Wd u IY 4F t kt 1ati WEATHER Fair and Slightly Warmer. VOL. LV, No. 164 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JUNE 5, 1945 PRICE FIVE CENTS Youth Peace Role Told; Delegates Air Opinions 6th MVarine Troops Land on Oroku --- : Representative Tell of Chinese War Suffering Voicing the combined opinion of the five delegates from the World Youth Council who spoke in Rack- ham Lecture Hall last night, Lt. Zvo- noser Jurissic, an officer in the Yugoslav Merchant Marine, stated that "No one except the youth of the world can save the world for peace." Chinese Haven't Succumbed Following a keynote address by Dean Alice Lloyd, who welcomed the visitors, Yang Kang, delegate from China, related her experiences as a war correspondent and told the audi- ence that her "people have not suc- cumbed to Japanese aggression al- though 80 per cent of our industry has been destroyed and 10 per cent of our population has been killed." She emphasized the fact that "Chi- nese youth realizes the responsibility that rests on its shoulders." "Czech youth, too, has hopes for a world peace," said Maria -Michel, who was a student at Prague during German occupation and "cultural blackout" which existed at the time. Security Depends On All "World security depends on the concerted efforts of all of us and not just political groups," Frances Da- mon, American representative, em- phasized. She quoted the motto of the World Youth Council: "We are ready. We are determined. Forward for our future," as a possible motto for youth movements everywhere. "America has no idea of what has happened in Europe and the Far East for she has not been exposed to the horrors of war," declared Svend Pedersen, officer in the Danish navy, who added that "only through ex- change of students can there be understanding which will mnake pos- sible the lasting peace that our fore- fathers failed to accomplish." All students are invited to a final informdl discussion period from 10 a. m. to noon EWT today in Lane Hall. Sa Francisco Group Favors Use of Force By The Associated Press SAN FRANCISCO, June 4-The hard core of a United Nations Char- ter, the 'provision for efforts to end international disputes peacefully and to use strong armmethods if they fail, was approved today by a United Nations Conference committee. Chairman Camillo Ponce Enriquez of Ecuador said the committee had approved an entire charter chapter dealing with "determination of threats to the peace or acts of ag- gression and action with respect thereto." Under it a compact, 11-member Se- curity Council would serve as the in- strument of a new World League in bringing unruly nations into line and preventing the eruption of war in the future. It would be backed up by armed forces directed by the top military ex- perts of great powers. To the Security Council would be given the right to determine the existence of "any threat to the peace, breach of the peace or act of ag- gression" and to adopt w'hatever measures are needed to "maintain or restore peace and security." Before putting those measures into effect, it could call upon disputants to comply with provisional, tempo- gravation of their controversy. gravation of their conroversy. It could propose methods for bringing the dispute to an amicable end-and all the United Nations are supposed to bind themselves to ad- just ther international differences pacifically. But in the event these attempts at1 friendly adjustment fail, they could decide to bring pressure through dip- lomatic, economic or other sanctions. CAMPUS EVENTS Today Five World Youth Rep- resentatives will meet with students from 10 a. m. EWT to noon (9-11 a. m. CWT) in Lane Hall. Today Program in commemora- tion of Thomas Mann's seventieth birthday at 4:15 p. m. EWT (3:15 p. m. CWT) in Rackham Amphitheatre. Today Prescott Club Convoca- tion at 5:15 p.mn. EWT (4:15 p. m. CWT) in the League. today Sigma Rho Tau to hold Yugoslav Praises Aid Of U.S. Air Power "American air power certainly aided us against the Germans during the war," declared Lt. Zvonoser Jurissic, Yugoslav naval officer, in a Daily interview yesterday at the In- ternational Center tea honoring five youth delegates to the San Francisco Conference. "We had no planes and were un- able to protect ourselves from Nazi air attacks until you sent your ships against the enemy," Jurissic said. In reply to a question concerning Marshal Tito, Jurissic acclaimed the Yugoslav leader as the "only man who has been able to rally all social and economic groups into a unified army to fight for a demo- cratic Yugoslavia." On leave from the Yugoslav Mer- chant Marine in which he has served since 1941, Jurissic related how his ship was torpedoed off the Atlantic coast, and the crew of 33 men floated three days in a life boat until they were picked up and brought to the United States by a Swedish ship. He was appointed as an observer to the San Francisco Conference because of his connection as a lia- son officer for youth groups be- tween his country and the United Stats. Jurissic is also represent- ative of Seaman's Youth of Yugo- slavia. Another member of the delegation, Yang Kang, who was studying at Radcliff College, is a newcomer to this country; she arrived in 1944 via India where she stayed for two months. In reply to a question concerning Americans, Miss Kang was im- pressed with the "interest which everyone has in current .events", but she added that they seem to lose their interest soon after being aroused. "Even on your various college campuses therre a many organizations which aren't aware of each other's existence, while in China we have a unified council among the several schools to pro- mote further cooperation and pow- er for our youth movements." An American citizen and resident of the United States until she was 12, delegate Maria Michel, former medicalstudent, was pleased by the enthusiasm with which the group had been received. Receiving a chemistry scholarship at Smith College in 1943, Miss Mich- el was chosen as a member of the group because of her recent arrival from Czechoslovakia in 1942 and as- sociation with the National Union of Czech Students in Prague. Frances Damon, executive secre- tary for American Youth for a Free World, which is sponsoring the cur- rent tour, completes the group of delegates, with the exception of Sven Pedersen, who was flying in from Chicago for the rally. Miss Damon explained the form- ation of the World Youth Council which resulted from an Inter- national Youth Conference in Lon- don in 1941. At this time students and youth leaders who had escaped from Nazi-held countries met to set up an international organiz- ation of young people for unified action against the enemy forces. The conference in August at Lon- don will be the first since 1942; ac- cording to Miss Damon, who noted ,that since it must be limited to 400 to 500 members the number of repre- sentatives are chosen according to a poplation quota, the strength of their youth movement, and their status as a United Nation. A unounceinenits Final distribution of commence- ment announcements will be held from 1:30 to 5 p. m. EWT (12:30 to 4 p. m. CWT) today in Rtm. 2, University Hall. Chinese Troops Smash Toward Liuchow Base American Air Power Support 25-Mile Dash By The Associated Press CHUNGKING, June 4-Bursting through Japanese lines in a 25-mile dash, Chinese troops today pushed to within 28 mies of the former American airbase city of Liuchow while waves of U. S. bombers and fighters blasted the fire-swept South China rail hub. Imperiling a second Japanese-held former American airfield in South- Central China, other Chinese assault forces advanced two miles, to within five miles of Shaoyang (Paoching), 330 miles southeast of Chungking. Japs Abandon Area These swift advances were an- nounced by the Chinese High Com- mand as reports reaching Chungking indicated that the Japanese were abandoning not only their overland corridor to Indo-China, but also the vital land bridge across China to Canton and Hong Kong. Liuchow, 400 miles southeast of Chungking, is one of the most strate- gically-important objectives in South China. It is the biggest communica- tion center in Kwangsi province. Formerly a large U. S. bomber base, it was abandoned to the Japanese last November. U. S. Fifth Air Force Joining the battle to regain the former airbase, U. S. 14th Air Force bombers and fighters subjected Liu- chow to one of the most concentrated aid attacks in China in recent months. High explosives and incen- diaries were rained on warehouses, setting a large area afire, while fight- er-bombers bombed and strafed Jap- anese anti-aircraft positions. The Chinese were closing in on Liuchow-which the Japanese have been reported preparing to evacuate -on a 100-mile front extending along an arc on the north, west and south- west. CIO Head Raps Lack of Plans For CE OI 5aek CHICAGO, June 4 P) 11, I. Thomas, international president of the United Automobile Workers un- ion (CIO), declared today "There appears to be a total lack of plans in federal agencies to meet the serious labor situation in Detroit and in the nation." Thomas, who recently surveyed employment, cutbacks and reconver- sion in areas from the middle west to the west cast, addressed the union's executive board, adding in an interview that the labor situation nationally is "critical." Thomas recommended the board make an "emphatic demand" for re- peal of executive order 9240, which eliminated time and a half and double time for Saturday and Sun- day, for removal of all manpower controls, and for any tendency to force workers to accept jobs at less pay following closing of war plants. He said the automotive industry in March employed 800,000 workers, but that by September it would employ no more than 549,000. In Detroit, Thomas added, the automotive in- dustry at peak employed 355,542, but six weeks after V-E Day only 200,122 were employed. Thomas asserted the automotive industry's plans to produce 200,000 cars this year would provide employ- ment for "no more than 100,000 per- sons." KOREA Ham HONSHU . _ ;TOKYO / g SHIKOKU Yawata " 00 SHIKOKU t KYUSHU Naats - Sasebo Oit * - Omura Omuta Nagasak* umo * JAPANa Nobeoka AMAKUSA * HtoyoshsHososlm SK YUSH U _ Kokubu A'va' It K I Mtyakonolo Kagos~ma! 'i}Kushira Ban Ariake say - GATTATH MILE IV0s(17hina Sea ° YH u TAttC 50 hALSEY'S CARRIER PLANES STRIKE KYUSHU AIRFIELDS-Map locates five Kyushu airfields hit in raids by carrier planes of Adm. Wil- liam F. Halsey's Third Pacific Fleet in action announced b'y Adm. Chester W. Nimitz after disclosing that Halsey had resumed his com- mand of the fleet. Education Assembly To Be Held; Sigma Rho Tau Will Give Dinner Half o Naha Airfield Taken; Army Gains in Other Sectors Leathernecks Construct Bridges to Vonainan Island, Nimitz' s Communique Reports By The Associated Press GUAM, June 5 (Tuesday) - Troops of the Sixth Marine Division in a quick amphibious maneuver, landed yesterday on Oroku peninsula, immedi- ately south of Naha City, Okinawa, and captured half of Naha airfield, best in the Ryukus. In all other sectors, Fleet Adm. Chester W. Nimitz reported, the 10th U.S. Army made substantial gains. Maj. Gen. Lemuel C. Shepherd Jr.'s Sixth Division Leathernecks quick- ly secured a 1,200-yard beachhead on the northwest tip of Oroku peninsula, directly north of Naha airfield. Teaching As A Filly Art' Is Speech Topic Honoring candidates for the teach- er's certificate the School of Edu- cation will hold its tenth annual con- vocation at 2 p. m. EWT (1 p. m. CWT) today in the auditorium of University High School. President Ruthven will open the convocation exercises with an address to be followed by the introduction of the convocation speaker by Dean James B. Edmonson of the School of Education. Brubacher To Give Address John S. Brubacher, professor of ed- ucation at Yale University, will de- liver the convocation, address on the topic "Teaching As A Fine Art." Scholastic awards will be presented by Prof. Francis Day Curtis, secre- tary of the School of Education, and the audience will participate in the singing of "The Yellow and the Blue." Winners of the 1945-46 scholastic awards are Howard Kingsbury Hol- land (William H. Payne Scholar) and Arthur Henry Rice (Burke Aaron Hinsdale. Scholar). The former award is made to candidates for the master's degree, while the latter is for candidates for the doctorate. Recommended by Council These awards are made in accord- ance with a recommendation of the University Council, providing that the services of former distinguished staff members might be appropriate- ly recognized and have been author- ized by the School of Education with the approval of the Board of Regents. Both Drs. Payne and Hinsdale were members of the faculty and leaders. in the field of education. High scholarship and high rank in professional zeal and promise are the requirements for the awards. Thomas Manni To Be Honored Program Will Be Held At Rackhuam Today Sponsored by the German and English departments, a celebration honoring the seventieth birthday of Thomas Mann, noted author and personality, will be held at 4:15 p. m. EWT (3:15 p. m. CWT) today in the Amphitheatre of the Rackham Build- ing. The celebration will include speeches by Prof. Henry W. Nord- meyer and Prof. Fred B. Wahr of the German department; Dr. James H. Meisel of the political science depart- ment, who served as Dr. Mann's pri- vate secretary in 1938-9; and Prof. Bennett Weaver, representing the English department. Refreshments will be served at a social following the Wilkerson To Speak At Banquet Today Daniel C. Wilkerson, General Mot- ors Corp. patent attorney and invent- or, will speak on "Invention in the Post-War Era" at the 16th Annual Sigma Rho Tau "Tung Oil" Banquet at 6:15 p. m. EWT (5:15 p. m. CWT) today in the Union. - Wilkerson served as a state advis- or on military inventions during the organizing of the original Michigan War Council. He has been a mem- ber of the Detroit Chamber of Com- merce for the past ten years, is an alumnus of the U. S. Naval Academy and a national director of the Navy League of the United States. In February 1941, Wilkerson, who has been active in military affairs in the state during the past decade as an organizer of the State Troops and of state-wide Navy League or- ganizations, predicted the fall of Ger- many during the winter of 1944-45, and the fall of Japan by the end of 1947, on a basis of exhaustion of mili- tary supplies. The banquet will be attended by faculty members and students in en- gineering, architecture, and science, and will feature traditional Stump Speakers Society humorous faculty speaking contests as well as the an- nouncement of winners in national speaking contests held at the Sigma Rho Tau convention, ten days ago. NO SOCIALISM ! Churchill Hits Labor Program In First Speech LONDON, June 4-(/P)-Prime Min- ister Churchill hurled himself into the British election campaign tonight in a fighting speech in which he charged that the socialistic program advocated by his laborite opponents could not be established "without a political police." His address, delivered by radio, launched the conservative party's campaign to remain in power when the nation goes to the polls July 5. Churchill devoted his sharpest words to criticism of socialism, touching only briefly on foreign af- fairs and then only to remind the country of the tremendous task of finishing off the "Japanese tyrants." "My friends, I must tell you that a socialist policy is abhorrent to Brit- ish ideas of freedom," he declared. "Therecan be no doubt that social- ism is inseparably interwoven with totalitarianism and the abject wor- ship of the state. Light Resistance The Leathernecks encountered on- ly light resistance, except on their left flank, where the Japanese opened up with automatic weapon fire. Nimitz's communiques today re- ported the Marines already were con- structing bridges to Yonamau Island in the center of Naha harbor. Avail- able maps show causeways connect- ing the tiny island with both Naha city and Oroku peninsula. Presuma- bly, these had been knocked out by heavy naval and artillery fire which destroyed Naha. On the east coast, Seventh Divi- sion infantry smashed ahead 5,000 yards - a gain of 8,500 yards in two days - to enter Guischan town on the south coast and virtually secure Chinen peninsula. Twa Town Captured The 96th Division struck heavily southward, captured Iwa town and approached Meka town, which was captured by the Seventh Division in a broad, fanlike advance. The first Marine Division captured Tomosu town, half a mile south o Kazimato in south central Okinawa, as they developed their encirclement of Oroku peninsula. Maj. Gen. Pedro A. Del Valle's First Division Marines thus are in a posi- tion to swing west to assist in the battle for Oroku peninsula, or to smash southward, where some enemy remnants are reported cut off in a seven-square mile area between Nagusuku on the west coast and Mabuni on the southeast. S1 * .i On Jap Seaport GUAM, June 5, Tuesday-()- Kobe, Japan's principal seaport and sixth largest city, felt the sting of Superfortress incendiaries for the third time this morning as 400 to 450 of the huge bombers unloaded some 3,000 tons of fire bombs on congested industrial areas. Attack Length of City The areanunder attack extended from one end of the long, narrow city to the other, skipping only a three-mile area west of the ship- building yards, burned out in two previous fire strikes Feb. 3 and -March 17. Kobe, huddled tightly against a ridge of wooded hills, lies along the shore of Osaka Bay, at the 'eastern end of the inland sea. It is about 250 miles southwest of Tokyo. Osaka, Japan's third largest city, is just 15 miles to the east. Population Dense Because of the cramped position between the shore and hills, Kobe's 33-square-mile area has an average population density of 30,500 persons per square mile. The city is about 10 miles long and two or three wide. This was the 15th incendiary strike at Japanese cities by Maj. Gen. Cur- tis Lemay's 21st Bomber Command. Targets today included the imper- ial government railway shops, the main Sannomiya railroad station, the commercial dock area, and a heavily industrialized section dominated by the Kobe steel works. Newly Formed Club To Meet Both American and foreign stu- dents on campus are invited to the general meeting of the newly organ- ized All-Nations Club at 7:30 p. m. EWT (6:30 p. m. CWT) today in the International Center. Offering students a chance to join an independent student-run organ- ization whose purpose is the realiza- tion of better international relations at the University, the All Nations I rl~h t-00nc a nrnaram of troriaA ck"A U.S. Post-War Plans Warrant Conscription Peace Requires Draft, State Department Says By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, June 4-The Unit- ed States' obligations under the world security organization warrant uni- versal military training in peacetime, the State Department said today. It outlined its views on the con- troversial peace time draft plan through Undersecretary Joseph C. Grew as the house postwar'military policy started its long-heralded hear- ings. Other Witnesses Half a dozen other witnesses fol- lowed Grew in the Caucus Room of the old House office building and, with one exception, they endorsed the principle of building up a strong re- serve army by inducting teen-age males into military service for one year of training in peacetime. A war veteran, the head of a. women's federation, the mother of six men in the armed service, a clergyman and a military news com- mentator, George Fielding Eliot, were among those testifying. Only the clergyman dissented from the general endorsement of the postwar draft. Grew was the first witness in a group of proponents for whom Chair- man Woodrum (D.-Va.) set aside the first two days of the hearings, to be followed by two days of opposi- tion and more than a week of rebut- tal on both sides. Advocate of Draft Grew told the committee he ap- peared as "an advocate of military training for the young men of Amer- ica." "I believe a year's military training is necessary because of our obliga- tions under the world security organ- ization; because in the world of things as they are, our international policy to be effective must have strength behind it," Grew said. Truman Asks Lend-Lease Aid Request Aims To End Japanese War Quickly WASHINGTON, June 4-President Truman asked Congress today for a new lend-lease appropriation of $1,975,000,000 to help "bring the con- flict with Japan to a quick and decis- ive end." In a letter to House Speaker Ray- burn the president said the approp- riation, recommended for the fiscal year beginning July 1 would-togeth- er with unobligated balances of $2,400,000,000-make up a total pro- gram of $4,375,000,000. Supplement Program He said that the lend-lease pro- gram would be supplemented to the extent necessary by the export-im- port bank and that he would send congress soon "a proposal providing for adequate legal authorization and expanded lending capacity for the bank."' Mr. Truman said the requested new appropriation "reflects our resolution to give fully effective aid in order to shorten the war and thereby reduce the cost in Allied lives and materials." The president's letter was accom- panied by one in which Harold D. Smith, director of the budget, recom- mended: 1. Continuance of lend-lease as "an indispensable weapon" for complete war against Japan in col- laborating with our allies. 2. Limitation on the use of lend-lease funds to war and na- tional defense purposes and reduc- tion in their expenditure as fast nc rrtccihl® r.nncic4nnf t:ri1H l ncn MOZART CONCERTO: Mary Evans JohInsone Will Be Featured wiiIth 'U' Orchestra Mary Evans Johnson, outstanding student pianist, will be featured in the Mozart "Concerto in M major, K. 467" (for piano and orchestra) on the University Symphony Orchestra's spring concert at 8:30 p.m. EWT (7:30 p.m. CWT) tomorrow in Hill Auditorium. - Original cadenzas which Mrs. Johnson prepared for this work will be heard for the first time. An Ann Arbor resident, she is a pupil of Prof. John Kollen in the School of Music ranged for string orchestra by Prof. Ross. The Brahrns Symnplhiony in D ma- jor, No. 2, Op. 73" will conclCtide the concert. 'Johnson Was Conductor The University Symphony Orches- tra attained an eminent standing in the immediate pre-war period under the conductorship of Thor Johnson, now in service. During the 1942-43 season the orchestra functioned un- A,. nr P .ri, T)P To - nni.f ,. . ij Pj