i , y 1LIFL 4hr IWVFI t at t VOL. LV, No. 134 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN SUNDAY, APRIL 29, 1945 PRICE FIVE CENTS TRU * UE IES RU OAgmi" RS OF I SURDE Deleg,1ates * * * * * Yanks Fight 22 Miles From Berlin :k x: : * :: : -0 Last Enemy Stronghold Is Under Attack Germans Encircled; Resistance Totters PARIS, Sunday, April 29.- ()- American Armies crushed down to- day on Germany's last major strong- hold, rolling an unstoppable wall of tanks to within 22 miles of Munich, cradle of Nazidom that already was reported torn by revolt. President Truman announced at Washington, after checking with General Eisenhower here, that a re- port from San Francisco that Ger- many had agreed to unconditional surrender was unfounded. Senator Tom Connally (Dem., Tex.), vice- chairman of the American delegation to the San Francisco conference, as- serted, however, that the surrender was expected "hourly". Supreme Headquarters said no1 German capitulation offer had been Germans Withdraw From Elbe River LONDON, April 28.-(P)--The Ger- mans have withdrawn all their troops from the middle Elbe River line fac- ing the Americans and have thrown thm into the battle for Berlin but still have been unable to prevent deepening Russian penetrations into the city, the Hamburg radio said tonight. This broadcast by the Nazi station said the Germans had practically stopped fighting the Americans in north central Germany "to concen- trate all the remaining strength of the Reich against the Bolshevik flood rolling westward." received here but that did not mean none had been made directly to one or more Allied capitals. The San Francisco reports said an ultimatum had been delivered to Heinrich Him- mler after tht Gestapo chief asserted Adolf Hitler was dying and he (Him- mler) wanted to give up to the Unit- ed States and Britain. The Allies were reported to have said Germany must surrender com- pletely to the United States, Russia and Britain or face intensified de- struction of her remaining physical assets and military forces. The hour for such tactics was growing late, for the Reich now was split into two traps, one on the north barely the size of Indiana and one on the south little larger than Col- orado. The southern one was crumbling badly at its very core under the blows of the U.S. Third and Seventh and French First Armies. The Seventh Army was but 25 miles west of Munich, considered the northern bastion of the Alpine re- doubt, and the U.S. Third Army was 27 miles away on the north. Hopwood Entry Closes Tuesday Manuscripts in the annual Avery and Jule Hopwood contest in creative writing are due on Tuesday at 4:30 p.m. in the Hopwood Room. The awards, first given in 1931, total $8,000 in the drama, poetry, essay and fiction fields. The contest is the nation's oldest and largest in amateur creative writing and is lim- ited to non-professional resident stu- dents. Announcement of the winners in the contest will be made about June i5. CAMPUS EVENTS Today Lecture: Prof. Shao Chang Lee, head of the Institute of Foreign Cul- ture at Michigan State College, will speak on "T' Th Fturt'c in the Pacific~ Soviet Army Takes Over in Dying Berhl Rumors of German Surrender Denied By The Associated Press LONDON, Sunday, April 29.-Sov- :et armies, taking a final strangle- hold on dying Berlin, hurled its de- fenders back into a shell-raked 25- square-mile pocket in the city's cen- ter yesterday while thousands of German troops gave up the suicidal struggle and surrendered to the Red Army.. German resistance was fanatical out it was tottering. Almost all the city but the central pocket, which was forged by a Red Army inner ring of encirclement, was in Russian hands. While the city lashed in its death agonies, Soviet forces north of the capital smashed out across the Meck- lenburg plains on an expanding 81- mile front and gained up to 22 miles toward Rostock and Hamburg in a clean-up of the isolated northern half of Adolf Hitler's now-bisected third Reich. Capture Five Major Towns These forces captured five major towns, including Pasewalk, where Hitler, blinded by gas, in November, 1918, resolved in a military hospital to become a politician, rebuild Ger- many's military power and avenge the Versailles Treaty. Three major Berlin city districts and parts of three others were cap- tured by the First White Russian and First Ukrainian Armies as they battled up to three miles through blazing streets and linked up in wes- tern Berlin, Moscow revealed. 13,000 Troops Surrender More than 13,000 enemy troops straggled through desert-like clouds of dust to Red Army lines where they surrendered, while southeast of Ber- 'in another 14,000 enemy troops were aken prisoner in a giant trap. Phi Beta Kappa Nwnuiinates 44 New Member Forty-four students were honored at the thirty-seventh annual initia- ion of the Alpha Chapter of Michi- Tan, Phi Beta Kappa. Thursday in 'he Rackham Amphitheatre. The initiates are: College of Literature, Science, and tl Arts, juniors Harry Loberman .nd Joyce Marilyn Siegan. College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, seniors: Betty Jane Ander- son, Sally Ann Boim, Harry William Daum, Elizabeth Ann Follin, Robert John Gaukler, Nancy Joan Groberg, John Hay, Martha Ferar Klee, Eliz- abeth Harrison Kopchick, Richard James Koppitch, Eugene John Kul- inski, Robert Owen McWilliams, Na- talie Elizabeth Mattern, Violet Mise- kow, Loraine Elizabeth Naum, Evelyn Edith Phillips, Betty Caroline Bou- dier Ruppert, Sarah Elsegood Smy- the, Susan Stacy, Helen Elaine Thrasher, and Joan Patricia Welker. 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True Peace Soon No Official Confirmation Received On Reported Himmler Peace Move By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, April 28-President Truman said tonight that Germany had not yet surrendered unconditionally-but highly placed American officials in San Francisco asserted they expected a surrender announcement at any time. In the nation's capital, the chief executive called a night news con- ference at the White House to state that there was no foundation for the reports that Germany had finally given up. He said he had communi- cated with General Dwight D. Eisenhower's headquarters to check the reports which literally had run around the world in the early hours of the evening. However, Chairman Connally (D.-Tex.) of the Senate foreign rela- tions committee, who is also vice-chairman of the American delegation to the United Nations conference on the west coast reiterated, in the wake of the President's statement, that he expected word of the Nazi capitulation to be given out momentarily. But the White House made it clear no Saturday night announcement was expected. Crowds were in the streets here and elsewhere, apparently awaiting an official confirmation to touch off a Saturday night V-E cele- bration. "No Foundation for Rumor"--Truman Tension gripped Washington, and President Truman, who had left the White House in the early afternoon for his temporary residence in nearby Blair house, returned to the executive offices. He summoned an emergency ;news conference to say that "there is no foundation for the rumor" that Germany had finally given up. As the military debacle in the Reich mounted hourly the juncture of American and British armies south of tottering Berlin, Mr. Truman talked to the assembled reporters. Trum an's Statement. WASHINGTON, April 27-( P)-President Truman tonight author- ized the following direct quotations on his denial that Germany has surrendered: "Well, I was over here, as you can see, doing a little work, and the rumor got started. "I had a call from San Francisco and the State Department called me. "I just got in touch with Admiral Leahy and had him call our headquarters-Commander in Chief in Europe-and there is no founda- tion for the rumor. "That is all I have to say." The President was then asked "are you going to stand by?" "I am going to finish this work," he said. His statement, while denying that a surrender had taken place, did not rule out the possibility that a capitulation is in the offing. In San Francisco, Senator Connally said later in the evening that he expected a surrender announcement "momentarily." Connally Says Surrender Imminent Connally, in making the statement, was aware of the White House announcement. 'The Texan said his information was that the German offer to meet the Allied terms-that is, unconditional surrender to the three big powers, the United States, Great Britain and Russia-had come from Gestapo chief Heinrich Himmler, reporter to be acting for Adolf Hitler, described as ill. RUMORS SPREAD FAST: Nation Celebrates Too Early 'A Duke Ellington To Highlight Senior Dance 'Band of Year' Swings In from Carncgia Hall Duke Ellington, creator of a new vogue in modern music, will come "direct from Carnegie Hall" to Ann Arbor to appear at the 1945 revival of an all-campus Senior Ball Friday, June 1 in the I-M Building. Senior classes of the literary and engineering schools will sponsor the Ball for members of all schools. Tickets will go on sale Wednesday at the Union Travel Desk. Chairmen Named Jim Plate and Bob Precious, A/Sj USNR, are co-chairmen. Jim Wallis, A/S USNR, is in charge of tickets; Betty Willemin will arrange the list of patrons; Pat Coulter is program chairman, and Bill Culligan A/S USNR is buildings chairman. Tom Bliska and Mary Ann Jones will edit a pocket-sized Senior Ball Maga- zine, copies of which will be distribut- ed as favors. Hank Mantho and Mavis Kennedy are co-publicity chairmen. Duke Ellington, composer of "clas- sic" jazz has been making a name for his band and his music for a de- cade and a half. Among the awards received by Ellington is the anniver- sary plaque presented him at his Carnegie Hall concert. The plaque was signed by 32 leading American musicians. Rated Top Band "Downbeat," national swing-band' music magazine recorded Ellington as the top band of the year in their' annual contest. "Metronome" maga- zine also designated him as the only "A-plus" band in its 1945 All-Star Band poll. "Esquire" magazine nam- ed Ellington as the number one man "both as a bandleader and arranger" Renowned Artists Will Appear at May'* Festival Four-Day Concert Series To Begin Thursday; Six Newcomers, Old Favorites Featured The fifty-second annual May Fes- tival, traditional climax of the musi- cal season for Ann Arbor and the University, will bring such old favor- ites as Ezio Pinza, Rudolph Serkin, Bidu Sayao and the Philadelphia Orchestra, in addition to six new- comers, to the stage of Hill Audi- torium for the four-day series of concerts starting Thursdayand con- tinuing through next Sunday. Originated in 18c4 Originated in 1894 as the result of an accident, the first May Festival met with such success that the Board of Directors of the University Musi- cal Society decided to continue this feature. Since that announcement of three concerts by the Boston Fes- tival Orchestra, the Festival has grown to a series of six concerts, fea- turing guest artists, the Choral Union and the Festival Youth Chorus. Famous people in the music world, such as Piatigorsky, Milstein, Lubo- shutz and Nemenoff and Lily Pons have appeared on Festival concerts in past years. The Philadelphia Or- chestra, conducted by Eugene Or- mandy, will participate in all Festi- val programs for the tenth consecu- tive season. Organized 45 years ago, the orchestra was previously directed by Leopold Stokowsky, Fritz Schell and Carl Pohlig before Ormandy was appointed co-conductor in 1936 and later the orchestra's fourth conduc- tor. Caston, Associated Conductor Saul Caston, associated conductor of the Philadelphia Orchestra, was once a member of the Russian Sym- phony Orchestra. He will conduct the orchestra in the Saturday after- noon and evening concerts. The first four concerts, as prey- iously announced, will be given at 8:30 p.m. EWT Thursday and Fri- day and 2:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. EWT Saturday. The final concerts will be presented at the same times Sunday, May 6. Serkin To Play Pianist Rudolph Serkin will per - form the Brahms "Concerto No. 2 in B-flat major" (for piano and orches- tra) at the Sunday afternoon con- cert. Orchestral selections, including a Bach-Onmandy arrangement of the Chorale Prelude "O Mensch Be- wein Dein' Sunde Gross" and Men- delssohn's "Reformation" Symphony, will precede the solo number. Metropolitan artists Eleanor Ste- ber, soprano; Hertha Glaz, contralto; Frederick ,Jagel, tenor; and Nicola Moscona, bass, will sing the solo roles in the Bruckner "Te Deum Lau- damus" Sunday night. The Univer- sity Choral Union under the direction ,of Prof. Hardin Van Deursen will also participate in this number. Choral Union practice is being held every day, and the Met. soloists will arrive Thursday for a practice with the group. Single tickets for some of the con- certs are still available; all season tickets, however, are sold out. Peace Charter Is Revised in Mock Parley Five amendments to the Dumbar- ton Oaks Charter were agreed upon and several issues in relation to pol- icy toward defeated Germany, Italy, and Japan were discussed at the mock Post-War Council United Na- tions Conference yesterday by ap- proximately 150 Michigan and Wayne students. The conference also agreed by a nine to one vote that a copy of the revised charter will be sent to the American delegation in San Fran- cisco. The dissenting vote was regis- tered by Russia. Afternoon Panel During the afternoon panel on "Feeling With Our Fallen Foes," delegates from the eleven Allied Na- tions agreed that all key industries By The Associated Press The report from San Francisco that Germany had surrendered un- conditionally touched off subdued and short-lived demonstrations in most of the nation's cities last night. The demonstrations, for the most part a mixture of skepticism and ju- bilation, quickly subsided after Pres- ident Truman described as unfound- ed the report given the Associated Press by Senator Connally (Dm., Tex.), vice-chairman of the U.S. del- egation to the Security Conference. Many of the nation's newspapers greeted the first report with extra editions and screaming headlines. In some towns church bells pealed and whistles and horns blared. Crowds thronged the squares of many towns, City Calm at Early V-E Tip Initial reaction here to the quickly denied report of unconditional Ger- man surrender last night saw the bubble of momentary joy burst into stern realization that the war is not over. In line with the announced policy of handling V-E day celebrations, the senior class of the Judge Advocate General's School were immediately alerted as MP's and began patrolling assigned areas. and gathered in front of newspaper offices. Times Square Jubilation The jubilation lasted about half an hour in New York's Times Square. Cheers went up from thousands of persons crowded onto sidewalks and pieces of torn paper rained, down from office buildings. Traffic was halted on Seventh Ave. and 42nd St. All New York police officers down to the rank of captain were called to duty and other members of the force were ordered to standby. Connally Origin Of Premature Peace Report SAN FRANCISCO, April 28-()- Senator Tom Connally, Texas Demo- crat, Chairman of the U. S. Senate foreign relations committee and vice chairman of the American Delegation to the United Nations Conference, said tonight that he expects "momen- tarily" an announcement that Ger- many has surrendered uncondition- ally. Conally made his statement to a reporter after he had been informed that President Truman, in Washing- ton, had said reports of Germany's unconditional surrender were un- founded. TRIBUTE TO 'GRAND OLD MAN': State To Celebrate Yost's 70th Birthday By BILL LAMBERT Fielding H. Yost, who tomorrow celebrates his seventy-fourth birth- day, received further tribute to his great achievements in Michigan ath- letics, last week when the State leg- islature adopted a resolution declar- ing April 30 as "Fielding H. Yost Day." which bears his name, and will per- petuate the memory of a man whose life has been dedicate dto instilling in youth the spirit of competition and fair play. Yost started his Michigan football coaching career in 1901 with his fam- ed "Point-a-Minute" teams, and con- tinued his meteoric rise until now his he turned to the coaching pro- fession, receiving his first appoint- ment from Ohio Wesleyan. His exceptional success there led to many offers, and he coached at Nebraska, Kansas, and Stanford, before finally coming to Michigan in 1901. With such memorable stars as I,