cow It%. 111*W A&,-- A&I- AW fa Mm==.m2cclsmm6.- 41P .A..Aho jouttu WEATHER Cloudy and Not Quite So Cold With Light Snou VOL. LV, No. 48 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, JAN. 3, 1945 PRICE FIVE'CENTS -TAM" GermAkn Thlr ventharstine Soviets Concentrate On B dapest Attack Street by Street Fighting Is Continued Toward Heart of Hungarian Capital By The Associated Press LONDON, Jan. 2.- Almost 900 blocks of buildings in battered :Buda- pest were in Russian hands today as Red Army storm troops continued to blast their way into the capital street by street and house by house, aiming at "annihilation of encircled enemy groupings" on both sides of the Dan- ube. Tonight's Soviet communique re- ported capture of 232 blocks in Pest, eastern section of the embattled Hungarian capital, and another 63 in the western section, Buda. Indicating that the Red Army is concentrating on the conquest of Budapest before continuing its drive toward Austria, the communique re- Gen. Plastiras Unmoved by Greek reent General Refuses To Become Premier By The Associated Press ATHENS, Jan. 2-Archbishop Da- maskinos, the new Regent of Greece, was reported tonight to have failed thus far in attempts to persuade Gen. Nicholas Plastiras to become Premier of the new government now being formed. (The Federal Communications Commission reported later that the Athens radio declared Jlastiras had agreed to form a new government in Greece.) This stumbling block in the path of peace for turbulent Greece came as Athens shook with the rumble of British artillery replying to shelling by the ELAS, militia of the left-wing EAM. The fighting continued de- spite the announcement that a new government was being formed and a plea from Damaskinos for laying down arms. Plastiras' friends said the veteran soldier wanted to take the premier- ship only if all political parties were willing to support him and if guar- antees of support can be obtained from the United Nations. Adm. amsaY Killed in Crash Dunkerque Hero Dies in Belgium PARIS, Jan. 2-01')-Admiral Sir Bertram Home Ramsay, whose ships saved the British army at Dunkerque and who four years later directed naval operations in the Allied inva-- sion of Normandy, was killed today when his plane crashed on a trip to Belgium. He would have been 62 on Jan. 20. An announcement from supreme headquarters said that the Admiral, whose aggressiveness won him the nickname "Dynamo,"-which was the code name of the Dunkerque op- eration-met with an "accident" while en route to a conference. His plane was not shot down by the Germans but probably ran into bad weather. Ramsay was a planner and com- mander of every important combined Naval-Army operation of the Allies and was naval commander in chief under general Eisenhower, the su- preme Allied commander. ported action on only one other sec- tor of the southeastern front, the repulse of attacks by "large forces of enemy infantry and tanks" southeast of Komaron, a Danube River town 4' miles northwest of .Budapes and 53 miles southeast of Bratislava. Costly Attacks These attacks, apparently in the neighborhood of Tovaros, Soviet-held town five miles southeast of Komar- on, cost the Germans heavily in manpower and equipment, the com- munique broadcast from Moscow said. The Russian assault forces pushing ahead in Budapest had continued support from artillery outside the city which had forced the defending garrisons of Germans and Hungar- ians underground in their last-ditch stand. Lacking control of the air and los- ing their grip on the streets, a large part of the fanatic Nazi garrison disappeared into cellars in a hopeless attemut to hold off Russian 'assault forces commanding the western part of the Hungarian.capital and surging strongly against the Pest district on the eastern side of the Danube. Cut Cellar Walls The Germans were reported link- ing the below street level chambers by chopping holes through cellar walls. Slit trenches pitted backyards in the oesieged area. For five days there has been street fighting in Budapest which rivals the fighting at Stalingrad. The Paris radio reported a state of emergency had been declared on all Austrian railroads. The remainder of the long eastern front was quiet. Berlin reported the battle of the Courland Peninsula in western Latvia had reached a dead- lock. Yank Airmen Strike at Japs Nips Stage Feeble Raid on 13-29 Base By The Associated Press American aerial blows against the 4 panese in the Philippines, off For- mosa and in the central Pacific high- lighted official reports late Tuesday on progress of the war against Nip- pon. Gen. Douglas MacArthur said his fliers marked the passing of the old year by striking Japanese shipping and other targets. Adm. Chester W. Nimitz said Yank airmen continued blasting Iwo Jima, on the road to Tokyo, while the Japanese staged a feeble raid on the Yank Superfor- tress base at Saipan. Shoot Four Enemy Planes MacArthur said air patrols, oper- ating east of Formosa, shot down four enemy planes and left five coastal freighters in flames. Striking against Luzon, main is- land of the Philippines, the American airmen unloaded bombs at Laoag, on the northwest coast facing the China Sea. The explosives started fires ashore and sank a freighter. Air patrols destroyed a gunboat off the west coast. Blast Warehouses Yank fighter planes, roaring over southern Luzon, blasted warehouses, rail facilities, power plants and wharves. G~renkrctin lu~c COLOPGNE' t / 1 - S ei n. tflg ,tdast,chi ' uren t B&ONN 1.Marburg // 'AHNGERMANY IACINRoerR ,, - T s4y BELGIUM LIEGE - C essen d~mu f ~ 4 Q Chares v ot COLENt mbug \ onant .Mar h* VS ~ 1 w. bd, FRANKFURT STHbetMAINZ 4,Q , l chte nchDarmstadt -- /--E2 LUXE MBOjURG caJ t R I~be rn o tudwr gshafen MANNHEIM V0 2e'r ., ; . Rode, N lL-. Hdefbu. g FRANCE! SAARLAUTERN redlbon j \T AA Rchfettenbach'10VRU_.o t chal rSt B htch et RLSRUHE Ms f asten Damba E STATUTE MILES - TRASBOURG PATTON'S THIRD ARMY TROOPS -GAIN-Arrows indicate points on the western front where rival armiies are attacking. Lt. Gen, George S. Patton's Third Army made gains of up to six miles in the St. IHubert area. German assaults on the Third Army's Bastogne Cor- ridor were halted, but the Germans yesterday were attacking to the South in the Bitche-Baniistein-Dainbach sector against the U. S. Seventh Army. PICK YOUR MEN: V-Ball Committee Candidates Chosen byMen's Judiciary Complete slates of candidates for V-Ball Committee posts and the the College of Business Administra- Board in Control of Student Publi- Iicn. cations were announced yesterday by Student Publications the Men's Judiciary Council. Those who petitioned for the single At the same time details for the position available on the Board in election which will be held from 9 Control of Student Publications are a. m. to 2 p. m. Friday were released. Ken Bissell, Bud Brimmer, Monroe Polls will be located in the Engine Fink, and William C. McConnell. Arch, in the main corridor of Uni- General rules for elections will versity Hall and on the main floor of apply, and no 'electioneering within the architecture building. 1 50 feet of the polls will be allowed. Engine School All candidates' names will be plac- Representing the College of Engi- ed on the same ballot but an indi- neering will be Dick Mixer, Robert vidual may vote only for candidates N. Dolph. S. John Sorice, and Wil from his school at any of the three liam C. McConnell. Three will be polling places. Those ballots which, elected. bear votes for candidates from more The Lit School will elect five from than one school will be destroyed at the following: Norma Johnson, Doris the discretion of the Men's Judiciary Heiden. Janet Main Gene Lane Council. 1 7 i l 1 i, : 1L , ~ AI Y l , L , 1J~l Doris Chapman, Alena Loeser, Dave Loewenberg, John Johnson, and Paul John. Either Jean Wick or Phil Marcellus will be chosen from the College of Architecture and Design which will i have one representative on the com- mittee, and Morton Scholnick will be unopposed as the only candidate from 'Keeeee-- iii;t It as old! Old man winter came up with thei coldest day of the year yesterday as students shivvered along to class frozen by three below weather. Temperatures climbed from three below zero at 8 a. m. yesterday to five above early in the afternoon. For' today the weatherman forecasted slightly warmer temperatures with snow flurries. The cold wave set in New Year's' Day with a temperature reading of about 13 degrees at 8 p. m. The high yesterday was 32 degrees. Negrin Protises Franco's Overthrow LONDON, Jan. 2-(.P)-Dr. Juan Negrin broke his five years of self- imposed public silence tonight and declared he would help overthrow Generalissimo Francisco Franco and establish a "stable, tolerant and pro- gressive republic" in Spain. m. Wei Next To Appear for Lecture Group Mme. Wei Tao-ming, wife of the Chinese Ambassador to the United States, formerly a member of the Executive Yuan, will speak at 8:30 p. in. Jan. 11, in Hill Auditorium under the auspices of the Oratorical Association. An ardent feminist, Mme. Wei was the first Chinese woman lawyer in Shanghai, serving in the '20's as president of the Shanghai District Court, as a member of the Provin- cial Government of Kiangsu and as a member of the commission for the draft of China's Civil Code. A diplomat in her own right, she had acted as Chinese envoy extraor- dinary to France prior to her hus- band's appointment in 1941 to the ambassadorship of that country. Dr. and Mme. Wei arrived in Washing- ton enroute to Paris, remained there for some months and Dr. Wei was appointed China's envoy to this country before continuing to Vichy. It has been suggested that pressure from Tokyo barred the way. A daughter of a Chinese mandarin of the Manchu dynasty, she partici- pated in the Chinese Revolution of 1911 and pleaded China's case in the Shantung problem in the United States. t t t i t f 1 1 k X t t t z I v Y C V : i E C S r F t r t c t f i r. 0 a r. z a c d J J c A s c tl i; e A Patch' "Divisions Ha It Nazi Advance in Lower Vosges FDR Admits Enemy Forces Make Sizable Dent Into Yank Lines; Less Than Belgian Break By The Associated Press WITH THE U. S. SEVENTH ARMY on the Western Front, Jan. 2-Lt. Gen. Alexander M. Patch's doughboys late today halted the German ad- vance in the lower Vosges Mountains southeast of the Maginot line town APof Bitche after being pushed back two miles in some areas by tank-sup- ported enemy attacks. The Germans had slashed into the Seventh Army front on New Year's Eve with the same fanatical fury that characterized Field Marshal Karl Political Problems Von Rundstedt's armies in their as--- sault against the U. S. First Army By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Jan. 2-President PARIS, Wednesday, Jan. 3-(- B)- Roosevelt acknowledged today that German troops were jabbing today there are some important differences at nearly a dozen places from Saar- a among the Allied powers and implied brucken to the Rhine against U. S. that they concern European political Third and Seventh Army positions in and territorial problems. a series of diversionary thrusts that Moreover, he indicated that he had gained as much as two miles in }Merlin Nuremberg doesn't hope to settle them all at his at least one point. fotheoming meeting with Prime Min- Not As Bad As Belgium Ludwigshafen Bombed ister Churchill and Premier Stalin. Nowhere had these counterblows. By The Associated Press Different Interpretation assumed anything like the propor- LONDON, Jan. 2-The RA , in Sketching a rough background for tions of the breakthrough Marshal one of its biggest night raids of the this meeting in response to a rapid Karl Gerd Von Rundstedt had war, dropped 6,000 tons of bombs fire of news conference questions, the achieved in the Belgian bulge. There from more than 1,000 heavy bomb- President declared that the Allies he was already making his first ges- ers tonight on Berlin and the German have a pretty good set of principles ture of withdrawal under the ham- industrial centers of Nuremberg and but that they are differently inter- mering of 2,500 Allied warplanes, Ludwigshafen. preted in different countries and which smashed at enemy troops, ar- The attacks followed daylight ham- under the circumstances, he said, you mor and installations from the base mering of German Army concentra- do the best you can, of the wedge to the Rhine. tions and communications behind the Earlier in the day, it was indicated Make a Sizable Dent ' enemy wedge in Belgium by U. S that the big three probably will A sizable dent has been made in Eighth Air Force Flying Fortresses meet in February, Senate Majority the U. S. Seventh Army front south and Liberators. Leader Barkley said after talking of the Maginot line bastion of Bit- 3,000 Tons Unloaded with the President that Mr. Roosevelt che, close to the German border, More than 3,000 tons of bombs had indicated he would meet Chur- field dispatches disclosed, but this were unloaded by the American heav- chill and Stalin some time soon, to push has been slowed almost to a which house majority leader McCor- standstill after gaining as much as ick added "probably." two miles on a five-mile front. z Sil r Thrad Offers No Clue A new series of counterthrusts has The chief executive himself offer- been opene dby Von Rundstedt on the LONDON, Jan. 2-0?--- Hitler's ed no clue as to his plans. When told Third Army front farther west. hair is turning grey and he is de- of Barkley's report he said it's a Nazis Miscalculate Weather veloping a stoop, a German radio question of the meaning of the word These fresh blows to the south, de- spokesman said today in describing soon and he would suggest that it livered with the same fury that mark- the scene at der Fehrer's New means anon. ed the assault against the First Army Year broadcast. Mr. Roosevelt also was asked about in Belgium and Luxembourg last - b s Prime Minister Churchill's statement month, were launched on New Year's ies ntheir eleventh consecutive day that he had been in telegraphic cor- Eve..of theistiederial offenivey respondence with the President on An apparent miscalculation in the of the sustained aerial offensive. the handling of the Greek situation, weather has worked against the Na- Nine bombers and two fighters of the the implication being that the Presi- zis, however, since clear skies have Eighth Air Force failed to return. dent had in some way subscribed to permitted complete aerial support of Nearly 1,700 warplanes from Am- the British policy of using armed the American ground troopls. erican bases in Britain participated ___r___inG_____._in the operations today and among foMr. Roosevelt replied that the most their targets was a group of Nazi important thing is to see that the Filipino Artist armored and infantry units cose to populations of rescued countries do These G n otfront. not starve. We've all been thinking T, esi for wood Germantroops,spttedin the 'f tha fr aiogrtme hesad.wooded area, 10 miles behind the of that for a long time, he said. lines northeast of Saarlautern, were Centr P at reported bomber "with exceptionally MYDA To Present good results." .Decorations for International Ba No Enemy Interference Party For Veterans to be held from 8:30 p.m. to 1 a.m In contrast to yesterday's massed Friday will indicate the professional attack by the German airforce, the A get-together to acquaint veter- touch of an artist. American planes carried out today's Eduardo Salgado, a prominent operations without interference from held by the Michigan Youth for Filipino artist, who is planning the enemy fighters. Democratic Action from 7 to 10 p. m. decorations for the semi - formal The weather was clear and most Sunday, Jan. 7 in the Women's Ath- dance asked guest cooperation to the of the bombing was visual. letic Building. Guests at the party extent that'costumes be in keeping. Other targets today were road will be entertained by a floor show, with the spirit of the Ball. junctions near Prum, Kilburg, Daun, and refreshments will be served, ac- Request Native Attire Bitburg and Mayen and rail traffic cording to Belle Rosenthal, president. Foreign students are urged to wear in the vicinities of Gerolstein, bad All veterans, servicemen, and stu- their native costumes and other Kraunzmach, Ehrange and Coblenz. lents are invited to attend. guests may compromise between the Only near Coblenz, where a group strictly formal and the modifications of bridges was hidden by clouds, was Sritish Fleet Arrives of wartime. He explained that the instrument bombing necessary, Ball will be formal enough to require in Austra an J ters long dresses for women and informal enough to permit a choice of tails, SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 2-(')-A fx or business suits. y 7 omplete British fleet has arrived in On completion of six years of art Watchdog NBC reporter George Fol- study in the Philippines Salgado left suer said today in a shortwave broad- the Islands and came to the Uni- ast from the Philippines. He said versity on a special scholarship. His House Committee Asks ~as frm te- hilppies.He aidfirst exhibition of his works was F he force, including aircraft carriers, sponsored by the School of Graduate For Permanent 'Police' .s under the command of Adm. S Studies. He has since exhibited in Wa Bruce Fraser, who recently conclud- ver meropolitanart stitutes WASHINGTON, Jan. 2--(pr)-A d strategy talks with U. S. Fleet Traveled Through Islands House investigating committee pro- Adm. Chester W. Nimitz. Following his graduation from the posed today that Congress set up a University of Philippines, Salgado, permanent agency to police the acti- whose home is in Manila, travelled in vies of such organizations as the the Islands to picture the native CIO Political Action Committee. scene. His purpose in coming to the Broaden Corrupt Practices Act es rUnited States he explains was "to It also suggested that the Corrupt truth about the Filipino people and paign spending-be broadened to cov- to correct the impression given by er primary elections and the activi- Today they don't add that any misinformed writers." ties of so-called "political education" more around here. Encouraged by the progress of the societies which cluster at the fringe They always insisted he lacked the war in the Philippines, Salgado in- of political campaigns without bear- nilitary efficiency of the enemy- sisted that the freedom-loving Fili- ing regular party labels. that only West Pointers or career pinos will continue to fight for liber- Watchdog Agency soldiers or "regular Army" men ation - Concluding a long investigation of could approach the Germans for the activities of such organizations, combat, strategy and _effectiveness. the House Campaign Investigating They don't say that right now. Even the Governor Committee urged that Congress: They said he didn't quite have the d "Set up a scheme of relying on British Tommy's traditional stub- Couldn't Find Home some Congressional agnecy to watch CAMPUS EVENTS Today SRA record concert pres- enting "St. Matthew Passion" at 7:30 p. m. in Lane Hall library. Today MYDA sponsored veter- ans meeting at 7 p. m. in Lane Hall. Jan. 5 International Ball at 9 p. m. in Union Ballroom. Jan. 5 Transfer students invited to Dean Lloyd coffee hour at 4:30 p. m. in ,the League. OF CIVILIAN GI'S-WHO GOT MAD: Even the Bravesta.-and the Best-Someti By KENNETH L. DIXON ON THE BELGIAN FRONT, Dec. 31.-(Delayed)- (A')- Nothing but the highest praise for the young American kids who helped stop Von Rundstedt's offensive 'came from the top officers of this division tonight. Nothing but admiration, respect and love. One of the captains knew who they're the best damned fighting men in the world." After holding firm for ten days against impossible odds his company had just been pulled out of the line- what was left of it. He rubbed a cold, cracked hand across his bearded face, and said bitterly: "Who really saved it? Your damned, beat down, under-trained, softy 'civilian soldier.' That's who "Why, one company would beat back a counterattack at one point then shift while that German out- fit was resting up and beat off another one. Then they'd shift back again in time to be there, to beat back the first bunch of Boche when they tried it again." "By everything in the book they couldn't do it. Yet they did. I still can't understand it." n t: s c c F w