-M ~r / N 4h04 ~aiMg WEATHER C-,Did, Claudi., VOL.. LV, No. 149 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, MAY 17, 1945 Navy Reports ap Subs oughtin At PRICE FIVE CENTS rntic * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Children Will Benefit from Tag Day Sale Coeds To Canvass City for $1,800 Goal The twenty-fifth annual Tag Day campaign will take place tomorrow with coeds from 28 houses selling tags throughout Ann Arbor from 7:45 a. m. until 4 p. m. Revenue For Camp According to Prof. F. N. Menefee of the School of Engineering, the funds collected on Tag Day are the prin- cipal source of revenue for the Uni- versity Fresh Air Camp of which he is director. Students and towns- people are thus given a chance to provide a boy with healthful sur- roundings where he will be under the guidance of competent counsellors who can aid him in coping with his particular problem, he pointed out. The goal of this year's drive has been set at $1,800. University students also benefit from the drive in that by working as counsellors at the camp they may re- TAG DAY POSTS Center of Diagonal-Kappa Al- pha Theta. Engine Arch-Kappa Kappa Gamma. Behind Library-Chi Omega. Romance Language Bldg.-Soro- sis. Alumni Memorial Hall-Kappa Delta. Union Steps-Gamma Phi Beta. State Street entrance to Arcade -Newberry. North end of Angell Hall-Delta Gamma. Front steps of Angell Hall-Ged- des House. Corner Hill & State-Day House. Corner East U. and South U.- Alpha Phi. North -side WAB-Stockwell. South side of Waterman Gym- Stockwell. University Hospital-Mosher. Front of League - Washtenaw House. Center of Law Quad-Martha Cook. North Door West Quad-Alpha Omicron Pi. East Quad-Alpha Gamma Del- ta. Corner State and Liberty-Betsy Barbour. Couzens Hall-Jordan. Between Clements Library and President Ruthven's home-Delta Delta Delta. Between University High School and Art School-Alpha Delta Pi. Northeast corner Main and Wil- liams-Alpha Xi Delta. Southwest corner Main and Wil- liams-Alpha Chi Omega. Northeast corner Main and Lib- erty-Sigma Delta Tau. Southwest corner Main and Lib- erty-Zeta Tau Alpha. Northeast corner Main and Washington-Pi Beta Phi. Northwest corner Main and Washington-Alpha Epsilon Phi. Downtown stores to be canvassed by Chicago House. ceive a maximum of six hours credit for certain special courses in the sociology department and the School of Education. Students act as cabin supervisor for eight boys for half of the eight week season and spend the other half in classroom work. On Patterson Lake Located near Pickney, Michigan on Patterson Lake, the camp can ac- commodate 240 boys each season. Selection of campers is made by 25 social agencies which are provided with a report on each camper at the season's end. Coeds selling the tags are asked to remain at their posts until they are relieved. Those having posts in the downtown area need not go on duty until 9 a. m. CAMPUS EVENTS Today Dr. Edward H. Kraus will deliver the annual Henry Russel Lectureat 4:15 p. m. EWT (3:15 p. M. CWT) in the Rackham Amphitheatre. Today Michigan Youth for De- mocratic Action will meet at 4 p. m. EWT (3 p. m. t"+vrr inthee Tnin Strict Control of Nazis Is Specifled Doenitz Called Stop-Gap, Not A 'Government' Nazis To Administer Germany for Allies By The Associated Press PARIS, May 16-A program of sweat and discipline under which Germany will have to earn her way back into the community of nations under strict military control was laid down by the Allies today. The so-called German government of Grand Admiral Karl Doenitz was declared officially to be only a tem- porary stop-gap, "fully controlled" by the Allies while it fulfills a useful purpose. Temporarily Used A supreme headquarters statement said Doenitz "and certain other selected German officers" were being used only temporarily as an instru- ment for facilitating the surrender and disarmament of German forces and were acting under complete Al- lied control. The formal statement made clear that there was no thought of rec- ognizing Doenitz and his "Flensburg group" as a German government. So far as the Allies are concerned, Count Ludwig Schwerin von Krosigk "does not exist" as Doenitz' foreign mini-. ster. Military Government This was underscored by Lt. Gen. Lucius D. Clay, Gen. Eisenhower's deputy for the occupation of Ger- many. "The Allied government of Germany is going to be military, and the Germans are going to know it is military," declared Clay. In London Prime Minister Chur- chill told Commons that it was the Allied aim that "the Germans should administer their country in obedi- ence to Allied directions." The Brit- ish leader added that "we have no in- tention of undertaking the burden of administering Germany ourselves." It was not immediately clear how these statements fitted into the pat- tern of the yet to be determined fu- ture of Germany, but Clay declared that all that is left of Germany's potential to make war would be smashed. Plan Housing For Negroes Temporary Units Will Be Built near Detroit WASHINGTON, May 16.-(/)-The National Housing Agency declared tcday that 1,410 temporary housing units to be built near Detroit are designed to help ease an "'extremely critical" situation among Negro war workers. The Ford Motor Company yester- day assailed the $3,500,000 project as a "high-handed attempt" to put through at taxpayers' expense a building program "which is not need- ed in the war effort and has no con- nection with it." The motor company questioned the logic of a government housing proj- ect in the area of the Willow Run Bomber Plant, which it said will close by August, and the River Rouge factory, where it said lay-offs are being made daily. Ford-owned land was taken over by the government for the project. The NHA, asserting in a statement that the housing program is "not dependent on the operations of the Willow Run bomber plant," said: "As a matter of fact, many of the housing units now serving that plant will be moved and re-used to supply accommodations at the new site near Detroit." ZOOT SUIT JIVE-Ruth McMorris, Nina Goehring and Jean Hole (left to right), specialty dancers whose interpretation of zoot stit jive will be featured in the Soph Music Bar all coed stage show, "Swing's the Thing," at 7:30 p. m. EWT (6:30 p. m. CWT) Saturday in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. -Photo by John Horeth ;{c }; =K "; :;: ;: Tickets To Be Sold for Soph Music Bar at League, Library Tickets will go on sale today at the Union, League and Library for Soph Music Bar to be held from 7:30 p.m. to midnight EWT (6:30 p.m. to 11 p.m. CWT) Saturday on the entire second floor of the League. Soph Music Bar,the first Soph Cabaret given since the outbreak of the war, will feature an all-coed stage show, "Swing's the Thing", at 7:30 p.m. EWT in the Lydia Men- delssohn Theater. Jean Hole, Ruth McMorris and Nina Goehring will highlight the dancing and singing numbers of the show with a specialty interpreting toot suit jive. Phyllis Knight To Sing Phyllis Knight, as blues soloist, will sing "I Surrender, Dear" and Joan Schlee will present a ballet dance. Following the stage show, the tech- nicolor hit of the '30's, "A Star Is Born" starring Frederic March and Janet Gaynor will be shown. Jimmy Strauss and his Detroit orchestra will furnish the musical background for-dancing from 9 p.m.- midnight EWT (8 p. m.-11 p.m. CWT) in the League ballroom. Dec- orations will be carried out in popu- lar song titles, which represent the theme of Soph Music Bar. Nine Holes of Golf The Hussey Room will be devoted to the game of miniature golf under the direction of the WAA. A nine- holedcourse, complete with sand- traps and water holes will be avail-j able to all golf addicts. A prize will be awarded to the star player of the evening. Refreshments will be served in the Soph Men To Meet To plan for the athletic defeat of the freshman class on Ferry Field May 26, all sophomore men will meet at 8:30 p. m. EWT (7:30 p. m. CWT) today in Rm. 316, the Union. Sophomore captains for the Class Games Classic, revived this term to renew underclassmen spirit, and Earl Riskey, intramural sports head and sophomore coach, will be on hand to direct the see- ond-year men. Grand Rapids Room, which will be converted into a Parisian sidewalk cafe. Cokes, candy and potato cgips will be served in true French style. Caricatures ofhCabaret-goers will be sketched in the Parisian cafe. Fortune Tellers Featured Fortune tellers and novelty games will highlight Soph Music Bar enter- tainment. Both single and couple tickets are to be sold, and each ticket entitles the bearer to participate in every feature of the Cabaret. BOND REVUE: Stars of Show Spent Three Days on a Raft After their ship was sunk in July, 1943, two members of the U.S.S. Helena band, featured in the free Navy War Bond Revue coming at 8:30 p.m. EWT Tuesday to Hill Audi- torium, drifted for three days on a life raft before being rescued at Vella LaVella in the Solomon Islands. Approximately all the members of the band were in the Navy before the outbreak of the war, and since then they have participated in 13 engage- ments in the Southwest Pacific be- fore the sinking of the Helena. Now stationed at Great Lakes Nav- al Training Station, the band made a previous tour during the Fifth War Loan Campaign last summer when they covered seven Midwestern states. During the current drive they will travel 10,000 miles through Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Michigan and Ken- tucky. Featured in addition to the band will be Lieut. Robert K. Adam3, USNR, a graduate of the University, as emcee of the program, which is being sponsored by the combined veterans organizations of Ann Arbor. Purchase of a bond is not required for admittance to the show, which will be free to townspeople as well as students. Kraus To Give .Russel Lecture., Announce Prize "The Unfolding Crystal" will be the subject of the annual Henry Russel Lecture which will be delivered by Prof. Edward H. Kraus, former Dean of the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, at 4:15 p. m. EWT (3:15 CWT) today in the Rack- ham Amphitheatre. Public announcement of the Henry Russel Award will also be made at this time. The Henry Russel Lec- tureship, which was awarded to Dr. Kraus for outstanding work in Crys- tallography and Minerology, comes from a bequest left by the late Henry Russel and carries a stipend for re- search in the field in which it is awarded. The Lectureship is presented each year to the member of the University faculty above the rank of assistant professor whose work is judged most outstanding by the University Re- search Club. The Henry Russel Award is given to faculty members below the rank of associate profes- sor who are annually selected for the award by a special board. Dunham Voted Council Head Prof. Arthur L. Dunham of the History Department was elected pres- ident of the Ann Arbor Council of Social Agencies to succeed Rabbi Je- hudah M. Cohen, retiring president, at a dinner meeting held yesterday at the YMCA. Mrs. Robert Granville was elected vice president to succeed Lawrence Quinn, a University graduate. At the meeting, members welcomed new Executive Director Gladwin Lewis who replaces Walter Jeske. Dr. Otto Engelke, Washtenaw County Health Officer was elected treasurer. Rabbi Cohen delivered the princi- pal address of the evening entitled, "Can Social Work Meet the Chal- lenge of the Peace?" The Council is a group of City Welfare agencies which combined to achieve more efficient administra- tion and the elimination of over-lap- ping. Security Group Will Enforce World Peace Trusteeship Issue Is Debated at Conference By The Associated Press SAN FRANCISCO, May 16-A United Nations Conference commit- tee voted today to stand pat on a big-power plan for enforcing Oeace through a compact Security Council of eleven member nations. As the conference entered its fourth week, big and little countries were in substantial accord on most points, and the American delegation decided it was time to press for a speedy wind-up of the job of draft- ing a world charter. Some progress was achieved on the biggest issue still before the conference - trusteeships - al- though whatever is decided about establishing guardianships for de- pendent or strategic areas of the world may turn out to be some- what meaningless in individual cases. The reason is that under present plans a country having a mandate left over from the last war, or one assigned a mandate at the peace table after this world conflict, woue have the right to say whether the area should be brought under super- vision of a new league. Nevertheless, a conference com- mittee accepted, as something or which it could go to work, an Ameri- can-drafted combination of all thE trusteeship ideas of the Big Five- France, Britain, China, Russia and the United States. Any country, including the Big Five, can propose changes in it. The trusteeship system would be pegged to four fundamental points: 1. Maintenance of international security: 2. Maintenance of the security of the administering coun- try: 3. Social, economic and poli- tical advancement of the native populations: 4. Safeguarding of the area's natural resources. As a result of action in anothei committee, the composition of the Security Council will be what the four countries sponsoring the conference have recommended - subject, of course, to later approval by the en- tire conference. UJA Campaign Closes Friday Drive To Raise $2,500 For Relief Agencies The United Jewish Appeal cam- paign to collect $2,500 from student will end tomorrow. The national goal of this drive i $80,000,000, and these funds will b used by various agencies to aid Jewv thro ighout the world who have beer uprooted from their homes, and wh now are in need of food, clothin, and medical care. Officials Bribed Before the fall of Germany, helr brought to Jews in occupied coun- tries was given in a clandestine man- ner-the bribing of officials, and thc sneaking of the refugees across bor- ders. This is the first year that relief organizations will actually be able t get in and function for all the strick. en people. The sanction and request of the various European countries concerned has been received. Organizations Organizations which will distribute the funds are the American Jewish Congress; B'nai B'rith Wider Scope, Joint Defense Appeal (B'nai B'rith Anti-Defamation League and Ameri- can Jewish Committee). The collection among students has been undertaken by solicitors who have divided the work into eight major divisions. Beryle Walters, stu- dent director in charge of the cam- paign, has urged that those persons who have not yet contributed and wish to do so should contact the solicitor in charge of his group. Campus Solicitors David Loewenberg is collecting Giant German Sub Caught Going to Japan Carried Luftwaffe Officers, Equipment By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, May. 16-A dis- closure that Japanese submarines have been operating in the Atlantic came from the Navy today. Admiral Jonas H. Ingram, com- manding the Atlantic Fleet, told a news conference in unfolding some of the long-held secrets of the "Bat- SAN FRANCISCO, May 16. - (P)-Concern over the possibility of Russian entrance into the Pa- cific War, the Tokyo radio indi- cated today, was one of the causes behind Japan's action in abrogat- all treaties between Nippon and Germany. tle of the Atlantic" that American craft had sunk one Japanese subma- rine late last summer just south' of Iceland. He said it was identified by flot- lam which rose to the surface after its destruction. First Word Disclosed This was the first word that Nippo- nese undersea raiders had joined- or attempted to join-German U- boats in harrassing Allied shipping in the Atlantic. A giant 1,600-ton German subma- rine carrying three German uft- waffe officers and aviation plans and equipment headed for Japan sur- :endered Sunday in the Atlantic. Reveals Surrender Admiral Ingram, revealed the U- hoat's surrender today in line with 'i general lifting of the secrecy which !as surrounded the Battle of the At- lantic against submarines since the Mtart of the war. He told a news conference that from the time of our entry into the war "we know definitely that we sank 126 U-boats, most of them far from our shore." B-29s Knock Out IkeyJap War, Industes By The Associated Press Systematic destruction of Japan's key war industries was pushed by the American Superfortress command to- day as more than 500 of the sky giants returned to the great city of Nagoya for the second time in 68 hours to rain 3,500 tons of fire bombs )n prime targets. As the Superforts made their pre- dawn strike Thursday (Tokyo time) American ground forces on bloody Okinawa and in the southern Philip- pines remained locked in deadly com- bat with fanatical die-hard Japanese forces. Battle Unchanged The roaring battle front on Oki- nawa was practically unchanged as American doughboys and Marines carried the fight to the Japanese. Adm. Chester W. Nimitz disclosed in his communique today that the Okinawa campaign had cost 3,781 American lives through My 14. Jap- anese fatalities reached the stag- gering total of 46,505. The Nippo- nese also lost 1,038 men captured. Wounded Total 17,004 The American wounded .totaled 17,004 and the missing 165. The Yanks registered only local gains on Okinawa where the fight- ing was uphill or through rugged terrain. A dozen Japanese planes struck against the American fleet off Oki- nawa. Carrier and Marine fliers shot down nine. The others fled. Marine Patrols Enter Capital Okinawa, Thursday, May 17.--UP -Patrols of the Sixth Marine Divi- sion crossed the Asato River estuary and entered the main part of Naha, Okinawa's capital city, today. This put troops of the 10th U. S. Army in, or on the doorsteps of, Okinawa's three largest towns. The other two are fortress Shuri and I JAG SCHOOL GRADUATION: Classes Will Include Six Michigan Alumni Six graduates of the University sistant Inspecting General of the with the 22nd Officer Candidate class gence Corps during the six mhthsI