r Y 44# , j jw Sir ignn tl WEATHER Par°ti y fcludy today fich j- igt $now., VOL. LV, No. 42 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, DEC. 20, 1944 PRICE FIVE CENTS Nazi Tanks Hamme r Deep into Belgium Valencia on Leyte f Captured by Yanks Troops Capture Island Headquarters; Japanese Airfield Taken Undamaged By The Associated Press lam GEN. MacARTHUR'S HEADQUAR- TERS, Dec. 20, Wednesday- The Japanese headquarters of Valencia on Leyte Island has been captured by American troops, today's commu- nique reported, and an airfield taken intact by the doughboys. The airfield is now in use, Gen. Douglas MacArthur said. It will pro- vide another base for American planes which have been pressing a war of attrition against the enemy. Headquarters also announced that the first American cavalry has taken Loloy, six miles north of Valencia in Ormoc corridor. Valencia had been the headquar- ters of Gen. Sosaki Suzuki, comman- de of the Japanese 35th Army. Armies Approach Meeting The advance beyond Valencia ap- parently placed the 77th Infantry Division within striking distance of a junction with the 32nd Yankee Di- vision which is driving down the corridor from the north. The American First (dismounted) Cavaly division is converging on the corridor highway northeast of Valen- cia. The 77th was reported rolling up the remnants of the Yamashita Line along the corridor. Japanese Dead Abandoned A total of 1,484 more Japanese dead were found abandoned on Leyte Island Monday, the communique said. In the Mindoro phases of the cam- paign to liberate the Philippines, Tokyo Admits Superfortress Shanghai Raid By The Associated Press Tokyo radio acknowledged last night a B-29 raid reported earlier by the 20th Air Force headquarters at Washington on Shanghai, China, saying it was made Tues- day at mid-day (Chinese Time) by more than ten Superfortresses over a four hour period. The enemy broadcast, recorded Cammission,. contained no reort by the Federal Communications on the damage. Headquarters of the 20th said the raid, which also took in Nanking, hit docks and engineering works. A B-29 BASE, Szechwan Province, China, Dec. 18-(Delayed)-Huge fires were left blazing along almost the entire length of Hankow's 3- mile-long Yangtze riverfront area to- day following a perfectly coordinated assault by virtually every type of operational airplane in the China theater. The combined power of Maj. Gen. Curtis E. Lemay's 20th Bomber Com- mand, Maj. Claire L. Chennault's 14th Air Force and the Chinese-Am- erican composite wing made the strike. Ward's Firms May Be Seized By Government WASHINGTON, Dec. 19-(R)-- Montgomery Ward's refusal to com- ply with War Labor Board directives apparently was turned over to the White House tonight. Early seizure of some of the big mail order firm's properties appeared possible. Chairman William H. Davis of the WLB, and Lloyd Garrison, public member, conferred with Economic Stabilizer Fred Vinson late in the day. . While there was no announcement as to the reason, there appeared lit- tle doubt the conference concerned the Ward case. Earlier, the WLB repo'ted that it was continuing with the Ward case in the customary manner . . . That of preparing papers for Vinson's con- sideration. Meanwhile, eventual seizure of American planes shot down 13 Jap- anese aircraft Sunday and Monday.. No ground opposition has yet been encountered in the remarkably easy American occupation of this island, which lies less than 150 miles south of Manila. Second IFC Ball Planned For January Attempt To Re-Engage Henderson for Party Any apprehensio nthat adjustment would not be made regarding last band was discounted yesterday when it was learned that plans are being made to stage another dance "some- time in January." Bliss Bowman, president of IFC and chairman of the committee and Assistant Dean of Students W. B. Rea indicated that "negotiations are now in progress to obtain Fletcher Henderson to play the -dance." After Saturday's "disappearing act" on the part of his band, Hen- derson declared a strong conviction to come back to Michigan "to do the dance.", Early statements that the new dance would, be held Jan. 6 now hinge upon Henderson's booking arrange- ments, Dean Rea stated, "but we are confident that the party can be held one Saturday in January." One thing certain is that the dance will not be formal. Because of the safety precaution of retaining stubs from the tickets was used,. Bowman said that "equitable arrangements will be made for all those who purchased tickets." ROTTERDAM : .z UNTE - WeselHamm' Li *Breda Ss/1 . otmn Sv.pe tt ii r * Duisburg f "J''- r E G jU ArnbbereKASSE' S- vhRoesmond RA KTWuppertal UANTWERPX TRI rr sXM G BikneF Frskenberg dOLOGNE dwegenishm RmLS Maastric AAHENaburg II~C.AAR LaCKEN~anda HeGlbronn I''J Roen Bonn p E N RN nown a -bov is ade*ai ie - hr ,, 7 Mal nedy tn(u Chsrleroi A aa lbe grCOBLEN g h Beg, natBELGIUM "='g ~ --- Givetro ha aed= r s O" Sne c-ALuses atbcPres WWesbadn F AR =e ~etzerad,11 - D - _ "eh-' \ TRIER - /'Ida, Worms S AN LUXEMBOURG 4 ' r k agilld."' Oberstein f /? Derl ? 11rrKaiserlatenLudw ,gsh,,f enMannheimj 3 r iuaret Y Lebeci, 8 trhj,~ . YouTeb onv ii_ - '"Homberg edebr _) oet s adu i Heibronn\ * VERDUN __ SAARBRUCKEN * /Pont - 'Corny r0"KARLSRUHE Cho l St a Mousson Clemery G Q Touo*NACY -'*-STUTTGART S# ou 'ANY "" aSTRASBOURG - JFL WESTERN FRONT--Shown above is a detailed view of the region surrounding Aachen and the '70-)mile front along thee Belgian border, where Nazi troops have launched their "Christmas O-ffensive." Associated.. Press War Map WAR AT A GLANCE By The Associated Press WESTERN FRONT- German Christmas counter-offensive as- sumes proportions of major break- through. News blackout conceals First Army. PACIFIC FRONT- Jap head- quarters on Valencia captured by American troops on Leyte. Super- fortresses bomb Hankow's water- front in China. Front Extends 70 Miles; Yanks Try to Stabilize Line * * * 4' RUSSIAN FRONT-Red throws arc around Slovak munications hub. Advances on Hungarian front. Prof. Bonner Army com- made Furious German Assault Drives First Army Baek 20 Miles at One Point By The Associated Press SHAEF, Paris, Dec. 19-The German Christmas counter-offensive on the Western Front assumed the proportions of an attempted major break- through tonight as the first frontline dispatches trickling through a news blackout disclosed that the U. S. First Army was massing infantry and armor in an effort to stabilize the front. Despite the Americans' desperate holding fight, the enemy's tank-led battering ram continued probing into Belgium and Luxembourg on a front of approximately 70 miles extending from above Monschau in the north to the vicinity of Schternach in the south. The Germans apparently were hammering with the same fury that in the first three days of the assault rolled back the First Army at least 20 miles at one point. 4>Supreme Headquarters maintained its own strict news censorship, but Sete O K s omised tonight that a full and trutfulaccount of the reverse on the First Army front would be given - p p "the public at the earliest moment tees consistent with military security. A front dispatch from Associated Press Correspondent William F. Boni Six A proved For said Lt. Gen. Courtney H. Hodges was throwing all available forces into the State Department effort to stem the "most serious set. back to American arms on this side i CHRISTMAS PARTY: All Campus' Invited to Affair At Hill Auditorium Tomorrow Issuing a general invitation to all students and faculty members, the Union Council has asked that every- one attend the All-Campus Christ- mas party at 8 p. m. tomorrow in Hill Auditorium. President Alexander G. Ruth- ven will greet the guests and de- liver his Christmas message to the University. Also appearing on tiie program will be a quartet from the International Center. The Navy Chorus and lhe Woman's Glee Club will present sev- eral selections prepared by their separate organizations and will com- bine on the singing of "Deck the Halls." The Navy Chorus will sing a spe- cial arrangement of "Silent Night." IRA Conducting Campus Poll, Petitioning for FEPC Today Distribution of postal cards urg- ing the establishment of a perma- nent Fair Employment Practices Committee (FEPC) to be mailed to Congressmen, the signing of peti- tions as well as the taking of a cam- pus-wide poll on the FEPC will take place today in a drive conducted by the Inter-Racial Association. Tables have been set up in the lobby of the library and the lobby Reds Besieg"PeI/ Czech Center LONDON, Dec. 19-(P)-The Red Army threw a fiery siege arc around the Czechoslovak communications hub of Kassa today, pressing within nine miles of that hinge position of the German defenses and cutting the highway and railroad to the south- east in a day of general advances on a front of more than 80 miles in southern Slovakia and northern Hun-1 gary. In gains of as much as eight miles from previously-announced positions, the Russians crossed into Slovakia at many new points, it was disclosed in the Soviet communique broadcast from Moscow tonight. of Angell Hall, from which postal cards will be distributed to passers- by. The students have merely to address the cards to their respect- ive Congressmen and mail them. At both tables IRA will have a list of names of all Senators on hand to inform those unacquainted with the names of their Congressmen. With the assistance of Michigan Youth for Democratic Action (MY- DA), members of the organization are conducting a campus-wide poll, the results of which will be published in the Daily. The questions to be asked are: 1. Are you in favor of the estab- lishment of a permanent organiza- tion to do away with racial dis- crimination in industry? 2. Do you favor coercive meas, ures on the part of the government to enforce racial equality in pri- vate industry? "Every student and faculty mem- ber interested in the preservation and concrete establishment of dem- ocracy," stated Herbert Otto, presi- dent of IRA and chairman of the campaign, "should take an active interest in seeing that instances of racial discrimination as well as un- democratic practices are eliminated from the American way of life." The Chorus is directed by Prof. Leonard Maretta of the School of Music and features Eugene Malitz A-S USNR as soloist and Eric Beu, A-S USNR, as accompanist. The Navy will also be represented a part of the V-12 Swing Band. Members of the band will be seated on the stage and will do- several num- bers. The Women's Glee Club, directed by Miss Margurite, Hood, also of the School of Music, will sing "A Shep- herd Christmas Song," arranged by Dickinson, with Marilyn Watt as soloist. Ruth MacNeal, Jean Gil- man, and Arlene Peugot wil be feat- ured as soloists in the Glee Club's rendition of "Glory to God in the Highest" by Pergolesi. The Choir and the Glee Club will also lead a Campus Christmas party guests in mass singing of favorite carols. Special guest of the evening will be a distinguished personage from the North Pole. Santa Claus has promised to be in Ann Arbor prom- ptly at 8 n. m. despite his current 24 hour workday program. Union Council members announced yesterday that responses to the invi- tations sent to every faculty member and to all student residences, have been extremely good. "We feel that people are really anxious to reminisce about the good old days when grade school Christmas festivities meant a celebration by students and faculty members. ELAS Fortify Averoff Prison ATHENS, Dec. 19 - (A) - ELAS troops fortified the Averoff prison to- night after a strong mortar and gre- nade attack by the leftwing militia had forced the British garrison and Greek gendarmes and wardens to evacuate the institution. A widespread hunt was launched by the British, Greek and undoubted- ly by the ELAS-Militia of the left- wing EAM political party-for Jean Rallis, quisling premier of Greece during the German occupation, who escaped during the fighting for the prison. Named speaker For Graduation Prof. Campbell Bonner, member and former chairman of the Univer- sity Greek department, will deliver' the Midwinter Graduation Exercises address Feb. 24, Dr. Frank E. Rob- bins, assistant to the president, an- nounced yesterday. Prof. Bonner, who will begin his retirement furlough at the close of the current term, was chairman of the Greek department from 1912 to this year when he was succeeded by Prof. Warren E. Blake. First be- coming a member of the faculty in 1907, he was made professor and chairman of the deartment at the 'same time. President of the American Philolo- gical Association in 1933, Professor Bonner is a fellow-of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and is one of the managing committee of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens. He was born Jan. 30, 1876 at Nashville, Tenn. and received his AB degree at Vanderbilt University in 1896, his MA one year later. Professor Bonner received his Ph.D. at Harvard in 1900. Petitions Due After Holiday Board of Publications, V-Ball Positions Open Petitions for those desiring com- mittee positions for the third an- nual V-Ball or for persons wishing to fill the vacancy on the Board of Student Publications should be turn- ed in to the student offices of the Union before Saturday, Dec. 30, the Men's Judiciary Council has an- nounced. Committee members of V-Ball will help in the selection of orchestras, decorations, ballroom, favors, and will generally supervise the dance details. This between-semester dance was initiated as a wartime measure early in 1943 combining the annual J-Hop and Senior Prom. Juniors and sen- iors who can present eligibility cards may petition for the various com- mittee posts involved in planning the dance this season. Such petitions should consist of one sheet and must contain at least 15 signatures sup- porting the candidate. Schools of Literature, Engineering, Business Administration, Forestry, Architecture, and Pharmacy will be represented on the committees. WASHINGTON, Dec. 19.- The Senate put a belated stamp of ap- proval tonight on the six appointees to the reorganized State Department, but not until after President Roose- velt personally intervened. Rolling roughshod over a noisy but sparse-voted opposition, the admin- istration won overwhelming approval of the nominations of Joseph C. Grew as undersecretary of State and four assistants. MacLeish Vote Close Republicans made it closer, how- ever, for Archibald MacLeish, poetry writing Librarian of Congress, who came through with 43 to 25 approval in what proved to be largely a pair- tisan test. MacLeish thus becomes assistant secretary of State in charge of cul- tural and public relations. Some senators described the , latter as "propaganda" activities. Here's how the others ran in the voting to confirm : Grew, former ambassador to Ja- pan, to be undersecretary of State, 66 to 7. Nelson Rockefeller, formerly co- ordinator of inter-American affairs, to be assistant secretary in charge of Latin-American- relations, 62 to 10. Will L. Clayton, formerly Surplus Property administrator, to be assis- tant secretary in charge of economic affairs, 52 to 19. James C. Dunn, State Department career, man, to be assistant secretary in charge of European affairs, 62 to 10. Brig.-Gen. Julius C. Holmes, for- merly attached to Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower's staff abroad, as an assistant secretary to be the principal administrative officer in charge of organization and personnel, 62 to 9. The 1944-45 Student Directory will go on sale today on campus, in the book stores, and at the Student Publications Building. of the worid since Kasserine Pass in Tunisia." Late today an emergency call brought a big force of U. S. Flying Fortresses and British Lancaster$ from British fields to spread 2,000 tons of fragmentation and high ex- plosive bombs on rail and road junc- tions immediately abehind the at- tacking Nazi forces. As Field Marshal Karl Gerd Van Rundstedt's battering ram smashed into the deeply-dented American line south of Aachen, Allied Headquarters imparted only the terse information (See OFFENSIVE, Page 6) R TC Posts To Be Filled Of ficers To Be Named By Lt.-Col. Smith Today Ratings and certificates for Uni- versity cadet officers and non-com- missioned officers will be presented by Lt.-Colonel Ridgway P. Smith at 4:15 p.m. today at the formal inspec- tion of the unit at the ROTC rifle range. Cadet officers for the current sem- ester will be: company commander, Capt. William Goldberg; executive officer, First Lt. Bennett Housman; platoon leaders, Second Lt. Donald Colletti, and Second Lt. Roger Goelz. The non-commissioned officers will be headed by First Sgt. Byron Mays. Platoon sergeants will be J. Under- wood, D. Saslow, and C. Cuthbert. As squad leaders Staff Sgt. Larry Bauer, R. Bernard, C. Culbertson, B. Englehart, H. Hildebrandt, J. Kub- isch, R. Harvey, B. Milbourn, J. Paul, E. Perrin, T. Richter, and T. Tyvand have been appointed while G. Cross- man, J. Chandler, R. Dunlap, T. Dickenson, G. Haas, R. Parkinson, R. Saulen, J. Tramantana, and b. Wyant will be presented with ser- geants' ratings. Army Fliers Develop New Way To Take On Passengers in Flight, 'GREAT DEFEAT FOR AMERICAN DEMOCRACY' Education Professor Condemns Proposed Training Plans WASHINGTON, Dec. 19-(A)-Ar- my airplanes in full flight can now pick human passengers off the ground with scarcely a jolt. The method, announced today by the Army Air Forces, is based on a pickup idea first used by a rural air mail service in West Virginia. As a result of experiments con- ducted by the Air Technical Service Command at Wright Field, project engineers of the ATSC said the prac- tice had been developed to a point where AAF standardization can be seriously considered. First Attempt Last Year The first human pickup was para- trooper First Lieut. Alexis Dister of Washington. On Sept. 5, 1943, he demonstrated the practical us of the new equipment which may make pos- sible a revolutionary means of rescue .C- .- . -4 4 A A T e.. .,.. ..w.,. reel inside the plane cabin with 185 feet of half-inch nylon rope. At the free end of the rope is a hook held by a release mechanism. A ten-foot wooden polethanging below the plane guides the tow rope hook into, the pickup loop. Automatic delayed ac- tion brakes and an electric reeling motor weighing a total of 200 pounds, complete the airborne mechanism. Ground equipment includes a spe- cial harness fastened to a nylon loop hung above the ground between two poles. CAMPUS EVENTS Today IRA distributes post cards urging continued exist- ence of FEPC. Today Veterans Organization meets at 7 p. m. in Un- By BOB GOLDMAN Condemning 'patent medicine post- war militaryp lans, Prof. W.' Clark Trow of the education school said yesterday, "If the House and Senate bills for compulsory peacetime mili- tary training are passed on any other grounds than strict military neces- + eits American reamocracv could educators have failed to "perceive their sinister significance." "They have failed to realize that military and educational programs are separate problems and that 'in passing the ,buck to the military,' they make a confession of bank- ruptcy." "It is time," Prof. Trow pointed out, "for the many who have convic- .- . -1r -- - - - - -- n in i (2) Military necessity is the only valid reason for any plan of com- pulsory post-war military training- only if it is necessary to the security of our country should it be provided and then be made as "educational" as possible. (3) The case for military necessity must be made much clearer than it has yet been made-even on military -o-n rIQ ha Yan + notnnnn.hl military programs has been in a large measure due to the efforts of those who are responsible for our educa- tional system-teachers, principals, professors and research workers, in and out of uniform, have organized the courses of study and trained the teacher officers. (6) It is now the responsibility of educational leaders of the country to