Ar 4iltr 4ai14I WEATHER Cloudy With Rain Rather Cool VOL. LV, No. 143 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, MAY 10, 1945 PRICE FIVE CENTS Federal Controls To Be Continued Only Bans on Racing, Entertainment Lifted; Some Reconversion Promised Army Reports Plan for Relocation Of Trmoops from Europe 'to Pacific By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, May 9-The Gov- ernment notified its civilians today they must remain in virtually full war harness until Japan is beaten, but abolished immediately, the racing ban and midnight curfew on entertain- ment places. "Some reconversion" to civilian goods production was promised, at once by War Mobilization Director Fred M. Vinson. But he laid down the policy that nearly all the economic controls im- posed for the two-front war-ration- ing, high taxes, wage and price ceil- ings, many manpower and production controls-should be maintained in force until the last shot is fired in the Pacific. 'Dire Struggle Ahead' Vinson warned at a news confer- Hopwood Prize Novel of 1944 Is Published '34 Charlton' Wins Award for Rene Kuhn "34 Charlton," which won for Rene L. Kuhn, '44, a major Avery Hopwood fiction award in 1944, is being pub- lished today by Appleton-Century. Miss Kuhn attended the University; from 1942 to 1944 and won a minor award in the short story division of the Hopwood Contest in 1943. Her novel, originally titled "Into the Light," is placed in Greenwich Village and is the story of an Irish- American family with the clash of generations, a girl's struggle to lead her own life as its theme. Miss Kuhn was born in Honolulu, and attended scools in China, Japan, Central America, and in various parts of the United States. She is the daughter of Irene Kuhn, journalist now with National Broadcasting.Com- pany, and author of a book on her experiences as a newspaper-woman. Since graduation from the Uni- versity, Miss Kuhn has done some radio work and writing for the Unit- ed Press. At present she is working on a new novel. Stalin Declares Germans Safe, Victory Final MOSCOW, May 9.-EP)-The Sov- iet Union will not "destroy Germny or its people," Marshal Stalin an- nounced tonight in a blunt, matter- of-fact six-minute victory broadcast, Speaking from his study in the Kremlin, around which a million or more Russians crowded in a noisy, happy holiday mood, the Soviet lead- er climaxed his nation's greatest celebration. 1,000-Gun Salute Fifty-four minutes after he fin- ished speaking, 1,000 Moscow guns fired 30 volleys into the cold, clear spring sky, fingered by thousands of searchlights and arching rockets. "The Soviet Army and the Army of the Allied Command have forced Germapy to fall," Stalin said, ex- plaining the Rheims and Berlin dou- ble surrender ceremonies. Real Capitulation "Being acquainted with the wolf- ish habits of the Fascists who regard every document as a blank piece of paper, we did not have grounds to believe in the act. However, this morning when the German army put down her arims and began to sur- render this was not a simple piece of Paper but a real capitulation . .. The Soviets Union is rejoicing in victories although it does not intend either to destroy Germany or its people." After the tremendous artillery sa - lute and pyrotechnic display, Red Air Force planes swooped and circled over the gay scene, their roaring mo- tors adding to the din of victory. From the planes showered multi- colored flares. CAMPUS EVENTS Today R. i. Markham will lec- ture on "Post-War Pros- pects in the Balkans" at 8 p. m. EWT in the Rack- ham Amphitheatre. Today Tea at the International ence of a dire struggle still ahead, predicting that Japan would not sur- render unconditionally without a "successful and complete invasion" of her homeland. This means that "a great part" of the war worker force must stay on the job and that munitions production will finally stabilize at not less than two-thirds of the present huge arma- ment rate, Vinson stated, in his first meeting with the press since he be- came director of the Office of War Mobilization and Reconversion. Announces Army TheArmywill reduce strength by 1,300,000 men in the next year, but slowly at first. The Navy will not cut, he said. Draft calls will continue to be heavy and deferments for men under 30 "will continue to be rela- tively few." Probably 1,500,000 warworkers will lose their jobs in the next six months, Vinson predicted, perhaps 3,000,000 more in the following half year. But reconversion should soak up most of them, leaving 2,500,000 unemployed in twelve months compared with to- day's 1,000,000 jobless. Increase in Consumer's Goods On the optimistic side of the pic- ture, he forecast: A few new passenger cars coming off assembly lines in six to nine months, an immediate start on mod- erate numbers of refrigerators and washing machines; and An increase in gasoline rations perhaps amounting to 50 per cent for A-card drivers; just when, he could not say. Commercial users, and per- haps B-card motorists, will get an increase too. U.S., Britain Discuss Urgent Polish Problem By The Associated Press SAN FRANCISCO, May 9-Soviet Commissar Molotov left for Moscow today and Secretary of State Stet- tinius and British Foreign Secretary Eden huddled immediately with top advisers on the Polish problem. Molotov boarded a Moscow-bound plane in midmorning. No sooner had he left than the British and Ameri- can foreign ministers got together with W. Averell Harriman, U. S. Am- bassador to Russia, and Sir Archibald Clark Kerr, Britain's envoy to Mos- cow. Polish Issue Discussed Apparently they reviewed the en- tire question of broadening the Pol- ish government. And apparently, also, Harriman and Kerr got their in- structions on how to procede on this issue from now on. They were leav- ing tonight for Moscow by way of Washington and London. It was learned that the British and Americans still have received no re- ply from the Russians to their de- mand for a full explanation of the arrest of sixteen Polish underground leaders. They are reported standing firm on their insistance that this explanation be provided, with Britain and the United States maintaining a united front. Russian Reply Expected A Russian reply is expected within, a few days, however. Stettinius and Eden are known to feel there can be little, if any, progress on complete adjustment of the Polish issue until it comes along. Conference Delegates heard, too, that Prime Minister Churchill was urging Eden to return to London be- cause of the situation raised by Ger- many's surrender. CHILDREN'S THEATER: Nazi Chiefs Surrender to U.S. Seventh Goering Yields After Fleeing Execution KUTZBUEHEL, Austria, May 9- (R)-Reichsmarshal Herman Wilhelm Goering, whose Nazi air force once frightened the world, and Field Mar- shal Albert Kesselring, German Com- mander-in-Chief on the western front, have surrendered to Lt. Gen. Alexander M. Patch's American Sev- enth Army. Goerin'g, a self-professed fugitive from the wrath of Hitler, surrendered near here last night with his wife and six-year-old daughter and was flown today to Gen. Patch's head- quarters. Details of Kesselring's cap- ture were not immediately given. The first of the top Nazis to fall, into American hands, Goering said he was sentenced to execution by Hitler on April 24 when he sug- gested that he, Goering, take over the crumbling Reich. He declared that his air force fol- lowers shot their way through SS troops who were guarding him at Berchtesgaden and spirited him away to a hideout in this area. It was with relief, apparently, that the Nazi lead- er surrendered last night to Brig. Gen. Robert Stack, assistant com- mander of the U. S. 36th Division. Another of the original Nazis to fall into the 36th Division's hands in the mop-up of this a.ea of Austria was Gen. Ritter Von E pp, who com- manded a brief defense of Munich but fled before American forces broke into the city. Goering readily posed for photo- graphers and talked freely of his final clash with Hitler, whom lie described i a speech as late as 1943 as the "Greatest German in history." He wore several medals, including the Grand Cross of the Knights Cross, Germany's highest decoration, but complained that he lost more than half his medals when Allied planes bombed the house where he was held prisoner at Berchtesgaden. Truman Signs 18-Year-Olds To Get, Six Months' Training WASHINGTON, May 9 - (/P) - President Truman today signed into law the bill extending the Selective Service Act one year, and it was officially announced that draft calls "will continue to be large." The latter announcement came from the Office of War Mobilization, which said: "Deferments for men under 30 will continue to be relatively few and will become fewer as more veterans return to industry and the farms." President Truman, in signing the draft law extension, made plain he would have vetoed, if he could, a section forbidding the use of 18- year-olds in combat without six months training. He objected that this "places added restrictions on the War and Navy departments in their management of the fighting forces." Three Million Yanks To BeMoved Within Year By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, May 9-Approximately 2,837,000 troops will be moved out of Europe within nine'months, the Army disclosed today. Within 12 months, the Army expects to have out of Europe 3,100,000 troops,leaving only an occupational force estimated at 400,000. The majority of these soldiers will come to the United States for rede- ployment to the Pacific area or for discharge from the Army. The others will be routed direct to the Pacific. About 45,000 soldiers, including many who have been prisoners of the Germans, will be returned to this country by air and surface ships during this month. Maj. Gen. Charles P. Gross, chief of the Army Transportation Corps, outlined at a news conference this schedule for the movement i of troops from the European andv Mediterranean theaters: Approximately 845,000 men or an rour Foreign average of slightly more than 280,000 a month, will be withdrawn during the first three months following V-E Day. - e a 1 Approximately 1,185,000, or an Visit M ichigan average of 395,000 a month, will be moved out during the second three months. Were Observers at GEN. SMITH SIGNS UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER TERMS-Lt. Gen. Walter Bedell Smith (above), Allied.Chief of Staff, signs document imposing unconditional surrender upon Germans, at headquarters at Rheims, France. FOREIGN CORRESPONDENT: Markham Will Discuss Post War Prospects in Balkans Rueben H. Markham, foreign cor- respondent for the Christian Science Monitor, will speak on "Post-war Prospects in the Balkans" at 8:00 p. in. EWT (7:00 p. m. CWT) today in the Rackham Amphitheatre under Stalin Discloses Pragtie Freed; N azisFight On LONDON, Thursday, May 10-UP)- Marshal Stalin announced the liber- ation of Prague yesterday and said that while a small group of die-hard Germans still was resisting in Czecho- slovakia, "we must believe that the Red Army will succeed in bringing it to its senses." Just after midnight the Moscow radio broadcast a Soviet communique which stated that the capitulation of the Germans was, proceeding on all fronts except in Czechoslovakia, where a group of German troops, "avoiding capitulation to ,Soviet for- ces. is retreating hastily to the west and southwest." T'lh Moscow communique said Soviet troops had linked up with Americans in Austria iii the area of Anstetten. Shortly before Stalin announced that Prague had been freed the Prague patriot radio broadcast an invitation to President Eduard Benes and the national government to re- turn to Prague from Kosice, The German high command in what the announcer on the Flens- burg radio, said was the "last com- munique" announced tonight that all German arms had ceased firing on order of Grand Admiral Karl Doenitz, "We have achieved great victories bits also heavy defeat-way sue-I cumnbed with honor," said the an-° ioineer. An Associated Press dispatch fromI the British Second Army said a fierce battle was being waged at Segeberg, 25 miles north of Hamburg, in a woods where 300 fanatic German SS troopers and marines were battling German soldiers. The dispatch said the territory had been made out of bounds for British troops and no British troops had been molested. Alumni Group Will Hear Dean Lloyd the auspices of the sociology depart- ment. In his 25 years of work in Europe, Markham witnessed the rise and fall of the Communists in Bulgaria, the dismemberment of Czechoslovakia, and the growth of the power of the Nazis throughout southeast Europe, and was in Vienna when Chancellor Dollfuss was assassinated. For the past two years Markham was Deputy Director of the Office of War Information. He recently re- turned to the foreign correspondent staff of the Christian Science Mon- itor, which he joined in 1926. This University lecture is open to the pub- lic. . . Yank Troops Are Moved to Pacific Theater ROME, May 9. (IP)-Some American combat troops already have been transferred direct from Italy to the Pacific war zone, Gen. Joseph T. McNarney, commander of U.S. forces in the Mediterranean area, disclosed today. Only a relatively small number of troops in this area will be demobil- ized and these probably won't leave Italy for several months, McNarney said in a V-E Day broadcast. The movement to the Pacific thea- ter, he said, would be via the United States. "For most of you," McNarney told the troops under his command, "your return to civilian life will come only when Japan has been utterly and finally defeated." } About 807,000, or 269,000 a month, will be shifted during the third three months. After that, the redeployment will be carried on until only the occupa- tional force of some 400,000 is left Gross said that all of those troops who are destined to be brought out under the redeployment program should leave Europe within a year. After the last World War it re- quired 10 months to evacuate 2,000,- 000, troops. U. S. troop ships not required in the Pacific, many British troop ships, more than 400 converted cargo ships and 800 transport planes will be used to transport the troops. Gross said that by using captured enemy passenger ships the movement of troops may be speeded up by as much as 60,000 men dur- ing the second three months of the redeployment and by 117,000 men 'during the third quarter. Gen. Brehon Somervell, chief of Army Service Forces, told the news conference that once the troops ar- rive in this country they will be sent to 22 army personnel centers disfrib- uted throughout the United States. Within a week after arriving in this country, Somervell estimated, the soldiers should reach home for fur- lough, or permanent release, as the I case may be. Furloughed men, on completion of their leaves, willgo back to the personnel centers, will be formed into groups and sent to as- sembly points for reassignments and special training. The personnel centers to which the troops will go after reaching this country include: Indiantown Gap, Pa., serving Ohio. lower Michigan and Pennsylvania: Fort Sheridan, Ill., serving Illinois Michigan and Wisconsin; and For Snelling, Minn., serving Minnesota North Dakota, South Dakota, Wis- consin and Upper Michigan. Alumni Will Hear President Ruthven President Ruthven will address the University of Michigan Club of Mus- kegon at its annual banquet this eve- ning. Mrs. Ruthven, T. Hawley Tapping, general secretary of Alumni Associa- tion, and Mrs. Tapping will also go to Muskegon. San Francisco Parley Four young people from Denmark, China, the United States, and Yugo- slavia, who have been accredited by the World Youth Council to represent that organization as observers at the United Nations Conference, will visit the University June 4 and 5 as part of a county-wide tour. The purpose of their stay here will be to give a report of observations made at San Francisco and also to in- still an interest in the World Youth Conference which will be held in August in London. A two-day program is being ar- ranged by a joint committee repre- senting all the organized groups on campus, and tentative plans include a tea at the International Center and a rally to be held in Rackham Auditorium. A more definite program will be announced as soon as the committee has completed its plans, said Bob Woodward, president of MYDA, at the initial meeting of the group yes- terday, which included represent- atives from IRA, MYDA, Women's War Council, Pan-Hellenic, Hillel Foundation, Veterans Organization, I. F. C., the International Center, Post War Council, and the Union. Tag Day Drive Will lie Held To He U' Camp With its goal set at $1,800, the tra- ditional Tag Day drive will take place Friday, May 18. Organized to provide support for the University Fresh Air Camp, the campaign will accomplish a dual pur- pose in shaking it possible for boys in the 9 to 13 age group to spend a month in a more healthful environ- ment, mentally and physically, than that to which they are accustomed and by offering students interested in teaching or social work invaluable experience in their field. Recreational activities at the camp are under the supervision of forty counselors, chosen from among qual- ified graduate and undergraduate ap- plicants of the University. Students who spend the eight week session at the camp are given credit for one or more of the following courses; Edu- cation C120a, C120b, Sociology 200, Sociology 201. Located on Patterson Lake, 24 miles northwest of Ann Arbor, the camp ac- commodates 240 boys sent to it by 25 social agencies. 300 acres of land and 26 permanent buildings, includ- ing a main lodge, women's dormitory, classrooms, cabins, workshop and modern health unit comprise the camp property. The sale of tags, from which ap- proximately half the camp budget is derived, will be undertaken by women's dorms, sorority and league houses. Posts will be distributed throughout the it and both stu- dents and townspeople are asked to contribute. German Prisoners Remain in Europe MARITAL CONFLICTS: One in Four War Marriages Will Fa ii, Dr. Burgess Asserts Elves and the Shoemaker' To Be Presented Tomorrow "The Elves and the Shoemaker" will be presented by the Children's Theatre of the Department of Speech tomorrow and Saturday in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. "The Elves and the Shoemaker" was adapted for the theatre by Char- lotte Chorpenning and Nora Tully from the popular fairy tale. The play tells the story of how Widget, played by Ethel Isenberg, and his elves save the kind shoemaker's shop from the .,,..,, ;+n. ~on.ln.v"frvo h ia to be forced out of their home and into the streets when Widget, under the guidance of Gremlo, played by Carolyn West, carries out his first job successfully and outwits the crafty witch. Three Matinees Scheduled The rest of the cast includes Gloria Ann Salter, Naomi Vincent, Mae Dix, Margaret Walsh, Mary Woods, Bar- bara Weisberg, Shirley Armstrong, and Babette Blum. Divorces after the war will be at the rate of one to every four mar- riages," stated Dr. Ernest W. Bur- gess, University of Chicago sociolo- gist in a lecture yesterday. Hasty and hurried-up marriages during the war will be partly respon- sible for this highest divorce rate in history, Burgess said. Marriages To Be Hasty "These hasty unions have not had the test of the normal duration of courtship and engagement to insure the existence of tempermental coin- .- :_ - ' .. -A.d-, -,, - ;. 4. E - , ;r veteran feels 'I am not needed any more'" he continued. "A final influence making for sep- aration and divorce will be the hasty and ill-advised marriages after the war," Burgess stated. Courtship Will Be Brief Many young people will wish to make up for what they have missed of marital bliss because of the war, and will marry after only a short ac- quaintance, courtship, and engage- ment, he said. No Excess of Women "rM-r- it s tn . n ha iRs a 1ta4