LET'S FINISH THE JOB- BUY EXTRA BONDS TODAYI Jr gl~Afr 3f 4kv WEATHER Cloudy and cold, with occasional snow flurries VOL. LV, No. 34 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, DEC. 10, 1944 PRICE FIVE CENTS Yanks Pound Saar Valley Fortifications * * * * * * * * * * * * Reds Strike Budapest From Three Sides Near Last Rail Outlet For Nazis Danube Reached 13 Miles Above Capital WAR AT A GLANCE By The Associated Press WESTERN FRONT-Third Ar- my troops drive deeper into Sieg- fried Line, other Allied armies con- tinue slow progress against des- perate opposition. PACIFIC FRONT-Japs suffer heavy losses in south half of West- ern Leyte. Tokyo reports new raids on Jap capital. RUSSIAN FRONT-Budapest nearly encircled. Magyar govern- ment has fled. GREECE-ELAS resistance con- tinues. By The Associated Press LONDON, Dec. 9-Budapest was almost three-quarters encircled to- night as Russian troops in major break-throughs north and southwest of the capital drove to within 15 miles of the last Nazi rail escape route from the Hungarian capital from which the Magyar Government had fled. - Premier-Marshal Stalin in an or- der of the day said that Marshal Rodion Y. Malinovsky's second Uk- rame Army had reached the Danube 13 miles north of the capital, cut- ting the Budapest-Bratislava-Vienna Railway by the capture of VAC, and racing clear up to the old Czechoslo- vakian border through captured Bal- assagyarmat, 36 miles northeast of the capital's outskirts. Drive Farther Driving to within 89 miles of Bra- tislava, Slovak capital, and to with- in 119 miles of Vienna, Malinovsky's troops broke through German lines on a 75-mile front, Stalin said. They appeared to be dashing toward Au- stria along the Danube without wait- ing the fall of Budapest. While this northern flanking op- eration was in progress, other Soviet forces which had crossed the Dan- ube River and captured Ercsi, 13 miles southwest of Budapest, linked up with the onrushing third Ukraine Army of Marshal Feodor I. Tolbukhin at Valenezeito Lake, 22 miles south- west of Budapest, the Moscow an- nouncement said. Stronghold Collapsed This six-mile-long lake, 12 miles west of the Eresi bridgehead, reaches to within four miles northeast of Szekesfehevar, last big Axis strong- hold southwest of Budapest whose collapse or military nullification ap- peared to be imminent. The fall or by-passing of Szekes- fehervar would release a large share of Tolbukhin's forces for another di- rect drive on Vienna, 85 miles to the northwest, an operation which also would eventually cut off Budapest. In the junction at Valenczeito Lake the Russians had cut the Budapest- Szekesfehervar trunk railway, and at captured Ercsi they were only 15 air-line miles from the last rail route leading westward from the capital. CAMPUS EVENTS Today Navy Chorus will sing at 7:30 p. m. in Rm. 316 in the Michigan Union. Today David Hollandwillngive organ recital at 4:15 p.m. in Hill Auditorium. Today Albert Cohen, Hillel lec- turer, will speak at 8 p.m. in Hillel Foundation As- sembly Room. Dec. 11 Boston Symphony Orche- stra, under Serge Kous- sevitzky, will be heard in the Choral Union con- cert at 8:30 p. m. in Hill Auditorium. rn 11 PrPanntt Clh meetine at Galenls Quota Over-Subscribed. For the second straight year, the Galens have oversubscribed their quota by $500 in their annual drive to raise funds to maintain the children's'workship at University hospital. In the two-day sale of tags con- cluded yesterday, the Galens re-~ ceived $3,541 in contributions from students and townspeople, Robert Ideson, Med '45, chairman of the drive, revealed last night. Their goal was $3,000.1 "I am more than grateful for the fine way in which everyone has responded to our appeal," Ideson declared. Most of the money collected will serve to keep up the workshop, which was set up in 1927 to give children confined to the hospitalE a chance to relieve idle hours of recuperation through woodworking projects. The Galens, members of the honorary medical society, also provide a near-complete children's library as part of their special edu- cation work at the hospital. U' Bond Quota c Wthin ight,' Says Committee Announcement Places Total at $82,312, $18,000 from Goal Announcement of an all-inclusive University bond total yesterday placed War Bond sales at $82,312, within $18,000 of the University quota. The total exceeded earlier figures by about $40,000, and indicated, members of the University War Bond committee said, that Michigan's $100,000 quota was "in sight." Earlier figures had included only sales made by Bond Belles of the Junior Girls' Project but the new total was made up of purchases dir- ectly at the Cashier's Office, through BOND BOX We have. . . County ..... . ... $7,434,286 University ...........: $,82,312 We need ... County .."............729,714 University ...........$ 17,688 the University payroll savings plan and through other purchases credited to the University total. The largest part of the sales were attributed to the "splendid efforts" of the Bond Belles, who solicited about $47,000 of the total sales. Con- sisting of 637 separate sales, the total represents the cash value of Series E bonds only. Committee members stated that they "were sure that the quota can be reached and the University will again go over the top." Meanwhile, County purchases had less than one million dollars to go to exceed their quota of $8,164,000 be- fore the Sixth War Loan Drive closes Saturday. The present total is $7,434,286. U.S. Third Army Hitsig Stubborn Nazi Resistance Costs Enemy Equivalent of 17 Divisions in 3 Weeks By The Associated Press SHAEF. PARIS, Dec. 9-U. S. Third Army troops slugged deeper into the Siegfried line fortifications around the Saar basin today while other Allied armies on the Western front continued their slow progress against desperate opposition. The stubborn German resistance along the entire front, the Allied Supreme Command said, cost the enemy the equivalent of 17 divisions in the first three weeks of,the current winter offensive. There was heavy fighting all along the.Third Army line. The 26th Division cracked the Siegfried defenses near Achen, seven miles southeast of Sarreguemines, and joined the 35th Division on the east bank of the Saar River for a drive from the south on the rich Saarland, already under attack from the west. .L MOVING UP-Misty rain and smoke from bursting shells blanket these British soldiers as they move up along a muddy road during the assault across the W essem Canal in the Netherlands. ORATORICAL ASSOCIATION LECTURE: Osa Johnson, Author and Explorer To Speak On- Jungle Paradise of Africa and Solo mons "African Paradise and the Solo- mons, her most recent films, willbe shown by Osa Johnson, explorer and author, when she makes her personal appearance for the Oratorical Asso- ciation at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday in Hill Auditoium. The story of the Johnsons' four- year stay in the heart of the African jungle, where their only neighbors for one hundred miles were thous- ands of elephants and other big game, "African Paradise," was filmed Cohen To Talk On Employment Opportunities Delivering the first of a series of three lectures, Albert Cohen of the B'nai Brith Vocational Guidance Ser- vice, Detroit, will speak on "Job Op- nr-nii~~c'Tnia ad'I f or tha War just prior to the death of her hus- band, Martin Johnson. The picture comes simultaneous- ly with her new book, "Four Years in Paradise," and a sequel to "I Married Adventure." It represents a continuation of the life work the Johnson began together, filming the world's vanAshing wild life, both animal and human. This task was halted four years ago by an airplane crash on the Pacific coast which took Martin Johnson's life and narrowly missed claiming that of his widow. Mrs. Johnson is continuing their work and as soon as the war is over, will do another African safari, the first ever undertaken by a woman. "The Solomons," based on her book, "Bride in the Solomons," in- cludes the story and pictures of the cannibals of the islands. Mrs. John- son can not only vouch for the man- eating activities of the natives, but has a pictorial record of their rites. During her travels in the Solo- cite fifth columnist activities in progress at the time of her trip. Mrs. Johnson tells the story of the excellent Japanese tailor, Ishimoto, at Tulagi, the seat of government of the Solomons. He was interested in photography and had exceptionally fine photographic equipment. He also had a boat, a trim little ketch, which he used in his free time for making trips to Savo, Guadalcanal and more distant points. When the Marines took the Guad- alcanal beaches, among the Japanese dead was a General Ishimoto, a very able general, selected by the Jap- anese High Command because of his thorough knowledge of the area., Peace Possible In Greek War ELAS General Reported To Have Surrendered ATHENS, Dec. 9.-(P)--A general of the ELAS forces, whose conflict with the regularcgovernmentand British troops turned Athens into a civil war battleground, was reported to have surrendered tonight, while liberals who have been acting as mediators indicated that peace might be restored to the capital by tomor- row or Monday. The name of the surrendering gen- eral was not announced. The report of his capitulation came even as additional ELAS units were massing outside the city. Dmitri Lambrakis, an independent liberal and publisher of the news- paper, Eleutheron Vina, said he had been consulting all day as inter- mediary between the moderates, dis- senting extremists and government leaders in an effort to stop the armed clashes and find a solution to the nation's political problems. The Western Front Today CANADIAN FIRST ARMY: Captured holdout fort below Maas in Holland. Front unchanged elsewhere. BRITISH SECOND ARMY: Front before Venlo in Holland unchanged. U.S. NINTH ARMY: Front un- changed along Roer; smashed last to pockets at Julich. U.S. FIRST ARMY: Captured two new heights between Julich and Duren on the Roer. U.S. THIRD ARMY: Fought house to house in Saareguemines; battered into Siegfried Line above Saarlautern; drove on Saarbru- cken. U.S. SEVENTH ARMY: Closed up to Rhine above Strasbourg; shelled, Siegfried Line from :point 4 miles from Reich frontier. FRENCH FIRST ARMY: Driv- ing north from Mulhouse on Col- mar, narrowed German escape gap to 22 miles. Qt c r S 1 1 I por tumties .Loday ana a er U wa- V oa ons she was made aware of Jap- at 8 p. m. today at the Hillel Founda- s tion Assembly room. anese plans for aggression and can The employment outlook in various professional fields, based on the lat- Deferred Men est available information, will be dis-e cussed by Cohen. The talk will be followed by the I 10 e raite , technicolor motion picture, "Michi-l gan on the March," depicting the WASHINGTON, Dec. 9 - (A) - University's role in the war effort. Drafting of men aged 26 to 37 as re- This film has been shown to various placements for soldiers and sailors alumni groups throughout the state released to manpower-short war and was seen at the recent annual plants was ordered tonight. convention of the University Press. War mobilization director James Club. F. Byrnes asked this step as the gov- Last March, Cohen lectured at Hil- ernment drove to get 300,000 needed1 lel on "Trends and the Future Out- workers into war industries and look in Employment Discrimination" bring lagging production of critical at which time he stated that there materials up to schedule. will be a great need for doctors and In another move, the Army asked lawyers after the war. During subse- and secured an agreement for a 7- quent visits to the University, Cohen day work week for four months in conducted vocational aptitude and plants manufacturing truck tires and interests tests which were taken by a tubes, products which the army lists group of approximately 30 students. among its most important shortages. l l" l i t 3 Yank. Attacks Hampered Rain Torrents MAC ARTHUR'S HEADQUAR- TERS, Philippines, Dec. 10. (Sun- day)--(P)-The two American infan- try divisions south of Ormoc con- centrated yesterday on the sizeable job of destroying Japanese troops pocketed there, but torrents of rain hampered the operations. Gen. Douglas MacArthur's com- munique today said the 77th division, which was landed there behind the enemy's Yamashita line in a surprise move three days ago, was probing southward, toward the cornered Jap- anese force. Drive Forward On the south side of the pocket, the 77th U.S. division drove forward three miles, capturing Albuera, term- inus of a road crossing Leyte Island from east to west. The trapped enemy force was being squeezed into an ever-narrowing area and his losses were heavy, MacArthur said. North of Ormoc, where the rain was the worst, the American 32nd division kept up its pressure against the enemy, capturing a nfield battery and large dumps of munitions and supplies. Navy Chorus To Sing Today Appearing for the first time this semester, the Navy Chorus will pre- sent a program of light classical music at the regular International Center Sunday evening entertain- Advances Continue The Fifth Division, operating south of Saarlautern, continued its advance and reached the junction of the Saar and Roselle rivers. The Sixth Armored Division wiped out an enemy salient three miles deep and two miles wide located five miles southeast of Saarbrucken. The 90th Division, pressing deeper into the Siegfried line in the west- ern Saar basin, seized the Dillingen Railroad Station two miles north of Saarlautern, and beat back enemy counterblows inside Dillingen. Stiff Resistance The 26th Division was the first to cross the Saar, breaking across last month some 17 miles south of Sar- reguemines, and since then has been beating up the east bank. It ran into stiff resistance at Achen, where it came up against the old French fortifications for the first time. (The German Agency Transocean declared the Third Army on that front was attacking with six to ten tank divisions and four mechanized infantry divisions-far more than the Allies have announced.) Offensive Rolling The U. S. Seenth Army kept the Allied winter offensive rolling all the way east to the Rhine with attacks northwest of Haguenau within four miles of Germany and was hacking at the approaches to Haguenau itself. The city is the most important enemy base left in northern Alsace. Snow blanketed the northern front, where the U. S. Ninth Army smashed the last two German pockets on the Roer at Julich, and the U. S. First Army edged closer to the' river some 18 miles south of Julich near Berg- stein. Split in British House Foreseen Hands-OfW Attitude Threatened by Minority LONDON, Dec. 9.-(IP)-A poten- tially serious division among sup- porters of Britain's coalition govern- ment became apparent tonight de- spite the House of Commons' vote of confidence yesterday on Prime Min- ister Churchill's determined policy of "intervention to keep peace" in liberated Europe. The rank-and-file of the strong minoritylabor party threatened to adopt a "hands-off" attitude on Churchill's handling of the rebellious factions in Greece and on his denun- ciation of Count Carlo Sforza of Italy, although few- appeared ready to break entirely with the coalition. Prescott Club To Hold Meeting The Prescott Club of the College of Pharmacy will commemorate the one- hundredth anniversary of the use of anesthesia at its meeting to be held at 7 p. m. Tuesday in the East Lec- ture Rm. of the Rackham building, Dr. F. F. Blicke, professor of Phar- maceutical Chemistry, will review the history of the early development of SERGE KOUSSEVITZKY TO CONDUCT: Boston Symphony Concert Is Tomorrow Serge Koussevitzky, who will con- duct the Boston Symphony Orche- stra at 8:30 p. m. tomorrow in Hill Auditorium in the sixth Choral Un- ion concert, is the orchestra's first Russian conductor. There was no musical life about the small central Russian province of Tver except from small visiting thea- tricals. When his father opposed a career of music, Koussevitzky ran away and entered the Philharmonic School in Moscow, as a scholarship student of the double-bass. He soon certs Koussevitzky" with his own orchestra in Paris. Here, and by guest performances in London and other cities, western Europe came to know him. He came to America in 1924 to lead the Boston Symphony Orchestra. His span of years covers more than a quarter of the Orchestra's history and far exceeds that of any previous conductor. The inception of the Orchestra is traceable to the realization of a young Bntonian studnt nf music in Vien- important part of its yearly itin- erary. It has established at Tanglewood, its beautiful estate, the Berkshire Music Center. The school posesses its own student orchestra and chorus, and departments for conducting, mu- sical composition, and operatic inter- pretation. The faculty is drawn from members of the orchestra, and from colleges and schools of music. In its sixty years the Orchestra has attempted to encompass all that