Y Sir 6w tl W EATHIER Partly Cloudy, Little Change in Temperature (Groundhog may See shadow). l VOL. LV. No. 74 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN FRIDAY. FEB. 2, 1945 PRICE FIVE CENTS MacArthur Makes Third Luzon Landing * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Red Troops Topple Polish Stronghold of Torun Pomeranian Bastion of Raiders Rescue 513 from Japs Troops 20 S id .- Miles Moscow Officially Reports Forces 59 Miles Northeast of Capital, Capture of Duringshof See Picture, Page 2 By The Associated Press LONDON, Feb. 1-Russian troops toppled the northern Polish strong- hold of Torun and encircled the German Pomeranian bastion of Schneide- muhl today as Berlin said that other Soviet forces had reached the ice- packed Oder River 30 to 40 miles northeast of the German capital. Officially, Moscow placed the nearest Russian troops 59 miles north- east of panic-ridden Berlin with the capture of Duringshof, 18 miles from Kustrin, one of the last strongholds barring the way to the Reich capital. Nazis Report Reds 40 Miles Away U.S. First, Third Hit Weakening Nazi Defenses Crumbling West Wall Breached Near Aachen By The Associated Press PARIS, Feb. 1-U. S. troops drove as deep as two and a half miles today through hitherto unbreached ram- parts of the Westwal south of Aachen against resistance so light the belief grew that the Germans had weakened the Reich's great western fortifica- tions to bolster the eastern front. The full weight of the assault by the U. S. First and Third Armies was crunching through dragon teeth traps and pillboxes on a 40-mile front, widening the breaches in the Siegfried Line against an astounding lack of resistance.- I Nazis Abandon Equipment Some First Army forces in the forefront of. the assault found the Germans had fled from roadblocks and pillboxes, abandoning main posi- tions with guns and ammunition. The Third Army, closing to within seven and a half miles of Prum after seizing Winterscheid, swept three and a half miles into Germany without sighting a tank. Prum is the big road and railway center which sup- plies the Siegfried network facing southern Belgium and northern Lux- embourg. Rail Yards Battered Ahead of them, hundreds of Allied heavy bombers battered rail yards and bridges in the Ruhr and Rhine- land, attempting to paralyze German troop movement from the western to the eastern front. Far to the south, the battle to drive the Germans from Alsace gathered momentum. French and American forces virtually wiped out the Rhine- bank salient south of Strasbourg and tightened the ring around Colmar- last big French town in German hands-by severing its main railway line to the Rhine. Something Serewey Reported An Associated Press dispatch from the presently-quiet U. S. Ninth Army front on the Roer north of Aachen said that there was something "screwy" on the Western Front-that whole sections had been abandoned by the Germans and not yet occupied by the Allies. Lt. Gen. Courtney H. Hodges' First Army, storming the Siegfried line in at least three sectors, met little re- sistance at some points and heavy at others as it developed its assault along a line from the area of Mon- schau, 15 miles southeast of Aachen, southward for 20 miles to the front near St. Vith. CAMPUS EVENTS Today Open House for students in Bus. Ad school from 9 p. m. to midnight at the League. Today Post-War Council will present movies on China at 7:30 p. m. in the Rack- ham Amphitheatre. Feb. 3 Eighth Choral Union Con- cert featuring Dorothy Maynor, soprano, at 8:30 p. m. in Hill Auditorium. Feb. 4 University Concert Band, under the direction of Prof. Revelli, will give the annual mid-winter per- I German broadcasts, however, said that the Russians had broken through to the Oder northwest of Kustrin, 40 miles from Berlin, and had fought their way into the edge of Kustrin, only to be hurled out by strong Nazi reinforcements hurried from central Germany, the Baltic port of Stettin and the western front. In a new crossing into Germany from Poland west of Leszno the Rus- sians penetrated to within six miles of Glogau, stronghold on the middle Oder River 117 miles southeast of Berlin. The Russians farther downstream smashed to within 10 miles of Cros- son, 68 miles southeast of Berlin, and in this area and near Kustrin appar- ently were preparing to cross the Oder in a big pincers movement on the capital, by-passing Frankfurt and Kustrin. Reds 150 Localities During the day the Russians cap- tured 150 more localities in the ad- vance on Berlin, and far to the north- west toppled Ratzebuhr, 26 miles north of encircled Schneidemuhl and only 58 miles from the Baltic. This latter drive was aimed at cutting off another big segment of German forces between those trapped in East Prussia and the Stettin area north of Berlin. The threat to Berlin was so acute that Nazi broadcasts already said that the battle for the capital had begun; Soviet gunfire was reported audible in Berlin, and Soviet planes were rak- ing German troop movements east of the capital. Nazis Shelling Oder River The Germans were reported shell- ing the Oder River and also dyna- miting it in an attempt to break up the ice sheets which might aid a Russian crossing. Torun, big Vistula river port city of 63,000, fell after a six-day siege be- gun last Saturday when the Russians encircled the Nazi stronghold. It is 80 miles northeast of surrounded Poz- nan, last big Polish city in German hands and another island of resist- ance far behind the Soviet lines fight- ing toward Berlin. GolGold man To Be Honored Conductors Will Be Music School's Guests Members of the School of Music faculty and students will honor Mor- ton Gould and Dr. Edwin F. Goldman, guest conductors at the Seventh An- nual Band and Orchestra Clinic, to be held here tomorrow and Sunday, with a reception at 3 p. m. today in the Rackham Building. Gould, who will conduct the Con- cert Band in several of his composi- tions, including "Jericho," arrived to- day from Cleveland, O., where the Cleveland Symphony Orchestra per- formed a work that he was commis- sioned to write for it. This is Gould's second appearance in Ann Arbor re- cently, last visiting as a guest at the band's annual Spring Concert in 1940. Began Career Early The young composer-conductor be- gan his musical career at the early age of four and at six his first com- position, a waltz, was published. Known in musical circles as a note- worthy concert pianist when only 17 years old, Gould was later engaged by a radio station in New York to nrPCan+ h ie nwn muneal nnrn m. by The Associated Press PHILIPPINES, Luzon, Feb. 1.-Green out by 407 picked fighters of the clad United States rangers and Fili- sixth ranger battalion and guerrillas. pino guerrillas rescued 513 gaunt and Stealthily piercing the Neuvo ragged men, mostly American stur- IEci; a Province hills, the comman- vivors of the Bataan "death march" do force led by Lt.-Col. Hsenry and Corregidor, in a bold raid Tues- Mucci, of Bridgeport, Conn., with day night 25 miles behind Japanese the Filipino guerrilla unit under lines. Maj. Robert Lapham, of Daven- It was the first mass rescue of port, Iowa, hit the Cabantuan pris- prisoners in the Pacific war, carried on camp near Cabu at 7 p.m., their guns blazing. The prisoners feared the firing Fmeant their liquidation by the Jap- anese had started-an end to their nearly three years of cruel custody since the fall of Bataan and Cor- f regidor. The gaunt and hungry men dodged totefloor, atng hnrangers 'Surrender' Doctrine burst into the barbed wire-enclosed Awaits Allied Approval barracks with the reassuring words: "Take it easy fellows, the Yanks By The Associated Press are here. We got this place, pals."- LONDON, Feb. 1.-Disclosure that Freed were 486 Americans, 23 Brit- a fully fashioned "Instrument of ish, some of whom defended Singa- Surrender" awaits only final Big pore; three Netherlanders and one Three approval was interpreted in Norwegian. Two of the men died on London tonight as heralding a major the way to safety. their failing hearts psychclogical as well as military unable to withstand the ordeal which drive to bring about Germany's cap- climaxed their three years' imprison- itulation. ment. An authoritative source announced They were all that were left at the that the specific terms to be handed Cabantuan camp. whichdonce held the Germans after their surrender 10,000 captives. Hundreds had died had been initialed by representatives from disease, malnutrition or mis- of the United States, Britain and treatment. Others had been removed to work camps in Japan. Clean.-up of the Japanese guards proceeded briskly, the 121 Rangers and 286 Filipinos moving with deadly precision. With no time to lose, the rescuers and rescued started their night forced march back to American lines. Some of the prisoners walked despiteI tropical ulcers, wounds and bodily weakness. Others were carried on the backs of Rangers. Some rode in carabao carts. These were the Michigan men res- cued: Pvt. Joseph Limbaugh, First Lt. Beverly Gibbon, Lt. Isaac Newton La Victoire, Naval Reserve, former psy- chiatrist of Michigan State Correc- tional Institutions, Jackson; Cpl. Frank C. Potyraj; Pfc. William C. Rieck; Capt. Donald S. Robins; Pvt. Robert J. Body. LUZON DRAMA: i 7 1 1 From ap italI City, U. S. Eighth Army Invades West Coast Of Batangas Province; Nearing Cavite ,I Soviet Russia, respectively U.S. Am- bassador John G. Winant, Sir Wil- liam Strang, British Undersecretary of State, and Soviet Ambassador Fy- odor Gusev. Simultaneously came word that Prime Minister Churchill was taking to the conference with President Roosevelt and Premier Marshal Sta- lin-a meeting perhaps now under way- a concrete British plan for four-power rule over the Rhineland and the Ruhr believed to imply crea- tion of a separate political and eco- nomic entity. Dr. Sharfrn Elected Head of Economics Club Prof. I. Leo Sharfman, chairman of the economics department, yes- terday was elected president of the American Economic Association for 1945. Prof. Sharfman is now in Wash- ington, attending a meeting of the officers of the Association, although the 1944 meeting for the entire mem- bership was cancelled in conformity with the request of James F. Byrnes, Director of the Office of War Mobili- zation and Reconversion. Plans are now being formulated for the 1945 meeting. Prof. Sharfman is the third mem- ber of the staff of the Michigan eco- nomics department who has been honored with the presidency of the American Economic Association. The late Henry Carter Adams, who was head of the department from 1880 to 1921, was president of the Asso- ciation in 1896 to 1897; and the late Fred Manville Taylor, who was a member of the department between 1892 and 1929, was president of the Association in 1928. Future of Nazi Heads Planned e aa ByU.S.,Alliesa By The Avweiated Press WASHINGTON, Feb. 1-The Unit- ed States proposed to Britain and other Allies definite plans for punish- ing Nazi leaders and other Germans guilty of atrocities against the Jews inside Germany. This was announced tonight by Acting Secretary of State Joseph C. Grew to meet criticisms aroused by i the dismissal of Herbert C. Pell as American member of the United Na- tions War Crimes Commission. Pell had wanted the German persecutors of German citizens tried as war crimi- nals even though some questions had been raised whether these crimes could technically be classed as war crimes under international law. A policy declaration by Grew made it clear that the United States, like Britain, distinguished between regu- lar war crimes and those atrocities committed against Jews and otherI minority groups inside Germany. Angell flal'blaze' Caused by Cigarette Ann Arbor's reliable fire depart-' ment yesterday answered a frantic call from Angell Hall only to find upon arriving at the scene that the' "blaze" was out. The fire which started between 2:50 and 3:10 p. m. in the AH basement was the result of that rare commodity, a cigarette, coming in contact with a jammed wastepaper basket. "Gross negligence," was the indig- nant firemen's only comment. U' Instructor's 1 ~II Husband Freed ,By Commandos News of the daring raid which rescued United States servicemen, from a Japanese prison camp on Luzon reached Mrs. Isaac N. La Victoire, wife of Lt. La Victoire of the USNR Medical Corps, who has been held captive since the fall of Bataan, as she taught a class of cadet nurses in the School of Nursing yesterday. Mrs. La Victoire, an assistant in basic sciences for nurses, received the first of what later became num- erous phone calls from Mrs. Elsie Panlillo, a Filipino student, who had heard in a news report of the raid, and through official channels learn- ed subsequently that her husband was listed safe. Stationed Near Manila Lt La Victoire, prior to his call to active duty Jan. 28, 1941 in the Navy, had been a psychiatrist in Jackson Prison. He was stationed at the Cavite naval base near Manila when the Philippines were invaded. He was reported missing in May, 1942 and Mrs. La Victoire learned later that he was taken prisoner in January, 1942. Last week she received two cards from her husband dated May and September. the first since the Gripsholm returned in Decem- ber, 1943. The card delivered via the Gripsholm informed her that Lt. La Victoire had been transferred to an- other camp. 'Lucky Break' She realizes now how fortunate that transfer was, Mrs. La Victoire said. A letter received from a fellow prisoner of her husband on the Is- lands, who escaped earlier, leads her to believe, she said, that the lieuten- ant will be sent to Australia and remain there for some time before returning to the States. Mrs. La Victoire, a graduate of the University, assumed her position in the nursing school in the fall of 1942. I By The Associated Press PHILIPPINES, Luzon, Friday, Feb. 2-A new landing southwest of Manila-the third invasion of Luzon island-forced the jaws of a trap north and south of the Philippines capital, with some Yank columns reported today a bare 20 air miles away. Virtually sealing off the possibility of Nipponese troops south of Manila joining those to the north, 11th Division troops of the Eighth Army landed at Nasugbu on the'' west coast of Batangas province 32 miles southwest of Cavite Naval RFC, Commerce Base. They opened a drive north while Department To Yanks of the Sixth Army pressed south from Calumpit down Bulacan Province to the Angat River, the eSeparated closest approach to Manila. These Yanks have covered approximately Approval of Wallace 100 miles since their Jan. 9 landing at Lingayen Gulf. For Cabinet Predicted Eighth Army elements which land-Bc ed Monday northwest of Manila and WASBy The Associated Press -quickly secured Subic Bay as a base ate and President Roosevelt agreed for the Seventh Fleet were reported today on separating the huge RFC today to be moving east against light from the Commerce Department. enemy resistance across the base of The assumption was plain that en- Bataan Peninsula toward a junctureThasupinwslm htH - diigry Wallace can have what's left of with Sixth Army columns driving the cabinet post. southwest from Lubao. Issue Clarified 1 Caught Off Balance The confusion centering around MacArthur reported the enemy was nomination of Wallace for the dual "caught off balance and we landed job held by Jesse Jones was rapidly without loss" at Nasugbu. cleared in this series of quick steps: A fine road leads from Nasugbu to 1-The Senate forestalled by a Manila by way of Tagaytay Ridge vote of 4,-41 efforts to bring up through Cavite Province. Wallace's nomination immediately. He said: 2-The George Bill divorcing the "This operation places the Eighth multi-billion dollar lending agencies Army on the south side of Manila, from the Commerce Department was which is now the center of converg- passed, 74 to 12, and sent to the ing columns of the Sixth and Eighth House. Armies. It largely seals off the possi- 3-Majority leader Barkley of Ken- bility of the enemy troops south of tucky then read a message, coming Manila joining those in the north, and indirectly from the President, saying definitely outflanks the enemy's de- he would sign the George proposal. fense lines in southern Luzon." Names RFC Move Nearer Manila This message promptly enhanced Meanwhile Sixth Army Yanks mov- Wallace's chances of being confirmed ing south upon Manila from captured as Secretary of Commerce-a post Calumpit reached a point only 22 in which he would supervise the cen- miles from Manila as they reached sus, the Weather Bureau, the Coast the Angat River in Bulacan Province. and Geodetic Survey, the Civil Aero- nautics Administration and Statis- Eighth Army troops who landed tical Bureaus. on the west coast of Zambales Pro- By this compromise, the adminis- vince just north of Subic Bay on tration broke through a road block Monday were advancing eastward set up by senators who were all-out against only light Japanese resistance against Wallace's holding any public in their drive to seal off the Bataan office and those who were willing Peninsula. for him to be Secretary of Commerce MacArthur announced the hard- but would not vote to let him admin- hitting First Cavalry Division which ister RFC. distinguished itself on Yeyte now was committed to the Luzon cam- paign. Martha Cook To San Nicholas Taken In the northern sector First Corps forces seized San Nicholas, six miles '~ Additional east of San Manuel on a road, vital to the Japanese, leading into the Cagay- 50 to W SSF an Valley of northern Luzon. RENOWNED CONCERT ARTIST: SJlayn or To Appear Here ToMorrowi Dorothy Maynor, young American soprano, will be heard at 8:30 p. in. tomorrow in Hill Auditorium, under the sponsorship of the University Mu- sical Society. The daughter of a Norfolk, Va., minister, Miss Maynor received her first musical training in the choir of her father's church. She is a graduate of Hampton Institute, which she entered at the age of 14, and where she received her first vocal lessons. Toured Europe Several years after her enrollment at the Tnstitute she toured Eumroe During her first season she ap- peared as soloist with the New York Philharmonic, Boston Symphony, Philadelphia Orchestra, and the Chi- cago Symphony Orchestra. Program Announced Her program Saturday night fol- lows: Gismunda's Aria, from "Ottone"...Handel Roselinda's Aria, from "Roselinda".. Handel Chant de Forgeron................Milhaud Mandoline.......................Faure Les Berceaux....................Faure Fleur Jetee......................Faure Meine Liebe ist gruen ....... ....... Brahms Feldeinsamkeit ............ .....Brahms Steindehen ...............Strauss $150 Donated to Memorial Fund League's Contribution Brings Total to $900 A League contribution of $150 to the Florice Holmes memorial loan fund was announced yesterday by Marge Hall, Women's War Council president. The contribution brought the fund total to $900, only $300 short of the goal set by Miss Alice Lloyd, Dean of Women, who is heading the cam- paign for funds. Miss Holmes, Negro medical stu- dent, lost her life in an unsuccessful attempt to rescue a drowning com- panion in a canoe accident on the Huron River June 25, 1944. The fund to be established in her honor will be a loan fund available in cases of need to all women students registered in the School of Medicine. Contributions from her parents, Dr. and Mrs. Charles Holmes, of Durham. N.C., individual students and members of the medical school In response to the appeal of the World Student Service Fund, whose drive will be introduced on campus by Miss Alexandra Feldmahn, Assistant Executive Secretary of the WSSF, in an address on the "War-Stricken Stu- dent" at 8 p. in. today at Kellogg Auditorium, Martha Cook has voted to contribute $50 from its treasury in addition to individual student con- tributions to the drive. Prisoners Supplied "Nine University of Michigan men are on our list of prisoners of war in Germany who receive regular sup- plies from the WSSF. S/Sgt. Edwin A. Truscott is studying and teach- ing medicine behind the barbed wire of Camp Stalag XVII B. Lt. M. H. Swift, '44, is studying industrial en- gineering in Camp Stalag Luft.; and Lt. G. Ostroot, '44, is studying mech- anical engineering in the same camp," Miss Feldmahn declared in her key- note address to canvassers last night. "Books and study supplies bought with WSSF donations help men like these to live through endless days of nothing to do in prisoner of war camps. Supplies such as these have saved many students from insanity," Miss Feldmahn declared. Acehievement of n u$4 A 0nali s ® 1 ., ::