Lietgant 471 Ott . ...... ...... VOL. LV, No. 85 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN THURSDAY, FEB. 15, 1945 .... . ..... . British, Canadians Lunge earer to Ruhr * * * * * * * * * * Students Will Accept Policy Of Regulation Faculty Supervision of 'Flat Hat' Is Approved By The Associated Press WILLIAMSBURG, Va., Feb. 14- The student body of the College of William and Mary tonight announc- ed it would accept the policy of quasi- editorial supervision of college pub- lications as announced this morning by Dr. John E. Pomfret, president, and would resume publication of the Flat Hat under those conditions with its next regular issue. W. L. Williams, of Norfolk, presi- dent of the student body, in a state- ment issued late tonight and released by Dr. Pomfret, said that the editor and the six junior editors would henceforth constitute the editorial board of the Flat Hat and would ex- amine all materials of an editorial nature. If in the event doubt arises as to the context of any material, Williams said, the faculty councilor would be consulted. No Successor Named No intimation was given as to who would be named as successor to Miss Marilyn Kaemmerle, 22, of Jackson, Mich., whose editorial on race rela- tions, started the controversy which led to her being ousted and the stu- dents protesting faculty censorship. "The student assembly, acting for the student body, recommended that the Flat Hat resume publication in accordance with President Pomfret's recommendations of February 14. The editor and six junior editors will henceforth constitute the board of the Flat Hat and will accept responsi- paper. This board will examine care- bility for material appearing in that fully all materials of an editorial nature and all expressions of opinion, and ifdoubt is expressed regarding the wisdom:.f-publishing such ma- terials the faculty councilor will be consulted, Williams' statement said. Policy To Be Worked Out The president of the college will each September consult with the stu- dents regarding the choice of a coun- cilor, and additional steps will be taken to work out a sound system of editorial policy for the guidance of the editor. of this type of undergrad- uate publication. Earlier in the day students of the college had voted to suspend publi- cation of the college weekly after Dr. Pomf ret announced there would be faculty supervision of the paper Weber Penalty Reduced to Five Years of Labor WASHINGTON, Feb. 14.-()-The death sentence once imposed on Pvt. Henry Weber for refusing to drill has now been cut down to five years at hard labor. This was disclosed today by Maj.- Gen. Myron C. Cramer, Army Judge Advocate General, in a letter to Chairman Thomas (Dem., Utah) of the Senate Military Comm tee. Thomas became interested in the case after the death sentence was pronounced at Camp Roberts, Calif. Senator Wheeler (Dem., Mont.) de- manded an investigation, telling the Senate: "Whoever sentenced that boy to hanging ought to be discharged from the Army. Weber had been quoted as asking for non-combat assignment, on the ground that as a member of the Socialist Labor Party he was opposed to killing human beings. His superior officer charged him specifically with refusing to join his squad for train- ing, a court martial offense in war- time. Weber was convicted. The trial court itself however rescinded the death penalty and decreed life at hard labor. CAMPUS EVENTS Today Three forums on veterans problems to be held at 8 p. m. at Jones, Slauson, and Tappan Junior High Feb. 16 Daily ceases publication. Feb. 17 Final exams begin. Feb. 18 Faculty recital: Gilbert Ross, Helen Titus to per- fnrm at o n .m in Russians Seize Enemy Strongholds .C British, U.S. Air Forces Smash Ahead o rv Pomeranian Fortress of Schneidmuhl Taken; 7,000 Germans Killed, 5,000 Captured By The Associated Press LONDON, Feb. 14-The Russian First Ukraine Army seized seven German city-strongholds in Silesia today as it bludgeoned its way towards Berlin and Dresden with the aid of British and American bombers that smashed Dresden, Chemnitz and other centers ahead of the Soviet advance. In Pomerania the First White Russian Army liquidated the holdout fortress of Schneidemuehl, 15 miles be Holmes Fund Contributions Reach $1,200 Money To Be Turned In at Regents' Meeting Contributions to the Florice Holmes memorial loan fund have reached the $1,200 goal set by the Office of the Dean of Women and will be pre- sented to the Board of Regents at their next meeting, Miss lice Lloyd, Dean of Women, announced yester- day. The money will be used to estab- lish a loan fund to be available in cases of need to all women students registered in the School of Medicine. Tragedy Out of Rescue Miss Holmes, Negro medical stu- dent, lost her life in an unsuccessful attempt to rescue Langston Jones, also a University student, from drow- ning after their canoe capsized on, the Huron River June 25, 1944. ; She was a graduate of the Univer- sity of North Carolina, Durham, N.C.,I and held a master's degree from this; University. Miss Lloyd points outt that she was an excellent student3 and a "fine campus citizen."t Shortly after the accident, a num- ber of spontaneous contributions for a memorial were sent to the OfficeI of the Dean of Women. DefiniteI plans to use the money for a niemr-i ial loan fund were announced inI January, but no organized campaign has been conducted and all contribu-7 tions have been unsolicited.z Total $1,212r Contributions now total $1,212, and were received from Miss Holmes par- ents, Dr. and Mrs. Charles Holmes of Durham, N.C., other members of hert family, the League, individual stu- dents, members of the medical school faculty, and Alpha Epsilon Iota, wo-' men's medical sorority., The size of the fund is not limited, Miss Lloyd said, and present plans call for a perpetually growing mem- orial. Contributions will be accepted and added to the fund at any time. Cash donations and checks made out to the University and designated for the fund may be sent to Miss Ethel A. McCormick, social directorp of the League, or to Miss Lloyd. ' Fund Drive To Open March 1 When the 1945 Red Cross War Fund campaign opens on March 1, Ann Arbor will have a quota of $79,100 tof fill, and the University goal has beenf set at $4,500, it was announced by R. J. Bonini, chairman of the Wash-s tenaw County drive. Divisions of the campaign have 1 been listed with individual special gifts set at a quota of $15,000; resi- dential $16,000; industry and labor,k $15,000; business district $10,000; spe-1 cial groups $7,400; public employees,k $1,500; and clubs and sundry organ- izations, $1,800.Z hind the lines, killing more than 7,000 Germans and capturing 5,000 after a two-weeks siege. Prisoners Taken In Budapest, which fell Tuesday, the Russians picked up another 12,700 prisoners, mostly abandoned wound- ed, raising the list of captured in that one city to nearly 123,000. The final toll will be higher, as Moscow said a fragment of the garrison escaped only to be surrounded again west of the Hungarian capital. Therday's successes, announced in two orders of the day by Premier Stalin and the regular nightly Mos- cow communique, also credited the First Ukraine Army of Marshal Ivan S. Konev with bagging 2,100 prison- ers and taking more than 200 popu- lated centers in Silesia. Up ahead to the west of the Rus- sians could see in the skies the red glare of fires set in Dresden by 4,000 tons of British and American bombs, apparently the first fruits of the Cri- mea Conference. Chemnitz, 34 miles farther west, also was hard hit. 'Definite Plan' The BBQ quoted a Soviet military observer as saying the Allies were working together "with precision and according to a definite plan." Konev's men held the spotlight, however. Moscow news dispatches said they had crossed the Queis River defense line in their drive towards Dresden while the Swiss radio quoted German accounts as saying the northern wing had reached Sommer- feld, only 71 miles southeast of Mer- lin. The German DNB Agency itself broadcast that Konev had broken into Sorau, 84 miles southeast of Ber- lin. By Russian official account Konev's nearest approach to Berlin was 84 miles, with capture of Freystadt, 75 miles northwest of besieged Breslau. Other cities taken in this north- westward sweep included Neuzalz, six miles northeast of Freystadt; Neus- tadtel, seven miles southeast; and Sprottau, 13 miles south. Gilbert Ross To Give Recital Faculty Presentation To Be Last of Term Prof. Gilbert Ross, violinist, and Miss Helen Titus, pianist, will pre- sent the final faculty recital for the term, featuring Jacobi's "Ballade"' and "Rumanian Folk Dances" by Bartok, at 8:30 p.m. Sunday in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Acting conductor of the University Symphony Orchestra, Prof. Ross has appeared in numerous recitals in Ann Arbor, Detroit and Grand Rap- ids since he came here from Smith College two years ago. He also per- formed a complete series of Beetho- ven and Mozart sonatas during the summer session. The program will include sonatas by Brahms, Mozart, -Pergolesi, ex- cerpts from Strawinsky's "The Fire Bird," "Rumanian Folk Dances" (7) by Bartok and "Ballade." The "Bal- lade" was written by Frederick Jaco- bi who shared the directorship of the Julliard Music School with Bernard Wagner, in 1943. UTRECHT Issel R. - /R Zutphen srAUTE MiLES 11de Ed/eN~'Zfp~ ~A~~JMEGEN RN Emmwc WoolRhne?.NEGERM ANY r KLEVE as.- toRe chswald MY7GochWesel HOLLAND Venray Maas R, EbSE Eindhoven DuRsh 7I Veno Duisburg R 2n aMr Krefeld'> Weert ', Viersen*Duesseldorf Roermond 'N.s - ,.Gladbach BELGIUM Hasseiv*I __ ch COLOGNE Maastrcht Roer R. " tDueien AACHEN \o Heimbach LIEGE " -hwammenauel Dom (Ne__ M n cGemuend t rARM Y'\ _'"_ Schleiden Kronenbu g NOgne L u St. V th PRUEM ; ALLIED THREATS TO GERMAN INDUSTRIAL AREAS -- Shaded areas show possible Allied drives into German industrial areas in the Rhineland and the Ruhr. Canadian First Army forces (1) advanced on Emmerich in their offensive at the northern end of the front (broken), while the U. S. Third Army (2) drove through Pruem. V-Bal Tickets May Still Be Bou 'htw--for $4 Plan To Hold Extras In Reserve Announned "Gee, I'd like to go to V-Ball all right, but I won't have enough money to buy a ticket until after the first of the month. I guess I'm just out of Thus run the thoughts of many a student who, for reasons best known to himself, discovers that he hasn't got the necessary cash to buy a V- Ball ticket now and who realizes that tomorrow is the last day tickets will be sold. Plan Announced To get around the difficulty and give these students a chance to go to what is popularly termed the biggest social event of the season, Norma Johnson, director of V-Ball ticket sale's, has announced this plan: Students, especially those in the service, who would find it easier to get their tickets after March 1 may sign their names indicating that fact between 3 and 5 p. m. today and to- morrow at the V-Ball ticket booth in the Union lobby. For each person who signs up one ticket will be placed in reserve, to be sold to that student sometime during the first week of the spring term. May Reserve Tickets The student need put no money down on the ticket reservation, and his only obligation is that he should buy his ticket as soon as those reserv- ed tickets go on sale next month. Date of the actualdistribution will be an- nounced later. Tickets will be on sale in the regu- lar manner all day today and tomor- row at the Union Main Desk. Sales Total 1000 Over 1000 tickets have already been sold for the dance, a committee tabu- lation showed yesterday. Posters ap- peared throughout the campus yes- terday advertising the Victory pall, which will be held from 9 a. m. to 1 p. m. Friday, March 9, at the Intra- mural Building. This unusual manner in which stu- dents can get their V-Ball tickets has been put into effect because the V- Ball committee is anxious to keep up the tradition which says this dance must be a two-orchestra affair. Mor- ton Scholnick, band chairman, cannot complete arrangements with another dance combination until there are definite indications that the full limit of 1500 tickets will1be sold. Cigarettes Called Back on Counters NEW YORK, Feb. 14.-(P)-Re gional OPA Administrator Daniel P. Woolley today urged the cigarette industry to have cigarettes back on retail counters by next Monday. "The OPA has power to force you to do it," he told a meeting of job- bers, sub-jobbers and retailers in his office, "This is a beautiful, soft velvet glove on a hell of a tough iron mitt." With the publication of Friday's issue, The Daily will cease publi- cation for the Fall Term. Publi- cation will be resumed March 6. Two German Sub Spies Found Guilty, Sentenced To Death Counterattacks Light In Canadian Wedge By Thie Associated Press PARIS, Feb. 14.- While almost 8,000 Allied warplanes battered Ger- man installations from the Siegfried Line to the Russian front today, British and Canadian forces lunged nearer Hitler's industrially vital Ruhr valley against resistance that began to slacken after a week of steady pressure. The Canadians advanced all along the front of their powerful wedge which is inflexibly turning the flank of German divisions holding the nor- thern end of the Siegfried Line and the Rhine plain. Northeast of Kleve They pushed to points northeast of Kleve, four miles southeast of Kleve, cleared the Kleve Forest three miles north of Goch and established a sec- ond bridgehead over the Niers River, west of Wessel The German command hurled at least four counterattacksdagainst the Canadian units driving eastward, but they were officially described as gen- erally lighter than previous counter- thrusts and all were repulsed, some with the aid of Allied planes. One Allied column was fighting forward within a mile and a half of the heavily-fortified road center of Goch, eight miles south of Kleve. Goch already was outflanked by the capture of Bedbirgand Hasselt, twin towns east of Kleve Another road center, Calcar, was the objective of other British troops and neared Moy- land, three miles to the northwest. Moyland is 18 miles from the impor- tant Ruhr valley city of Wesel. Scots Drive On On the southern flank of the offen- sive front, Scottish troops pushed steadily down a road toward Afferden -on the east bank of the Maas Afield dispatch said that both bridgeheads over the Niers River in the vicinity of Bennep and Viller had been expand- ed in heavy fighting. One was more than a half-mile deep. Allied troops were within a few hundred yards of Kessel, road hub at the southern edge of the Reichswald, and its capture was believed near. The U.S. Third Army-the only other major unit of Gen. Eisenhow- er's massive forces now participating in the attack from the west-scored gains ur to a mile. Maj. Gallagher Succeeds Smith To Army Post Major Edward H. Gallagher, Ad- jutant for the Command for the past year, has been appointed to succeed the former Executive Officer for the ASTU-ROTC, Lieutenant Colonel Ridgeway P. Smith, who left Ann Arbor, Sunday, for Chicago to take command of Distrit No. Three, Sixth Service Command. Before leaving for his new assign- ment, Col. Smith expressed his appre- ciation to the University and to the people of Ann Arbor for the "splendid cooperation" he had received while stationed here. A veteran of the last war, Col. Smith entered the Regular Army shortly after the Armistice. He has seen foreign service in the Philip- pines, Hawaii, Alaska ad Panama. While stationed in the United States, Col. Smith had been active for many years in the ROTC program at sev- eral colleges, before coming to Mich- igan to supervise its ROTC program. His successor here, Maj. Gallagher, 'was appointed to his new post by Lt.- Col. Reginald C. Miller, Commanding Officer of Army forces in Ann Arbor. Churchill, Eden Go to Greece ATHENS, Feb. 14.-(P)- British Prime Minister Churchill and For- eign Secretary Anthony Eden arrived in Athens by plane late today and received a stirring ovation from thou- sands of Athenians at a ceremony in Constitution Square. Churchill, in a short speech full of enthusiasm andr ontimism. toldthe By The Associated Press NEW YORK, Feb. 14-William Curtis Colepaugh, an American whom the prosecution called "a double- crossing traitor," and Erich Gimpel, Yearly Foremen Meeting Slated For Tomorrow The Seventh Annual Foremen's Conference, sponsored by the Univer- sity Extension Service to discuss cur- rent industrial problems, will be held at 1 p. m. tomorrow at the Rackham Memorial Building in Detroit. Presiding over the individual con- ferences extending through 8:45 p. m. will be Prof. John W. Riegel, Univer- sity industrial relations authority. Conference discussion subjects in- clude: "Public and Private Services Available to Veterans," "The Fore- man and Discipline," "How to Dis- cover and Adjust Grievances," and "The Supervisor and Morale." Among noted authorities in the field of worker-management relations scheduled to attend the conference are C. C. Akridge, vice-president of the National Association of Foremen, and Leo Wolman, former University professor, now director-at-large of the National Bureau of Economic Re- search, Inc. China Educator1 To Visit Center Dr. A. W. Lindsay, visiting the University School of Dentistry, will be a guest at the International Cen- ter tea at 4 p.m. today. Dr. Lindsay, dean and professor of the College of Dentistry, West China Union University, was invited by the Chinese government to be a his German accomplice, were convict- ed today as Nazi spies and sentenced to die by hanging. Without displaying emotion, Gim- pel-and then Colepaugh-stood be- fore a seven man military commission and heard Col. Clinton J. Harrold, its president, say: "This commission, by a secret written ballot, finds you guilty upon all three counts, and you are here- by sentenced to be hanged by the neck until dead." Still silent and showing no signs of faltering, Colepaugh and Gimpel were led by their guards from the courtroom and taken back to the 138- year-old Castle 'Williams, Governors Island guard house. The charges against them were: they violated the law of war by secret- ly landing behind our defense lines from ansubmarine;they acted as spies in violation of the 82nd article of war and they conspired to commit espionage and sabotage. The verdict meant that the 26- year-old Colepaugh, a native of Nian- tic, Conn., had tried in vain to throw off the traitor label. U.S., BRITAIN CONCEDE: Big Three Compromise Bans Nation Veto; Stalin Agrees A MEETING OF MINDS: End of Yugoslav Split Seen (Editor's Note: The following story is by Maurice Western, war correspondent for the Sifton Newspapers of Canada. Western is one of a small group of Allied rvar correspondents recently admitted into Yugoslavia by Marshal Tito.) WASHINGTON, Feb. 14.-()-The Crimean compromise on Dumbarton Oaks voting procedure represented substantial concessions by both Rus- sia and the United States along lines originally put forward by Britain, diplomats learned today. Russia accepted the principle that a great power might be accused of real or threatened aggression before the world security council of which the five greatest post-war powers will accused great power would have a veto. Russia, however, agreed at Yalta that a great power could be accused. The United States receded on an Allied point involving the next step in dealing with a power accused of aggression-that is the decision on whether to apply sanctions, military force or other forms of collective ac- tion against it. On this point Russia obtained agreement to a voting pro- cere which wnulr reauire mani- i __ ">