41an4 i WEATHER Cloudy with Rising Temperatures it VOL. LV, No. 128 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN SUNDAY, APRIL 22, 1945 PRICE FIVE CENTS I I :jC ;i. : °3 1 # Russian-U.S. Ninth juncture Is Indic ated Paris Radio Claims Yanks, Soviets Meet Leipzig Said To Be Scene of Meeting By The Associated Press PARIS, Sunday, April 22-Formal announcement that the Americans and Russians have joined in central Germany was expected today in a matter of hours, and there were indi- cations that the U. S. Ninth Army might be the chosen force for the historic meeting with the Red Army at or near Berlin. Associated Press Correspondent Wes Gallagher, with the Ninth Army at Magdeburg, reported that the great Russian breakthrough-which now has entered Berlin-explained why the Ninth Army had been sitting on the Elbe River west of the German capital since April 11. Power To March To Berlin The Ninth Army had, and still has, the power to have marched to Berlin within ten days of its reaching the Elbe, Gallagher noted, and referring to the expected junction of the Ninth and the usians in the Berlin area. Simutaneousy, with Gallagher's dispatch, U. S. 12th AryGroup Headquarters announced cryptically that a reconnaissance plane "in con- tact with the 83rd Division (which is a Ninth Army Division) reported hav-. ing sighted what is believed to be Russian armor somewhere east of the Elbe River this (Sat.) afternoon." Paris Radio Reports Junction The very fact that, Army Group Headquarters saw fit to make such an announcement lent it added signifi- cance. Reconnaissance planes in con- tact with frontline divisions do not operate at extreme range ahead of the line. Paris radio reported the dramatic junction already had been made, and there were reports here that patrols had made preliminary contacts. Su- preme headquarters did not confirm these reports, and it was regarded here as certain that the actual formal meeting was still to come-but that it would come within hours, not days. Last Reported 32 Miles Apart The two allies last were reported 32 miles apart east of Leipzig in an area about 75 miles south of Berlin, and it was in that sector around Dresden that the French said they had come together. However, the Germans said the Russian forces already were three to four miles inside the Berlin city limits on the northeast and had cut around the city to Beelitz, on the southwest, while field reports from the American front put those Rus- sians within 35 miles of the U. S. Ninth Army drawn up on the Elbe River. The severed Reich was under slash- ing attack in the north and south. French First Army tanks in an 18- mile dash reached the upper Danube at a point 10 miles from the Swiss frontier. CAMPUS EVENTS Today: Prof. Arthur E. Wood will speak on New England at the International Center, 7:30 p.m. EWT. The lec- ture will be preceded by the March of Time film, "New England". Tuesday: Dr. John Gaus, Profes- sor of Political Science at the University of Wiscon- in, will speak on the subject, "Social Science Divisions as General Sta- ffs" at 3:15 p.m. in the Rackham Amphitheater. April 26, 27, 28: Junior Girls Play, "Take It from There" BERLIN 0K W Heinersdorf BLIV 1 Reinickendorf PNO Jung ern Heide ~Gesund- Hhn brunnenWEISSENSEE Schoenhausen * r h W eettine re-Spree R Sta Wsberg ---- ' Friedrichs-Hain X Moabit 9 Lh __. ~ eh rte r ' ~~Sta. OD 1:zo LICHTENBERG CHARLOTTENBURGnm'1 ir~nr7 Tiergarte DenLnden M= 0os otsdamer Stag Anhater" Sta.%/ Gor tz Stralau Rummelsburg 'nto analSta. W\L M E RSDO RF SCH OE NE- Hasen Heide. 03 ~Treptow o ~7 QC Friedenau ERGKOLL n BERGTempelhof NEUK Schmargendorf Tempel hof MU Cana! STATUTE MILES ~9u NAZI'S CAPITAL, BIGGEST PRIZE OF TWO WARS, ENTERED BY RUSSIANS-Russians penetrated into the capital from the northeast, swarming through the streets of the working class districts of WEISSENSEE and PANKOW (upper right hand corner), according to the German radio. UNTER DEN LINDEN, (the heart of the city), the Leipzigerstrasse and around the Brandenburg Gate, are reported by Stockholm to be under heavy bombardment from Russian shells. Berlin is left without any escape routes to the south. 3-4 Miles of Ciy Afire, Nazis Say Troops 'Engaged in Fighting at Berlin's Outskirts' Red High Command Reports By The Associated Press LONDON, Sunday, April 22.-The Germans announced last night that Red Army tanks had burst three to four miles inside the flaming rubble-strewn streets of barricaded Berlin in an overwhelming 16-army assault on the three-quarters encircled Nazi capital-biggest prize of two world wars. Moscow, whose official reports were running 24 hours behind Ger- man announcements, did not immediately confirm the dramatic flash from doomed Berlin. But a Moscow dispatch filed hours before said a Red Army entry into the Nazi citadel was "imminent". The Soviet high command said that veteran Russian forces, who have marched 1,000 miles from the gates of Moscow in one of the greatest military comebacks in history, were "engaged in fighting at Berlin's out- skirts" and had captured Erkner on the city's eastern limits and seven other fortress suburbs three to 16 miles from the capital. Raining war-ending blows on a beaten foe, the Russians by Berlin's account also irreparably split Adolf Hitler's greater Reich into two completely-isolated areas in a development as momentous a's the Red Army's entry into the capital. Berlin, caught in a swirling battle which the Germans said "never has been surpassed in ferocity," as well as all the Baltic ports and the hold- out areas of Denmark and Norway, was completely cut off from the Nazis' STOCKHOLM, April 22, Sunday-(P)--The German-controlled Scandinavian Telegraph Bureau said today that Berlin residents were fleeing westward "By tens of thousands" in an effort to escape the Heavy Russian artillery barrage sweeping the city from the east. Transport means are limited and the elevated railway stations are jammed, the agency said. "When a train arrived there was panic," it related. "Berliners fought with one another in order to board the ears headed west. "national redoubt" in southern Germany, Austria, Czechoslovakia and nothern Italy. German reports indicated that perhaps 4,000,000 Russian troops and German soldiers and home guards were locked in the death struggle for Berlin, which German broadcasts swore tp defend to "its last ruin." The broadcasts said big Soviet siege guns were "hailing" shells into Potzdamer Platz in the heart of Berlin. Life had moved under- ground for the siege, Berlin said, and the Nazis admitted that the "death battle" which promised to leave their capital a wasteland of rubble and ashes "is on." Berlin's Volksturm had been thrown into the struggle and the wounded were pouring into the city from the wrecked suburbs. From the shell-cratered heart of the city the word came just before midnight that the Russians had penetrated into the capital from the northeast, swarming through the streets of the left-wing populous work- ing class districts of Weissensee and Pankow. A mass of Russian tanks, artillery and infantry was about three to four miles from the heart of the city around Berlin's famed cathedral. The Russians apparently swung across the powerful German defense line based on the circular autobahn around the capital on an 11-mile front from the captured suburbs of Bernau and Alt-Landsberg, both three miles from the city limits and 13 miles from its core. In a 28-mile arc from Bernau, Soviet tanks battled through the suburbs of Werneuchen, Strausberg, Buckow Muencheberg and Fuer- stenwalde and reached the city limits at Erkner, astride the super- highway around Berlin. Erkner was taken in a 27-mile Russian surge from Seelow, whose capture was announced Friday. Meanwhile, the Germans, whose reports have been borne out by Moscow's conservative announcements, admitted that the sprawling city (See NAZI, Page 2) Berliners ie in Cellars Students' Plays Will Be Given By Lab Theater Four student-written one-act plays will be presented by the Laboratory Theatre ,at 8 p. m. EWT . (7 p. m. CWT) tomorrow in the auditorium of University High School. A committee composed of members of the English Department and head- ed by Prof. Roy W. Cowden selected the four plays from those written in Prof. K. T. Rowe's course in the writing of the one-act play. Student Authors Listed The four plays finally selected are Joan Lochner's "Pale Blond Boy"; Lois Barker's "Let the Great Gods Command," Eleanor Goodrich's "Voice of the Mountain" and Mary Lou Andrews "As You Were." "Pale Blond Boy" is the story of a man as told by the women who know him. "As You Were" concerns a man who deserted from the army and returns to his home town only to find problems he had not expected. Ballet To Be Featured "Voice of the Mountain" a symbol- istic play, features a ballet arrange- ment and a prologue. "Let the Great Gods Command" concerns the con- flict in the minds of several people who consider committing a mercy- killing. William Cooke, special student in the English Department and former Director of the Port Huron Little Theater, was chosen as Production Manager for this series of plays. Cooke selected his casts from a group of students, some of whom had had no previous dramatic experience, but who were anxious to work in these original productions. l~pen, Fated, Mock Student Conference To Parallel Sin Francisco Parley Paralleling -the San Francisco par- ley on world peace, a mock United Nations Conference, with student delegates, will be held by the Post- War Council next Saturday after- noon and evening. Two panels, one at.3p. in. EWT (2 p. m. CWT) on "What To Do With Occupied Enemy Territories" Reds Announce Friendship Pact Treaty Throws Stalin's Support Behind Lublin LONDON, Sunday, April 22.-(/P) -The Moscow radio formally an- nounced early today signature of "a treaty of friendship,smutual assis- tance and post-war collaboration" by Soviet Russia and the Soviet- sponsored Polish government of Warsaw. The Polish regime's radio at Lub- lin had announced the pact earlier. Neither announcement gave details. and the other at 8 p. M. EWT (7 p. m. CWT) on "World Organ- ization," along with a keynotej speech at 2 p. m., will be includedI on the program. Eleven University of Michigan students and eleven students from Wayne University will participate in the panels. Each representative, wearing an armband to designate his country, will present his views on the problems and policies which will be under debate in San Francisco. Charles Draghi will moderate at the panels and will draw up a min- iature United Nations Charter on the basis of agreements reached in the discussions. Bitter Fighting Marks Gains On Okinawa, le By The Associated Press Some of the bitterest fighting of the Pacific war marked small Ameri- can gains through heavily defended Japanese positions on southern Oki- nawa, Fleet Adm. Chester W. Nim- itz reported late Saturday. Meanwhile the American flag was i aised over Ie Island, 4,000 yards off Okinawa's west coast. Doughboys planted the Stars and Stripes atop Mt. Eigusugu after overcoming furi- ous resistance. The tiny island, now under Yank control, is being mopped up. Sector Changes Hands On southern Okinawa, high ground in the hill 178 sector changed hands several times as the fortunes of bat- tle swung from side to side. The hard-hitting Yank ground forces were heavily supported by Naval guns, Army and Marine artillery and car- rier-based planes. Japanese night air raiders hit two central American-held airfields on central Okinawa but damage was minor. Sports Results BASEBALL-Michigan 1, Illinois 0 TENNIS-Michigan 5, Purdue 2 GOLF-Michigan 151, U. of De- troit 2% For details see stories on Page 3 Dees6CmisonrGebest LONDON, April 21-(/P)-Three million terror-stricken Berliners, fearful of hunger as besieging Rus- sian armies cut them off from the rest of the world, huddled in cellars tonight after being exhorted by Reich CRAWFORD EXPECTS 3,000 STUDENTS: Post-War Engine School Plans Discussed Defense Commiissioner Goebbels to defend the capital to the death. A late German broadcast declar- ed forlornly: "The hour is too ser- ious to hide anything now." As shells from Russian artillery smashed into the bomb-battered city Goebbels in his second speech in three days to Berliners declared: "What you have earned with blood and tears you must defend with all the means at your disposal. What you have earned with sweat and work you must de- fend as only you can defend it." Later Nazi propagandist Hans Fritsche said that "during the years of bitter battle for national social- ism we have learned to love Berlin and we will under no circumstances let the enemy take possession of our town." Fritsche, vaguely suggesting that By MILT FREUDENHEIM An immediate host-war enrollment of some 3,000 graduate and undergraduate students, surpassing the previous high of 2413 in 1940, is anticipated by the College of Engineering, Dean Ivan C. Crawford said in an interview this week. The Department of Engineering Research has grown 500 per cent in volume during the war years, Dean Crawford announced. Con- Pointing out that space in the Engineering college is a critical situation, Dean Crawford compared the total enrollment in 1923 when East Engineering Building, the last space addition, was made, 1764 students, with the college enrollment in 1940 of 2413. "Unless addi- tional space can be secured, the college will be greatly handicapped in attempting to handle increases after the war," he said. "Complete plans have been prepared for additions to East Engi- neering Building, but unfortunately, it does not seem that there will be