I ui . Ar 4t WEATHER Scattered Showers and Cooler. VOL. LV, No. 153 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, MAY 22, 1945 PRICE FIVE CENTS War Bond review To Take Place Two-Hour Show To Feature Navy Band In connection with the Seventh War Loan Campaign, a free two- hour Navy Review will be given at 8:30 p. m. EWT (7:30 p. m. CWT) today in Hill Auditorium, featuring the U.S.S. Helena band with Lieut. Robert K. Adams, USNR, as emcee. Therreview, which is making a tour through Illinois, Michigan, Ohio, In- diana and Kentucky to stimulate bond sales, will consist of the Mu- sical Mchs directed by Jack Sherr, who led his own aggregation before joining the Navy, and several spe- cialty acts in addition to the band numbers. Adams is 'U' Grad Lieut. Adams, a graduate of the University, was a radio and stage actor previous to his entrance into the Navy, has produced "Sky High" from Glenview, Ill., Naval Air station and "Flight Deck Jamboree" from the Naval Air Technical Training Cen- ter, Chicago. Survivors of the sinking of the U.S.S. Helena in the Battle of Kula Gulf, July 5, 1943, the band is now stationed at the U. S. Naval Training Center, Great Lakes, Ill. The crew has recently been awarded the Navy Unit Commendation, first decoration of its kind given by the Navy De- partment. ' Nearly all the musicians were in the Navy before the outbreak of war, and were stationed at Pearl Harbor at the time of the Japanese attack. They participated in 13 engagements in the Southwest Pacific before the Helena was sunk in Kula Gulf. Sponsor Named Sponsored by the combined veter- ans' organizations of Ann Arbor, the show is free to townspeople and students. According to George Leon- ard, chairman of publicity for the local drive, "The cast has many pro- fessionals, and the show itself is really good." Campus sales are being conducted by solicitors from the veterans or- ganization, members of JGP, and bonds may even be purchased in the cashier's office. Any bonds bought from other sources should be credited to the University drive to help reach the $100,000 goal established for the campus. Sophs To Meet Today; Answer Frosl Callenge "My gosh, they're afraid of us," quoth freshman captain Dick Emer- ick yesterday about the failure of the sophomore class to respond to the freshman challenge in the Class Games Classic at 2 p. m. EWT Sat- urday on Ferry Field. He spoke of the scheduled sopho- more class meeting last week at which only a half dozen eager, will- ing and able sophs showed up tof make plans for what they say will be the rout of the freshmen on the field of honor. Navy and civilian sophomores will get an- other chance to band together against the junior-sized upstarts tonight, with a second meeting at 8 p. m. in Rm. 316 of the Union. "If they don't turn out tonight, you know the answer-they don't care enough about their allege honor to defend it," Roy Rogers, frosh lead- er, pointed out. Freshmen have is- sued uncomplimentary proclama- tions to the sophomores urging thema unite now or meet their doom. Class Games has been revived this year-for the first time since 1940- to bring back some of the traditional fire and spirit that always highlight- edathe interclass clashes in pre-war years. Freshmen have turned out some 50 strong in preparation for the Saturday fracas. Sophomores have yet to show anything but apa- thy to the youngsters' challenge. "They must be dead," Bob Goldman declared.1 Soph leaders Dave Duttweiler, Art Sakel, George Slocum and Dewey Tennant together with Coach Earl Riskey will be on hand tonight' to' organize the sophomores. Movies of the Michigan-Ohio State game will be shown. Both sides have urged a strong turnout tonight, because the games will be fair only if the teams a evenlv maihed. Rash Behavior An epidemic of German meas- les has hit the Michigan campus. "The worst feature of these measles is the alarm they are causing," Dr. Warren E. For- sythe, Director of the University Health Service, said. Actually they are not very serious, since they are mild, last only three days, and seldom have complications. A few days of rest and a reasonable amount of isolation will cure them. The symptoms of these measles are the same as those of a com- mon cold, except that with the measles there is an enlargement ofnthe glands behind the ears, and a generalized rash. Lantern Nigfht Sing Cup :Won By Newberry Adlelia Cheever House Awarded Activities Cup The presentation of the WAA Sing Cup to Helen Newberry for its rendi- tion of "Stadala Pumpa" (Czech Folk Song) and the WAA Participation Cup to members of Adelia Cheever highlighted the 32nd annual Lan- tern Night Sing held last night at Hill Auditorium, to honor senior women. Placing second in the song contest was Alpha Gamma Delta which sang "Beautiful Saviour" while "This Is My Country" won third place for Alpha Xi Delta. The cup was award- ed by Barbara Osborne, president of WAA. Dr. Bell Presents Awad Dr. Margaret Bell, who presented the participation cup, announr that Adelia Cheever had earned 16 points for participation in team an individual sports activities of WAA. Second place winner, Alpha Xi Dlta, accumulated 103 points and Zeta Tau Alpha, placing third, earned 61 points. Members of the School of Music faculty who judged the contest were Miss Thelma Lewis, Mls. Arthur Hackett and Dr. Hard in Van Der - sen. Dr. Margaret Bell also acted as judge. Thirty women's residences entered the contest and judging was based upon the most outst.aning examples of harmony and blending. Line of March Preceding the program in Hill Aud- itorium was a Line of March which met in front of the library. Seniors formed a double line, flanked by underclasswomen on either side. Past presidents of key women's activities or campus headed the line, while the Ann Arbor High School Band, under the direction of Charles Yates, led the parade from the center of the diagonal to the auditorium. Included in the group of presidents werc Natalie Mattern, former head of Women's Judiciary Council; Marjorie Hall, past president of Women's War Council; Florine Wilkens, 1944-45 head of Assembly Association; Peg Laubengayer, outgoing president of Panhellenic Association and Shelby Dietrich,past president of WAA. The Line of March was comprised of 1,500 University women. Seniors weregarbed in traditional caps and gowns and underclassmen wore color ed ribbons to signify respective clas- ses. Juniors wore yellow ribbons, See LANTERN NIGHT, Page 5 Chinese Troops Latnch Drive Push Made Againhst ap Lifeline in lndo-China CHUNGKING, May 21-IP)-Chi- nese troops, in preliminary counter- offensive blows against an estimated 2,000,000 Japanese troops in China and Manchuria, have launched a new drive in the south against Japan's vital lifeline to Indo-China, the High Command announced tonight. } The Chinese offensive 330 miles south of Chungking and 150 miles north of Indo-China already has rip- pedi out one major bastion inl the Japanese supply coridor across China-the heavily-fortified Kwangsi province rail town of Hochin, a com- munique said. JAG's To Meet For Conference Forty-nine high ranking judge ad- vocates, including six generals, will -nnv- f'r.',. n +J',f.r a r ot, l . n_ Japs Attack Wearing Yank Outfits * * Ci'ty B4 Lucking Says Townspeople Bear Costs Suit To Be Held in Court on Monday A show cause hearing will be held in Circuit Court Monday on a suit seeking to enjoin Ann Arbor from furnishingrfurther fire protection to the University unless "under lawful authority or contract authorized by the state legislature." Plaintiff in the case, filed yester- day, is Alfred Lucking, Detroit at- torney and owner of the Wolverine Building, Washington and Fourth Ave. Lucking Explains Case Stating that Ann Arbor taxpayers should not be compelled to support fire protection for a state-owned in- stitution, Lucking explained that the University doubles the fire hazard to individual property because of several old buildings, including 'U' and Mason Halls on campus. "The City of Ann Arbor which has an assessed evaluation of approxi- mately $50,000,000 is giving free fire protection to the $60,000,000 property, owned and controlled by the Univer- ,ity Board of Regents," he said. "Yet, no actual compensation for the pro- tection has been given the city."' $50,000 Asked Lucking contends.that the Regents should be required to pay the city $50,000, plus interest, which he said was the reasonable value of fire pro- tection furnished by the city in the past six years. Owners of two small buildings, housing places of business, adjoin- ing the Wolverine . Building and termed "serious fire hazards," were also named in the suit. World Charter May e Signed In Two Weeks SAN FRANCISCO, May 21.-UP)- Under the impetus of good will gen- erated by agreement on a touchy regional security issue, the United Nations Conference officially set for its goal today the signing "in the first week of June" of a new world charter designed to keep peace, Specific steps taken today toward a compromise on another big prob- lem- trusteeships- added to the chances that the conference might finish its momentous enterprise in another fortnight. A move to promise either eventual independence or self-government to colonial peoples under international rule was reported to have been a- greed upon substantially by repre- sentatives of the British and Ameri- can delegations. Russia has been battling for inclu- sion of the goal of independence. Britain and the United States so far have preferred the naming of self- government. The Chinese suggested listing both. Commander Harold E. Stassen of the American. delegation and Lord Cranborne for the British were re- ported today to have agreed gener- ally to support the Chinese formula. As this boost to conference prog- ress developed, the policy-making steering committee distributed to delegates a time-tables suggesting that all committees and subcommit- tees which have been sifting amend- ments to the charter and drafting its various chapters, complete the job "by the end of the present week." * * * * alks at U's 'Fire Rites for Prof. Hayden Will Be Held Tomorrow rives Repulse Nip illenge Near Naha emy Sports %aptured U S Weapons its; Americans Advance on Okinawa By The Associated Press GUAM, Tuesday, May 22-Japanese wearing American Marine uni- forms and using captured U. S. weapons made a strong counterattack on the Sixth Marine Division sector near Naha Sunday night. The attack was repulsed. Three other groups of Japanese, using demolitions, attacked the First Marine Division sector. They also were repulsed, Fleet Adm. Chester W. Nimitz said in today's communique. Both the Marine Third Amphibious Corps-the First and Second Divi- sions-and the 24th Army Corps-the 77th and 96th Infantry Divisions- , Made advances on both flanks and PROF. JOSEPH HAYDEN former faculty member to be buried here tomorrow. * * ** * * Formter Political Science Chairman Was Attached to MacArthlr's Staff Tension over Trieste Question Eased byTito Moscow May Have Caused Recent Action By The Associated Press LONDON, May 21.-Marshal Tito of Yugoslavia appeared tonight to have -eased diplomatic and military tension over the occupation of Tri- este and its surrounding area, pos- sibly under Moscow prompting. Diplomatic sources with contacts in the British Foreign Office de- scribed the situation as "definitely improved" and there was a disposi- tion to regard the problem as ripe for an early solution. Tito Withdraws Already, Tito was withdrawing his troops from southern Austria, one of the points of dispute. Yugoslav occupation headquarters had been withdrawn from Trieste. although the military situation there was unchanged with both British and Yugoslav troops occupying the Adri- atic port. While delegates purporting to speak for the citizens of Trieste sent a bellicose message of allegiance to Tito, progress was apparent on dip- lomatic levels. Solution Sought Diplomatic channels said it had, become quite clear in the last 24 hours that the Yugoslavs were pre- pared to seek a solution without armed force, and that Tito's govern- ment had indicated a willingness to discuss the question with the Allies. Developments were indicated on two diplomatic fronts-first Tito's apparent readiness to discuss direct- ly with Italy the long-term status of the territory, and second his inclina- tion to discuss the present status of occupation with the Allies. in the center of the Naha-Shuri- Yonabaru line. Jap Planes Attack Making their first attack in several days, 35 Japanese warplanes struck at American shipping off Okinawa Sunday evening. They damaged five light units, Nimitz said. Twerity-six attackers were shot down. Fleet Airwing one search planes have sunk 86,880 tons of Japanese shipping and damaged 81,500 tons since inauguration of their sweeps to Korean and Japanese rwaters. They also have destroyed 21 Japanese planes and damaged 15. These four- motored Privateers and Liberators twin engined Mariners went into ac- tion from Okinawa bases only a few weeks ago. Yaku Island Bombed Their latest raid was a bombing attack on Yaku Island, northern Ry- ukyus, where they started large fires. Marine planes attacked the Palaus and Marshalls. One army Mitchell bomber was lost to antiaircraft fire in an attack on Minami Cape, Shumushu Island, northern Kuriles, Sunday. Navy search planes attacked targets on Paramushiro. OnOkinawa Maj. Gen. John R. Hodge, commander of the 10th Ar- my's 24th Corps, said a decrease of Japanese mortar and artillery Aire at night indicated American bleeding tactics have cut the strength of the enemy, denied outside reinforce- ments. Japs Hide in Caves But the Nipponese, believed to have still around 30,000 troops massed along the four-mile line, piled from caves and tunnels of their hill de- fenses and fought the Yanks to the death. Front reports said the first Marine Division in a mighty tank- supported thrust drove to the crest of the last ridge overlooking Shubi, second largest city on the island. Shuri is a mass of rubble, blasted by Naval and land artillery and aer- ial bombs. But Shuri castle, thick- walled and moated home of medieval Ryukyuan warriors, remained a tough bastion to be cracked. Funeral services for Prof. Joseph Ralston Hayden, 58, civilian affairs expert formerly attached to General MacArthur's Philippine staff will be held at 4 p. m. EWT (3 p. m. CWT) tomorrow in the St. Andrew's Episco- pal Church. Prof. Hayden, a member of the University political Science Depart- ment for 23 years, served as the de- partment chairman since 1937. He joined MacArthur's staff shortly aft- er the fall of Bataan and served with him until a month ago when he was sent home because of poor health. He had been on leave of absence as vice governor and secretary of public instruction in the Philippine Islands. Prior to this he had been an ex- change professor at the University of the Philippines. Hemorrage Causes Death Arriving home about a month ago Prof. Hayden went to Washington on business last week. His death due to cerebral hemnorrage came late Sat- urday night in Walter Reed hospital in Washington, shortly after he had attended the wedding of a Philip- pine friend. His knowledge of the Far East made him widely known as a lecturer and political writer. He held the position of special correspondent in the Far East for the Christian Science Monitor. Graduate of Knox1 Prof. Hayden graduated from Knox College, in Galesburg, Illinois in 1910. He received his 'law degree in 1928. He attended the University of Mich- igan for his masters and doctors de- grees. He became director of the Round Table on the Philippine Islands at the Institute of Politics, Williamston in 1927. From 1925 until 1930 he was a member of the Board of Cur- rent History Associates. He was a Lieutenant in the Michigan Naval Militia and was on active duty from April, 1917 until February 1919 dur- ing the last war. Hayden's Works The best known of Prof. Hayden's literary works were "The Senate and the Treaties 1789-1817." In 1920 he edited "The Philippines Past and Present," written by pean C. Wor- cester. He was a prolific contributor of articles on Government and Poli- tics. Surviving Professor Hayden is his wife Elizabeth, whom he married in Ann Arbor in 1917. 'There are two daughters, Mrs. Elizabeth Douglas Pearson and Mary. His only son Ralston, just returned from the Eu- topean Theatre of Operations after completing his required bombing mis- sions. An important meeting of dor- mitory presidents will be held at 5 p. m. EWT (4 p. m. CWT) today 1 in the Assembly-Pan Hellenic of- flees at the League. LIAISON OFFICER: JAG School Director Leaves For War Crimes Office Post Director of the military justice de- partment of the Judge Advocate General's School, Maj. 'Warren F. Farr left yesterday for Washington to serve as liaison officer between the War Crimes Office of the JAGD and Supreme Court Justice Robert S. Jackson, recently appointed Unit- ed States Prosecutor on the future International Court. Inducted into the Army four years ARGENTINE BOOKMAKING ON DISPLAY: ago, Maj. Farr graduated from OCS and the Fifth Officer class of the JAG School in November, 1942. He has served as director of the military justice department for the last year. , First Lt. John H. Weidner, a grad- uate in the Fifth Officer Candidate class, left yesterday for a new as- signment to the JAG in Washington. Assistant Executive Officer of the JAG School, Lt. Weidner expects to be sent overseas "bh~ortly. A graduate of the Sixth Officer Candidate class, First Lt. Robert T. Dwyer, a member of ,the military science and tactics staff here, has also been assigned to Washington. Three new officers have been as- signed to the JAG School. First Lt. Charles H. Flansburg, member of the 22nd Officer class, which gradu- ated Saturday, has been added to +ha n smayn nnna wthman nnra +. Dean 's Gollection Exhibits High Workmanship By BETTYANN LARSEN "The level of Argentine workman- shin in bookmaking is now as high as that in the United States," Dean Hayward Keniston said yesterday in an interview regarding the current exhibit of hnoks on disnlav in the the books are published unbound with colorful paper covers similar to the 'jackets' on American books. Authors, in fact, often have full- page photographs on the fronts. Occasionally, however, elaborate hinding are made from umhorn calf "Of course, the more ornate covers may run as high as $6.00, but that is still much less than a comparable American rate of $15.00. Strictly Yankee influence is found in the 'pocket' books on ex- hihit. "fliiynhrpe R rrasc s." in hand to eliminate "drifts" on the pages. A yearly Book Fair, held in a Buenos Aires park, attempts to en- courage a reading public. At that time each publisher has a booth where he sells his latest publications.