To Be Merged with NROTC Naval Reserve Program To Include 8-Termn Curriculum; Quota is 2100 The new nationwide setup, calling for the gradual merging of the V-12 into the NROTC and for a wartime quota of 24,000 and a peacetime quota of 14,000 men to fill 50 NROTC units announced this week by the Navy Department, will cause no decrease in the total V-12 complement at the University, it was revealed yesterday. The new set-up "will effect no sub- stantial change in the University curriculum," Prof. Marvin Niehuss, Co-ordinator of Emergency Training, stated. Wider Curriculum At present most students who are assigned in the V-12 program to a specialized curriculum and who will have completed four terms by July 1, will not be transferred to the NROTC but will be allowed to con- tinue as members of V-12 to comple- tion of their curriculum. Most of the V-12 men at Michigan, who were to have transferred to NROTC by July 1, 'made the change when en- rolling for the current semesters. Prof. Clarence F. Kessler pointed out that under the new program men will have a wider choice of electives than they have had under the V-12 program, in which all courses were prescribed. Either an engineering or ageneral curriculum may be selec- ted, and, according to Prof. Kessler, "There is no reason'why a man may not select journalism or architecture or any other field of study if he wishes to do so." Will Continme Causes Those students, who will have com- pleted four semesters in the V-12 by July 1, will continue to take a vary- ing number of terms up to a total of eight, and will be transferred to Naval Reserve Midshipman School for an additional term of intensive training prior to being commissioned. Under the newly announced pro- gram, the NROTC curriculum will Ohio Floods Serious, Termed Not Disastrous CINCINNATI, March 9-()-The Ohio valley began to write off the Ohio- river's 1945 flood tonight as one of major caliber but far from a disaster. The 981-mile river had crested at its one danger point-Portsmouth- was falling at many upriver points, and was expected to crest tonight or tomorrow at most places below Louis- ville except at the mouth. At Cairo, Ill., a rise in the Missis- sippi was expected to push the Ohio up to perhaps a 54-foot stage, a foot or so higher than today's mark and 14 feet above flood stage. Cairo is pro- tected to 60 feet by a floodwall. Volunteers and state guardsmen working under Army engineers held out the Ohio and tributary Scioto rivers at Portsmouth with a hastily built 2,800-foot levee of sandbags, keeping just inches ahead of the wat- ers before they crested there at 64.94 early today. Officers warned the pressure against the levee now was greatest and it still could break. CAMPUS EVENTS Today Former University of Texas President Homer P. Rainey will speak at 2:30 p. m. at Rackham Amphitheatre. Today Hockey game: Michigan vs. Huron and Middlesex Regiment at 8 p. m. at the ice rink. March 11 Ava Comin Case will present first in a series of School of Music fac- ulty recitals at 8:30 p. m. in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. March 12-14 Copies of the second - permit the student eight terms of college training, including any spent in the V-12 program prior to trans- fer in the NROTC. The curriculum, of two types, general and engineer- ing, will lead to a commission as En- sign in the Naval Reserve. One year after commissioning, NROTC grad- uates will be authorized to request transfer from the reserve to the reg- ular Navy. Reds Seize Oder Town, N ear Berlin LONDON, Mar. 9-(P)-The Ger- mans said tonight that Red Army shock troops had crashed into the heart of Kuestrin and captured part of that Oder River fortress town 38 miles east of Berlin in a roaring pre- lude to'the battle for the Nazi capital. In the north spearheads of three Soviet armies were reported battling in the suburbs of Stettin, Pomeranian capital. The Germans announced the loss of Greifenhagen, east bank Oder crossing town 11 miles south of Stet- tin, main port for Berlin. Armies Closing on Danzig Far to the northeast five or six Soviet armies were closing swiftly on surrounded Danzig, having pierced the outer defenses of that former free city. Albert Forster, Nazi Gaul- eiter, again called on civilians and soldiers to fight to the death. None of these enemy reports was confirmed by Moscow, but Premier Stalin announced in an order of the day the fall of Stolp, nine-way Pom- eranian junction and stronghold 63 miles west of Danzig. Stolp was one of the last few enemy strongholds left in Pomerania east of the Oder. Other Soviet forces were reported only 10 miles outside Danzig on the southwest. Hitler Visits Oder Front Heavy fighting raged from Kienitz, west bank village 10 miles northwest of Kuestrin, down to the area west of Lebus, 11 miles south of Kuestrin, enemy broadcasts said. Dr. Raiey Will Speak Today, 'Educational Problems l the South Is Topic Dr. Homer P. Rainey, nationally- known educator and former presi- dent of the University of Texas, will discuss "Educational Problems in the South" before an open meeting at 2:30 p.m. today in the Rackham Auditorium. Dismissed from the presidency at Texas last year because of his con- troversy concerning fundamental freedoms at that university with the Board of Regents, Dr. Rainey at that time detailed numerous cases where- in he affirmed that the Board had over-stepped its legal bounds in try- ing to interfere with the due admin- istrational powers of the president during the five years he held that office. Dr. Rainey, who will be introduced by President Alexander G. Ruthven, is brought here through the com- bined efforts of MYDA, Inter-Racial Association, Hillel Foundation, Post- War Council, Student Religious As- sociation, The Daily, Dr. I. L. Sharf- man, Franklin H. Littell, Profs. How- ard McClusky, Norman Maier, Pres- ton Slosson, Mentor Williams and others. Nationally recognized as an educa- tional leader, Dr. Rainey has been professor at the University of Ore- gon, president of Bucknell and Ober-I SEES CANCER CELLS-Dr. E. V. Cowdry (right), professor of anatomy at Washington University, St. Louis, Mo., shows living cancer cells used in research into the malady to Senator Claude Pepper, chairman of the Senate subcommittee on wartime health and education, seeking to maintain wartime speedup in research. MembersofUAW-CI()Vote To Retain N14o-,Strike' Pledge DETROIT, March 9-(AP)-Mem- bers of the United Automobile Work- ers (CIO) have voted to retain the Union's no-strike pledge, Ben Garri- son, chairman of a referendum com- mittee of the international union, said tonight. Garrison said rough estimates of some 300,000 ballots, which have been sorted into "yes" and "no" piles, Scholarships Announced by Engine Schtool Winners of the Frank Sheehan and. Cornelius Donovan scholarships for the spring term have been announced by Dean Ivan C. Crawford of the College of Engineering. Warren H. Curry, Jackson, and John William Peterson, Allegon, re- ceived the Sheehan Scholarship for the spring and summer terms, while James 'S. Barry, Roscommon, and William S. Wunch, Charlottesville, Va., won the Cornelius Donovan award. Curry and Barry have general scholastic averages of 3.2; Peter'-; son's average is 3.4; Wunch's 3.7, The Frank Sheehan Scholarship in Aeronautics was founded in 1929 by a gift from Mildred Sheehan of New York as a memorial to her brother, F. P. Sheehan. The scholarship is granted to students who intend to follow an aeronautics career. They must have completed at least two years' work in thc College of Engi- neering with a scholastic average "distinctly above the average." The Cornelius Donovan Scholar- ship is an award to "meritorious" senior students who are working their way through college. These students must have completed a min- imum of 45 units of work at the Uni- versity with a minimum general aver- age of 2.5. juike Boxes Must Be Off by -Midnight Local police and sheriff's officers yesterday warned Ann Arbor and' county restaurant owners that juke boxes must be turned off by mid- night, Juke boxes have been interpreted, under the recently adopted curfew order, as entertainment, it was dis- closed. Since the Byrnes order to close places of entertainment was made ef- fective almost two weeks ago, there have been violations in Ann Arbor or the county. 'Dating Tinle' at Illinois WT,11 Pn..v,...c T.vnlve-', " indicated a possible two-to-one sup- port for the pledge. After the referendum was author- ized last fall at the union's inter- national convention at Grand Rapids, Mich., the committee mailed out some 1,200,000 ballots to members of the union in war plants throughout the United States and Canada, and to members on leave in the armed ser- vices. Garrison said the committee had expected close to 500,000 ballots would be returned, but the actual number fell short of this figure. The referendum was authorized after the UAW-CIO convention had heard demands from some factions for revocation of the no-strike pledge. All international officers of the union, however, urged retention of the pledge in war plants. Prod ii tioiWill Be resumedl DETROIT, March 9-(I')-Resump- tion of war production Monday in seven plants of the Briggs Manufac- turing Co., closed for eight days by a strike of 13,000 employes, was voted tonight at a meeting of the strikers. The workers, who twice previously rejected back-to-work proposals, agreed by a 10 to 1 margin to termi- nate the work stoppage, which had tied up output of plane assemblies and other war materiel, after hear- ing pleas that they return to their benches from officers of the local and international union. More than 2,500 unionists attended the meeting. Elsewhere on the Detroit labor front, a one-day strike of 3,000 work- ers at Graham-Paige Motors Inc., ended today as Local 142 UAW-CIO agreed to negotiate the differences with the company. The walkout cen-- tered about the time allowed for washing-up by employes, the union claiming 15 minutes and the company asserting five was the maximum. The international UAW-CIO execu- tive board announced at New York that officers of Dodge Local 3 had been "severely condemned" for their part in a recent work stoppage at the Dodge main plant First Army Joins Third, Traps NZis Yank Drive Probably 5 Miles East of Rhine By The Associated Press PARIS, March 9--The U. S. First Army drove probably more .than five miles east of the Rhine today after smashing the first tank-led counter- attack at its Remagen bridgehead, and to the south trapped an estimat- ed 50,000 Germans by linking up with the Third Army. Men, guns, tanks and supplies pour- ed into the expanding bridgehead 28 miles south of Cologne across the great Iludendorff bridge, officially dis- closed to have been taken intact. German planes in ones, twos and threes tried repeatedly to knock out the bridge during the day, but were shot down or driven off by alert anti- aircraft gunners guarding what for the moment is the key to the whole battle against Germany on the west. No News on Scope Supreme Headquarters blacked out the scope of the advance, but it was possible that a breakout on the road to Berlin might be disclosed at any hour. (A Blue Network correspondent broadcast from the front that the bridgehead had been doubled in size and width since yesterday and that "a number of towns and villages" had been captured.) Bonn, Rhineland city of 101,000 fell to the First Army north of the middle Rhine bridgehead, and the Third Army to the south battled within four miles of the traffic center of Coblenz after sweeping the enemy from the Coblenz plain west of the Rhine. U. S. 15th Army Disclosed on Front On one of the blackest days for Germany since Hitler plunged Europe into the second World War within a generation, the Allies handed the ene- my more bad news by disclosing that the U. S. 15th Army now was on the Western Front at an undisclosed sec- tor. Under Lt. Gen. Leonard T. Gerow, a corps commander on D-Day, the new 15th gave Gen. Eisenhower nine armies-five of them American-for the showdown battles of Germany. The Germans counter-attacked Lt. Gen. Courtney H. Hodges' First Army bridgehead in force for the first time today with elements of an armored division, but were hurled back. Red Cross War Drive Covers entire Cwnmpus Every house and each man and woman on campus will be contacted through the efforts of either the League or the Union in the Red Cross War Fund drive which will continue throughout the month of March, The quota set for student dona- tions is $5,000, $500 more than last year's all-campus quota. Faculty and other University personnel have been solicited separately, and to date they have contributed $1,500, which in- cludes reports from 30 per cent of the departments. Their goal has been set at $4,500. The annual membership drive, which will raise the funds necessary to the continuation of the many ser- vices the Red Cross render to the serviceman, went over the top last year in the campus drive- In the local drive, latest reports show that the city workers have in- creased totals past the half-way mark to Ann Arbor's quota of $79,100. is Left in Flames Heaviest Raid of War Is Executed in Clear Weather by Saipan-Based Forts By The Associated Press 21ST BOMBER COMMAND HEADQUARTERS, Guam, Mar. 10-A force of more than 300 American B-29s bombed Tokyo in a surprise raid before daylight today, leaving the capital in "conflagration." Bombing was visual, in clear weather. The raid, the heaviest yet made by the Superforts, caught the enemy capital by surprise. The B-29s, flying from their bases on Tinian, Saipan and Guam in the Marianas, attacked soon after midnight (Tokyo time) in their second night appearance over the city. All Incendiary It was the first announced all-incendiary raid by the sky giants. The bombing force exceeded by more than 100 planes the number participating in last Sunday's record strike at the enemy capital. The bomb load also was the heavi* * est ever dropped on Tokyo, exceed- ing a thousand tons. There was some speculation that the total may have reached 1,500 tons. Targets of this heavy thrust at Tokyo, the 12th attack by the B-29s since their Saipan base was inaugu- rated last November, were industrial areas. Tokyo Admits It The Tokyo radio acknowledged ear- tier that the city had been attacked, saying there were "some fires" in "residential sections" caused by "in- discriminate bombing." These were being fought, the broad- cast added, "by our government and civilians in order to limit the dam- ages to the smallest possible degree." "There is a conflagration in Tokyo} tonight," said Maj. Gen. Curtis Le- May- after checking the raid's pro- gress and first reports. He had stay-. ed up all night at headquarters. Center of Tokyo The target assigned and hit by the massive force was an area of 10 square miles in the center of Tokyo. It contains scores of small industries, factories and other military targets- and a population of about 1,000,000. It is considered the most congested area in the capital. In character it varies from sections comparable to a downtown business section in an Am- erican city, with administration build- ings and many important business houses, to tightly packed residences. Fire breaks, cut through the sec- tion in anticipation of incendiary raids, apparently failed to stop the spread of the flames. Clear Weather The weather over the city during the 90-minute attack was a complete contrast to the heavy overcast and obscuring fog which forced B-29s to rely on precision instruments in the last two raids, March 4 and Feb. 25. At headquarters, General Le May followed intently the reports of -the earliest fliers leaving the target. "Small fires," said the first to re- port. "Large fires," carne later reports. Conflagration' "Conflagration," was the thrilling word received when only half the planes had reported. Caught flat-footed as the first raid- ers swooped in, the Japanese sent up meager fighter opposition. Pilots reported heavy anti-aircraft fire, how- ever. Not a single plane had been lost as of LeMay's latest word. OK o Reports Yank Landing, On Mindanao VacArthlur GiVes No Confirmation of Attack By The Associated Press LUZON, March 10-American lib- eration troops were reported by the Tokyo radio to be ashore on -Min- danao Island, second largest and sec- ond in importance of the Philippines. Gen. Douglas MacArthur's Friday communique made no mention of an invasion but told of heavy American air attacks on Zamboanga, ancient fortress city. It was here that the unconfirmed Tokyo broadcast said the Yanks had landed. Heavy Raid Reported The raid reported by MacArthur was unusually heavy-with bombers of all sizes dropping 129 tons of bombs on Japanese barracks and supply areas. Mindanao would be the twenty-first Philippine island invaded by :Mac- Arthur's troopls since the initial land- ings on Leyte and near-by small islands in October, 1944. The Tokyo report said the land- ing at Zamboanga was preceded by heavy naval bombardment, started March 8 by battleships, cruisers and other American warships. Shimbu Defenses Hit Gen. MacArthur reported today that the Yanks have broken into the Shimbu defense line east of-Manila. He said the First (dismounted) Cav- alry Division and the Sixth Infantry Division have made substantial gains on the south flank of the defense- studded line in the vicinity of Bayan- bayan. The enemy line "consists almost en- tirely of caves in the hillsides closely spaced for interlocking fire." "A cave normally consists of a 10- foot shaft large enough for a man to climb up or down a rope ladder," MacArthur said in emphasizing the difficulty of the operation. The method of attack has been to confine the enemy with air and ar- tillery saturation bombardments, then to send forward small demolition groups with flame throwers, white phosphorous and demolition grenades. TWO GRADUATING CLASSES: Brig.Ge i. Trudea Cancels Visit to JAG Commencement Brigadier General Arthur G. Tru- deau, Deputy Director of the Military Training Division, Army Service For- ces, has cancelled his proposed visit to Ann Arbor to view JAG School commencement exercises Friday and GEN. RATAY COVERS ALL LOOPHOLES: Army Curbs iarseille Black Market Saturday, it was announced yester- day. Guest officers attending the grad- uation of the 10th Officer Candi- date Class and 21st Officer Class will be Major General Myron C. Cram- er, Judge Advocate General, U. S. Army; Major General Russel B. Rey- nolds, Commanding General, Sixth Service Command; Colonel William H. McCarthy, Commanding Officer, District One, Sixth Service Command, Detroit; and Colonel Oscar Rand, Staff Judge Advocate, Sixth Service Command. Recently appointed to head the Sixth Service Command, Gen. Rey- MARSEILLE-( P)-The iron hand of the military, applied swiftly, has shut off any chance to black market U. S. goods in this big French port through which flow tremendous sup- ed when he was commander in Cor- sica and covered up all loopholes. "No American supplies are being sold on the open market here," he said. "And further, anyone wishing to send a money order home from marketing military supplies now are given five and six year prison terms and fines of 50,000 francs, Ratay said. Ratay acknowledged that some supplies landed on the beaches when