'I it I aitj WEA'THER Fair and Continued Cool Today !MM VOL. LIV No. 33-S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN FRIDAY, AUG. 18, 1944 PRICE FIVE CENTS Yanks Advance Within 35 Miles of Paris '++ 4, 4a 4, 4.. .. 4. 4.t 4 ,,, .t. 4. "a" *4a 'e" 4.. 4, ;c Five Road Centers Seized in New Inva sion f" 4) 7th Army Plunges into Alps Yank Penetration Nears Naval Base WAR AT A GLANCE By The Associated Press FRANCE-Germans report Al- lies 22 miles from Paris. Forces in south move 30 miles inland. Re- ports of landing in Albania. Pos- sible assault on Toulon. Aerial warfare heavy. ' RUSSIA-Reds on pre-war Ger- man soil for first time. PACIFIC-Bombing continues on island bases. Miti airdrome, north Halmahera island, hit again. By The Associated Press ROME, Aug. 17-Surging forward on a great 30-mile arc deep in south- ern France, the American Seventh Army today seized five important road centers deep behind the origi- nal beachheads, and forward ele- ments plunged more than 30 miles into the Maritime Alps in the drive to join with Allied forces in north- ern France. Along the coast the invasion ar- mies drove through La Napoule, a village only four miles southwest of LONDON, Friday, Aug. 18-(P)- The Ankara radio said today "Al- lied forces have landed at Durazzo in Albania." The report was without Allied confirmation, although the Turk- ish broadcast said it was quoting a special Allied Mediterranean ra- dio bulletin. the famous resort town of Cannes, Allied headquarters announced late tonight. Seize Large Coastal Strip Maj. Gen. Alexander M. Patch's troops had seized a coastal strip ex- tending almost to Toulon on the west to Cannes on the east today, and it was possible that already the as- sault on Toulon had begun. Headquarters said the opposition thus far encountered in southern France consisted of elements of two German divisions. About 40 per cent of the enemy holding the assault area were battalions composed mostly of Russian war prisoners, Czechs and Poles, under German officers, and headquarters said "their combat effi- ciency and morale is not high." The main assault of the Seventh Army was made in the boundary area between the two divisions holding the region where the landings were made, and "this factor together with the preliminary bombing contributed to the enemy's confusion," headquarters said. French Groups Aid Drive French resistance groups have con- tributed largely to the success of the American drive by supplying infor- mation on German dispositions, the Allied command announced. An official Allied announcement, which likely was behind frontline de- velopments, said today that invasion forces were 10 miles from Toulon and 10 miles from Cannes. They had driven inland through the Argens Valley and along the main road and rail lines leading to Mar- seilles, chief seaport of France. The invasion was firmly establish-, ed on a 500-square-mile segment 'of the French Riviera. A continuous stream of reinforcements, supplies the beachhead was expanding steadily. New Members of Council Announced New freshman and sophomore class representatives to the Engineering Council were announced by President Chuck Walton following the elec- tionnsthis week. Campus Must Supply 450 Donors < > U~ East Prussian Border Reached by Red Army Jewish General Leads Invaders in Surge by White Russian Tank Troops _ By The Associated Press LONDON, Aug. 18, Friday-Rus- sian troops for the first time in 30 years carried -war to the German border yesterday, smashing across a battlefield littered with Nazi dead, burned-out tanks and battered gun platforms and reaching the East Allied Bombers Strike Aoain At Hahnahera 23 Japanese Planes Wrecked in U.S. Raid By The Associated Press SOUTHWEST PACIFIC, Aug. 18, Friday-A sizeable force of Allied heavy and medium bombers smashed tons of bombs Wednesday on Miti airdrome, northern Halmahera is- land, in the most concentrated as- sault yet delivered against any single point in this area. Twenty-three parked planes were destroyed or damaged during the raid, as Allied planes continued at- tacks which the communique said rapidly were "reducing the enemy's potential strength in the Molucca Islands." Bombers Leave Fires Large fires were started in person- nel and suply areas adjacent to Miti, one of the key Japanese airfields on Halmahera, southern guardian of the Philippines. Liberators and Mitchells roared over the island in mid-morn- ing, but no Japanese planes arose. Anti-aircraft fire was reported. This was the fourteenth raid re- ported in August communiques on Halmahera, approximately 300 miles south of Mindanao, main island in the southern Philippines. Nimitz Forecasts Blows A war of trip-hammer blows from mighty American forces based in the strategic Marianas Islands is the outlook for Japan. It will be a non-stop affair, says Adm. Chester W. Nimitz, speaking from Pearl Harbor, and the thrusts in variousrdirections will be impelled by ''powerhouse tactics." Foreseeing rapid transfer of rein- forcements from the European thea- tre because of the favorable situa- tion there, Nimitz nevertheless made it clear there would be no period of waiting in the Pacific. Summer Prom Will Be Held at Union Today Students will dance to the music of Ralph Wilson's band at the Sum- mer Prom, the only all-campus dance of the semester, from 8:30 to 11:30 p. m. today in the Union Ballroom. For the semi-formal dance Army and Navy personnel will be granted midnight liberty, which they must show their dance tickets to obtain. There are a few tickets left, which may be purchased today at the Union main desk as long as they last. Sponsors of the dance are the Bomber ScholarshipCommittee and Junior Girls Project. Because the proceeds will go into war bonds for the bomber-scholarship fund, the dance serves the dual purpose of pro- viding recreation for summer stu- dents and servicemen and increasing the fund. Members of the summer Bomber Scholarship Committee are Jim Plate, chairman Glen White, financial Prussian frontier along the Szes- zuppe Rivver in western Lithuania. Led by Gen. Ivan Cherniakhovsky, 37-year-old Jewish tank expert and youngest full general in the Red Army, this historic honor achieved after months of gruelling campaign- ing fell to the Third White Russian Army. Batter Powerful Defenses Moscow's midnight bulletin said the Red Army battered down "pow- erfully built defenses" in order to reach the frontier, and wiped out isolated German troops pinned a- gainst the river. The Russian communique men- tioned heavy German resistance, supported by tanks and artillery, and said the enemy was launching con- stant counterattacks with supporting fire from "heavy catapult appli- ances." This was believed to mean platforms for rocket guns. The enemy still was hurling in reserves from Heinrich Himmler's German Home Army, ordering them to "fight to the death" to protect the "holy soil" of Germany, Moscow said. In one area the Russians wiped out 1,000 Germans yesterday and blew up 60 tanks and self-propelled guns, the bulletin said. Are Near Schirwindt The Russians apparently surged onto the frontier in the area of Schirwindt, German border town 42 miles southeast of Tilsit, east Prus- sian rail center, and 90 miles east of Konigsberg, east Prussian capital. The Szeszuppe River flows north- ward along the frontier from Schir- windt, and at one point is only about 30 miles east of Tilsit. It flows into Schirwindt from the east. Thisrperil to East Prussia, cradle of German militarism, highlighted all the action along the eastern front,but other Soviet armiesewhich had broken across the Vistula River in central Poland 110 miles south of Warsaw also captured 20 localities in their fan-like sweep. Wavell Refuses To See Gandhi Will Support War if Granted Independence NEW DELHI, Friday, Aug. 18- (P)-Field Marshal Lord WavellQ the. Viceroy of India, has rejected a re- quest for an interview by Mohandas K. Gandhi, who offered to urge full nationalist support of the war ef- fort if India be granted immediate independence, it was announced to- day. The viceroy said that because of their sharp differences nothing could be gained by such a meeting now, but he added that he would be glad to consider any "definite and con- structive policy." An exchange of letters between Lord Wavell and the aged Indian nationalist leader made public to- day disclosed that Gandhi sought a conference July 17. University To Fill County's Entire Quota Washtenaw County's entire quota of 450 donors for the September Blood Bank must be filled by Univer- sity personnel; Sandy Perlis, USNR, chairman of the drive, announced yesterday. "The success of the drive will de- mand the full support of the cam- pus," Perlis said, "because the Uni- versity has been assigned its biggest quota since the beginning of the Blood Bank drives." He stressed par- ticularly that in order to overcome the effects of the reduced summer enrollment, the campus community must respond wholeheartedly. Registration Next Week A Blood Bank booth at the center of the Diagonal will be provided Aug. 21 through Aug. 26, to register don- ors. It will be open from 9 a. m. to noon and from 1 to 2:15 p. m. Mon- day through Friday and from 9 a. m. to noon on Saturday. During the registration period, facilities will also be provided in the Social Director's Office in the League and from 3 p. m. to 5 p. m. in the student offices of the Union. Ser- vicemen will be registered in the East and West Quadrangles at a time which will be announced by their respective headquarters. Previous Quotas Filled Previous quotas have been filled and exceeded during the fall and spring semesters. This demonstrates, Perlis said, that the student body recognized the importance of the Blood Bank. "Just as it has been necessary to increase our expedition- ary force as the fronts expanded, with the need for blood plasma grow- ing proportionately, it is necessary to fill and go beyond an increased quota," he said. The mobile unit will be stationed at the Women's Athletic Building Sept. 14 and 15. During those two days donors will be excused from class the hour of their appointment. Absence for Blood Bank will be ex- cused by the signature of the ap- pointment card by Assistant Dean E. A. Walter of the literary college and Dean Ivan C. Crawford of the engineering school. Consent Needed For Youths Persons who are under 21 years old must have the consent of their parents in order to become blood donors, according to Red Cross. Eight weeks must lapse between an individual's blood donations, so per- sons who gave blood in the August blood bank will be ineligible for the forthcoming bank. Persons who have given blood previously are re- quested by the Red Cross to bring their blood donorcertificate with them to the Blood Bank. New Membership Cards Are Ready at Union Now Union members are notified that their blue membership card, good last semester, is now void, and new ones must be obtained for the pres- ent term. The new white cards will be issued at the student office in the Union from 3 to 5 p.m. every day. The cashier's receipt must be shown when application for a new card is made. -e VREUX Mant tan Veneul Versailles0 Deux PARIS ti:-- CNAR @E Etampos iEN~bN "Font'ai nebleau Nogent 1 FRANCE LE MANSORLEANS E Vendome Loir R e Blois Chambord ' i TOURS 'Chaumont 0 o 25 '4.. > CLoches . AUT MILS YANKS NEAR PARIS-Arrows point toward the path of the Al- lied drive to Paris following the capture of Dreux, Chartres and Orleans by Patton's hard-driving tank force. POSTPONED PAYOFF: Vichy French Paris Gay as . By The Associated Press LONDON, Aug. 17-Swiss reports said tonight that most members of the Vichy government had fled to Berlin, leaving 5,000 mobile guards- men of doubtful loyalty guarding the panicky "Laval-Petain capital" menaced by Allied liberating armies and a multitude of patriots storm- ing ahead of them. The Maquis resistance groups and others began a systematic de- struction of German and Vichy de- fenses in France-derailing trains, surrounding isolated German gar- risons in southern France and along the Swiss frontier, cutting down notorious Axis sympathizers on their "black lists," and in gen- eral moving in well-defined courses laid out by Allied chieftains. A dispatch to Der Bund, Bern newspaper in Switzerland, told of the flight out of Vichy by French cabinet ministers, but no specific in- formation was given regarding Pier- re Laval, chief of government, nor of Marshal Henri Petain, the chief of state who took over when it appeared War Veterans To Meet Today More than 75 discharged war vet- erans now enrolled in the University are expected to attend the meeting of the Veterans Organization to be held at 7 p.m. today in the Rackhan Amphitheatre when three American Legion leaders will discuss veteran aid programs. Laszlo Hetenyi, Grad., president of the club which received temporary recognition from the University Wednesday, issued a special call to all veterans "to appreciate the im- portance of this meeting and be sure to attend." Henry Barnes, civic leader who will be remembered for his WAC recruiting efforts and war bond sell- ing activities, will discuss govern- ment and Legion veteran programs accompanied by Carl Johnson and Walter Kindschy, leaders in state Legion activities. TankForces Take Four Main Cities German Seventh Army Mass Barges on Seine in Attempt to Escape Annihilation BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS LONDON, Friday, Aug. 18-Swift American tank columns ripped through chaotic, fleeing masses of German troops near the .outskirts of Paris yesterday and a Berlin broadcast early today admitted frankly that the Nazis had lost the battle of Normandy and were trying to escape another large Allied trap. Allied sources said the Americans were within 35 miles of Paris; but German reports placed them only 23 miles away. Lt. Gen. George S. Patton's hard-hitting mechanized troops had overwhelmed four bastion cities before Paris, and were smashing against the Germans only 20 miles from the Seine River, where a disorganized and badly-mauled Nazi Seventh Army was massing barges and ferries in a desperate attempt to escape annihilation. "The Normandy front has been liquidated by the Germans,"said Dr. Max Krull, military correspondent of DNB, German news agency, "Ger- man forces are retreating and swift Allied troops are trying to gain new positions to outflank and even encircle them. __- The Fortress cities of Chartres, Orleans, Dreux and Chateaudun fell to the triumphant columns which speared on 13 miles east of Flee to Berun, Chartres and forced the Aunay Riv- er, from where the spire of the M ies A npproach Eiffel Tower could be seen lifting 1 U above Paris 35 miles beyond. _ _--_Gunfire Heard in Paris France and the Allied cause was lost (The London Radio said U. S. in 1940. spearheads had reached "the out- Brig. Gen. Joseph Koenig, head skirts of Paris," CBS reported. The of the French forces of the interior, Germans declared the capital was said in a communique tonight that "a front line city" with the thun- his men were attacking German der of distant guns echoing in the convoys with "considerable losses" streets, and that the Americans were to the enemy's men and materiaL attacking St. Arnoult, 23 miles from A frontier dispatch to the Lausan- Paris, and Epernon, 25 miles from ne (Switzerland) Gazette said Ma- Versailles.) quis forces had launched an attack Meanwhile, the Canadians shatter- on the Fort De L'Ecluse in the Ain ed powerful enemy defenses east and department near the French-Swiss south of Caen with a surprise offen- frontier, and that factory workers in sive that overran such strongholds response to orders from Gen. Charles as Troarn and Vimont, forced the DeGaulle had gone on strike in Dives River as deep as 25 miles south- Montbeliard, 35 miles west of Basel. east of Caen and sent the Germans In connection with reports that the reeling in a general retreat from po- Vichy government was disintegrating, sitions which had blocked drives its officials were said to be trans- toward Paris and Le Havre since D- ferring authority in many places to Day. persons whohad held office before Germans Flee Falaise Trap the Armistice with the Germans in Of most imminent peril to the bat- 1940. tered Seventh German Army, fleeing The Morocco radio said the Ger- the Falaise trap in Normandy, was mans had ordered martial law in the a northern column which captured Maritime Alps. The defiance spread Dreux and burst across the Eure to civilian laborers, with the French River, only 20 miles west of the Seine, press reporting railroad workers of now a formidable moat with its the north and east striking. bridges blasted Paris, on the eve of deliverance Here the American armored tide, after four years of Nazi captivity, flanking Paris on the south, was in'a was a prayerful, gay, rebellious position to turn south. and hungry capital tonight as the thundeof:gunsea"nno"nsed the FDR Insists approach of Allied armies. The German command appealed to the people to remain calm. On Occupation The Paris correspondent for the German Transocean News Service, Of Axis Nations who apparently was preparing for a quick departure along with the rest of the Germans, said that the WASHINGTON, Aug. 17-()- city's transportation was completely President Roosevelt, back in the cap- paralyzed. ital today from his Pacific tour, in- The Paris police, the correspondent formed the world that Germany and said, have been on strike since Tues- Japan will be occupied by Allied day in protest over appointment of troops regardless of when or how a new high police official. There is they surrender. no gas or coal for cooking in the There will be no repetition, he said, capital, and it has been necessary to of the 1918 situation, when Germany supply the populace with hot meals escaped full occupation by quitting from central communal kitchens, he when her homeland was menaced. said. Berlin, he recalled, dodged occu- pation after the last war by negotiat- ing an Armistice. If we let them Pla ersd quit this time, he said, the next gen- eration will be told that Germany Extra Showings won the war. There is an interesting psychology study not only of the German people Operetta To Be Given but of their military command, he a dosaid, a characteristic to throw up Saturday, ionuay the sponge when their borders are Extra performances of "The Choc- menaced because they don't want olate Soldier" will be presented at Germany overrun. 2:30p. . toorrw ad 8:0 p m. As for Japan, the chief executive 2:30 p. m.utomorrw anheexcept. m.ldeclared that nation must be sealed dmndyorbecueoftheoff from the peace-loving world un- demand for tickets. til she proves herself willing and a,'e The operetta will take place as to ve wt p ac ul c n ri . planned today and tomorrow in the to live with peaceful countries. Lydia Mendelssohn Theater at 8:30 p. m. Tickets for all performances Hungarians Offer may be purchased at the box office daily from 10 a. m. until curtain To Release Jews WAR LEAVES ITS MARK: Notre Dame Is Damaged Slightly By The Associated Press _ The beautiful twin-spired cathe- dral of Notre Dame, known to tour- ists the world over, escaped serious war damage when American forces liberated the city of Chartres in their push across northern France. one of the oldest, most historic in France. Its windows earlier had been removed to prevent their be- ing damaged in event the war swept through Chartres. The present structure was com- pleted in 1240 except for minor al- stroyed by fire. In the 11th cen- tury Bishop Fulbert established the cathedral of Notre Dame and er- ected a new edifice. However it, too, was destroyed. Re- building of the cathedral was under- taken about 1120 amid popular reli-