P 4 4kr 4v A Arls. m MLJML exaU WEATHER Warmer, Gentle to Moderate Winds. VOL. LV, No. 144 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, MAY 11, 1945 PRICE FIVE CENTS Japanese Plants Heavily Damaged Hiro Aircraft Factory, Tachikawa Engine Works Hit by B-29 Raiders By The Associated Press GUAM, Friday, May 11-(P)-Two important Japanese aircraft works- Hiro Naval Aircraft factory and Tachikawa Engine Plant-were damaged heavily by recent B-29 raids, reconnaissance photographs disclosed today. The pictures show the Hiro factory, five miles east of Kure on Hon- shu island, was damaged 75 per cent in one attack, that of May 5. On the same day, other Superfortresses caused 80 per cent roof area damage to Soviet Army Threatens To Trap Germans Fighting Continues After Official Armistice By The Associated Press LONDON, Friday, May 11-Moscow announced last night that German forces in Czechoslovakia had refused to surrender and that the Red Army had "gone over to the attack" in a powerful offensive that threatened to trap hundreds of thousands of Nazi troops in a. giant 9,900-square mile pocket. Bitter fighting was raging in Czechoslovakia more than 48 hours after the official end of all hostili- ties in Europe. But elsewhere, rem- nants of beaten Germany's once- powerful surface and underwater fleets surrendered while the British Navy liberated England's own tiny channel islands and Dunkerque- seene of the war's greatest Allied defeat-also was freed. Under the all-out onslaught of three Russian armies, some German troops in Czechoslovakia were be- ginning to lay down their arms, Mos- cow reported. More than 63,000 were taken prisoner Wednesday and Thursday. The Soviet war bulletin said that "German troops commanded by Field Marshal (Ferdinand) Schoer- ner, infringing the act of capitu- lation, refused to remain on the spot and lay down their arms." Schoerner himself is wanted by the Russians as a war criminal. "Coisequently troops of the First Ukrainian front have gone over to the attack," Moscow said. At the same time, Moscow said that Marshal Ro- dion Y. Malinovsky's Second Ukrain- ian Army also had opened an offen- sive against enemy troops command- ed by Col. Gen. Wyller, which also refused to surrender. Marshal Ivan S. Konev's First Ukrainians captured the towns of Podborany, Nove-Straseci, Berounm Gorowice, Kraljpe, Litomerice and Ceska-Lipa on a 60-mile front northwest and southwest of Prague. Threatened by encirclement, one group of Schoerner's army began to surrender in disorder, Moscow said, and 35,000 troops were captured. "An- other group of Schoerner's forces," the communique said, "also infring- ed capitulation terms and began to withdraw to the west. These forces were pursued across northeastern Moravia and Bohemia from the Su- detenland by Gen. Andrei I. Yere- menko's Fourth Ukrainian Army, which occupied Rychnov and Skote- lee, and captured 20,000 enemy troops. Swlintons Liberated From Prison Camp SAN FRANCISCO, May 10.--()- Prof. Roy S. Swinton, on leave from the College of Engineering, and Mrs. Swintonearrived here yesterday a- board a U.S. transport returning 164 civilians liberated from Philippine prison camps. The Swintons were interied at Santo Tomas while the professor was on sabbatical leave from the Univer- sity. CAMPUS EVENTS Today The Graduate Council sponsors a Mixer and Dance at 8 p. m. EWT in the Rackham Bldg. Today Children's Theatre pres- ents "The Elves and the Shoemaker" at 3:45 p. m. EWT In Lydia Mendel- ssohn Theatre. Today Petitions for Hillel Stu- dent Council must be turned in at the Founda- tion. Today Lane Hall Coffee Hour, 4- 6 p. tn. EWT. MAy 12 Miss Kathleen N. Lardis, nearby Hiro naval engine and turbine factory. The Tachikawa engine plant of the Hitachi Aircraft Company in the Tokyo area was 80 per cent burned out April 24. Major Buildings Damaged All major buildings of the Hiro Naval Aircraft Factory were severely or completely damaged with the single exception of one muli-colored building which appeared to have suf- fered three hits. Twenty-eight build- ings sustained a total of 700,000 square feet of roof damage; In the same attack, 870,000 square feet of the roof area of the Hiro naval engine and turbine factory was damaged. Several buildings of the nearby Hiro arsenal were de- stroyed or damaged. 400 Giant Superforts More than 400 giant Superforts packing an explosive wallop equal to the bomb tonnage of 1,000 Liberators spread wide destruction in the aerial attack. The record-breaking assault left smoke columns billowing more than 15,000 feet above ruins of fuel tanks and plants at Tokyuama and Otake, on southwestern Honshu island, main unit of the Nipponese homeland chain. 3,000 Mile Round Trip All the targets were in the west- ern areas around the Japan inland sea, requiring a round trip flight or more than 3,000 miles for the Super- .forts. Domei, the Japanese news agency, estimated that yesterday's raid was made by approximately 300 Super- forts, but the enemy propagandists have consistently minimized the strik- ing forces inthe American raids. It made no claims of planes shot down. Reds Domminate Balkan States, Says Markham "In every country in southeast Europe, with the exception of Greece, Russia has had its way and set up its own government," Reuben H. Mark- ham said yesterday in a lecture spon- sored by the sociology department. The growing coercive, dynamic movements in the Baikans climaxed in the fall of 1944. ±vlarkham said, and in every case the present party was put in power by the Russian Army, which imposed its type of government on the people, estab- lished people's courts similar to those in Mississippi, and closed the elec- tions. This e> treme radcicalism, he ex plained, i the last of four steps th'ough which the Balkan countries have passed in developing from coun- tries under Turkish domination. "Af- ter liberty there came to power the conservative group, which is, in some countries, the land - owning class. They gave the people a feeling of self-respect." The bourgeoisie obtained control next and were known as the Liberals, Progressives, or Democrats, Mark- ham continued. "When the liberal party became the defendant of the status quo which it had created, new parties, such as the .National Peasant Party in Romania, emerged," he said. "By 1928 the peasant movement had pe- Lered out, and the students, younger professors, young priests, and young army officers went to the extreme party." $100,000 is Campus Bond Quota' University VetsTo Act As Solicitors One hundred thousand dollars has been set as the University, quota in the Seventh War Loan. Campus veterans, delegating them- selves bond solicitors, have set up schedules to contact every member of the University faculty purchases during the drive. Some 25 veterans have been assigned various depart- ments to cover, and each is making appointments with the men in his department to discuss extra war bond purchases for the campaign. "Although initial sales are coming in rather slowly, as soon as the na- Blood Donations Due Persons who signed up for blood donations are reminded that ap- pointments have been scheduled between 12:30 and 4:30 p. m. EWT (11:30 a. m. to 3:30 p. in. CWT) today at the Blood Bank, which is located on the second floor of the WAB. tional campaign gets under way, we should have no difficulty in securing full cooperation from the faculty fTr war bond purchases," John Crispin, head of the campus veterans organi- zation, affirmed yesterday. The campus drive has begun one wFek earlie than the city, county' and national drives, partly to offset the general confusion attendant on the close of the spiing term next minth. The national -.ampaign will extend until June 30, but directors of the University solicitation hope to have the quota filled by the fist week in June. Junior girls were organized yester- day into, bond selling teams under the general direction of Joan Schlee, new assistant JGP chairman. They will complement the soliciting work of the veterans, covering the Uni- versity -:tafi other than the faculty. The coeds' operations will begin Monday, with ten of the girls acting as unit leaders with three or four junior girls to assist them. All bonds purchased by University personnel through the cashier's of- fice, the veterans and the junior girls will be credited to the University total. The campaign directors warn that bonds purchased through banks and c4her organizations that have ao specific quotas to fill wil not be counted in the University total unless the buyer indicates his purchase as such, and reports it to the cashier's office. Individual stamp purchases will not be counted in totalling the Uni- versity bond sales. The campaign directors have urged, however, that students complete as many stamp booklets as they can, because each filled book turned in for a bond will all the University in reaching its aimn of $ ),0Ci worth of bonds. Chinese, Yanks Holr Jap Drive CHUNGKING, Friday. May 11-(R) - Chinese troops with powerful American air support smashed a major Japanese drive on the Ameri- can air base at Chihkiang Wednes- day and drove on for a 9%2-mile gain, killing more than 1,000 invad- ers, the Chinese high command an- nounced today. The victory, possibly the turning point in the campaign to oust the enemy from the Chinese interior, led to the encirclement of enemy units at Tungkow, on a main highway 70 miles east of Chihkiang, and at Shammen, ,75 miles east of the air- base, which is 250 miles southeast of the capital. The Chinese said they had captured points 20 and 25 miles northwest of Poaching. Point Score, Based on Toughness, io Determine Soldiers' Release FRENCH LEADERS FREED FROM GERMAN PRISON-French leaders prior to the German invasion of 1940 pose,. after their liberation from a- German prison at Itter Castle, Austria. with Maj. Gen. Anthony M. McAuliffe (third from right), commanding general of the 103rd Division who once said, "NUTS" to German surrender demands. In the group are (L to R) Edouard Daladier, Premier 'in 1939; Madame Weygand; Gen. Maximne Weygand, Army commander during the fall of France; Gen. McAuliffe; Paul Reynaud, Premier in 1940; Gen. Maurice Gamelin, Army commander at the start of war. Length of Service, Dependency, (AP Wirephoto from Signal Corps radiophoto from Paris) Et-hel Is enbe rg Plays Leading Role as Wid 'st Speech Students Give 'Elves and Shoemaker' Ethel Isenberg stars as Widget, one of the chief elves in "The Elves and the Shoemaker" which opens at 3:45 p.m. EWT (2:45 p.m. CWT) today in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. Miss Isenberg was last seen as "Judy" in the comedy "Junior Misa ' presentee by Play Production of the speech department last semester. "Thei Nes and the Shoemaker"' is .adapted from the popular fairy tale and concerns the trials and trib- War TrnigProgram. Planns To Close Jl The Engineering, Science and Management War Training program, which has trained more than 12,000 men and women since November 1940, will be discontinued after. July 1, Prof. Robert H. Sherlock, of the engineer- ing college revealed yesterday. The purpose of the program was to supply additional personnel in these fields and to upgrade skills of those already in industry. All courses were given on non-credit basis with the exception of one dealing with radar Year Overseas,' In Army, Child, To Count High 1,300,000 Men Will Be Released Next Year By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, May 10.- Sol- diers who have rolled up a point score of 85-based on length and toughness of service and fatherhood -are eligible for release, the War Department disclosed today. Twelve Point Counts One child, one year in the Army, one year overseas count 12 points each under the system for cutting the fighting force. Each combat dec- oration adds five points. Approximately 1,300,000 men, in- eluding 650,000 in Europe and 433,000 in the Pacific area, will be released during the next 12 months under the plan, This number may be stepped high- er by maintaining draft calls above actual replacement needs. Other factors Another 700,000 men also are scheduled to be released from service because of physical disability, age, or other factors. "Critical" scores for the various forces-air, ground, service and WACS-have not yet been set but to avoid any delay in demobilization, the Army has fixed the interim score of 85 (44 for WACS) as the minimum for discharge. These minima may be lowered later. Those who have built up the. re- quired score are eligible for release now and some of them will move to separation centers within a week. However, some men with the re- quired score may be retained because the Army needs their special skills and no replacement is immediately available. Officials said every possi- ble step would be taken to obtain re- placements for such men. Eligibility Score Card The score card for computing eli- gibility for discharge, was released simultaneously at the War Depart- ment and to soldiers around the world. Here is the weight given to each factor: One point will be credited for each month of army service since Sep- tember 16, 1940. (The time of ser- vice is computed from the date the soldier reached the reception center. Any 15-days or more will count as a month). Service in the armed forces of an ally nation, or in the Navy, Marines or Coast Guard will be credited as though it were U. S. Army service. One point will be given for each month served overseas since Septem- ber 16, 1940. Army Decorations Five points will be given for each Army award for combat, such as the Distinguished Service Cross, Purple Heart and battle participation stars; for each similar award made by the Navy and for each award or decora- tion granted by a foreign country and recognition by the War Department. Twelve points will be allowed for each child under 18 years, up to a maximum of three children. Service Troops Moved to Chia for which credit was given to senior s electrical engineers and graduate stu- dents in physics. ESMWT program was financed by the federal government through the United States Office of Educa- tion. Seven of the 200 institutions participating were in Michigan. Many courses were given in Michi- gan cities through the University Ex- tension Service, but the majority of the work was presented in full-time. courses for various branches of the armed services.rTeachers were fac- ulty men from the University and men from industrial corporations. Although most of the trainees at first were men, women were trained to a great extent. At one time there were 250 women on campus who spent 40-48 hours per week in class and laboratory. The University trained 1,500 inspectors for Army Ordnance and the Army Air Forces. Surveying, topography mapping, and photogramnmetry for women college graduates were offered here to train them for work with the Army Map Service. Men were sent here from Wright Field, Ohio, for courses dealing with radar and radio for the Signal Corps. ESMWT took over much of the college level work of training men in technical fields that many large corporations had been doing because the universities and colleges could handle it more conveniently and ef- fectively. Ann Arbor Man Reported Prisoner First Lt. William Breitmayer, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. V. Breitmayer of Ann Arbor, missing since his plane was shot down over Austria Feb. 7, was reported taken prisoner and his release is awaited. HELLZAPOPPIN! Zaniest Dance In U' History Is Union Boast. EDITOR'S NOTE: Perry Logan, The Daily's Roving Reporter, was shanghaied by two Union publicity men to cover Hellzapoppin. Hellza will be poppin' on the laid- in floors and with the laid-out dan- cers in the Union ballroom come tomorrow night. Set to stage the zaniest dance in campus history, the Union Executive Council has redoubled its effort; to make itself worthwhile on campus. Guaranteed to reduce the once proud Rainbow Room to a shambles, the Hellzauoppin fray will cater only to masculine ne'er-do-wells who long ago gave up trying to dance to Bill Layton';' music. Johnny Burtt. a ti aveling magi- clan, will mingle with the paying guests, doing his special disappear- ing feats. All loose wallets, combs, 1)raceet' and garter straps should be guarded carefully, as Burtt has been acclaimed a master of the art. Coun- cil members were working on a scheme whereby the magician him- self would disappear, but Burtt's par- ents objected. A real live spouting still will be set up in one corner of the dance ficer. If aAi one but a Council mem- ber gets within five feet of it, the Union loses its franchise As yet no diquid i ereshments have been or- dered for the still, as the Council is split into two warring camps, the one repre.Eaxting the Seagram people and the cthei the Vernor's interests. .4 EThEl ISENBERG ulatioas (" the elves in saving the kind shoemaker's shop from the scheming old witch, Heckla. Naomi Vincent is cast as the "shoe- maker" and Jacqueline Kramer and Serene Sheppard play the roles of his wife and daughter, respectively. Pat Ficard portrays the witch with Carolyn West and Gloria Ann Salter cast as two of the chief elves who help Widget outwit the cruel Heckla. Others in the cast include: Mae Dix, Margaret Walsh, Mary Woods, Barbara Weisberg, Shirley Arm- strong and Babette Blum. e 1 a SYMBOLIC SLOGAN: SIGHT SOPH, SINK SAME: Sophomores, Freshmen To Clash in Class Games Classic WASHINGTON, May 10-(P)--A big shift of American service troops and transport to China was disclosed today 24 hours after the army reveal- ed that it expects to unload supplies on the China coast. The latest development was a War Department report that service troops, in a huge truck convoy, al- ready have been moved. to China from the Persian Gulf Area where they helped supply the Soviet Army. General Brehon Somervell injected a reference to China into news con- ference discussion yesterday of prob- lems confronting the service forces, which he commands, in getting equipment into the Pacific theatre. Unlike the European theatre when there were excellent docks and suffi- cient manpower in Britain to handle the supplies, he said facilities and matilfomm i .rp vf aP-vl mse The campus spirit that pitted sophomore against freshman for the honor of his class in Black Fri- days from the turn of the century until the second war will be roused Class Gaines is in no way connec- ted with the Black Fridays whose memories still live in Union posters, but it is the direct outgrowth of that old Michigan class rivalry. Until it earc "1101 mf 11 fit.R oL.1t s to be worn until the next com- ! encemflenEt. The going got rough when sophomores tried to shoot the flag down. Outlawed in 1940, Class Games, a meeting of dormitory heads Wednes- day. One captain for each class will be chosen from each of the men's dorms-Allen Rumsey, Wenley, Flet- cher, Adams and the combined fra- ternti htv ii function of the Class Games pro- gram. Heyliger will act as coach and adviser for the freshmen, and Riske for the sophomores. The games will be played for noints. In the only contest held thus