Y Sir ignn Intg W5i'EHATHER r ai s 1 VOL. LV, No. 87 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN TUESDAY, MARCH 6, 1945 PRICE FIVE CENTS Hayward Keniston Appointed Dean of Literary College Romance Language Chairman Replaces Dean Kraus, on Retirement Furlough Prof. Hayward Keniston, chairman of the Department of Romance Languages and a graduate of Harvard University, was appointed dean of the College of Literature, Science and the Arts in a between semesters meeting of the Board of Regents here Feb. 23. Prof. Keniston was named to replace Dean Edward H. Kraus who began his retirement furlough Feb. 24. Veterans returning to the Univer- Tanks Roll Into Tottering Cologne * * * * * * * * * * Russians Capture Stettin la,> - _n Fascists Riot In Bucharest Bands Roam Streets Unchecked by Police By The Associated Press MOSCOW, Mar. 5-A Tass news dispatch reported today that pro- Fascist bands were rioting in the streets of Bucharest and tearing pic- tures of United Nations leaders from buildings in the Romanian capital, which has been without a government since that of Prime Minister Radescu resigned a week ago.j The Tass report quoting the Ro- manian newspaper Momentul said that bands of legionnaires, protected by Radescu's Ministry of the Inter- ior, were racing through the streets in automobiles, shooting up the homes of democratic leaders, and spreading panic among the popula- tion. (A delayed Associated Press dis- patch from Budapest, filed Saturday, made no mention of disturbances at that time.) The Russian press did not com- ment, though the situation appeared worse than at any time since the Rdssian-Romanian armistice was signed. Daily Staff' Promotios sity hereafter will pay tuition fees based on their place of residence, the Regents ruled. By law the Univer- sity is permitted to charge the men non-resident fees. In other business the Regents ac- cepted gifts totaling $14,700 and approved engineering research con- tracts worth nearly $35,000. The Regents also approved secretarial training courses under the direction of the business administration school. Dean Keniston first came to the University in 1940 from the Univer- Nazi Armies Pressed into Two Pockets Stargard, Naugard 'aken by Russians By The Associated Press LONDON, Mar. 6, Tuesday-Rus- Sian troops, anchoring their Pomer- anian flank securely on the Baltic coast, yesterday wheeled toward Stet- tin and captured that port's outer bastions of Stargard and Naugard, while other Soviet forces to the northeast cut deeper into two pock- ets where possibly 200,000 Germans were trapped. Stargard Overwhelmed * Overwhelming Stargard in a vi- cious street battle that cost the Germans 4,000 killed, the Russians pushed on toward Altdamm, east bank Oder River crossing town just opposite Stettin and 15 miles west of Stargard. Altdamm and other localities ringing Stettin, Pomeran- ian capital and Berlin's main port, were reported under Soviet artillery fire. Naugard, 22 miles north of Star- gard, also fell as the Russians folded back the Germans into an 1,800- square-mile pocket in which the en- emy was battling with his back to a 45-mile waterline formed by the lower Oder, Stettin Bay and the Dievenow River. Koberg, on the Baltic 65 miles northeast of Stettin, also was being stormed by Soviet troops "under cov- er of a blizzard," Berlin said. The enemy broadcast claimed that the Russians had been held in the frin- ges of the town, site of a large Amer- ican prisoner of war camp. Two-Thirds of Iwo Captured U. S. PACIFIC FLEET HEAD- QUARTERS, Guam, Tuesday, Mar. 6 -(M)-U. S. Marines grimly pressing Iwo Jima's strongly-entrenched Jap- anese toward the northern and north- eastern cliffs made no major attack Monday but broke up a number of enemy attempts to infiltrate Ameri- can positions. Adm. Chester W. Nimitz said in his communique today the battle lines remained substantially unchanged as the three divisions of Marines, who hold two-thirds or more of Iwo, con- solidated their holdings elsewhere on the small but vital island where fight- ing is now in its 16th day. A GERMAN PRISONER STRIKES A FINAL BLOW-A German prisoner who exploded a grenade while being searched by American captors lies dead on the ground (right center). Four doughboys have been wounded by the blast. One, near the foot of tree at left, is struggling to rise, while the man standing nearest him is unable to help because he has been badly wounded. The two other Yanks are but slightly wounded but dazed by the blast. Announced New appointments to the senior staff of The Daily for the spring semester have been announced by the Board in Control of Student Pub- lications. Evelyn Phillips, '45, was reappoint- ed managing editor while Margaret Farmer, '46, was named editorial di- rector. Ray Dixon, '45, who was for- merly associate editor, was appointed city editor and Paul Sislin, '46, took his place as associate editor. The Board named Dick Strickland, '45, business manager and Martha Schmitt, '45, and Kay McFee asso- ciate business managers. All of the appointees come from the Detroit area with the exception of Miss Farmer, whose home is in Flint, and Miss Schmitt, who lives in Cleve- land Heights, 0. In addition, Mary Brush, '47, and Lois Iverson, '47, were named full night editors by the Board and Char- lotte Bobrecker, '47, Bettyann Larsen, 47, and Annette Shenker, '47 were appointed assistant night editors. Dr. Ra*ey Will Speak Saturday Dr. Homer P. Rainey, former pres- ident of the University of Texas and nationally-known educator 'will dis- cuss "Education Problems in the South" at an open meeting at 2:30 p.m. Saturday in thenRackham Audi- torium. Dr. Rainey was removed from his post in Texas for alleged "un-Ameri- can activities" involving his insis- tence that the Sacco and Venzetti case be taught in U. of Texas classes. University President Dr. Alexander G. Ruthven will introduce Dr. Rainey. Included in the campus groups sponsoring the lecti.ue are : the Hillel Foundation, Michigan Youth forI Democratic Action, the Inter-racial Association, Postewar Council, the Student Religious Association, and The Michigan Daily. HAYWARD KENISTON . . . Literary School Dean. sity of Chicago. While a member of the faculty here, he accepted an ap- pointment to the staff of the U. S. State Department in Buenos Aires and was cultural attache there for two years from 1942 to 1944. Dean Keniston has taught Romance lang- uages at Harvard, Cornell and Chi- cago. Born July 5, 1883 in Somerville, Mass., Dean Keniston received his A. B, degree from Harvard in 1904. He also was awarded degrees of A. M. and Ph. D. in 1910 and 1911. He is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, member of the American Philosophical Society and the Hispanica Society. Retiring Dean Kraus was pro- fessor of crystallography and min- eralogy and holds the Roebling Medal, emblematic of international leadership in mineralogy. He was born Dec. 1, 1875, in Syracuse, N. Y., and is a graduate of Syracuse Uni- versity, receiving a B. S. degree the~re in 1896. In 1901 he earned a Ph. D. degree at1the University of Munich in Germany. Dean Kraus first came to the University in 1904. He served as dean of the College of Pharmacy from 1923 to 1933 when he was appointed dean of the Lit- erary School. The list of gifts accepted by the. Regents was headed by a grant of $3,800 from Parke, Davis and Com- pany to continue research in antibiot- ics. Through Miss Alice Lloyd, Dean of Women, $1,227 was granted to es- tablish the Florice Holmes Memorial Loan Fund in memory of the late University medical student. The secretarial training courses under the direction of the business administration school approved by the Regents consist of office prac- tice, stenography, typing and office management. Heretofore, the sec- retarial program had been part of the Division of Emergency Train- ing. U' Enrollment Figures Total Over 8,000 Fewer Servicemen, More Civilians Listed Latest but not final University en- rollment totals, 8,111, reveal an over- all civilian increase over the 1944 spring term of more than 15 per cent while the number of students in the armed forces has dropped slight- ly more than 30 per cent., As The Daily went to press there were 284 more men and 493 more women enrolled this term as com- pared with the 1944 total of the Mon- day following the first days of regis-. tration. Because of the reduction of the Army ASTP program, there Cas been a net loss of 497 students. Enrollment thus far includes: men, 1,862; women, 4,043; navy trainees, 1,282; army trainees, 924; total, 8,111. 1944 spring term registration in- cluded: men, 1,578; women, 3,550;j navy trainees, 1,241; arniy trainees, 2,239; total, 8,608. Noticeable increases in the enroll- ment of the Lit., Graduate, and Den- tal Schools account for the larger campus male population. CAMPUS CINDERELLAS: V-Ball Time Changed To Agree With WIVIC Curfew Directive- Complying with the recent War Manpower Commission directive which curfews post-midnight revelry, the V-Ball committee has set the time for the third annual Victory Ball back one hour, the dance to be staged from 8 p. m. to midnight Friday in the Intramural Sports Building. In line with the committee decision, announced yesterday by Paul John, dance chairman, late permission for women and naval students has been correspondingly altered. Women may stay out until 1 a. n. and V-12 men will be allowed until 1:30 a. m. Both these times are one hour earlier than the times previously announced. Because of increased student de- mand, a new supply of tickets has been printed, and these will go on sale today, Norma Johnson, ticket chairman, declared yesterday. Tick- ets will be sold on the diagonal Extension Will Sponsor Talks frnm i a. m. to 4 p. n. and all day at the Union main desk. Departing from usual custom, dance music for the Friday formal will be played by only one orchestra, that of Hal McIntyre, whose combination is termed the best new band of the year by swing music publications. Featured with the orchestra, slated soon for a six month overseas jaunt, will be the songs of Al Nobel and Gloria Van. 'SpeechToB Presentedb British Author Wyndham Lewis, English author and artist, will speak at 4:15 p.m., tomorrow in the amphitheatre of the Rackham Building under the auspi- ces of the English department on "TolstoyhHemmingway, and War." The author of many novels and books of commentary on the modern world, Mr. Lewis has been compared by critics with both Swift and Rabe- lais. "Tarr," a novel published in 1918, was one of the first indications of the literary revolution to take place in the next decade. Other nov- les, most of which are satires, in- clude "The Apes of God," "The Wild Body," and "The Childermass." Describing his work, Prof. Bredvold of the English Department said, "His satire is broad and vigorous, and his style modern. But he attacks what- ever he considers nonsense, whether it is found in the conservative Eng- lish middle class or in the cults of the ultra-moderns." Second semester freshmen or higher who received at least a C average during the fall term are eligible to tryout for the Michigan Daily this semester. There will be a tryout meeting ' for news, women's and sports staffs at 5 p. m. Thursday lutpost Besieged Nazi City Seen. in, Allied Gras Yank Push Forces Garrison to Retreat See MAP, Page 2 By The Associated Press PARIS, Mar. U tanks drove more than a mile today into the tot- tering Rhineland metropolis of Co- logne, seized one-fifth of it, and the largest German city ever to be storm- ed by the Allies seemed virtually within American grasp. The charge of American tanks from the north to within two miles of the big Hohenzollern bridge in the heart of the city forced the remaining Ger- man garrison-estimated by one staff officer to number only 1,000 men-to fall back. Other Forces Smash from West Other American forces were sma- shing in from the west, and a flying column began cutting three miles southwest of Cologne to complete the encirclement. This. column last was reported about five and a half miles from the Rhine south of Co- logne. Cologne, fourth largest city in Ger- many, was undergoing a terrible or- deal of fire, and a pall of smeke hung over it as massed artillery laid down shells before the advancing armor and infantry. Largest City in Rhenish Prussia Cologne is the largest city in Rhen- ish Prussia, normally with a popu.. lation of 768,000 which ran her once- busy war factories, but most of the civilians had fled now or cowered in basements as the battle swirled a- round them. Simultaneously, the U.S. Ninth Army struck into the center of the shrinking Rhine pocket to the north, fighting into Rheinberg, one of the chief ferry points for an estimated 50,000 German soldiers trying to fight their way to the east bank of the river. Seventy Miles of West Bank Seized American and Canadian armies had seized control of 70 miles of the Rhines west bank between Cologne and the Dutch border, and the Ger- mans were hemmed into three slen- der pockets in the remaining 20 miles. Amos Hawley Will Address Baha i Group "There Is No Superior Race" will be the subject of an address to be given tomorrow at 8 p. m. in Lane Hall by Dr. Amos Hawley of the University sociology department, un- der the sponsorship of the Ann Ar- bor Baha'i Assembly. Dr. Hawley, who has participated in panel discussions on Post-War Problems and plans for reconstruc- tion, will consider the re-education of the peoples of the world to rid thei of false ideologies such as the belief in a superior race as a possible plan for future peace. Rex King, who has traveled throughout the country on Racial Amity and has addressed two pre- vious Baha'i assemblys on the sub- ject, will be chairman of the discus- sion which will be open to the pub- lic. Marriage, Topics To Family Life Be Discussed FOR ORIENTAL STUDY: Chinese Government Awards Scholarships to Mitchell, Booth Mary Anna Mitchell and Phyllis Booth have been awarded the first two scholarship sat the University granted by the Chinese government for the study of Chinese civilization. The scholarships pay $1,500 and may be renewed if satisfactory work is done for a total of three years. Their purpose, according to the Chi- nese Embassy at Washington, is not so much to train Americans for work in China as to acquaint foreign lead- ers in this country with Chinese civil- ization. From Six Universities Only six universities have been ask- ed by the Chinese government to give the scholarships: Michigan, Harvard, Yale, Columbia, Chicago, and Cali- fornia.s Although it could have given five scholarships this year, the University felt that only two of the applicants met the high standards it intends to maintain for these awards. Miss Mit- chell, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. O. A. Miller of Flint, is a senior on campus and has taken Chinese, Chi- nese art, English and sociology. Grad Student Miss Booth, 1216 Prospect, Ann Ar- bor, is a student in the graduate school. She was born in China at Chefoo, Shantung province which now is occupied territory. Her par- ents are Mr. and Mrs. William C. Booth, who were Presbyterian mis- sionaries in the Orient. Miss Booth knew Chinesebefore she did English and considers herself a product ofj Eastern and Western civilization. She came to this country when she was 17. At the University she has major- ed in Oriental Civilizations. "The American Family Today," a marriage and family life institute, sponsored by the University Exten- sion Service together with more than 50 Detroit social agencies, will be held today through Monday at the Rackham Educational Memorial in Detroit. Highlighting the five-day confer- ences dealing with "problems faced by young people and adults in every- day wartime living," will be Dr. Mar- garet Mead, author and anthropolo- gist, Captain Dorothy C. Stratton, director of the Spars, and Dr. Homer P. Rainey, former president of the Texas University. Morning programs will be held to- day starting at 9:30 a.m. with an ad- dress by Dr. Mead on "Patterns in American Family Life." Topics for conference meetings to be held from 10:30 a.m. on are: "Physical and Emotional Needs of Children," "Religion in the Home," The Older Adolescent and the War," and "Inter-cultural Attitudes and the Family." Kelso Receives Court Judgment University Prof. Robert W. Kelso, Director of Curriculum in Social Work in Detroit, Institute of Public and Social Administration, yesterday won a State Court of Claims judgment against the State, awarding to him $2,500, according to an Associated Pr,.C'C.rpnnrt COMES THE REVOLUTION: Final Week Vows Forgotten as Spring Flies Over Ann Arbor "LAND OF THE MAHARAJAHS": Joe Fisher Predicted Japanese War "Next semester comes the revolu- tion," was the frantic wail heard all over campus during finals. This was usually accompanied by frenzied vows of studying eight hours every day, doing outside reading and term pa- pers as soon as they were assigned, and keeping two weeks ahead in e. C51. Coeds declared they would never fact, similar comments were still prevalent as late as registration. But with the dawn of the first day of classes, a more potent factor ap- peared on campus. Unfortunately, spring sprung, without warning or announcement. Coatless coeds boun- ded along the diag, chattering of clothesnand men, tennis and dates, vaca~tionnd rV-Ball. Accompanying his lecture, "Land of the Maharajahs," with color films, Joe Fisher, international traveler and Sultan of Johore, who in solemn cere- mony christened Fisher Singapore Joe. tures were originally the product of a habby. He recorded every interesting place or unusual event that came his