4 f Aar tl WEATHER Light Snow Today and Snow Fiiiries Tonight VOL. LV., No. 47 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDA, DEC. 31, 1944 PRICE FIVE CENTS Ohio Hoopsters eat Wolverines Risen's Field Goal, Free Throw Give Margin For Victory, in Overtime, 44-41 By BILL MULLENDORE A field goal and a free throw by towering Arnie Risen, Ohio State's 6 ft., 9 in. center, with less than a minute of the first overtime period re- maining gave the Buckeyes, defending Western Conference titlists, a 44-41 victory last night over a fighting Michigan quintet which didn't know the meaning of the word "quit." The Wolverines, playing before a crowd of over 5,000, surged from behind in the closing seconds of the regulation period to knot the count at 39-all on baskets by Walt Kell and Bob Geahan after trailing for most of the second half. Geahan's pivot shot gave Michi- gan a short-lived 41-39 marginin Y a i (S 0the opening minute of the overtimei period, but Risen quickly tied it upI with a tip shot under the basket. Risen's game-winning shot came on a tip-in of Don Grate's desperation heave from mid-court, and his free Thrust at ConVoy throw put the game on ice. Results in Nip Loss By The Associated Press A Japanese aerial thrust at a United States convoy off Panay Island, Philippines, Thursday night (Philippine time) cost the attackers eight planes shot down, Gen. Doug- las MacArthur reported today (Sun- .day). Tokio Claim The, headquarters' communique made no mention of losses to the convoy, which was bound for Min- doro Island. Tokyo radio claimed that 20 transports were sunk out of 30 in the convoy. MacArthur said total Nipponese losses in the Leyte campaign, which started with invasion of the island Oct. 15 and ended Christmas Day with the' American capture of the port of Palompon on the West Coast, have reached 116,770, including 601 more enemy dead counted in the past 24 hours by Yank mop-up units. Jap 35th Army Wiped Out The Leyte fighting wiped out the Japanese 35th Army, which was com- prised of four divisions with elements of two other divisions and some naval base units. The victor was the U. S. 6th Army made up-of seven-divisions of approximately the enemy's strength, the communique said. The enemy casualty figure also included estimated losses when 10 Nipponese conveys headed for the island were destroyed. Nazis Promise 1945 Victory LONDON, Dec. 30--(P)-Nazi big- wigs filled German air waves today with promises of victory in New Year's proclamations. Rotund, long-silent Hermann Goer- ing remained silent, but a proclama- tion purporting to come from him declared that "It is our duty and our task in the coming year to carry war again into the enemy's country." Reichsminister Paul Goebbels, the No. 1 Nazi propagandist, had a brand new story to tell in explanation of why the equally garrulous Adolf Hit- ler has not been heard from lately. Goebbels on the German radio said he purposely planted rumors that Hitler was ill as part of a deep and far-flung scheme to lull the Allies into complacency and set them up for Field Marshal Karl Von Rund- stedt's winter offensive. hinese Take. On Offensive Mobile Columns Near Hengyang Attack Japs CHUNGKING, Dec. 30-(IP)-Chi- nese units in Hunan province have killed scores of Japanese soldiers in an attack by mobile columns near Hengyang as Allied warplanes rang- ed over the whole China theater to carry out successful raids on enemy road, rail and shipping installations, Chinese dispatches said tonight. About 100 Japanese were killed and five machineguns were seized when Chinese infantrymen storm- ed enemy positions outside the north gate of Hengyang at the junction of the Hunan-Kwangsi and Canton- Hankow Railroads, the reports said. CAMPUS EVENTS C Fighting furiously, the Wolverines dominated the play through most of the first half and left the floor at half-time on the long end of a 25-19 score. Two tip-ins by Dick Rifen- burg, and a set shot from the corner by Don Lund gave Michigan its half- See OHIO CAGERS, Page 3 Women, N avy Hours Relaxed For Center Fete Late permission has been granted to Navy trainees and women stu- dents who are attending the Inter- national Ball which will be held from 8:30 p.m. to 1 a.m., Friday, Jan. 5 in the Rainbow Room of the Union. Navy men must report to the West Quad at midnight, while women will be allowed to stay out until 1:30 a.m. Bill Layton and his orchestra will provide music for ti is all-campus dance, which will be attended by foreign students, their American friends and faculty. Proceeds will be devoted to the Emergency Relief Fund for Foreign Students. The ball is semi-formal and an internationally cosmopolitan air will be added by the native costumes of the foreign students. Tickets for the dance may be obtained at the Union, the League and at the International Center. Cudlip Seeks Regency Post DETROIT, Dec. 30-(P)--William A. Cudlip, Detroit attorney, plans to seek the Republican nomination for Regent of the University of Michi- gan, he announced today. The nomi- nations will be made at the party's state convention in Grand Rapids Jan. 12. Cudlip, a native of Iron Mountain, was graduated from the Law school at the University in 1926. He 'has served as counsel for the National Credit Association and the Recon- struction Finance Corporation, and in 1943 Gov. Kelly appointed him a member of the Compilation of Laws Commission. Nazi Chief Hits Salient At 3 Places Attempts To Save Bastogne Conquests WAR AT A GLANCE By The Associated Press WESTERN FRONT-Nazis throw three divisions on both sides of Yank corridor supplying Bastogne; Allies broaden front south of Ger- mans' Belgian bulge to 50 miles. GREECE-King George II an- nounces appointmept of Archbish- op Damaskinos as regent. PACIFIC - Americans shoot down eight planes as Japs attempt raid on Yank convoy off Panay Islands; total Jap losses on Leyte reach 116,770, MacArthur reports. 6y The Associated Press PARIS, Dec. 30.-Field Marshal Karl Von Rundstedt has struck with three divisions at both sides of the Bastogne salient, pointed like a dag- ger at the heart of his shrinking Belgium and Luxembourg conquests, a late front dispatch said tonight. Two German divisions drove from the west and a third from the east at the corridor supplying Bastogne, from whose apex American artillery fire is raining on the 16-mile-wide waist of Von Rundstedt's hour-glass shaped front. Third Army Broadens Front The renewed attacks-breaking a four-day lull- came as Lt.-Gen. George S. Patton's hard-driving for- ces broadened their front along the south of the German bulge to nearly 50 miles, struck west of Bastogne, sheared supply roads and threatened to cut off enemy armor thrust to within 23 miles of Sedan at Libra- mont. American counter-blows had re- won nearly one-third of the territory overrun in the Germans' surprise counteroffensive, badly narrowing the maneuvering ground for Von Rundstedt's three armies. Progress of the new battle was not at once disclosed, nor was the time at which it broke. Drive into Moircy Previously, Supreme Headquarters had reported under the 36-hour se- curity blackout that by yesterday morning one Third Army force drove into Moircy, 11 miles east of Bas- togne and but four and a half miles southeast of St. Hubert, where an- other American garrison has been making a small scale Bastogne-like stand and holding off far larger forces. Allied Shakeup Is Unconfirmed WASHINGTON, Dec. 30.-(P)-A press report in London that a shake- up in the Allied Command is impend- ing found no indication of confirma- tion here. A spokesman recalled Secretary of War Stimson's statement Thursday that it was too early to attempt to place any individual blame for the German break-through in Belgium. The spokesman indicated that is still the department's view. Athens Archbishop Damaskinos Appointed Greek Regent; King's Action Is Regarded As Abdication NEW GREEK REGENT-attending a conference in Athens for the purpose of halting strife between ELAS forces and British troops are (left to right) Anthony Eden, British Foreign Minister; Archbishop Damaskinos, Metropolitan of Corinth and newly appointed Regent of Greece; and Winston Churchill, British Prime Minister. Vets Studying Only Part-Time Eligible for Pay U' Group To Discuss National Affiliation WASHINGTON, Dec. 30.- (P)- Veterans taking part-time studies under the G.I. Bill of Rights will be put on the payroll "immediately," Brig.-Gen. Frank T. Hines, Adminis- tration of Veterans' Affairs, said today. All veterans taking part - time courses are eligible for payments unless they are gainfully employed in full-time jobs not related to the course of training. A meeting of the Veterans Organ- ization will be held in the basement lecture room of Lane Hall at 7 p.m., Wednesday, Jan. 3. All veterans are urged to attend this meeting. In addition to the regular business, there will be a dis- cussion on the possibilities of affili- ating the veterans attending the University with a national organiza- tion of veterans in college. 'Forgotten Front ' Returns To News PARIS, Dec. 30-(P)--The "Forgot- ten Front" along the French-Italian frontier popped into the news today with the announcement of a series of bombardments by the French Navy. The Ministry of Marine announced that the destroyers Le Fortune, Trombe and L'Alcyon hid shelled effectively German concentrations TO RING IN '45: League Celebration Tonight Will Welcome New Year* v The last hours of 1944 will be ob- served from 8:30 p. m. to 1:30 p. m. today in the League at a fun-packed celebration presented by the Women's War Council. The midnight exit of "the old man" and the entrance of "the little boy" will be preceded by a student-talent floorshow in the Ballroom. Dancers Dorothy Murzek and Beverly Wittan will set the pace for a graceful new year. Eleanor Mellert, Lady Magi- cian, will perform her most intri- cate sleight-of-hand feats. Members of the Women's Glee Club will sing "Drink to Me Only With Thine Eyes" featuring soloist Ruth MacNeal. They will also sing "Sum- mertime" and will lead all celebrants in singing "Auld Lange Syne" Al- pha Chi Omega sorority will present their skit, "I Walked Home From the Buggy Ride." The Union Executive Council will equip the Grand Rapids and the Hussy Rooms with games where par- ty-goers may try their skill in vari- ous kinds of contests. Peggy Goodin and Bethine Clark will establish a fortune-telling booth so that guests may discover early what 1945 holds for them. Refreshments will be served in the Grillroom which will be decorated for the occasion. Mary Anne Jones and Marcia Sharpe have planned the decorations for the native building. The Grillroom will be staffed by Yank Bombers Blast Germanyv Supply Lines Pounded; 11 Planes Are Missing LONDON, Dec. 30-(1P)-More than 2,000 British-base American bomb- ers and fighter planes pierced through fog today and pounded Ger- man supply lines to the western front for the eighth consecutive day. Eight bombers and three fighters were reported missing from these op- erations. While the German airforce stuck to its bases for a third day, more than 1,300 Flying Fortresses and Liberators of the U. S. Eighth Air- force, escorted by approximately 700 Thunderbolts and Mustangs, struck unmolested at railroad bridges on lines leading directly from Berlin and at freightyards at Mannheim, Kaiserlautern and Kassel. Holiday Absentees Decline This Week DETROIT, Dec. 30-(!P)-Prelimi- nary surveys in Detroit's major war Dean of. Women Alice Lloyd, As- sistant Dean Mrs. Mary C. Bromage and Miss Alice MacCormick, director of coedrundergraduate activities. House directors from campus dormi- tories and sorority houses will also help with the serving. Tickets may be purchased singly or in couples and one general admis- sion price will suffice for all enter- tainment activities presented by the Council. Honor Group Presents Movie 'Scarlet Pimpernel' Shown Twice Today Two showings, at 8:30 and 11:15 p. m. today of "The Scarlet Pimper- nel," film drama starring Merle Ober- on and the late Leslie Howard, will be presented by Mortarboard, senior women's honor society, in the Lydia Mendelssohn theater. Based on the well known adven- ture novel by Baroness Orkzy, "The Scarlet Pimpernel" enjoys a reputa- tion as a constant revival in movie houses throughout the nation. The plot evolves around the heroic and secret escapades ofnaseemingly in- nocuous English nobleman, played by Leslie Howard, who leads an ad- venturous group devoted to the res- cue of French noblemen from death by the guillotine of French Revolu- tionary Paris. The Michigan Daily will not be published this Tuesday, the day following New Year's day. Publi- cation will be resumed on Wed- nesday. The editors take this op- portunity to extend a happy New Year greeting to our readers. Appointment Considered Swing fto Left- Churchill Reported .ro Have Urged Step By The Associated Press LONDON, Dec. 30-King George II of Greece tonight announced ap- pointment of Archbishop Damaskinos of Athens as Regent of his strife- torn country, taking a step generally regarded here as tantamount to re- linquishing of his throne. Swing To Left The 50-year-old monarch's road has been rocky for years, and most observers in London's diplomatic quarters believe the Greek people, who are swinging to the left, would vote against a monarchy in a plebi- scite which is expected to be held. Appointment of the Regent was announced in a Royal Proclamation issued after a statement in Athens that the Archbishop probably would assume his duties as regent tomor- row. Damaskinos Authorized The Proclamation, stating that the King had "deeply considered the ter- rible situation" into which Greece had fallen, had resolved not to re- turn to the country "unless summon- ed by a free and fair expression of national will" and authorized Da- maskinos to "take all steps neces- sary to restore order and tranquility." The King, reported to have o-- posed the Regency, was believed to have been convinced of the necessity of the measure by Prime Minister. Churchill, who had just returned from Athens. Reliable sources said Churchill told the Greek King that a Regency would be established by the government in Athens regard- less of his consent. Decision Unanimous Establishment of a Regency had been unanimously agreed upon by the all-party conference convened by Churchill and Foreign Secretary An- thong Eden last Tuesday in an ef- fort to restore peace in Greece. The Archbishop's first task will be to form a new government. There were indications that 85- year - old Themostikles Sophoulis, Dean of the Greek Liberal Party, would be asked to head a new ad- ministration. State Poles Ask FDR To Assist KALAMAZOO, Dec. 30-(P)-Am- erican intervention in the Russian- Polish boundary dispute was asked in telegrams sent President Roosevelt and other American officials at the weekend by the Polish National Al- liance's group here, one of the or- ganization's three local units. The message to the President, typical of the others said: "If the lofty ideals of. the Atlantic Charter and the four freedoms are what we are fighting for, then it is time to protest Russia's unilateral grob of Polish territory. Please use your in- fiuence on behalf of Poland, our first ally." This Year's Disillusioninent Portends Determination During Next 12 Months By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Dec. 30.-Ameri- can officialdom is winding up 1944 acutely conscious that for the United States this has been in many respects the most disappointing and disillu- sioning year of the war. Unjustified optimism about mil- itary progress led them to believe when this 12 months starts that by tonight the war in Europe would be won and the shift of forces to the Pacific well started.. Perhaps the basic error in mili- tary thinking, Allied as well as American, has been to underestimate the enemy's determination. It was believed that when he was sur- rounded and battered by land and air he would surrender. A tremen- dous series of victories east, south and west, tightened the ring around Hitler's fortress Europe but fell so short of breaking Germany that the enemy was able to wind up the year military spokesmen ever admitted except privately; the almost com- plete destruction of German naval power, which made this possible; the Allied triumph in the air battle of Europe; the Russian advance to Warsaw and the Allied victory in France; the unexpectedly fast prog- ress in the Pacific, culminating in the invasion of the Philippines; par- tial completion of the Dumbarton Oaks plan for world organization. Students Buck Up, Gird for Second New Year Celebration - - - - - - - - - - - Hopeful '44' on the Battlefront Is Replaced by 'Realistic '45' SHAEF, Paris, Dec. 30.- OP)- Hopeful 1944, a year when the Allies might have won the war by collapse within the Reich, has given way to a realistic 1945, when the Allies expect to win by hard and costly battles. Field Marshal Karl Von Rund- stedt's fierce counter-offensive, which all but split the western front in one anxious and critical week, helped those were his objectives-provide the hope for victory next year, Although Gen. Eisenhower's win- ter offensive from Holland to Switz- erland was slapped to a standstill, the speed and force with which Von Rundstedt was contained showed the weight of manpower and battle equipment- the odds which will forge victory in 1945. With one New Year's Eve celebra- tion already under their belts, hardy University students will swing into a second round of festivities tonight to welcome in the new year and ring out the old. At 11 p. m. yesterday, 25 hours ahead of schedule, celebrants at the Michigan Union toasted the New Year. Sticklers for tradition will welcome the New Year tonight at 12 midnight (eastern war time). Tomorrow Is Another Class Celebration of the third war-time New Year's Eve will be curtailed to- night by knowledge that tomorrow is Naval V-12 unit may be out until 12:30 a. m. and most Army units on campus will have no bed check to- morrow. The Dean of Student's has issued no permits for private parties for the holiday. Driving regulations, suspended for the Christmas recess, will remain in force today as usual. Sweet Adeline? Liquor rationing in Michigan and the usual shortages of that variety of holiday cheer assured a "safe-and sane" New Year's. "Water will flow like wine," one student predicted. The only entertainment organized