'RIG L2 46F flit t n r g IW"WF ait WEATHER Occasional rains with slight temperature changes ,,. J- VOL. LV, No. 2 :9 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, DEC. 5, 1944 PRICE FIVE CENTS a a61aLL AV avJD Va:t17A0 University Appoints Four Men to Key Positions 7 A Time of i e Pressure, ' Says Becker Celebrated Historian Opens Lecture Series "We are living in a time of pres- sure, offered a choice between de-. pression and mass unemployment as the price of peace or employment brought by total war," Prof. Carl L. Becker, eminent American histo- rian, said last night in the first of the initial series of William W. Cook L'etures on American Institutions at the Rackham Building. "We can't solve this paradox by letting it ride," Prof. Becker warn- ed, "but we must recognize our com- munal responsibilities, we must be- come more serious about our govern- ment." Speaking on the "American Politi- cal Tradition," Prof. Becker urged a more responsible approach * to the citizen's duties to government as well as benefits derived from it. The talk was the first of a five-lecture series on the general topic "Freedom and Responsibility in the American Way of Life." Emphasizes Responsibility For every freedom enumerated in American government, he stated, a responsibility is implied. "One man's liberty may be another man's bond- age," Prof. Becker added. Citizens of the United States can no longer afford to take for.granted either their freedom or their government, he warned. We must seek the solution to our problems in the re-evaluation of our liberties and in the recognition of our group responsibilities. Prof. Becker traced the American political tradition that government is "a necessary evil." He emphasized that Americans could no longer be disinterested in government, or could afford to view political campaigns as good-humored contests in which any outcome was not particularly urgent. To Be Published The lectures by the Cornell histo- rian will be published in book-form later. Subsequent lectures will be "Freedom of Speech and the Press," today; "Freedom of Learning and Teaching," Wednesday; "Constitu- tional Government," Thursday; and the concluding lecture Friday, "Pri- vate Economic Enterprise." All lec- tures will be given at 4:15 p. m. in the Rackham Amphitheatre. Reds Advance Within 40 Miles Of Budapest LONDON, DEC. 4-(1)-Red Army spearheads had thrust tonight to the flat, south shore of Lake Balaton in southwestern Hungary, and to with- in 40 miles of Budapest on the Dan- ube's west bank, Berlin broadcasts said. There was no immediate confirma- tion from Moscow that units of Mar- shal Feodor 1. Tolbukhin's Third Ukraine Army had reached the com- paratively shallow, 50-mile long lake guarding the approaches to Austria, but the speed of his advance tended to bear out the German report. A Moscow dispatch said one of Tolbukhin's Battalions had covered 100 miles in 24 hQurs and pictured the German and Hungarian opposition as stunned and reeling before the swift- ness of his attack. Berlin admitted that Soviet forces I had thrust beyond Bunafoldvar, fort- ress on the Danube's west bank that fell to the Russians yesterday, to within 40 miles of the Hungarian capital. These Red Army forces were driv- ing toward Budapest for a possible assault from the rear. . . _ _ _. : I _ __ _!". c 2 00 .. . SIATUYI MILES Wj fRr ATI SWEDENAilAV iebsk DENMARKLTHUANIA * ENGLAND BaltSea °n Smo en a a oldap M HOLLAND"H riGrodnoD Gomel Ostra eenBERPOLAND LONDON RUSSIA D , WARSAW / RlHR GERMANY AKiev. !e H Krakow twow Berdichev SAARPragueC -p Metz rgeCZECHOes PAR4- Karlsruhe SLOVAKA C Utk- .Kasa-Cernaut * Munic Cndo e J el fort 48udapest FRANCE AUSTRIA SWITZERLAND HUNGARY *yocc / 4-.4 - // ROMANIA- PloesIt. :..Po ..Belgrade . G ur n o eB >"Bucharest" *Toulouse /oG, it 0Se /&donub' -Livorno = * -ToulonTALY. BULGARIA s Sol 1,4 (cRSK ROSk.AMA A ESTIMATED GERMAN STRENGTH CONFRONTING ALLIES--Arrows show current Allied offensives in Europe and numbers indicate the reported disposition of German combat divisions. British army sources estimate the Germans have 70 divisions on ti he Western front, 20 in Scandinavia, 140 on the Eastern front, 20 in the Balkans, 30 in Italy and 20 i uside Germany. The Allies on the Western front are driving toward the Ruhr, the Saar and Karlsruh e. Present Russian action is in Czechoslovakia and Hungary. Bologn, is the key point on the Italian front. Pre-war Germany (1938) is shown in black. Class Officers In Engineering To Be Elected Voting Will Be Held In Arch Tomorrow Three of the nine men who sub- mitted petitions will be chosen offi- cers of the class of 1945, College of Engineering, in the voting to be held tomorrow in the Engine Arch. President, vice-president and sec- retary-treasurer will be chosen from the group that includes Richard Barnard, Robert Champion, William Culligan, Donald Davie, Nicholas Krusko, Francis Nutto, Robert Pre- cious, James Wallis and Richard Seitz. Voters will list their first, second, and third choices for their class officers, rather than vote separately for each office. The three candi- dates receiving the most votes will assume office, the highest total nam- ing the president. All 1945 graduates, including Naval personnel that ordinarily would grad- uate next year, will be eligible to vote. They must present their iden- tification cards, which will be punch- ed as they vote.- Sophomores petitioning for posi- tions on the Engineering Council will be chosen at the same time by mem- bers of their class. Two of these three- Charles Helmick, Richard Mixer and George Spaulding-will be elected, serving until their gradua- tion. 'Cig' Inquiry Asked I WASHINGTON, Dec. 5.-(/P-The Federal Trade Commission is going to try its hand at finding out where the cigarettes have gone. Chairman I Wheeler (Dem., Mont.) of the Senate Interstate Commerce Committee re- quested the investigation. FOR YOUNG INVALII)S: 'Galens' To Solicit Funds for Hospital Children's Workshop ThirdArmy Drive Nears Key City Advances Made on 21 Mile Lorraine Front By The Associated Press WITH, THE U.S. THIRD ARMY, Dec. 4.-(7:30 p.m.)-The U.S. Third Army resumed its advance late today on a 21-mile front in Lorraine, driv- ing within six and a half miles of Saarbrucken, capital of the threat- ened Saarland. Other units were fighting to clean out the eastern part of Saarlautern beyond the captured Saar River bridge. Units of the Sixth Armored Divi- sion entered Diebling, 5% miles west of Sarreguemines, and captured. nearby Theding. Threaten Coal Mines Beating off counterattacks by an enemy alarmed at the rising menace to his coal mines and factories, the Third hurled more tanks and infan- try into its expanding Saar River bridgehead at Saarlautern and fought deeper into the Siegfried Line. The line's big guns blazed away at Saarlautern and its captured bridge, but Lt.-Gen. George S. Patton's troops seized control of most of the Saar's second city and extended their grip on the west bank of the river to a distance of 16 miles. As the mighty Allied win-the-war offensive thundered into another week, the U.S. First Army pushed farther along the Aachen-Cologne superhighway to within 500 yards of the Roer River. They were 22 airline miles from Cologne's western out- skirts. Along the Roer River line, where the Germans have massed the greater part of their tanks and a third of their infantry to protect the Ruhr, the U.S. Ninth Army battled to drive the last desperate defenders from the west bank at the river fortress of Julich. Destroys Bridgehead The British Second Army to the northwest wiped out the enemy bridgehead on the west bank of the Maas River at Venlo, and drove the Germans back across the stream with their backs to the Reich. The German position on the Alsa- tian plain was deteriorating, and a front dispatch said resistance ap- peared broken southwest of Selestat, where the U.S. Seventh Army was about 26 miles from the French First Army fighting up from the south toward Colman. All resistance ended in Strasbourg, and American forces swinging north- west of the city seized Zinswiller, nine miles south of the German Palatinate, a region of agriculture and industry lying east of the Saar: Mail Christmas Parcels Early Oswald J. Koch, local postmaster, issued a plea yesterday for early mailing of Christmas packages and cards. Railroad facilities will soon be overcrowded with Christmas mail and parcels, and last-minute mailing this year will undoubtedly result in after- Christmas deliveries, he stated. To avoid delay and disappoint- ment, Christmas gifts should be mail- ed now, since transport facilities are taxed to the limit with war traffic, which takes precedence over all oth- ers, he said. Christmas gifts mailed early may be marked "Do not open until Christ- mas." I Niehuss, Briggs T o Be New Vice-Presidents Herbert Watkins Named as Secretary; Adams To Assume Provost Duties Jan.1 In a move designed to "reorganize top administrative posts" President Alexander G. Ruthven yesterday announced four new appointments to key administrative posts aimed "at preparing the University to meet post-war problems." A general survey within the administrative set-up was conducted by a committee of the Board of Regents and duties and responsibilities of the new vice-presidential positions were streamlined, the president indicated. The new, appointments are: Prof. Marvin L. Niehuss of the Law School and Prof. Robert P. Briggs of the business administration school were named vice-presidents "of equal rank." Funds to maintain the children's workshop on the ninth floor of the University Hospital will be solicited by the Galens, the honorary under- graduate medical fraternity, in their annual sale of tags Friday and Sat- urday, December 8 and 9. Goal of the Galens will be to bet- ter the $3,000 they raised in their two-day drive last year, Robert Ide- son, Med. '45, chairman of the drive, has announced. To help relieve the restlessness of the younger children when confined to the hospital, the Galens have fur- nished a junior sized workshop, com- plete with jigsaw, hammers, saws and woodburners, reserved exclusively for recuperating patients between the ages of seven and 13. There for two hours every week- day afternoon the children are allow- * G reePartisans Get Ultimatum ATHENS, Dec. 4.-(/P)-An ulti- matum to quit the Athens area was served on armed men of the leftist EAM (National Liberation Front) today as the bullet-punctuated Greek crisis mounted with a general strike and open battle in one section of! the capital. .Martial law and a curfew were imposed by Premier George -Papan- dreou's British-supported govern- ment. The crisis was precipitated by EAM refusal to disarm and disband its militia, -the Elas. The EAM insisted! that the mountain brigade formed in exile under Papandreou's regime be demobilized simultaneously and charged it had right-wing tendencies. ed to make practically any wood cre- ation they desire, with the aid of the plans, materials and equipment pro- vided by the Galens. 'Bond Buying Battalion To Get Football To stimulate sales of War Bonds during the Sixth War Loan Drive, Naval authorities on campus yester- day offered a new Michigan football, inscribed with the autographs of all members of the team, to the battal- ion purchasing the largest amount of bonds, Yesterday was pay-day for Naval trainees on the campus, Lt. Paul Blansett, in charge of bond sales, said, and the bluejackets purchased bonds in denominations of E, F and G. Total purchases have not been tallied yet, Blansett said. In the county, sales approached the $8,164,000 goal as more than $5,000,000 in bonds of all denomina- tions were purchased. With only 12 more days remaining to the Sixth War Loan Drive, faculty members, administration members, and students have bought a total of $32,195 in war bonds. Competition among Bond Belle teams is being led by team 15, headed by Beverly Wittan and selling to administration members, with 66 sales to its credit. Second is Jean Gaffney's team two, engineering school, which has sold 50 bonds. Selling to Law School, Pat Barrett's team five is third with 43 sales. Fourth is team one, selling to literary school and headed by Barb Osborne, with 42 sales. Although competition at the pres- ent time is being based on the num- ber of sales, in order to be fair to the teams with small schools, final stand- ings will be made on the basis of the ratio between the number of bonds sold and the number of persons ap- proached, Frances Goldberg, chair- man of the drive, announced yester- day. U Veterans To Hold Meeting Laszlo Hetenyi, president of the Veterans Organization issued a spe- cial call to campus veterans to at- tend the regular meeting to be held at 7 p. m. tomorrow in the Union. At the same time he reminded all candidates for office to obtain eligi- Adams Named Provost Dr. James P. Adams, now vice- president of Brown University, whose appointment as provost was an- nounced two weeks ago, will assume his duties here Jan. 1, 1945. At their last meeting, the Board of Regents elevated Herbert G. Wat- kins from assistant secretary to sec- retary and assistant vice-president to aid in the work of conducting Uni- versity business activities. President Ruthven outlined three pressing reasons explaining why these changes are being made at this time. The "postwar problems we can see before us, the need for immediate preparation to meet them, and va- cancies in staff positions now or soon to exist," were cited. Meads 'U' Program Since early 1942, Professor Niehuss has been director of Division for Em- ergency Training and it has been his duty to organize and superivse all service programs on campus as well as other University war work. A native of Louisville, Ky., where he was born in 1903, Prof. Niehuss received his A. B. here in 1925 and his LL.B in 1930. He has been or the law school staff since 1933 with the exception of two years from 1934- 36 in private practice in Chicago. To Conduct Public Relations In his new role as University vice- president, Prof. Niehuss will assume responsibility for the relations of the University with other institutions and groups. This appointment fills a position which has been vacant since the retirement of Dr. James Bruce in 1942. Speaking of his past record, Dr, Ruthven stated "his experience and record have shown he is fully able to serve as the coordinator and ad- viser in formulating University plans and activities that affect our rela- tions with other institutions and or- ganizations." He was appointed as of Dec. 1. Will Direct 'U' Business Prof. Briggs, who has been on leave of absence in war service for the past two years, as a vice-president will assume the responsibility of direct- See APPOINTMEN'TS, Page 4 Soong Takes New Duties as Premier, CHUNGKING, Dec. 4.-(iP)-For- eign Minister T. V. Soong, brother of Mrs. Chiang Kai-Shek, assumed the duties of Premier of China today in a popular move apparently paving the way for a working agreement between the central government anc the Communists of north China. Soong's attitude toward the Com- munists is known to be moderate, and his accession to greater influence comes coincidentally with uncon- firmed reports of an agreement in principle between the two parties tc wage a common war against Japan. Aid Stethtnts MacLeislh, Rockefeller, Clayton Also Appointed By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Dec. 4.-Direction of the nation's foreign affairs, alrea- dy under a new Secretary of State, was put almost entirely in new hands today by a sweeping top-level shake- up. The resignations of three-old-line officials were accepted with regret, and President Roosevelt appointed the following men to aid Secretary Edward Ri. Stettinius: Under-Secretary-Joseph C. Grew, blue-blooded Bostonian, career dip- lomat and first-hand studet of Japan, where he was ambassador for nine years prior to Pearl Harbor. Assistant Secretary William L. Clayton of Texas, who rose from an $8 a week stenographer's job to be the world's largest cotton merchant, MacLeish Appointed Assistant Secretary - Archibald MacLeish, poet, soldier, and editor who is now Librarian of Congress and once headed the Office of Facts and Figures, forerunner of OW. Assistant Secretary-Nelson Rock- efeller, grandson of "John D." and now coordinator of inter-American affairs. The appointments put heavy em- phasis on economic affairs in foreign policy. The only experienced diplo- matist in the list sent to the Senate for confirmation is Grew. Clayton, who formerly headed the cotton brokerage firm of Anderson, Clayton and Company, Texas, was until recently Surplus War Property Administrator, but served notice he would not take charge of the job of disposing of such property under a newly-enacted law, which he con- sidered inadequate. In his State Department post he will be in charge of economic affairs. Overseas Public Relations MacLeish will have charge of cul- tural and public relations. Rockefel- ler will oversee Latin-American rela- tions, with an assignment also to integrate the work of his present office into the State Department while terminating its strictly war- time activities "as war conditions permit.' The biggest surprise among the resignations was in the case of Berle. Breckinridge Long is in ill health and currently resting in Florida. G. How- land Shaw desires to leave govern- ment work, at least for the time being, to do rehabilitation work with the nation's wayward boys. Later if the federal government joins in this worki he may return to government service. These sweeping changes leave only one of former Secretary Cordell Hull's assistants in office. That is Dean Acheson who will have general responsibility for State Department relations with Congress and also will deal with international conferences. Union Will Conduct Election Tomorrow Election of vice-presidents of the Union from the Medical, Literary and Dental Schools will take place tomor- row. In order to vote, members must carry their identification cards, which will be punched. No campaigning will be allowed within 50 feet of the ballot boxes. Ballot boxes will be located at the inside door of the Engineering Arch, on the main floor Grew Named to New Posct To YOUNG VIOLINIST: Carroll Gleno,, lup' pear l Choral Union Co,,1cerl Io-igh!, SEA, AIR BATTLE: 6 Jap Forces Each Lose Destroyerinr Clash off Leyte CAMPUS EVENTS Today Prof. Carl Becker of Cor- nell speaks on second Cook Lecture series at 4:15 p.m. in the Rackham Amphitheatre. Today Carroll Glenn, violinist. 8:30 p.m. at Hill Aud. Dec. 6 Veterans Organization meets at 7:00 p. i., ion, Carroll Glenn, young American vi- olinist, will be heard at 8:30 p. m. today in the fifth Choral Union Con- cert at Hill Auditorium. The Detroit Symphony Orchestra will be host to Miss Glenn at the Thursday Subscription Concert. Karl Kreuger and Carroll Glenn have combined their talents before, and it is by especial request of the con- ductor that Miss Glenn will per- 'l i tion of Music Clubs, and the Schu- bert Memorial Awards, Miss Glenn was born and lived in Chester, S. C. until she was eleven, when she took up her duties with Edouard Dethier of the Juilliard School in New York. She is the bride of Staff Sergeant Eugene List, also a- graduate of Juilliard and one of the most promising pianists to ap- pear before the public in decades. Appears With Orchestras Miss Glenn has appeared with the By the Associated Press GEN. MAC ARTHUR'S HEAD- QUARTERS, Philippines, Dec. 5, Tuesday-American and Japanese naval forces each lost a destroyer in a sea and air clash in Ormoc Gulf off Leyte Saturday night, headquarters reported today. In addition, another' enemy destroyer was believed dam- aged. The majority of the American crew members were rescued in a daring action by far-roaming Catalina pa- into the Gulf in the face of air attacks and shore fire. American destroyers daringly penetrated Or- moc Bay for the first time last week, shelling enemy supply and reinforce- port of Ormoc. To reach Ormoc, the vessels had to skirt Leyte Island, stealing along the enemy-held shorelines and slicing through narrow passages and daring mine-sown waters. Down Six Planes