'R14 Y Sir 43rn1 DiaiIi WEATHER Fair and warmer with increasing cloudiness VOL. LV., No. 28 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, DEC. 3, 1944 PRICE FIVE CENTS Ruthven Supports Post-War Program Of Preparedness, Questions Value of Compulsory Military Training, Favors National Service Plan By STAN WALLACE President Alexander G. Ruthven took a stand in favor of a broad program of national preparedness following the war, said "the nature of the program can only be determined when postwar conditions are known," and questioned the value "of compulsory military training in the strict sense," in an exclusive Daily interview yesterday. Dr. Ruthven, who has been in close touch with educational and service leaders on the subject, advocated a program of "broad national service to include education, health, military training and spiecial efforts to promote international intellectual cooperation." Patton Enters. Saar Valley Fort; Aerial Blows Rock Jap Airdromes . "Assuming that we must have compulsory military training after the war," he declared, "I feel it would be a very great mistake to have a continuous year of military training for our young men and women interested in going to col- lege to fit themselves for particu- lar occupations." He strongly emphasized that "should there be another war after this one, this war has taugnt us it will be one of highly trained and technical people, and our national security would suffer if compulsory training interrupted their studies so that enough specialists were not available if needed." President Ruthven, who has long been associated with improving edu- cational techniques, returned to cam- pus only last Thursday after study- ing the educational program of the Naval Air Station at Pensacola, Fla. and other bases. Pointing to current discussion of postwar military training, the pres- ident stated "this is highly import- and and has value in bringing out alU facts and shades of opinion so t04t people can make intelligent decisions." "0ut we can make no definite de- cision now. This is not a matter for black and white determination at this time since we can't foresee what our eeds will be after the war," he declared.. Dr. Ruthven affirmed his support for some kind of a postwar military establishment. and likened it to a "police force. Something of this nature will be necessary," he asserted. Rather than a program that would produce a large force of trained men in a fully equipped military force, Dr. Ruthven prefers for college stu- dents,"an enlargement and improve- ment of ROTC programs with com- pulsory training limited to attend- ance at campus for two or three summers." Mortarboard To Offer Help .For Veterans Veterans of World War II on cam- pus will be aided by the annual pro- ject of Mortarboard, Senior women's honorary society, it was, announced by Vice-president Anne Terbrueggen. Men who have been out of school for a year or more will be offered tutoring in general or specific sub- jects.- Mortarboard's twenty members will offer as many subjects as possi- ble to the more than three hundred veterans on campus. The help of volunteer non-members of the group as well as paid professional tutoring will be provided. Laszlo Hetenyi of the campus Vet- eran's Organization will work closely with Miss Terbrueggen in making veterans aware of the opportunity and in enrolling them. Those veterans not affiliated with the Veterans Organization or the newly-formed American Legion Post on campus who wish to use the pro- ect are asked to get in touch with Mortarboard by putting their name, address, telephone number, class, and the subjects in which they de- sire help in -President Betty Wille- min's box in the undergraduate of- fice of the League. CAMPUS EVENTS Today David Holland presents an organ recital at 4:15 p.m. in Hill Auditorium featuring Bach. Today Ohio State - Michigan football movies will be chnwm in th Un in a t Russians Drive Along Danube Near Budapest Spearheads Are Within 43 Miles of Magyar City By The Associated Press LONDON, Dec. 2.-Russian tanks and motorized infantry raced toward Budapest along the west side of the Danube River tonight and also drove to within 74 miles of the Austrian frontier. Berlin declared that Soviet spear- heads were only 43 miles from the southern outskirts of the imperilled Hungarian capital. 300 Localities Captured In a 21-mile-deep breakthrough on a 50-mile front Marshal Feodor I. Tolbukhin's Third Ukraine Army units overran 300 localities in south- western Hungary, Premier-Marshal Stalin announced in a special order of the day. These included the strongholds and important communication cen- ters of Pa s, Szekszard, Dombovar and Kaposvar, the last only 28 miles from strategic Lake Balaton guard- ing the southeastern approaches to Austria. "The breach appears tragic," said a Berlin radio commentator. "The Russians are out to envelop all west- ern Hungary and Budapest on a grand scale." Railroad Section Seized Speeding forward at almost a mile- an-hour clip, the Russians seized a 16-mile section of the vital Buda- pest-Zagreb-Trieste railway, linking the outflanked Hungarian capital with the Axis front in northern Italy, by capturing Kaposvar. Kaposvar, the major point taken nearest the Austrian frontier is on the edge of a plain extending to Lake Balaton and the southernmost Reich territory. It is 95 miles southwest of Budapest and 93 miles northeast of Zagreb, Axis puppet Croatian capital. The capture of Dombovar, another eight-way road junction 16 miles to the east, gave the Russians control of part of the important trunk railway connecting the Axis Hungarian-Yu- goslav-Italian fronts. Detroit Dod e Walkout Ends DETROIT, DEC. 2-(P)-One De- troit war plant strike ended today but two others, involving 9,600 work- ers, continued. The first of 1,300 employes on all shifts at the aircraft engine division of Chrysler Corporation's Dodge main plant returned to their jobs after voting in a union mass meeting this morning to end their strike which began Thursday. The strikers, members of United Automobile Workers (CIO) Local 3, were engaged in work on engines for Superfortress bombers. Yank Airmen Bomb Shipping In Philippines Ground Action in Leyte Halted by Tropic Rains By The Associated Press Heavy attacks by American fliers against Japanese airdromes and ship- ping throughout the Philippines were reported by Gen. Douglas MacArthur today. As the Yank airmen in the far west Pacific continued to neutralize the Japanese aerial threat to Ameri- can liberation forces on Leyte Island, it was officially disclosed that other U. S. fliers blasted Iwo Jima, in the Volcano Islands, along the B-29 path- way to Tokyo. Iwo was hit for the fifth time in four days by AAF Liberators. The island is only 750 miles south of Tokyo. The Japanese have been using Iwo as an aerial base from which to attack the Superfortress fields on Saipan Island. Leyte Action Stalled Ground action on Leyte was stall- ed by continued tropical rains. The bad weather, however, did not ground planes. The Japanese struck in force against Yang Carigara Bay posi- tions on northern Leyte. American airmen lashed enemy airfields on Luzon and Mindanao Islands on Ley- te's northern and southern flanks, and hit shipping to the west. Meanwhile the Japanese, without American confirmation, claimed that Nippon para-troops were landed on eastern Leyte a week ago and that air scouts report they "have made death-defying penetrations at im- portant points" on two airfields "and caused great war result." Burma Road Town Takent In the southwest the Chinese cap- tured Chefang, nekt to the last Bur- ma Road town held by the Japanese on the Yunnan front. American Liaison units and Yank airmen aided the Chinese in seizing the town. Only about 24 miles of the Burma Road remains to be taken before the Chinese will be in position to hit the China-Burma border city of Want-. ing. In the northeast however the Jap- anese were acknowledged by the Chi- nese high command to have pene- trated Kweichow province. Its cap- ital, Kweiyang, is a Burma Road terminal some 235 miles south of Chungking. McKay, GOP Boss, Indicted Michigan Republican Faces Graft Charge LANSING, DEC. 2-(IP)-Swift trial awaits Frank D. McKay, Grand Rap- ids capitalist and one-time overlord of Michigan Republican politics, and1 his two co-defendants, special prose- cutor Kim Sigler declared today as the Carr Grand Jury issued warrants charging the trio conspired to cor- rupt the 1943 state legislature. Named with McKay as defendants are Floyd Fitzsimmons, of Benton Harbor, lobbyist, former promoter of prize fights, and pal of sports world big shots, and Rep. William Green, Hillman Republican. Green pre- viously was accused by the grand jury of soliciting a bribe to influence his vote as a legislator, but was not brought to trial. A heartening story of unsung hero- ism and unstinting effort on the part of the students and faculty at the University of Leningrad in the face of bitter defeat was cabled to the students of the University in a spe- cial message last night. The cable, transmitted directly to The Daily, told a story of half- starved scientists and their devoted students sticking to their research in the midst of the dark days of the siege of Leningrad. The cablegram took the form of a letter of greeting and was signed by the Rector of the University and thirty professors representing the faculty and the Russian Academy of Sciences organized into the "Soviet Scientists Anti-Fascist Committee." Two-Fold Celebration The message came on the occasion of the two-fold celebration of stu- tents re-entering their university buildings which they nave been re- building and on the 125th anniver- sary of the founding of the university in 1819. "We the faculty and students of Leningrad University assembled at a conference dedicated to the 125th birthday of our Alma Mater send greetings to our colleagues and com- rades in arms," the cable said. "We remember the friendly mes- sages from your University . . . these, it will be remembered, came SiXth War Loan Drive Sales Hit New Heights The second week of the Sixth War Loan Drive closed yesterday with University bond sales almost five times greater than the total of the previous week. . Bond Belles canvassing the campus for purchasers have amassed a total sales of $28,133, compared to the $5,839 mark of a week ago. The University goal is $100,000. County totals were about nine times greater during the same time. BOND BOX We have ... County ........ . .... $4,911,465 University .......... $ 28,133 We need .. . County . . ........... $3,252,535 University .......... $ 71,869 The latest high is $4,911,465, com-] pared to $527,153 of eight days ago. County purchase are now past the half way mark toward the $8,164,000 goal. Frances Goldberg, heading the Bond Belles of the Junior Girls Pro- ject, commended the Belles' coopera- tion, which she called "excellent so far." Post-War Conscription To Be MYDA Topic Monday Michigan Youth for Democratic Action (MYDA) will meet at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Union for the first of a series of discussions on Post-War Military Training. . Participants in the introductory debate will be Herbert Otto and Harold Lester of the Veteran's Or- ganization, and Ann Fagan Ginger. to hearten us in those perilous days when our university building was nearing its end," the message con- tinued. The message reminded the world of the three-year struggle with the "German invader" about Leningrad and in unvarnished language called upon all free peoples to unite in the final hour to bring victory to the "Anglo-Soviet-American coalition." "The final blow must be struck with all our might. our. resources, our weapons, and our ingenuity. We call upon scientists of all advanced Becker Will Open Series, UNSUNG HEROISM, UNSTINTING EFFORT: Leningrad Students, Faculty Cable Message Telling of CollegeLife, Research in War American Tradition Political. Is Topic Prof. Carl L. Becker, noted author, historian and political scientist of Cornell University, will speak on "The American Political Tradition" at 8:15 p.m. tomorrow in the lecture hall of the Rackham building. The lecture is the first in a series of five talks by Prof. Becker on the theme of "Freedom and Responsi- bility in the American Way of Life." The talks will be given Monday through Friday under the auspices of the William W. Cook Foundation for Lectures on American Institu- tions. Five-Day Series The Monday lecture is the only one to be presented in the evening. The succeeding four talks will begin at 4:15 p.m. Tuesday through Friday. They are "Freedom of Speech and the Press," Tuesday; "Freedom of Learning and Teaching," Wednes- day; "Constitutional Government," Thursday, and "Private Economic Enterprise," Friday. Prof. Becker, before becoming a member of the faculty at Cornell in 1917, taught at Pennsylvania Col- lege, Dartmouth, Kansas and Minne- sota. He is a graduate of the Uni- versity of Wisconsin. Is Recent Author He is a past president of the American Historical Association and has written several books. His latest volume, entitled "How New Will the Better World Be," was published a year ago. The lectures by Prof. Becker are the first in the Cook Foundation pro- gram for the coming year. Mr. Cook, who was a Michigan alumnus and distinguished member of the New York bar, provided for the creation of the lectureship on American insti- tutions in a bequest to the University. Dean E. Blythe Stason of the law school will introduce Prof. Becker Monday evening. Dean Edward H. Kraus will preside. Faenza Flanks Fall to Allies ROME, DEC. 2-(P)-Two positions north and south of Faenza have fal- len to Allied Armies, headquarters announced today, as the German withdrawal through the mountains toward the Po plain continued in the face of threats against the enemy's eastern flank. Indian troops of the British Eighth Army seized strongly-defended Al- bereto, a village five miles northeast of Faenza, capturing 100 prisoners. The U. S. Fifth Army, swinging across the Lamone River which blocks the approaches to Faenza, oc- cupied Monte Giornetto, 11 miles west, southwest of the city. World Noted Artist, Josef Lhevinne, Dies NEW YORK. Dec. 2.-UP)-Josef democratic countries to rally all their strength for this blow. "Victory is near. But to hasten it we must exert our efforts to the utmost. We call upon scientists of all freedom-loving lands not to relax the struggle for a single moment." Under Constant Fire With bombing attacks an almost hourly occurrence, and with mortar and shell fire blending into a "never ending melody of death" the message tells us how Leningrad scientists took their students underground into halls, basements to continue their work. Men and research data were dropped into Leningrad during the nights to give new life to the "struggling students" and from their research new weapons and industrial techniques were invent- ed and discovered. After the siege was broken early this year, this report relates how both faculty and students returned to the city in great numbers to bol- ster those who had remained "to begin, themselves, to restore our University." "Doctors, engineers, mathemati- cians became painters, carpenters, plumbers and brick masons to erase the havoc wrought by Fascist Ger- many," the greeting related in telling how college men and women went without sleep and food to furnish the reconstruction. Looks Toward Future Looking to the future which is being fashioned today by the "heroic efforts of the Red Army and our Anglo-American Allies," the message See LENINGRAD, Page 8 Wallis, Barnard Named Men's Judiciary Heads James E. Wallis, '45 NROTC, was appointed president and Richard Barnard, '45 NROTC, secretary of Men's Judiciary Council yesterday by the present members of the Council and Dean ' of Students, Joseph A. Bursley. The new officers, both studying in the Engineering School, are promi- nent in campus activities. Wallis, a member of Sigma Phi Epsilon, is a battalion officer in the NROTC and Barnard, a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon, has been on the track team for three years. He is a member of Triangles, Vulcans and 'M' Clubs, honor societies. Both men will serve for one school year. Other members of the Men's Judi- ciary Council are Tom Bliska, presi- dent of the Union, Charles Walton, president of the Engineering Council, and Bliss Bowman, president of In- terfraternity Council. Positions now vacant are those customarily filled by the Managing Editor of The Mi- chigan Daily and the president of Men's Congress. The powers of the Men's Judiciary Council include supervision of stu- dent elections, regulation of initia- tions and general conduct of all hon- or societies, establishment of rules concerning campus dances and the investigation of student conduct cases referred to it by the Dean of Students or initiated by the Council itself. Union Officers To Be Selected An all-campus election will be held Wednesday afternoon to select vice- presidents for the Men's Union from the Medical, Literary and Dental Schools, members of the Union nom- inating committee announced yester- day. Candidates selected by the com- mittee for the election included James Galles, Michael L. Cancilla and Ken- U.S. First, Ninth Armies Press To Roer River Seventh Wipes Out Nazi Rhine Bridgehead By The Associated Press PARIS, DEC. 2-Lt. Gen. George S. Patton's Third Army troops fought their way deeply into burning Saar- lautern, Saar basin fortress and In- dustrial city, today and to the north the U. S. First and Ninth Armies pressed ahead to the Roer River against the heaviest opposition of the winter offensive. U. S. Seventh Army troops wiped out the last remnants of the Ger- man bridgehead at the approaches to the now demolished Rhine bridges in Strasbourg. Saarlautern in Flames Following attacks by nearly 250 medium and light U. S. Ninth Air Force bombers which left Saarlautern in flames and tore open nearby Sieg- fried Line defenses, third Army doughboys entered the Saar city at two points. The Americans then fanned out over most of that part of the city which lies west of the Saar River. The 90th and 95th Divisions, with elements of the Tenth Armored Di- vision screening them to the north, now hold a 14-mile stretch along the Saar between Merzig and Saarlau- tern. The vital Saar basin has been gouged deeply by Third Army ad- vances, but the river still is a bar- rier to the greater part of this heav- ily industrial region. The Germans apparently hope to make a strong stand along this natural line. Tanks, Infantry Inside Saare Troops of the 26th Infantry Divi- sion teamed up with fourth Armored Division tanks and were fighting In.- side of Saare Union, 12 miles south of the Saar border, where the Yanks are moving up the east bank of the Saar River in a potential outflanking threat to Saarbrucken. In this area, the Germans launch- ed two of the fiercest counterat- tacks yet made in the current of- fensive, using 40 to 50 tanks. Fight- er bombers came to the aid of the doughboys knocking out at least six tanks and the attacks were repulsed. These attacks, however, did per- mit the Germans to reenter Mack- willer, according to field dispatches. To the north, at the edge of the Cologne plain, gains of yards were bought at a high cost of American blood in the giant battle that was entering its 16th day. The Ninth army occupied Linnich up to the River Roer tonight and has captured Liefarth between Beeck and Lindern, a late field dispatch said to- night.) Thus, virtually the -entire Ninth Army stood on the west bank of the Roer after recapturing two towns lost yesterday. Fighting continued in Beeck, to the west, and before Lindern, now in American hands. Krug Says War Need May Slow Reconversion WASHINGTON, DEC. 2-(A')-The armament task now in sight may re- tard reconversion for some time after Germany collapses, War Production Board Chairman J. A. Krug said to- day. He made that observation in dis- closing that $500,000,000 worth of new plant construction is planned to boost production of shells for in- fantry mortars. The drive meanwhile to get lag- ging production programs of other war implements up to the pace need- ed to meet the demands of all-out war on two major fronts is showing "excellent progress," Krug told a news conference. New workers, he said, are entering war plants in "encouraging" num- bers. The unexpectedly rapid advance against Japan, piling new Pacific de- mands atop the heavy requirements of Europe, has caused the Army to revise its V-E Day cuthaek n .n: VIOLIN VIRTUOSO: Carroll Glenn Announces Program Carroll Glenn, young American vio- linist, who will be heard at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday in Hill Auditorium at the fifth Choral Union concert, will play the following program: Sonata No. 1 in B Minor .......Bach Sonata No, 3 in D Minor, op. 108 .. Brahms Poene .......... ........... ....Chausson Sonatina for violin and piano.......... ............................Carlos Chavez Prelude in C-sharD minor.... ........ sic to study with Edouard Dethier, Belgian violinist. When he learned her age, he did not wish to have so young a pupil, but her playing con- vinced him that sherwas a great tal- ent, and he accepted her. In spite of her devotion to her art, however, Miss Glenn had to go to school each day like the other chil-