AbP 4JLA& t 4hp at lij WEATHER Increased Cloudiness and ildlic 1 VOL. LV, No. 94 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN WEDNESDAY, MARCH 14, 1945 Nazis Attack Rma en Erel Bri ge] PRICE FIVE CENTS head 100,000 Reds Push Across Oder River Russians Reported 33 Miles from Berlin By The Associated Press LONDON, Mar. 14, Wednesday- Marshal Gregory K. Zhukov, achiev- ing a breakthrough in a frontal as- sault toward Berlin, has pushed nearly 100,000 Russian troops across the Oder River between Frankfurt and newly-captured Kuestrin and has sent spearheads within 33 miles of the Reich capital, the Germans said last night. The German DNB agency con- tended the breakthrough was only temporary but said nine Russian divisions now were fighting on the west side of the river on the 16-mile wide, Kuestrin-Frankfurt front. Unconfirmed by Moscow - While the broadcast Soviet com- munique made no mention of any crossings in that critical area, Mos- cow dispatches told of preparatory artillery fire by heavy Russian guns wheeled into- positions in battered Kuestrin. Reports from the Russian capital indicated that three Russian armies were expected to make the massive assault on Berlin. According to the Germans, Rus- sian task forces are attempting to force open the forefeld defense of Berlin in these three areas: Westward from Kietz on the Oder's west bank opposite Kuestrin. In the bridgehead opposite Goer- itz, six miles below Kuestrin. In the Lebus bridgehead, six miles north of Frankfurt. Fighting Is Heavy The Russians breakthrough was secured in, the Lebuis bridgehead area, a Nazi commentator said, add- ing that fighting on the high ground commanding the Frankfurt-Berlin highway w, heavy and fluctuating. Below Danzig in the canal-cut delta area east of the Vistula River, the Russians occupied seven towns including Neukirch, 14 miles south- east of the former free city. Soviet units previously had driven to with- in nine miles northwest and south- west of Danzig. More than 1,000 prisoners were taken by the Russians in the fighting in the Gdynia-Danzig area. Stettinius Group Proposes Plan WASHINGTON, Mar. 13.-()-A system of trusteeships to replace one- nation, mandates for the control of former enemy territories will be pro- posed at the forthcoming San Fran- cisco Security Ccnference. This was learned today as Secre- tary of State Stettinius began pre- liminary conferences with the United States delegation to the meeting, which starts April 25. Stettinius, who is chairman of the group, predicted its members would be able to "work as one team," but at the same time be free to pursue their "personal views and convictions." The trusteeship proposal was not provided in the' Dumbarton Oaks Security plan which will chart the San Francisco parleys. Evidently discussed among the Big Three representatives at Yalta, it is intended as a formula for the dis- position of territories such as the Japanese-mandated islands which now are a part of the Pacific battle- ground, through joint control of two or more powers. CAMPUS EVENTS Today: Prof. Charles Wagner will deliver a lecture in Socie- dad Hispanica series at 8 p.m. in the Union. Today: Copies of the second edi- tion of the V-Ball Extra may be picked up until 5 p.m. at the Student Publications Building. Today and Tomorrow: 3 to 5 p.m. petitioning and interview- ing for seven Assembly Central Committee posi- tions for Assembly-Pan- hel Ball in the Kalama- zoo Room at the League. Today: Piano Recital by Benja- min Owen at 8:30 p.m. in Lydia Mendelssohn Thea- Bombers Hit Japan 's Second Cit 'U.S. First Plunges to Marines Invade Two Islands Off West Coast of Iwo Jima e Osaka Transformed Into Huge Fire Pit By The Associated Press GUAM, Mar. 14, Wednesday- Osaka, factory-congested second city of Japan, was transformed into "a huge pit of fire" by more than 2,000 tons of incendiaries dropped today by a huge force of B-29s which on Monday completely burned out 47,- 600.000 square feet of industrial Na- goya. The first Superfortress pilots back from Osaka, where they gave it the same devastating treatment accord- ed Tokyo Saturday, then Nagoya, Monday, reported four square miles of Osaka were a solid sheet of fire. Reports Are Incomplete Their reports covered only the first three quarters of an hour-before many of an estimated 300 B-29s had unloaded. The first 25 B-29 over Osaka set at least 19 big fires. The Osaka raid, like the big ones at Nagoya and Tokyo, was made in the early morning darkness. The raiders were favored by a sur- face wind which spread the flames, although only a slight wind was en- countered at the bombing altitude. Hit Industrial Area One pilot saw a Japanese fighter plane which declined to come close. Enemy searchlights by the scores stabbed the skies. As in the other saturation attacks which left block after block in flames, Osaka's congested industrial area was the target of today's assault. Prof. Wagner To Disc ss Flk Music of Spain Spanish folk music will be the topic of an address, "Cante Jondo," to be delivered by Prof. Charles Wag- ner of the Romance language de- partment at 8 p. m. today in Rm. 316, the Union. The lecture, to be accompanied by recordings, will deal primarily with the gypsy music of southern Spain. Prof. Wagner will discuss the back- ground and art of the selections. The music, which is Oriental in character, originated with the Arabs who occupied Spain for more than 800 years, Prof. Wagner stated. It was later modified by the gypsies, settling near Granada, who develop- ed a distinctive quality of their own, he commented. The lecture, sponsored by La So- ciedad Hispanica, will be delivered in Spanish. It is open to the public. Music Hour, Seminar To Be Held Today A special music program, spon- sored by the Student Religious Asso- ciation, featuring Beethoven's "Missa Solemnis" will be held at 7:30 p.m. today in the library of Lane Hall. Les Hetenyi, a graduate student in musicalogy, will lead this Association Music Hour. There will also be a seminar on Student Christian Movements held at 4 p.m. today in Lane Hall. Mr. Frank Littell, director of Lane Hall, will lead the discussion. Japs Continue Stand On North Iwo Jima By The Associated Press GUAM, Wednesday, Mar. 14-The Marines made amphibious landings Tuesday on two islets west of Iwo the Navy announced today. Kamgoku Iwa, the northernmost o the two islets, puts the leatherneck almost due west of Kitano Point northern extremity of Iwo where the Japanese continued to hold out yes- terday on the 23rd day of the inva- sion with small arms, machine guns and mortar fire. There were no ap- preciable changes in the Marine lines on Iwo Tuesday. Landing Unopposed The other islet invaded was Kama, due west of the west central coast. Both flank the Iwo sector assigned to Maj. Gen. Keller E. Rockey's Fifth Marine Division. The landings were unopposed. Adm. Chester W. Nimitz' communi- que reporting the landings described the two points as "rocks." Caves Sealed Up On Iwo, a small Japanese pocket on the east coast at Tachiiwa Point, was further reduced Tuesday by Maj. Gen. Clifton B. Cates' Fourth Ma- rine Division. During the day 115 more of the maze of caves used by the Japanese were sealed up. Air Attack Army fighters based on Iwo made new attacks north of Iwo Tuesday on the airfield and harbor at Chichi in the Bonin Islands. The communique belatedly listed attacks on Chichi Sunday and Monday by Army Air- force Liberators. Other air attacks were reported against enemy positions on Babel- thuap in the Palau Islands and on Yap in the western Carolines, both on Tuesday. Four Mmdanao Towns Taken MANILA, Wednesday, March 14- (P)--Forty-first Division troops, seiz- ing four villages north of captured Zamboanga, pursued the disorganized Japanese into the Mindanao hills against increasing resistance Monday while on Luzon the Yanks conquered the southern end of the bitterly-con- tested Shimbu line. Gen. Douglas MacArthur said in his communique today that Maj. Gen. Jens A. Doe's.battle-tested 41st, after capturing the villages of Can- elar, Santa Maria, Sinonog and Pit- ogo, was in hot pursuit of the enemy. Tanks paced the drive. Antipolo, southern anchor of the Shimbu line east of Manila, was cap- tured after a fierce fight. To the south, 11th Airborne Division troops reached Los Banos. site of the former internment camp, and Santo Tomas, on the main rail and highway route into southern Luzon. The 158th Regimental Combat team captured the town of Batangas, capital of Batangas Province, in a swift eastward sweep from Balayan Bay. Batangas is on Batangas Bay, on the north end of the Verde Island passage between Luzon and Min- doro. C0'5 - t STATUTE MILES aBON N G' " E - i K o a r g s w m t e a Uonnef RheInbreltbach *e Bruchhausen re R YOhlenberg , R E MAG EN .L'n z ti DaI enberg Hoenningen Rhine River Isenburg IrohlI "" e uwied CO BLE N Z '' YANK DRIVES ALONG RHINE--Open arrows indicate direction of American drives to expand the Rtemagen bridgehead (shaded area) along the east bank of the Rhine River in Germany. Solid line is the approximate battle front. CAREY iJW 3rdLAM SPAS Nat ional Government Urged To Outlaw Discrimination "If the federal government can prevent discrimination against an em- plIoyee because of his trade union affiliation, it can prevent discrimination against him because of his Skin color," Carey McWilliams, noted sociologist, said yesterday in a lecture sponsored by the Department of Sociology. A national policy, in the form of a Congressional joint resolution is needed to combat the segregation which breeds and perpetuates preju- dice," he continued. "Scientists have showed that prejudice is not based on actual racial difference, but upon Ruhr Super Highway Doughboys Win Heights Controlling Bridgehead; Gains Measured in Yards By The Associated Press PARIS, Wednesday, Mar. 14-The Germans attacked the American Remagen-Erpel bridgehead with at least 60 planes yesterday and fought stubbornly in the hills east of the Rhine River, but U. S. First Army troops pushed relentlessly deeper and reached within two miles of the great six-lane superhighway linking Frankfurt-on-Main and the industrial Ruhr. Gains made by American infantry were measured in yards, but it was pointed out that the advances gave the doughboys control of important heights controlling the bridgehead, which was now being speedily built up with the help of a newly-erected pontoon bridge. Frequent Raids Throughout the day the skies were filled with dogfights as the enemy made frequent raids and fighters of the Ninth Air Force labored to keep them away from the bridgehead area. Half a dozen or more lightning-fast jet-propelled planes were among the enemy attackers in the Germans' strongest air effort since the Rhine crossing March 7. American planes shot down ten, claimed five probables and damaged six while losing four of their own. Anti-aircraft gunners destroyed oth- ers, but no tabulation of their score was yet available. Monday, when the German raids were lighter, ack-ack batteries shot down 19 enemy planes. New Attack While fighting flared over and around the bridgehead, the U. S. Third Army lashed out in a new at- tack on a nine-mile front in the Saar- burg area and advanced up to 2% miles. A field dispatch tonight from Don Whitehead of the Associated Press disclosed for the first time that Lt. Gen. Courtney H. Hodges' First Ar- my engineers had succeeded in throw- ing a temporary bridge across the wide, swift river to share the burden with the shell-scarred rail structure captured in dramatic fashion last Wednesday. Small Yardage Gained Today's bridgehead advances, while not great in yardage, drove the Nazis from high ground east of the Rhine from which their artillery observers had direct observation of both traf- fic-laden spans. The Germans made numerous small counterattacks, all of which were repelled. Over-Opt:i iisni Warned Against 'In Parliament LONDON, March 13-()-War Secretary Sir James Grigg told the House of Commons today that Allied armies were preparing to cross the Rhine in force, then cautioned the cheering members against counting on a quick end of the war. "The position now is that the north bank of the Moselle is rapidly being cleared of the enemy and our forces are preparing for the task of cross- ing the Rhine in force," he said. "In spite of this - miraculous bet- terment in our fortunes it would be unwise to act as if all were over, bar the shouting. In recent months we have had one false dawn and I am sufficient of a pagan not to want to provoke a nemesis." The War Secretary also told the house that after the final victory over Germany a substantial number of men in the British armed service with long periods of duty overseas would be released and men now in civilian "reserved occupations" would be call- ed up. DumbartonPian Popular in N.H. CONCORD, N.H., Mar. 13.-(A)- An indication of the nation's general feeling towards the Dumbarton Oaks Post-War Peace Plan was given to- night by citizens of New Hampshire's 225 communities who voted over- whelmingly for the international pro- posals. Returns from 212 of the towns in the Granite State-one of the coun- try's original 13 colonies-shoed 13,- 847 votes for the plan and 751 a- gainst it. One hundred and two municipalities voted unanimously for Monte pigolno In Appenines Taken by Yanks U.S. Fifth Beats Off Nazi Counterattacks By The Associated Press ROME, Mar. 13-American Fifth Army troops, straightening their Apennine battle line in northern Italy for future operations, have captured Monte Spigolino, a 5,900-foot peak 14 miles northwest of Pistoia, Allied headquarters announced today. Several German counterattacks against the newly-won American po- sitions were beatedloff. Monte Spig- olino is about three miles east of Piansinatico, on highway 12 running from Lucca to Modena. To the west and along the Ligurian sea coast the Germans heavily shelled Allied forward positions. Allied pa- trols made contact with the Germans along the coast. South of Bologna Fifth Army troops advanced about 300 yards, taking several houses less than a mile southwest of Monte Rumici. South of Salvara other units made small advances without encounter- ing any enemy opposition. Bates To0 Attend Union Banquet Former Law School Dean To Give Speech Dr. Henry Moore Bates, former dean of the Law School, will be the featured speaker at the Union Ex- ecutive Council introductory banquet at 12:30 p. m. Saturday in the And- erson room. Dr. Bates, one of the original founders of the Michigan Union in 1907, will give campus newcomers who attend the banquet a brief view of how the Union has become one of the co-ordinating factors in campus activities. Functions of Union Described Jim Plate, '45, council president, will explain some of the functions of the Union and describe many of the projects of the Executive Coun- cil. All men students who are eligible for extra-curricular activities for the first time this semester and all men who are not as yet affiliated with large campus activities are invited to attend this banquet. Purpose of the gathering is to acquaint these men with the varied program of the Exec- utive Council and to urge them to become an active part of this group. Sign Up at Student Office Students who are interested in ex- tra-curricular- activities in general and the Michigan Union in particu- lar may attend the banquet, which is free .of charge, merely by signing up in the Student Offices of the Union before Thursday. There is no obliga- tion attached to signing up. Offices are open daily between 3 and 5 p. m. Film on UT o Be Presented Scenes of campus war activities in the sound and color film, "Michigan on the March," will be shown con- tinuously from noon to 10 p. m. tomorrow at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. "To The Ladies," a movie obtained from the Army which pays tribute to American women and girls in the war effort also will be included. Both films will last 45 minutes and there what people think of that difference, McWilliams pointed out. Proper use of federal legislative facilities, he stated, can bring about a change in that thinking. Wants Program of National Policy McWilliams said that he would like to see the Urban League and the Na- tional Association for the Advance- ment of Colored People, the twoj strongest Negro organizations in the country, put forth a program of na- tional policy and ask for its support by non-partisan groups. "What can organized Jewish groups, organized Catholic groups, the National Council of Churches, and organized labor groups do but support such a pro- gram?" he asked. "The elimination of the poll tax won't result in many more Negroes voting," the sociologist remarked. The remedy, he declared, is to be found in the second clause of the fourteenth amendment which states that it dis- crimination in a state is practiced so as to reduce the electorate appreciab- ly, then the representation of that state to Congress shall be reduced proportionately. Embarassing Situation "I wonder how effectively we can argue for the protection of European racial minorities at the peace table," McWilliams remarked. The embar- assing situation has come up at Dum- barton Oaks and will arise again in San Francisco, he warned. "The reason I think we face a con- tinuing crisis is because our unof- ficial policy of education and segre- gation has broken down. We fail to see that the racial minorities have outgrown this pattern," McWilliams' declared. Education has reached the point where it can proceed no fur- ther under segregation, he said. Prejudice is Too Costly As an example he cited the case of Gaines vs. Missouri in which the Su- preme Court ruled that the state of Missouri must either admit Gaines, a Negro law student to its state uni- versity or provide other means for his education. The state chose to erect another law school which accepted only Negroes. LAND OF THE MAHARA JAHS: Fisher To Give Final Oratorical Lecture Tomorrow "The Land of the Maharajahs" will come alive in Hill auditorium at 8:30 p. m. tomorrow when "Singapore Joe" Fisher discusses his films in the concluding lecture of the Oratorical Association series. The films are part of a series of pictures which Fisher has recorded, as a hobby, of every interesting place or unusual event that came his way. Christened "Singapore Joe" by the Sultan of Johore, Fisher still treas- ures the diamond-studded cigarette case and holder given him in a recep- tion at the Sultan's palace. He own- ed a chain of movie theatres through- out the East, as varied as the people who gathered in them. Some, like the famous Capitol Theatre in Singa- pore, were luxurious with silk hang- ings and plush-covered seats; others Born in Capetown, he fell into the motion picture business naturally. His father operated the biggest movie chain in the Union of South Africa and was dazzling the natives with two-reelers as far back as the turn of the century, at which time the chain's legal interests were represented by the law firm of Gandhi and Pollock! VnulPAWna. MA" . .............