I i i fri&4rn ttij Weather Fair and Cloudy VOL. LIV No. 3-S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, JULY 7, 1944 PRICE FIVE CENTS 200 Reported Dead in Circus Holocaust New Red Advances Yanks Close in on La Haye Du Puits; Threaten Wooded Heights Near City Reported Soviets Are Within 10 Miles of Wilno By The Associated Press LONDON, July 7, Friday-Soviet troops were reported by the Berlin radio early today to be within ten miles of the Baltic gateway of Wilno (Vilna) and the Russiansdthemselves announced important advances all along the central front now stretch- ing 350 miles north from newly cap- tured Kowel in southern Poland. The Moscow radio said the Ger- mans in Wilno, big rail center in the northern neck of pre-war Poland, were threatened with the same kind of debacle they suffered in the White Russian capital of Minsk. All the reserves that the Nazi com- mand could muster were being thrown into the battle, Russian re- ports said, but according to Moscow the fall of the city was imminent and the Germans were making prepara- tions to evacuate even while waging a desperate delaying fight. In a dispatch from Moscow, Asso- ciated Press Correspondent Eddy Gil- more called the capture of Kowel the commencement of "a great new Red Army thrust in the direction of PinsiC and Brest Litovsk" and the German radio itself said a reason for the withdrawal was to forestall a Russian pincers movement. More than 550 other places were takenduring the day as Soviet troops smashed westward all along thefront and the Moscow communique said more than 5,000 Germans were killed as the Russians continued their me- thodical-moppingup of the area east of Minsk. An entire regiment with its, commander surrendered, the war bulletin stated. Gen. Ivan Bagramian's drive north- westward from Polotsk, already with- in a few miles of the borders of both Latvia and Lithuania, swept into more than 150 inhabited localities, including five railway stations. West and northwest of Minsk Gen. Ivan Cherniakhovsky's Third White Rus- sian Army captured more than 300 places. Both drives directly threatened the city of Wilno (Vilna), disputed in battle for centuries, and the com- munique disclosed fresh bombings there and at Bialystok by huge fleets of Russian bombers during the night. Better weather was helping the Soviet Air Force, not only in thii sector but also to the north where fighters and light bombers were sweeping back and forth over enemy positions in the Wilno area clearing the way for the advance of Red infantry. Ann Arbor, County Exceed War Bond Quota Ann Arbor and Washtenaw County .went more than $367,000 beyond their Fifth War Loan Drive quota yesterday as total sales reached $9,472,966, Warren F. Cook, Wash- tenaw county Chairman of the War Finance Committee, said. Although out-county purchasers neared the quota for E-Bond pur- chases, Ann Arbor still lagged far behind in E-Bond sales, Cook said, and the brunt of the bond buying was carried by corporations and pur- chasers of large denomination bonds. 4' Heavy Fire Covers Only Escape Route By The Associated Press SUPREME HEADQUARTERS AL- LIED EXPEDITIONARY FORCE, Friday, June 7-U. S. troops closing a ring about the enemy anchor of La Haye Du Puits have stormed to the edge of the Foret De Mont Cas- tre-where strong enemy forces lie in wait-and are threatening the last wooded heights dominating the town, supreme headquarters announced last night. Front line dispatches said the only escape route out of the road and rail junction on the south was under ar- tillery fire, and reported savage fight- ing toward the heights of the forest, three miles east of La Haye, whose capture would unhinge enemy de- fenses resting, on La Haye on the west and the Bog, Marais De Gorges, on the east. Yank Leave Railway The Americans relinquished their hold on the railway station in the north part of La Haye. In the brightest, hottest day in Normandy since D-Day, another col- umn coming around the great bog on, the east fought down the road south- west from Carentan, widening thisI narrowest sector of the whole Nor-x mandy front in an advance of moret than a mile despite enemy counterat- tacks. Both British and Germans pouredr armor and infantry into the battleI raging for Carpiquet airfield, onlyt three miles east of Caen on the roadt to Paris, and the night communiquec said a number of enemy tanks weree destroyed. Allies Throw Aerial PunchI With the skies cleared at last, andI the Allies free to throw their Sunday aerial punch at the enemy, German1 communications took a severe maul- ing as hundreds of warplanes went * * * * * * [' AudervilIe - 'Ag'0 15 ~ "~'~ Barfteur -+cqebc one oug _ne aR StSas Cateret Sauveur R . St bors' Care ntan '"... ,.St Aubin %sgn *.ssa' Carp aetIAs . ~ BaVerson .s m R. 1P.OdonS'a*Thury" Vileie "FRANCE " ~Falaise I VIOLENT FIGHTING RAGES IN NORMANDY-Violent battles flared across the Normandy battle front as Yanks battled their way into the German anchor city of La Haye du Puits, and as the Germans tried in vain to break through the Anglo-Canadian lines on the eastern end of the front. The Canadians were forced back slightly in the fighting for the Carpiquet Airfield. bombing and strafing transport, roads and rails all the way behind the front and on back to the Paris area. Rail lines were cut by bombs at many points, fuel dumps were left blazing at Chartres, Argentan and Cerences, and dive-bombers attacked troops massing to oppose the Ameri- can push southwestward from Car- entan. A dispatch from Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower's advanced command post declared that more and more Allied troops and vehicles-"an ,as- tonishing total"-were piling up along the beachhead for the decis- ive battles ahead. 200 Injured In Tennessee Train Wreck JELLICO, Tenn., July 6.-(P)-Ray Ellison, mortician, said a 12-coach Louisville and Nashville Railroad train, carrying troops, cracked up to-, night in the Clear River Gorge, kill-1 ing several persons and injuring a- round 200. He said three bodies had been brought to his mortuary. The engine, and two of the coach- es, Ellison said, turned over into the rocky Clear Fork River Gorge, and two overturned on the brink of the gorge and caught fire. The river, he said, is shallow. The remainder of the coaches stayed upright. The wreck occurred 11 miles south of Jellico, which is near the Tennes- see-Kentucky line. Ellison said medical aid had been summoned from Fort Oglethorpe, near Chattanooga, and the Red Cross at Knoxville. t Earlier, Lloyd Baird told the Knox- ville Journal: "Everything is confusion and no one knows how many are killed and how many injured." Baird said scores of injured were being brought to Jellico Hospital and the hospital itself was too busy for any attache to give any details. World News at a Glance Negotiations Stop ... CAIRO, July 6.-Negotiations for participation of Greek leftist leaders in the British-endorsed government- l in-exile of Premier George Papan- dreou broke down 'today with the announcement that the Communist- controlled Liberation Front had in effect refused to enter the cabinet by presenting inacceptable demands. * * * Ends Seventh War Year CHUNGKING, July 7, Friday- (P)--China completed its seventh year of, war with the Japanese to- day, and despite sweeping advances of the enemy in three battle-locked provinces, Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek predicted, "Liberation is close at hand." The anniversary found the Chi- nese battling to stem a Japanese tide in Kwangtung province from Canton, which already had pierced Chinese defenses along the last Chinese-controlled strip of the Canton-Hankow - Peiping railway, and locked in a struggle to the death in Hunan province, against last Hunan stronghold of Heng- strong enemy forces battering the yang. Bliska, Darrow To Head Union For Summer President, Secretary Announced by Bursley Tom Bliska and George Darrow have been appointed president and secretary, respectively, of the Michi- gan Union, for the summer term Dean Joseph A. Bursley, chairman ex officio of the Selections Commit- tee of the Union, announced yester- day. Bliska, '46A, a member of Delta Upsilon, was formerly administration chairman of the Union. A resident of Ann Arbor, Bliska is a member of Tau Sigma Delta and the Ameri- can Institute of Architects. He sucs- ceeds Roy Boucher. Darrow, '45, is a member of Phi Gamma Delta and in the Naval ROTC Unit on campus. A native of New Rochelle, N. Y., Darrow succeeds Rupert Straub. The new secretary was co-chairman of the Union's ori- entation program. Dean Bursley made the announce- ment after selection by a committee of three faculty members and three student members expressly appointed by the Union board of directors to choose Union administrators. Bliska said the Union's activities for the summer would be concentrat- ed on service men. He said a pro- gram to "keep the campus alive" would be conducted through Hours- of-Fun and GI Stomps. Hour of Fun., New Progoramn To Be Today Inaugurating a new mode in en- tertainment at the University, the Hour of Fun to be given at 7:30 p. m. today in front of the old Medical Building will be highlighted by audi- ence participation. Sponsored by the Union, the pro- gram will be supplemented by the music of Billy Layton's orchestra. "Let's all get behind this and make it a huge success," Doc Field- ing, MC, said. "Everyone is asked to come prepared to do something. If you can dance, dance; if you can sing, sing. You can even take your Gen.DeGaulle, FDR Meet For Pailey Free French Chief Gets Big Welcome By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, July 6-General Charles De Gaulle and President Roosevelt clasped hands at the White House and exchanged warm greet- ings today at a meeting preliminary ~o man-to-man conferences aimed at smoothing out frictions in French- American relations. "My, I'm glad to see you," was Mr. Roosevelt's welcome. Arriving by airplane in mid-after- noon, the tall leader of the French1 National Committee was accorded a welcome such as has been given few foreign dignitaries not classed as heads of state. The high command of the army and navy greeted him when he step- ped from his plane while a 17-gun saluate-in accord with his military, rank-boomed out from a battery of cannon. Then the French general was whisked by automobile to the White House where President Roosevelt and members of the cabinet were waiting in the diplomatic reception room. When De Gaulle entered, the pres- ident was seated before a huge fire- place. Standing behind the chief executive was his daughter, Mrs. An- na Boettiger. Their greeting over, the Gen- eral was presented to Secretary of State Hull who said, "Welcome- glad to have you with us." De Gaulle appeared only slightly fatigued by his air journey. Speaking powerfully in English, which is difficult for him, he declar- ed, on arrival, "I salute and I pay my tribute to all those men and women who are relentlessly work- ing for the war and those brave American boys, soldiers, sailors and airmen, who are fighting abroad against our common enemy. "The whole French people are thinking of you and salute you Am- ericans, our friends. "The war is going well and when the Germans and Japanese are downed, the world will have to be organized for freedom and peace. "Our ardent desire is that the United States and France continue working together in every way, as today our fighting men are march- ing together to the common vic- tory." Flying Bombs Attack London, Trap Workers LONDON, July 7, Friday-(P)- More flying bombs smashed into the London area last night after a lull of several hours and while rescuers still dug for victims from Thursday morn- ing's barrage-some of them mill workers trapped under 50 tons of debris. The air ministry said there were casualties but less damage from the morning attack, and that defenders had one of their best days by down- ing "a large proportion" of the ro- bots. Grim Londoners are paying blood to watch the birth of a new era in air power-the flying bomb now and perhaps later the giant rocket bomb -in the opinion of many veteran airmen. The death and damage the flying bombs now are doing are only a frac- tion of the dreadful implications they carry. From the time that wars began, they have been won by killing enough of the enemy to break his will to fight, and robot weapons of the future conceivably will be able to accomplish this end. Kelly Wants Brown As Running Mate LANSING, July 6-(AP)-Govern- -or Kelly appealed tonight to the the people of Michigan in a radio broadcast to give him Auditor Gen- Scores Burned As Big Top Collapses Governor Mobilizes Emergency Forces To Dig Out Victims; Fire Is "Horrible" By The Associated Press HARTFORD, Conn., July 6.-A burst of flames in the main tent of the Ringling Brothers and Barnum and Bailey Circus brought death to at least 120 persons, many of them children, and horrible injury to many others in a disaster which officials said might ultimately result in a death toll of 200. State Police Commissioner Edward J. Hickey, one of the 6,000 spectators in the gay audience when the first tiny flame was discovered minutes after the opening animal act, placed the number of deaths at between 175 to 200, while Clifford fowler of the American Red Cross said in New York City he had been advised that more than 200 had perished. Tonight police court prosecutor S. Burr Leikind announced he had issued warrants charging manslaughter against four officers of the circus and said other arrests might be made. The four charged were J. A. Haley, vice-president of the circus company; John Brice, circus chief of police; George W. Smith, general manager and Leonard Aylesworth, described as chief canvass man. By 5:15 p. m. (EWT) the Huge drill shed of the state armory, quickly converted into a morgue, contained the bodies of 120 men, women and children, many of whom were trapped under the fiery canvas as it col- lapsed at 2:45 p. m. The problem of identifying the dead was great. Many, if not most, of the bodies were charred beyond recognition and the flimsy garments, worn by women and children offered little immediate hope of establishing identity only through a long and tra-< gic process of elimination were many expected to be given names., Mostly Children Hurt One hospital reported an incom- plete count showed 41 injured, while another hospital said that at least 30 children had been admitted. In the midst of the disaster, more terrifying because of the sudden panic it created than even the flood of 1936 and the hurricane and flood which struck this city in 1938, Gov- ernor Raymond E. Baldwin made a radio appeal for calmness as he di- rected mobilization of all the state's emergency facilities. Above the roar of frightened ani- mals could be heard the frantic calls of mothers seeking their children and the furious crackling of flames as they first quickly enveloped the big tent and then sent the canvas to the ground in ruins. Flaming Tent Smothers Kids One eye witness, policeman Arthur Barnard, who lives just across from the circus grounds, said "So many kids were hurt because the flaming tent dropped right on them." "They shinnied down the ropes and poles," he said. "Some of them were laughing and excited." Clarence E. Wilson, a business of- fice employe of the Hartford Times, was about to quit the circus grounds after leaving his wife and child at the big tent when he saw the burst of flames that signalled the start of terrifying pandemonium. The tent, he said, "went up in a puff of smoke," and within ten min- utes it lay "like burnt paper as far as I could see." "I saw rows of charred bodies ly- ing between the burned bleachers," said Wilson, who did not learn until some time later that his wife and son had escaped safely. "They show- ed no evidence of being trampled on, but were scorched and burned. The heat was intense and women and children were running out of the grounds. Men were crying for their children. There was a terrible howl- ing and screeching and panic." Band Plays to Stem Panic Many were killed and injured, eye- witnesses said, in the rush for the exits which came even as the band began playing to allay the fears of the thousands inside the big top. In contrast, others said, circus employes went quietly and swiftly to work sav- ing the animals and trying to restore'.' calm. Scores of men, women and children tried with varying success to jump from high seats. Many children were dropped bodily from elevated seats to make their way as best they could to safety. "Their cries," said a reporter who was himself almost caught in the mass," were "awful to hear." For many of these children, how- ever, there was no escape as fire en- veloped them. The five members of the famous Wallenda high wire trople, Herman, Carl, Joe, Helen and Henrietta, were about to start their act the high wire above the center ring, when the fire started. "When the flames hit the roof, we saw we had to get down fast," Her- man said. "We slid down the ropes and headed for the performers' exit, but people were so crowded there that we saw we didn't have a chance. So we climbed over the cage that lines the exit. That was easy for us -we're performers. But the public couldn't get out that way." Fire Called Worst Circus Disaster Felix Adler, internationally known clown who has been with the circus for 31 years, was putting on his make-up in the dressing tent when the fire began. "We heard a roar, like the ap- plause when one of the big acts comes off, only we knew that the animal act was over and there shouldn't be applause," he said. "We knew then that something was wrong. Then we smelled smoke. We moved everything out of the tent and then went over to see what we could do to help." "I thought the menagerie fire in Cleveland was the worst thing I could ever see, but no one in the circus business has ever seen any- thing as horrible as this." "We're out of business," Herbert Duval, adjuster for the show, said as he surveyed the ruins of the tent tonight. Asroustabouts and performers col- lected the charred poles, ropes, wire and equipment that littered the arena, he said that everything that remained, damaged or not, would be packed back into the train and taken straight to Sarasota, Fla., the cir- cus's winter headquarters, as soon as the authorities would permit what is left of the show to be moved. WASHINGTON, July 6-(AP)- The $16,000,000,000 Fifth War Loan Drive has moved to within 4 per cent of its quota. The treasury an- nunced today that sales through yesterday were $15,364,000,000. Figures on E-Bondhpurchases an- nounced yesterday showed that Ann Arborites bought more than $776,756 worth of bonds, 60 per cent of their E-Bond $1,300,000 quota. Outs-county E-Bond purchases stood at approximately $1,393,000, just short of the $1,490,000 objective. Washtenaw County corporations and banks bought more than $5,257,000 DEMOCRACY IN ACTION: NLocal Candidates State Views On Current Topics in Meeting Eyewitness Tells of Horror as Barrier Halts Escape in Fire Foreseeing another world war un- less "we have a clear cut foreign policy, Donald Gay (Dem.), candi- date for Congress, decried Republi- can isolationism after the last war last night in Circuit Court; ten other candidates for public office aired their stands in a candidates' meeting sponsored by the Ann Arbor League of Women Voters. organization of the workings of Congress. He added his support to proposals heard in some quarters that would make technical training prerequisite to committee appointment, would re- organize Congressional technique on a non-partisan basis. Candidate for the state senate, District 12, Rep. George N. Higgins (Rep.) went on record against a Students who have not yet re- ceived their copy of The Daily at their address may bring their cash- ier's receipt to the Student Publi- cations business office where they will obtain identification slips en- titling them to pick up a free copy of the paper from 7:45 to 10:10 a.m. every morning except Tuesdays and Sundays in fron tof the Main Library. writer on the Hartford Courant's staff, was attending the circus with his five- year-old son when the fire broke out Here's his eye-witness story.) HARTFORD, CONN., July 6-(AP) -The Wallendas, aerial artists, had just climbed up the rope ladder to their perch above when behind me All semblance of order was gone now. Women screamed, children cried. I saw one woman in the top row take her flaxen haired little girl in one arm, grab a rope in the other and slide to the ground. Her arm was raw and red. But there was little time now for observation. Preceding the Wallenda act, the