NOV. 15, 1944 THlE MICHIGAN DAILY Malinovsky's Troops Tighten Stranglehold on Budapest Capture of 30 Towns Announced by Reds as Artillery Moves Toward Capital By The Associated Press LONDON, NOV. 14-Soviet Marshal Rodin Y. Malinovsky set the stage tonight for the fall of Budapest, straightening his lines by advances northeast and south of the Hungarian capital and moving his armor, artillery and infantry into a strangling semicircle around the city. Most of the day's operations of the Red Army on the sodden Eastern front were aimed at getting into position for a death strike at Budapest. The Russian communique announced capture of more than 30 towns in a line extending for 45 miles east and northeast of Hitler's last satellite capital and liquidation of the enemy bridgehead on the east bank of the Danube with capture of Solt and POST-GRID CAMPAIGN: Football Delegation May Visit GI's After Present Fall Season Duna Egyhaza, 45 and 42 miles south. Russians Hold Positions Holding fast to their positions within easy medium artillery range of Budapest on the south, Malin- ovsky's men drove north and north- west from Monor and took Uri and Peteri, registering gains of three to five miles. Farther east they took the big rail- way town of Nagykata, 27 miles east of Budapest. and 10 miles south of Jaszbereny, and extended their hold closely on both sides of the latter important center, with Heves, 17' miles northeast, the largest town taken. The whole operation had the ef- fect of straightening out the pre- viously sinuous line stretching 80 miles northeast from the Budapest vicinity to positions south of Miskolc. Acknowledge Soviet Gains The German radio said the Rus- sians had dug in less than two miles from Jasgereny and acknowledged that they had made various penetra- tions along the line from Monor northeast. The Germans also inti- mated that a strong drive for Mis- kolc, a big railway junction, appear- ed to be developing from the south. In eliminating the Germans' Dan- ube River bridgehead south of Buda- pest, the Russians used three in- fantry .divisions, according to Ger- man accounts, which admitted that the position had been evacuated in favor of. newly-prepared holdings on the west bank. Coastal Brde At Ghiaia Canal ROME,.NOV. 14-(P-The British Eighth.Army has won the coastal highway bridge .over the Ghiaia Canal .before Ravenna and in im- portant gains of up to two miles in the Forli area has captured the vil- lage of San Tome, Allied headquart- ers announced today. Southwest of Forli, the town of San Varano was found to be clear of the ehemy but heavily mined, and British troops crossed the Montone southwest of the village at two points.. The Germans counterattack- ed strongly at the lower crossing, but Allied positionshwere maintained. In -the hills south of the Rimini- Bologna highway, new features were captured. At one place Polish troops advanced nearly two miles, captur- ing Monte Casole, a 1,450-foot peak. Hard fighting was in progress just west of Monte Casole in the neigh- borhood of the village of Cella. On the Fifth Army front, action! again was limited to patrolling and shelling. Scattered showers were re- portedfrom the entire front. i ii b 0 F French Seek U.S. Exports for Rehabilitation. WASHINGTON, NOV. 14--(A')- The French are seeking approximate- ly two billion dollars worth of United States exports during the next 12 months for use in rebuilding their country, it was learned tonight. oArrangements for the huge pro- curement program already are near- ing completion. Some of the goods may be shipped on lend-lease because they are considered necessary to' France's war effort against Ger- many or Japan but the great bulk will go partly for cash and officials hope, partly on credit. The French program, probably the farthest advanced of the economic plans to come out of liberated Eu- rope, calls for purchasing 700 loco- motives as well as comparable quan- tities of railway rolling stock and track equipment; trucks for highway transport; huge shipments of cotton, fertilizers, and other raw materials. It has recently been revised as a result of the discovery upon the lib- eration of France that the ravages of war had not been as great as officials first believed. The amounts of factory equipment desired have been sharply reduced and the amounts of raw materials required to keep existing French factories run- ning have been greatly increased. Similarly there was a reduction in food required and an increase in fer- tilizer and other food producing ma- terials. War. Contract Total Revealed Washtenaw County Gets 8.7 Per Cent Washtenaw County has produced a cumulative total of $1,898,529 in war supply and facility contracts since Pearl Harbor, the Detroit Re- gional Office of the War Production Board revealed today. This represents 8.7 per cent of the total state war production of $21,- 925,777, and is .9 per cent of the cumulative national total of $203,- 218,121,000. "The part which. Washtenaw County has played in the war picture has been of inestimable value," Car- sten Tiedeman, regional WPB di- rector said. ADD WAR CONTRACT p. 5 M1 "The figures do not represent the amount of war work completed, but war facility and supply contracts placed in this area. While the mone- tary amounts represent contracts placed, the work involved goes far into the future," he added. NEW YORK-NOV. 14--AP)-Foot- )all plans to send a delegation of coaches, players and newspapermen o the various war theaters following the grid campaign as baseball is go- ng at the present time. The plan originally was conceived by Lt. Col. Henry W. CEsky) Clark of the Army Special Selvice Forces. Before the War, Clark was director of athletics at Lafayette and dur- ing his under-gaduate days was a football player at Harvard. Clark, in describi ig the idea, said "That I believe :a GI would get a tremendous t rill out of talking to, say Fritz Ci isler of Mi- chigan or Lou Little o f Columbia. "And a wounded serveice man cer- tainly would receive ins iration from seeing some football gr eat and dis- covering that the playe, had a phy- sical defect but became a star nev- ertheless." If weather and wa r condidtions permit it is possible th a t the travel- ing coaches may be assigned to var- ious teams in a certai ti theater for a championship game. great quanti- ties of equipment already have been shipped overseas for use by the ser- vicemen. Crisler and Steve O'wens of the New York Pro Giants, have been mentioned as possible members of the coaching division, while Ward Cuff, a member of the Giant back- field and a recent medical dis- charge from the army, may go as a player-tourist. Ralph W. Olson of Honolulu, has reached New York on his survey of the trio of pro football loops expected to spring up after peace comes. Tex Oliver, former Oregon coach but now a Lieutenant Commander in the Navy, is Olson's choice as coach of the island eleven. FDR To Make 4th Oath Simple Event WASHINGTON, Nov. 14.- (O)- President Roosevelt has decided to do away with the usual inaugural trappings and take his fourth term oath in a simple White 'House cere- mony. Amplifying at his news conference on this announcement, Mr. Roose- velt said he made his choice because it would save money. He figured the whole cost could be held to $2,00, he said. The Congressional committee had been contemplating expending about $25,000, Mr. Roosevelt said. CHURCHILL, DEGAULLE HONOR UNKNOWN SOLDIER-Prime Minister Winston Churchill of Great Britain (second from left) and Gen. Charles DeGaulle (second from right) pay homage to the French Unknown Soldier during Armistice Day celebration in Paris on Nov. 11. QUICKIE'BRIDGES: Third Army Engineers twi Weal iter nuiie n-letz Seor nfkj I/ite4 By KENNETH L. DIXON Associated Press Correspondent, WITH THE AEF ON THE WEST-' ERN FRONT, Nov. 11.-(Delayed)- Nobody ever gets anywhere telling. the weatherman how to behave, so when Lt.-Gen. Patton's Third Army advance got under way here in the Metz sector the men had to keep moving despite mud, rain, snow and floods. With the 60th Combat Engineers, it became a matter of ingenuity. They had to be ready to get tanks across rivers and the flooded Lor- raine valleys under fire. While await- ing the order to advance, some offi- cers in the 60th got an idea and passed it along to Sgt. Eugene Con- ran of Brooklyn and the sergeant got busy. The scene shifts to a river cross- ing a few days later when the Sherman tanks jumped off with orders to cross the river and cap- ture a strategic town on the other side. "There was German machinegun crossfire at the bridge site," said Sgt. DeWitt Gilpin of Chicago. "But that bridge was placed across the river in exactly 20 minutes working time. The tanks rolled across. A .little later, supplies and ammunition fol- lowed. Another 'Quickie' bridge, and the town was ours." Bridges Built in Bivouac "The idea is that you build a bridge back in the bivouac area and then bring it up ready made, all set to throw across." explained S/Sgt. Harold Miller of Warsaw, Mo. "It cuts down Jerry's shooting time at you." As soon as the tanks were rolling HITCH-HIKING: Aussie Goes Homne on. Leave CALGARY, NOV. 13-OP)-An un- named Australian airman hitch-hik- ed to Australia and back to Canada on his two weeks' furlough, arriving back at his station at Vulcan, Al- berta, with five hours to spare, ac- cording to a story current here. After hitch-hiking to Lethbridge, the story says, he went to the air-' port and mentioned to United States ferry command pilots he was headed for the U. S. and asked for suggest- ions. They flew him to San Diego and passed him along to fellow fliers with instructions to show him a good time. The airman passed from one group of ferry fliers to another, landed in Australia, spent three days with his family, and U. S. airmen flew him back to North America. The distance he travelled equalled a trip around the world. across the river, the engineers got! busy making more "bivouac-built I bridges" to be ready for other cross-I ings. Despite the weather, another ( outfit, also a part of the 25th Divi- sion, found the advance a matter of human endurance. These were1 doughboys of the 320th Infantry Regiment. "They had mud for mattresses, rainwater for sheets and German bullets for lullabies," reported Pvt. Whitney Hanson of Salt Lake City, a former fiction writer. "You wouldn't believe men could sleep in those conditions in the middle of an attack-but they did." "I wouldn't believe it either unless I'd seen it," agreed his companion., in a voice flat with fatigue. "But most of our men were so exhausted they'd fall. asleep every time we stopped for any reason. Fall Dead Asleep "When the attack was held up, they'd fall asleep right there in the mud-bullets whining over and a- round them, rain falling all the time. As soon as a German strongpoint was wiped out, we'd wake them up and push along. The next time we were pinned down, they'd do it again." Nevertheless, these men had gotten up and gone ahead when the time came to attack again-and as we stood there talking, they were get- ting ready to attack again, right away. host-War Giua rd To Reach 18,(000 Gen. Colladay Foresees Improved State Troops LANSING, Mich., Nov. 14.-()P)- Brig.-Gen. Thomas Colladay, com- manding general of the Michigan State Troops, said today that mili- tary planners foresee a post-war Michigan National Guard of 18,000 men into which much of the present Michigan State Troops has been absorbed, and well supplied with modern Army equipment. Post-war size of the National Guard, Colladay said, still is offi- cially undecided, but 18,000 is the most widely accepted figure. The pre-war National Guard was about 7,400 men and the state troops full strength today is about 7,600. Colladay predicted the new guard would be much better equipped than the old guard, and would benefit substantially from expenditures for the upkeep of the state troops during the war. He estimated that "several million dollars worth" of equipment will be turned over to the guard by the state troops when the latter are disbanded. By BYRON WEBB JR. In the spotlight now, performing at all home football games, is the University of Michigan Marching Band. Acclaimed by Associated Press sports writers as "The All-American Band," this organization in pre-war days was enthusiastically received in Philadelphia, New York, Boston, New Haven, Minneapolis and other cities where it has appeared. This year it consists of 100 musicians, of which 65 are Navy students, nine Army students, and 26 male civilians. Although the end of football season brings with it the end of the Marching Band, two other University of Michigan Bands car- ry on-the Concert and the "Pops" which draw many members from the Marching Band. The Concert Band differs from the Marching Band in its instrumenta- tion, adding certain instruments (alto and bass clarinets, oboe, Eng- lish horn, bassoons, string bass and tympani) which would be impracti- cal for marching work. It is known all over the nation as one of the outstanding organi- zations of its kind, and the famous New York bandmaster, Dr. Edwin Franko Goldman has said that it stands without a peer among col- lege bands. The "Pops" Band con- tinues throughout the year, play- ing for basketball games as well as presenting concerts of its own. The first reference to a band at Michigan was found in the quotation of a graduate of the class of 1844 who wrote that a band of nine pieces assisted in the singing of chapel services. In 1859, fifteen students, who made ensemble music their hobby, formed "Les Sans Souci." It was this ,group which first took the name of the Michigan Band, although the University gave it no official recognition. Then, in 1895, by order of the Board of Regents the official Michi- gan Band was organized. At the turn of the century a bandstand was built near the old library, in the center of the campus, and was the scene of a number of well-attended concerts. In 1914, the First Annual Spring Band Concert was presented in Hill Auditorium. Conductor for the past nine years, William D. Revelli has a notable rec- ord in music. He began his musical education in St. Louis, Mo., where he was a pupil of Sarli of the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra and enrolled in the Beethoven Conservatory of Music. He since has studied with such eminent figures as Leon Samatini, Louis Victor Saar, and Felix Bor- owski. In 1925, Mr. Revelli was .elcected as supervisor of music in the Hobart Public Schools, Hobart, inn., where he organized the high school band. He then performed the phenomenal feat of directing it to first place in Class B in the National Contest for five years. 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Take an Active Part in- EXTRA-CURRICULAR ACTIVITIES AT THE UNION 1 I I f Classify your notebook with these bright-colored index tabs .,.; Flip to the subject wanted on the instant.. .Takes but a moment to attach and slide title card into transpar- T fj . -s su&..,,, ./ You can be on committees for: Dances ... War Activities ... Orientation Publicity ... Football Dances ... "Campus News" III 1 f{ I