Ave 41anp all WEATHER Cloudy with Scattered Showers VOL. LV, No. 127 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN SATURDAY, APRIL 21, 1945 Soviet Forces Approach Blazing erman PRICE FIVE CENTS apital * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Allies Race T Armies Approach Nazi Stronghold Peace Riots Reported Raging in Berlin, Munich; British Hit Hamburg Suburbs By The Associated Press PARIS, Saturday, April 21-Three Allied armies raced as much as 23 miles south yesterday toward Hitler's redoubt in Bavaria, captured Nuernberg and reached within 30 miles of Lake Constance, western bulwark of the probable last-stand Nazi position deep in the Alps. With the British battering a mile from the suburbs of Hamburg, Germany's second greatest city, and with peace riots reported raging in Berlin and Munich, Hitler passed silently through his 56th and blackest birthday. But worse was in store. Supreme headquarters declared flatly that the union of the western Allies and the Red armies would come in the next few days. Gen. Eisen- - Chower declared in an order of the oward Bavaria; Nuernberg Taken Moral Duties Stressed b Dr. Adams Honor Students At Convocation. The sacrifices the world has nade in this way are vain unless the moral order, which measures for civilized men the substance of human living, is defended, asserted Dr. James P. Adams, new University Provost, speaking at the twenty-second an- nual Honors Convocation, yesterday, in Rackham Lecture Hall. Standards of Thinking Addressing more than 550 students honored, Dr. Adams said that the elevation of our standards of think- ing depend on the enterprises of higher education. The only truth which can be transmitted for the benefit of others, Dr. Adams said, is -- Nazi Radio Says Foe Is at 'Gates' Russians Advuice 3 Miles Across Berin's Southern Escape Corridor By The Associated Press LONDON, April 20-Moscow revealed tonight that Russian tanks had broken 38 miles across Berlin's southern escape corridor within 18 miles of Dresden and 58 miles of American troops while the Germans said the Red Army had breached Berlin's inner defense ring and was only seven miles from the blazing German capital. The Russians were at the "very gates" of Berlin, one German report said, and a Wilhelmstrasse spokesman declared the yard-by-yard Russian advance "in a hell of fire, steel and blood" was deciding the war. Peace riots were reported in the capital. Moscow's communique said that Russian forces, advancing on Berlin and Dresden on a 100-mile front, had seized eight major strongholds while Navy Officers Will Assume New Positions Lt. Meany, Lt.-Conih. Scott Leave Next Week Lt.-Commander E. F. Scott, edu- cational officer for the NROTC unit and liaison officer for the Schools of Medicine and Dentistry, and Lt. Ed- mond S. Meany, Jr., educational offi- cer for the Bluejacket unit, will leave Ann Arbor next week to take up duties elsewhere according to an announcement from V-12 headquar- ters yesterday. It.-Comm. Scott, who has been stationed at the University for al- most two years, will first report to Camp Perry, Williamsburg, Va. After finishing his work there he will go to the Damage Control School at Philadelphia and later to Colgate University at Hamilton, N.Y. Lt. Meany will go to Chicago where he will serve under the Commandant of the Ninth Naval District. He has been stationed here for one year. Officers to fill the two positions left vacant have not yet been desig- nated. Okinawa Naval Losses Listed 15 U.S. Craft, 100 Jay Ships Destroyed GUAM, Saturday, April 21.-(')-- Fleet Headquarters announced today the loss of 15 naval craft between March 18 and April 18 in the battle of Okinawa and associated opera- tions, and said during the same period 100 enemy ships, besides many small craft, were sunk and 2,569 enemy aircraft destroyed. Strong Japanese resistance con- tinued on the island, west of Oki- nawa, but the Yanks there continued to gain. At the end of April 18 they counted 736 enemy dead. Today's communique said they had started to destroy enemy forces holding le- gusugu Peak, a troublesome emi- nence on the islet. Senator Proposes Medal For Columnist Ernie Pyle WASHINGTON, April 20.- (P)- Posthumous award of the congres- sionalumedal of honor to Ernie Pyle, Scripps-Howard columnist killed on le Jima, was proposed in a resolution introduced in the Senate today by Senator Willis (Rep., Ind.) CAMPUS EVENTS Today "Cue-Ball" dnce will be held from 9 p. m. to mid- night in the Rainbow Room of the Union. April 22 Organ Recital by Frieda Vogan at 4:15 p. m. EWT (3:15 CWT) in Hill Aud- inrim day that German armies of the west were "tottering on the threshold of defeat." Three great American armies, the U. S. Ninth, First and Third, were coiled and ready to strike along the Elbe where by German account the Americans and Russians were but 54} miles apart. Predict Power PunchI The Germans predicted that soon the Ninth Army would uncork a pow- er punch at Berlin from its bridge- head on the Elbe 52 miles away, con- certing its blows with those of the Russians now at the eastern gates of the German capital. Allied bombers loosed destruction on German defenses northwest, west, and southwest of Berlin along the route the Allies from the west would have to take to reach the capital. They struck both by day and by night. The fall of the Nazi party city of Nuernberg released elements of two armored and three infantry divisions for the southward push that was driv- ing a steel wedge between the Ger- mans' Alpine retreat and Czechoslo- vakia's arsenals. The Seventh Army was less than 70 miles from Munich and the French were but 65 miles from the Austrian frontier. " Nazis Losing Ports Germany not only was losing con, trol of her great ports-Bremen was cut off from three sides with only r oadls to the North Sea open-but she was losing her grip on those of France which she long had blockaded. The French announced that the bigI Atlaptic port of Bordeaux now was open with all effective resistance wip- ed from both sides of the Gironde River approaches to the city. From supreme headquarters went a sensational broadcast to Russian and Polish slave laborers in the Reich to stay where they were New Type Rocket LONDON, April 20.-(/P)- Secret work by American Air Force engi- neers has developed a new type of high-powered rocket bomb conceived. by the British Navy for use against German submarine and E-boat pens, it was disclosed today. that achieved in the heart and mind of a wise man. "This fact," he said, "transforms what would otherwise be for you but a social privilege and an intellectual experience into a moral obligation to the society in which you live." Dr. Adams told students that they can elevate standards of our think- ing so that people will be as inter- ested in the greater truths, revealed by putting things together as they are in the truths discovered by taking things apart. Peace Result, Not Cause To achieve peace, he continued, we must realize that peace is not a cause but a result, in a world in which there is respect for freedom, devotion to justice, and fidelity to truth. We must have a world, he said, in which men dare to defend the great heritages which have become es- sential in the master plan of humane living. The time has come for a resurgence of interest in the things'of the mind and spirit, Dr. Adams said. To be worthy of mankind, he explained, the world of tomorrow must be fashioned by the faith of men and supported by the courage of their convictions. Last Showing of "Citizen Kane' Will Be TOnight The last performance of "Citizen Kane" will be presented at 8:30 p.m. EWT (7:30 p.m. CWT) today in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. "Citizen Kane" is the Art Cinema League's third presentation of out- standing films selected from foreign and American productions ito (he campus. The film stars Orson Welles and his Mercury Players. Although fin- ally released after a year of debate, the film was banned in several cities because of its parallel to the life of William Randolph Hearst. (AP wirephoto from YANK, the Army weekly) A WAR-WEARY DOUGHBOY-Complete weariness is registered in the face of Pfc. Joseph F. leradi (seated) of Philadelphia, Pa., as he awaited treatment at the 80th Division field hospital on the U. S. Third Army front. Soldier at right is unidentified. Truman Receives Diplomats; Gets Rprt from Harrimuant By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, April 20-Presi- dent Truman, greeting the foreign diplomatic corps in the midst of a work-packed day, today expressed hope for an era of cordial good feel- ing among nations. It was a day in which the President shouldered many problems, foreign Great Powers Are Iseussed 13jv ijve'No 1 Fixed Grolp, Slossoll Says "We cannot consider the great powers a permanent fixed group like the stars in the sky," Prof. Preston Slosson of the history department stated in a discussion on "The Five Roads to San Francisco" held last night at the Hillel Foundation. Considering each of the "Big Five" separately as to its position and atti- tude in world affairs, Prof. Slosson first dealt with France and China. Stating that France is humiliated as a result of the war, he said that she will demand recognition as a great power and will champion the cause of the smaller powers in order to maintain their support. China, a potential giant of power, Prof. Slos- son explained, will seek recognition as "the" Asiatic power, and will also demand the return of her land taken by Japan. 4 , Great Britain will seek to maintain her importance through her sea pow- er, he said, while Russia's attitude is influenced by a feeling that she is isolated. This isolation, Prof. Slosson asserted, is manifested by her seek- ing as friends the eastern European powers. Stus'pects Q uestioned ~ ~ ~ -~N U ' and domestic. For one thing, he got a direct fill-in on tangled RussianI affairs from W. Averill Harriman, Ambassador to Moscow. In the afternoon, at a reception arranged by the state department, Mr. Truman shook hands with 59 diplomats from abroad. He managed to give the occasion the air of a good neighbor welcoming the folks from across the street. Cordial Relations "I met many of you whien I was vice president and our relationship was very good," he said in a brief wpeech. "I hope that our relationship will continue to be just as cordial as it was when I was vice president." Harriman, home for consultation, went to the White House with Secre-' tary of State Stettinius and Under- secretary Grew. Leaving the execu- tive offices he had nothing to report on the conference except that the talk was "about Russia." Discuss Molotov's Visit Obviously, however, it was con- cerned with such pressing matters as the impending visit of Soviet For- eign Commissar Vyacheslav Molotov, and the impasse over Russian de- mnands for representation of the Mos- cow-sponsored Warsaw provisional government of Poland at the San Francisco United Nations conference. wave alter wave o Russian armo lapped at a dozen other fortified towns and villages within Berlin's shattered defense ring east of the city. Defenders Fight On Before the capital's eastern ap- proaches, the German defenders of the American and British-bombed pity still were fighting after 150 hours without sleep. The Germans said that masses of Russian tanks, infantry and big guns still were pouring into the battle, pos- sibly the greatest in history, claimed that 1,300 Red Army tanks had been destroyed, and disclosed that the Red Army was 29 miles beyond the Oder river after five days of fighting, Fortresses Aid Armies "The decision of the war is being Xought in an inferno of flames, searchlights and tht most hellish noise ever heard," said a statement issued in the Wilhelmstrasse. Ahead of the attacking Russians 600 U. S. Flying Fortresses pounded key junc- tions in the Berlin area. Moscow announced that Marshal Gregory K. Zhukov's First White Army had captured the strongholds of Bad Freienwalde and Wriezen, 23 and 24 miles northeast of Berlin, and had driven ten miles beyond the. Oder, capturing the road junction of Seelow, 26 miles east of the city. Lebus Falls While Lebus on the Oder, five miles north of embattled Frankfurt, also fell, the Germans said the Russians were bursting toward Berlin's sub- urbs on a 32-mile arc and had reach- ed the town of Hangelsberg and the area of Strausberg-seven and 10 miles east and northeast of the cap- ital-after breaching the city's per- imeter defenses. Billiards King To le Crownedl Union Dance To Close .- Weeks' C otesL The king of campus pocket bil- liards players will be crowned as part of the entertainment at the "Cue Ball", to be held from 9 p.m. to midnight EWT today in the Rain- bow Room of the Union. Completing a billiards tournament of two weeks duration, the play-offs will begin at 10:15 p.m. EWT in the Union billiards room. Coeds and their dates will be allowed into the pool room during the intermission of the dance, and the progress of the games will be announced at regular intervals to the dancers. Hume Chosen By Eighty-Six Ballot Majority 652 Vote.in Student Publications Election Polling 86 votes more than his nearest opponent, Robert Hume was re-elected student representative to the Board in Control of Student Pub- lications in the all-campus election which saw 652 students go to the polls yesterday. Hume, who has already served one term with the Board, will serve now for three additional semesters. Hume based his candidacy on his first-hand knowledge of how the Board func- tions, his many student contacts which had given him an understand- ing of student opinion on the prob- lems that faced the Board, and his desire to promote the' interests of the students and to create good feeling between the Board and the student publications. Of the other candidates in the election, Allan Anderson polled 176 votes, James Martin 130 votes, and Cornelia Groefsema 84 votes. Senators Say Peace Plans To Be Liberalized WASHINGTON, April 20.- (P)- Senator Connally (Dem., Tex.) told the Senate today that the Dumbar- ton Oaks plan for world organiza- tion probably will be liberalized at San Francisco to provide for more flexibility in future years. Senator Vandenberg, (Rep., Mich.), taking leave as another member of the American delegation, said he was going "with a sense of deepest dedi- cation to a supreme cause. No Chart for Millennium He asked the senators not to ex- pect a chart for the millennium to come out of San Francisco, but as- serted: "I have faith that we may perfect this charter of peace and justice so that reasonable men of good will shall find in it so much good, so much emancipation for human hopes, that all lesser doubts and dis- agreements may be resolved in its favor." Sturdy Statement' Vandenberg endorsed what he called the "sturdy statement" by his Texas colleague, in which Connally said the American delegates hold no "slavish devotion" to the precise Dumbarton Oaks formula although they are committed to its principles. "We shall not be able to bring back an instrument embodying perfec- tion," Connally said. "There is no instrument extant that does not have somewhere in it things to which this citizen, that citizen, or the other citizen, or this country or the other country may object. NATIONAL MUSIC CAMP: Director Announces Seventeen Added to Interlochen Faculty -I Seventeen new members of 'the 1945 faculty for the National Music Camp at Interlochen, comprised mainly of instructors from other uni- versities and colleges throughout the country, have been announced by Prof. Joseph E. Maddy, director of the camp, Hugh Altvater, '20, who since his graduation from the University has studied in Paris and Fontainebleau, and is now Dean of the School of Music at Woman's College, Univer- sity of North Carolina, will be a new addition to the National Music Camp faculty. Non-union musicians from other universities; Cecil Burleigh, violin and compoistion, (pupil of in past years. Three members of the Music Camp faculty resigned from the union in order to teach this summer. Legislation to override Pet- rillo's ban on student broadcasting at Interlochen is now being consid- ered by a House committee in-Wash- ington, D. C. This attack on student bands and orchestras has been term- ed "Petrillo's War on the School Children of America" by Sen. Arthur Vandenberg of Michigan. Members of the 1944 faculty re- turning for the summer season in- clude several from the' University physical education department and School of Music; William W. Norton, conductor, Flint; Arthur L. Williams, 18-YEAR VOTE DEBATE: First Plac. Won for Lanisini g Eastern Iy Harrod, Clausen Lansing Eastern High School won' its first state championship by a two-to-one decision yesterday in the Twenty-Eighth Annual Champion- ship Debate of the Michigan High 1930-31 and 1941-42, and was the winner on the second occasion. Trophies were presented to the debaters by Marquis E. Shattuck, director of language education in the Detroit public schools, who acted as