i ,,,,M,, A i I ,I AIL £fr0igu aAbrt WEATHER _ight Sn 7 AL v {Gy VOL. LV, No. 58 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, JAN. 14, 1945 PRICE FIVE CENTS Z lu f s 4ttack azis in East __ s; 'U' Statement on Peace Draft Told Assumes Likelihood of Conscription; Proposes Civilian Administration Winter Offensive Gains 25 Miles Russians Slam Poland, East Prussia, Czechoslovakia on 600 Mile Front By The Associated Press LONDON, Sunday, Jan. 14-Premier-Marshal Stalin announced last night that the Red Army had opened its eagerly-awaited winter offensive on the Eastern front, breaking through 25 miles toward. the heart of Germany on a 37-mile front in southern Poland. Striking powerfully beyond the Vistula River, the Russians swept to within 69 miles of industrial German Silesia, reaching the Nida River, last big water barrier before the Reich frontier. A "decisive" Soviet barrage from massed cannon paved the way across the frozen plains, Stalin said in a special order of the day. Berlin reports said 2,500,000 Russian troops were on the move. The new blow put Germany in a; " : An eight-point program for one year of post-war compulsory training of all civilians coupled with means for University participation in the set-up was issued by the University Advisory Board on Policies yesterday. The program, designed to supple- ment governmental plans for antici- pated universal peacetime conscrip- tion, was prepared last year by the Board and re-issued when current nationwide discussion again focussed interest on national service. Training Not Advocated "The report does not advocate com- pulsory military training"; President Alexander G. Ruthven explained, "it merely assumes the likelihood of some such system." Prepared on a national, rather than local basis, the report was written under the assumption that peace- timeconscription would beinaugu- rated and that education should have a stake in shaping and administering the program. General Points Among the general points of the report are provisions for conscription of women, preparation for civilian as well as military activities and means of financial maintenance of the trainees. Warning that "control of young people during a decisive period in their lives would present the gravest danger of militarization and indoc- trination," the Board urged that a civilian, non-partisan administration be established to work with military heads running the national service program. Period of Service The period of service was planned to extend for one year, with excep- tion made for students enrolled in college officers' reserve training pro- grams. The program suggested that the best time for the individual's ser- vice would be immediately after high- school graduation. The 'program should "provide for the rehabilitation rather than rejec- tion of those physically or mentally unfit." The Board proposed a coun- selling and testing service to assure placement of trainees where they were most qualified to serve. The program should also be designed to develop trainees for the benefit of the nation. Specific Methods The eight points of the program suggested specific methods for ap- plying the plan. Among the sug- gestions were comprehensive health examinations for remedial treatment, education in citizenship and physi- cal conditioning. The Board also suggested that trainees found deficient in the ele- mentary subjects should be instruct- ed as under the present war-time program. Colleges Should Help Colleges and universities should participate in every way with the program, the Board recommended, both in lending its facilities and in guiding phases of national service. Recommending that the govern- ment provide financial support dur- ing the period of training, the Board suggested that present methods of fiscal maintenance be retained. All-Student Show Revived Kampus Kapers II Planned for Jan. 28, Preliminary plans have been com- pleted for the second production of Kampus Kapers which will be held at 3:30 p. in., January 28 in Hill Auditorium. First hailed as an innovation when it hit the campus last November, this all campus show is now being term- ed a "real part of the campus" and will again bring to the student body a variety of entertainment featur- ing all student talent. Combined Efforts The Union, the League, and the Daily have combined their efforts to make Kampus Kapers a living part of University life and these organ- izations are sponsoring this second production. The heads of these or- ganizations have indicated that "no effort will be spared to make this a great show." The University Committee on The- atre Policy and Practice headed by Dean-of Students, Joseph A. Bur- sley, gave official approval to the production in their meeting yester- day and Dean Bursley indicated the hope that "this show will receive the same enthusiastic support as the first one did." 4,000 at First Show It will be remembered that the first show headlined campus activi- ties and drew 4,000 people to Hill Auditorium, and included seven big all student acts with singing, danc- ing, comedy, and music. The January 28 production will in- clude the campus favorites, Billy Layton, his band and Judy Ward; the campus comedy king, Doc Field- ing; the acrobatic dancing of Bev Wittan and Dot Murzek; the Women's Glee Club; and other out- standing acts. Nominal Fee A nominal admission fee will be charged for this show, the committee indicated, to allay expenses and net proceeds will be donated to the USO and the Bomber Scholarship Fund. Complete details regarding ticket sales will be carried in the Daily, this week and the committee put out the suggestion that "every student circle January 28 as a red letter day in campus life." YANKS COAST WITH BELGIAN CHILDREN-During a lull in duty, Sgt. Harman Barber (left) of Iola, Kansas, and Sgt. John Aylor of McKenzie, Tenn., enjoy coasting with a group of children somewhere in Belgium. Horowitz Will Appear In Concert, Tomorrow Pianist Is Sixth in Choral Union Series Vladimir Horowitz, Russian-Amer- ican pianist, will appear in the sixth Choral Union concert at 8:30 p. m. tomorrow in Hill Auditorium. He was born in Kiev on October 1, 1904 of a cultured and artistic fam- Coeds To Use Main Entrance At Union Party Women will be permitted through the front door when the Union holds its 25th annual open house from 2 to 5 p. m. Saturday, according to Bob Lindsay, USNR, chairman of the House committee. Like the ban on women entering the Union front door, the Union open house is also a campus tradition. "This year's open house promises to be bigger and better than any held previously," Lindsay stated. Afternoon Stag Dance There will be an afternoon stag dance from 2 to 3 p. m. and from 4 to 5 p. m. An exhibit of._gymnastics will be given at 3 p. m., when the huge tamperon, usually kept at the Field House, will be used. Members of the WAA swimming' club will present a water ballet in the Union pool at 3:30 p. m. Intri- cate formations have been promised by the water ballerinas. Facilities Open The billiard room, ping pong room, and taproom of the Union will be open for everyone all afternoon. In addition all Union facilities will be on display. Those interested will be given the opportunity of investigating the guest rooms, kitchen and kitchen facilities, and student offices. "Since so many fellows gripe about the food they have to eat in the Union diningrooms, we are going to give them an opportunity to see just how that food is prepared," Lindsay stated. "Everyone is invited to attend, for in true campus tradition, the Union on this day will be open for the pleasure and inspection of all," Tom Bliska, Union president stated. ily, one of three talented children. His father was an engineer, his mother a musician and a graduate of the Conservatory at Kiev. He be- gan to be a pianist at the age of six under the careful tutelage of his mother. Second Teacher His second teacher was Sergei Tarnowsky, with whom he studied from the age of twelve until his sixteenth year. Then he entered the Conservatory, in the classes of Prof. Felix Blumenfeld, pupil of Arthur Rubenstein, world famous pianist. He was a graduate two years later. His uncle, a music critic of Khar- kov, arranged for his debut there. The concert was successful enough Hot Stuff!. Fletcher Henderson and his or- chestra played the twelfth (and a half) Interfraternity Ball last night on instruments borrowed from the University Band, with- out music or stands, starting two and a half hours late. While traveling in the band's special bus midway between De- troit and Dearborn, an oil heater in the bus blew up, sending the whole rear end of the bus into a mass of flames. Almost all of the orchestra's instruments and music together with all of the personal belongings of the band were de- stroyed. The band's manager es- timated the damage at $4,000. Special 1:30 permission was granted girls attending the dance. During the two and a half hours while the band members struggled in, Dean Walter B. Rea rounded up instruments, IFC President Bliss Bowman assured the crowd of 500 dancers that it "Was just one of those things," the patient couples sang frater- nity songs and Henderson-who came on ahead-improvised on the piano. giant vise with more than a dozen Allied armies striking concertedly from east and west. 36 Miles Northeast Overrunning more than 350 places in two days the Russians drove to within 36 miles northeast ,of Krakow and to within 11 miles southeast of Kielce, threatening to collapse the entire German front between Warsaw and Krakow. The northern end of the westward- moving Russian front was 100 miles south of Warsaw and 45 miles west of Sandomierz, Vistula River bridge- head base. Greatest Offensive Berlin reports, describing the Pol- ish offensive as "the greatest of all time," said that two other major Soviet offensives had begun--in Ger- man East Prussia and southern Czechoslovakia - accompanied by smaller attacks at intervals along a 600-mile front from Memel in the north down to stricken Budapest in Hungary, where the German garri- son appeared to be on its last legs. The German high command offi- cially termed the Polish offensive, launched by Marshal Ivan S. Konev's massive First Ukraine Army, the "long-expected winter offensive" by which the Russians, hitting from the west in concert with Allied western blows, hope to crush the Reich. Yank, Motorized P at rolsaDrive Nazis Continue Inland on Luzon WAR AT A GLANCE VLADIMER HOROWITZ . . . to appear tomorrow RUNNING MATES: GOP Nominees for Regents Vacancies Are U' Graduates to warrant a tour, his first, which took him all over Russia. Subsequent Tours Subsequent tours took him to Ger- many, Austria, Czecho-Slovakia, Hol- land, Italy, France, Spain, Belgium, and England. He played with the first orchestras of the world, and has been honored by the King and Queen of Belgium. He made his American debut on the night of January 12, 1928 with the New York Philharmonic-Symph- ony Orchestra at Carnegie Hall, play- ing the Tchaikovwsky piano concerto., Illness caused Horowitz to leave the concert stage in 1935. America did not hear from him for five years. He returned to the stage in 1940, and since then has appeared in concerts all over the country. Retreat Under Yank Assault By The Associated Press PARIS, Sunday, Jan. 14-Field Marshal Karl Von Rundstedt's Ger- man armies continued to fall back through their Ardennes salient last night as the U. S. First Army-in a grand attempt to cut off from the Reich these retreating enemy forces -scored gains of up to two miles in a general assault against the Germans' northern flank. The first army struck before dawn from the south of Malmedy and Stavelot toward St. Vith, Belgian town four miles from the German border, where Von Rundstedt was ex- pected to make his next stand against the mounting Allied drive. To the southwest, tanks reached Mont-Le- Ban, a village only a mile from the last good escape road from Houffa- lize, German base which once was the center of the shrunken Belgian salient. German resistance was light at first but stiffened during the day. The enemy used tanks against the advancing Yanks and supported his infantry with heavy artillery fire GENERAL MACARTHUR'S HEAD- QUARTERS, Luzon, Sunday, Jan. 14 -(IP)-Motorized patrols of American invasion troops on Luzon Island have penetrated inland 20 miles from the Lingayen Gulf beachhead, headquart- ers reported today. The report of the Yank penetra- tion on the main Philippine covered action through Friday, the fourth day since liberation forces came ashore on the gulf coast, an aver- age rate of progress of five miles a day. This deepest penetration puts Am- erican ground forces about 100 miles north of Manila, the Philippine cap- ital. Patrols are operating in the vicin- ity of Obriztondo and Bayambang, at the points of deepest penetration. The Yanks have added the towns of Santa Barbara and Mapandan to the more than 30 already reported oaken. Bayambang is a road juncture about 20 miles southeast of Lingayen Gulf and six and one-half miles north of the Tarlac, provincial bor- der where desperate fighting occur- red in Dec. 1941, when the Japanese invaded Luzon, and is about 90 miles (CQ) northwest of Manila. By The Associated Press WESTERN FRONT-Von Rund- stedt's men continue to fall back through Ardennes salient-First Army scores gains gainst German northern flank. PACIFIC FRONT-Silence con- cerning Naval battle off coast of Indo-China suggests new develop- ments- Patrols penetrate more than 20 miles from Lingayen Gulf beachhead on Luzon. RUSSIAN FRONT- Stalin an- nounces beginning of Red winter offensive on eastern front-Forces advance 25 miles toward heart of Germany on 37 mile front. Annual P°olio Drive Opens Official Today Campus Campaign T Be Held Jan. 21-31 The 1945 fund-raising appeal of the National Foundation for thfa- tle Paralysis in celebration of . President's birthday will open offi- ially on campus tomorrow and cow-, tinue until January 31, according to Jim Plate, general chairman of the drive. The national drive opens officially today. The student drive, however, will be held from Jan. 21-31. This week members of the student co- mittee will contact faculty nmembers,. University employees, and local mer- chants. Faculty To Be Contacted Since it is impossible to contact each faculty member individually, the members of the committee have requested that professors turn in t JAN. 1441 their contributions to the office of the secretary of their respective depart- ments. The student committee is compos- ed of Jim Plate, general chairman; Deb Perry, women's chairman; Pat Coulter, assistant to Miss Perry; and Joe Milillo and Henry Horldt, assist- ant to Plate. Contribution Boxes Boxes for contributions will be set up in every house on campus and all campus stores. There will also be a booth set up in the bank all week. Members of the Veterans Organ- ization, using as its slogan "Pitch in for Polio," will be stationed with their buckets in the center of the diag- onal, Liberty and State, and Liberty and Main. Fifth Army Both Otto Eckert, Lansing, and Dr. Charles Kennedy, Detroit, who were nominated for the open seats on the Board of Regents by the Re-I publican State Convention Friday are graduates of the University. The positions on the Board, now held by Edmund Shields, Lansing Democrat, and John D. Lynch, Dem- ocrat of Detroit, will be vacant when their terms of office expire at the end of this year. CAMPUS EVENTS Today Bernard Piche to present organ recital at 4:15 p.m. in Hill Auditorium. Jan. 15 Vladimir Horowitz, pia- nist, will be heard in Choral Union concert at 8:30 p. m. at Hill Audit- Regent Shields has already indi- cated he will not run for re-election while Regent Lynch has not made a public statement on his position. Lansing Director Eckert who celebrated his fifty- fifth birthday yesterday is director of the Lansing Municipal Water Works. He was born in Saginaw in 1890 and received his B. S. from the College of Engineering here in 1912. Dr. Kennedy is chief surgeon at Grace Hospital in Detroit and re- ceived his M. D. here in 1913. He was born in Detroit in 1887 and took a combined lit-med program while in the University. High Esteem Since his undergraduate days when he was active in most engineering t t i r 7 NOT CRITICISM, BUT PUZZLEMENT: Dough boys Fight, But Generals Still Say I' By KENNETH L. DIXON Associated Press Correspondent IN BELGIUM, Jan. 10-(Delayed)-When there is time it would be interesting to do a little research as to why Generals say "I" so much. It's a long-accepted habit-one of the things you learn toexpect around an Army. As a matter of fact, some people have been heard to insist that the first thing a new general does is to stand in front of a mirror and nrmrtice it. flank firm on this hilltop," you no- tice it. Lots of Generals give full credit to the guys under them. But during a year and a half following a handful of fronts I recall only one or two who didn't say "I" did this or "I" did that. when they meant "We." or other way to avoid seeing their frozen, crumpled bodies, it grates to hear a General say "I stopped the blasted Boche here." In all decency you know he does- n't mean it that way, but you wonder how he can preserve that profes-