41P at1 Weather warmer VOL. LIII, No. 41-S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, AUG. 22, 1943 PRICE FIVE CENTS Japanese Defenders Vanish from Kiska Fall Term Opening Date Is Moved to Nov. 1 Late Schedule Of Navy V-42 Causes Shift Incoming Group Will Arrive Too Late for Original 'U' Program rions So!dier"s View efished Jap Planes on Munda Coordinating the Navy V-12 pro- gram with academic schedules, the University yesterday moved the op- ening date of the Fall Term ahead to Nov. 1. - This action, postponing the op- ening of the semester from Oct. 25, Was taken by a committee of the. Dean's Conference after telephone' consultation with the Navy De- partment in Washington. "The men who are now here in the naval program could be here by Oct., 25, but an incoming group will not be here until Nov. 1. There might be a considerable number of men entering," Dr. Frank E. Robbins, chairman of the committee, said. "The ones who could-not be here until, Nov. 1 are entering freshmen a.nd. V-12 trainees from other schools," Dr. Robbins stated. Dr. Robbins: pointed out that changed dates avoid the need of instituting :new classes for Navy group on Nov. 1. Registration for classes will be held on Oct.. 28, 29 and 30, one. week later than the University had- planned. Officials urge civilian students to register in the regular period to avoid confusion.- . Spring,.Term classes will begin on March-6 and Commencement will be held on June 24 under the new cal- endar. Details of the 1944 Summer Teriand other changes will be announced at a later date, Dr. Robbins said. Included in the Deans' Conference conmittee are Dr. Robbins, Dean Edward H?. Kraus of the literary col- lege,' Dead Ivan C. Crawford of the engineering college, Dean of Stu- dents JosephcA. Bursley and Regis- trar Ira M. Smith. Capt. Richard 1. Cassidy, -naval commandant, and Col. Frederick Rogers, -Army com- mandant, attended yesterday's meet- ings by invitation. Members of American forces which captured Munda airfield from the Japanese after a bitter struggle, examine wrecked Japanese fighters and bombers found on the field, by the victorious Yanks. ANOTHER SOVIET SURPRISE? Russia RecallsA-mbassadorLitvinoff Hayden To Give Seventh Talk Negro Book, Music To Be Next Subjects Robert Hayden will conclude his discussion of Richard Wright's "Na- tive Son" and begin an explanation of Negro music in the seventh of his series of lectures on Negro history and culture, in the Amphitheatre of the Rackham Building at 8 p.m. to- morrow. In his last lecture, two weeks'froni tomorrow, Haydenhwill take up the graphic arts. By this series he has hoped to promote a better under- standing of N~egro problems and cul- ture and to show the importanceof the Negro as a part of American life. 1 By WADE WERNER Associated Press Correspondent WASHINGTON, Aug. 21.- The Moscow broadcast announcing that the presidium of the supreme Soviet of the U.S.S.R. had relieved Maxim Litvinoff of his post as ambassador to the United States and named An- drei Gromyko to succeed him did not come entirely as a surprise to offi- cials and diplomats here. It set off speculation. in diplo- matic ,circles, however, that the move might herald a change in Soviet policy and may possibly be an expression of Marshal Joseph Stalin's displeasure over the fail- ure of the Allies to meet the oft- expressed Soviet appeal for a sec- ond front in Europe. . It had been rumored ever since Litvinoff was called to Moscow last May, ostensibly for a routine report to his government, that there was more to his departure than met the eye and that he would not return. Almost at the same time Joseph E. Davies, former U.S. ambassador to Russia, flew to Moscow bearing a letter from President Roosevelt to Stalin. The contents of the letter' never were disclosed, but the Davies journey was deemed of such impor- tance it was generally referred to as his "second mission to Moscow.", Davies was lavishly entertained in the Kremlin and there was no . surface indication that Soviet Aemrican diplomatic relations had cooled. But the rumors that Lit- vinoff would not return continued, and were revived with each re- newed expression of Moscow's im- patience over the non-appearance of a second front in Europe. One version was that Stalin had called Litvinoff home because he failed in the vital task of persuading President Roosevelt that a second front must be opened at once at whatever cost; another version was that Stalin would indicate a major shift in Soviet policy by replacing Litvinoff with a diplomat not identi- fied with the policy of close coopera- tion with the western democracies. It was recalled that Litvinoff's sudden removal from the post of. Soviet commissar of foreign affairs in 1939 marked a turning point in world history. As the Soviet Un- ion's chief spokesman before the League of Nations, Litvinoff had become identified with the policy of collaboration with the western democracies, a symbol of the unit- ed front against Fascist aggression. Therefore, when the Moscow radio casually announced one night in May, 1939, that Litvinoff had been relieved of his post as foreign com- missar, diplomats in all parts of the world saw it as an indication of mo- mentous developments yet to come. A few months later, the Soviet- German non-aggression pact was signed. Litvinoff for a long time remained in obscurity. The signing of the Soviet-German pact seemed to some his political epitaph. But when Ger- many attacked Russia in June, 1941, Litvinoff emerged again as an ex- ponent of Soviet foreign policy. When he was named Soviet am- bassador to the United States it was clear a new era of Soviet-American collaboration was about to begin. The announcement of his re- moval today, amid new rumblings of discontent in the Kremlin over delay in the opening of a second front, therefore is regarded here as a major development in interna- tional diplomacy, possibly fore- shadowing a momentous change in Soviet policy. It was pointed out, however, that the announcement of Litvinoff's re- moval as ambassador referred to him as assistant commissar of foreign affairs. Some diplomats, for that reason, cautioned against jumping at the conclusion that his replacement in Washington meant also the eclipse of his influence in Moscow. It was suggested that Stalin, while retaining Litvinoff among Former Grid Star Missing in Sicily Former University grid star, Pvt. Harry Lutmoski, an Army para- arooper, was reported mission today by the War Department. Lutmoski has been missing from his company stationed in Sicily since July 14, it was revealed. A graduate of Hamtramck High School, Lutmo- ski come to Michigan in ;1932. He played fullback and guard on the Varsity squad in 1934. Dr. William Lyon Phelps "T~ V.,.7 1T_ w_ . __T'l his chief advisers in Moscow, might, have chosen to 'express, hisdis- pleasure over second front devel- opments by returning to aroutine' diplomatic representation in Washington. * * * Germans Lose Million Men LONDON, Sunday, Aug. 22-(A)- The Germans have lost 1,000,000 men killed and wounded in the third summer of fighting in Russia, a spe- cial Soviet bulletin announced last night. This is a third of their esti- mated effectives along the 1,g00-mile Russian front. On the basis of previous Russian announcements this brought the losses of Germany and her allies to 7,400,000 men killed, wounded and capture since Adolf fitler first plunged to the east on June 22;:1941. A special Soviet comm uni que marjing the second anniversary of the war last June 22 said that 6,400,- 000 German and satellite troops had been killed or made prisoner, turning Russia into a graveyard for German hopes of world empire. Even as these staggering losses were announced, the German radio said that more than 4,000 other-Nazis lost their lives yesterday as the Red Army drew its noose tighter about vital Kharkov and hammered at stubborn German forces near Bry- ansk and Spas-Demensk. The midnight communique supple- ment, recorded by the Soviet monitor from a Moscow broadcast, said that 1,000 Germans were killed as a Rus- sian column fighting northwest of the city overran several more villages. The embattled Germans threw fresh reserves into the battle' raging west of Kharkov, and the Moscow, bulletin said that Russian forces cut down 1,200 of them as they counter- attacked strongly. Forty Nazi tan's were knocked out in this action, the Russians said. Allies Wage Air Battle for Southern Italy Flying Buzzsaw Rips Into Vital Connecting Links Around Naples ALLIED. HEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AFRICA, Aug. 21-(P)-The air battle for southern Italy is going full tilt four days after the fall of Sicily. Air Chief Marshal Sir Arthur Ted- der's flying buzzsaw-which forced the surrender of Pantelleria and cut Sicily's communications to pieces even before the invasion-is ripping at long range into-the vital connect- ing links between ; northern and southern Italy around Naples. Close at hand round-the-clock pa- trols are maintaining a cannonade and bombardment of vulnerable points of the railway and highway ngtwork. Thewaves of fire from the sky are being sUpplemented by navalrforces which move'with impunity along the Italian coast, pouiring broadsides into ta gets' which 'can 'be reached form the ;sea. American warships shelled Gioia Tauro, 20 *ils northeast of Messina, and set"fires ragiig-among 'fdrtfied points and railway objetives yester- day in the latest. of. their naval at- tacks, Allied-headquarters announced today. British, sea' forces sank seven landing ;craft'"off- ,Scalea -farther north in'-another close-range en- counter the preceding night. 'This was. along the west side of a "HeIl'sa Triangle," . roug y . bounded by-Naples,Reggia CalabrIa' and Fog- gia, whice Allied airmen have mapped out with exploding boinb and gunfire. Five lDrown at Portage Lake Two Bodies Found; Three Still Mising Portage lake is still being draggedj by sheriff's officers for the bodies of three men believed to have drowned when their boat capsized early yes- terday morning following an outingf of war workers from International Industries, Inc. The bodies of their two women companions 'were recovered in the morning. Members of the party said, that the five, John J. Shanahan, Mr. and Mrs. Jocob R. Shelton, Duaine Warner and Miss Allice Burmeister, had gone out on the lake in a row- boat with an outboard motor shortly after midnight. The boat, a 12-foot, flat-bottom rowboat with a one-quarter horse- power motor capsized about 600 yards from shore. When the group did not return a search was organ- ized; an oil slick was discovered, when this line was followed it led the searchers to an oar, a seat cushion and finally ,to Miss Burmeister's body which had risen to the surface. Two hours later Mrs. Shelton's body was found on the surface. The five factory worker had with nine others gone from Ann Arbor to the lake for a picnic. Allies Capture Jap Island Unopposed Enemy Invasion of North America Lies Bombed, Bombarded Failure By The Associated Press NEW YORK, Aug. 21.- A Tokyo broadcast tonight announced the "transference" of Japanese forces from Kiska Island in "the latter part of July." The report was made by Domei, Japanese News Agency, and was recorded by the United States foreign broadcast intelligence service. WASHINGTON, Aug. 21.- (P)- American and Canadian forces, their enemy fled without offering final battle, stood undisputed masters of Kiska tonight and the once ambitious Japanese invasion of North America lay a bombed and bombarded failure. "No Japanese were found." With those words the Navy told today of seizure on Aug. 15 of the once strong enemy air and submarine base in the Aleutian Islands. Bombings Precede Landings Two weeks of the heaviest bombings yet carried out against the Japan- ese preceded the landings, the Navy disclosed in lifting the silence that has cloaked North Pacific actions for three weeks. It explained this silence was * G* *b Goes to Quebec CORDELL HULL ..Secretary of State Joins lead- ers of the Allied nations in Quebec. Sciong'To Join War Conference QUEBEC, Aug. 21. -(P)-- T. V. Soong, Chinese Foreign Minister, is expected to join the Quebec war Con- ference within the next 48 hours for discussions with President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill on China's role in forthcoming offensive operations against Japan. Word of Soong's expected arrival was the day's second development fo- cusing attention on plans for power- ful smashes at the enemy in the Pa- cific. The first was the simultaneous disclosure here and in Washington and Ottawa that a combined Ameri- can-Canadian force had occupied Kiska Island, the enemy's last bas- tion in the north central Pacific, without resistance. Mr. Roosevelt and Prime Minister W. L. MacKenzie King of Canada in a joint statement acclaimed this bloodless reconquest of the Aleutian Island as a victory which "frees the last vestige of North American ter- ritory of Japanese forces." The Daily Suspends Publication Today Publication of The Summer mer Daily ends today with the close of the summer session, ex- cept for the freshman supplement which will appear next week. Football extras will be put out after each game during the sum- mer term. Regular publication of The Daily will be resumed at the start of the fall term in November. Lprompted by a belief the Japanese radio equipment had been smashed and the Navy wished to supply Tokyo with no news. In 14 days-Aug. 1 to 14-heavy and light bombers, dive bombers, fighter planes, cannon carrying planes roared down on Kiska 106 times. They dumped tons andbox s of bombs on the enemy positions, knocking out gun emplacements, tearing up the Japanese - aixfield, blowing up or setting afire buildings and, supplies., Surface Units Busy Naval surface units were equally busy. On 15 occasions they steamed into the choppy waters off Kiska and sent their big shells' shrieking onto the island. Once heavy naval units -certainly cruisers, possibly battle- ships-stood off shore and poured 2,300 shells onto the -Japanese' posi- tions. They were unopposed. President Roosevelt and Prim. Minister W. L.. MacKenzie King of Canada hailed the'occupation ii 'a joint statement at Quebec where.=Al- lied leaderssare plotting new troubles for the Axis. They said : Japs Are Out of U.S. "The present occupation of Kiska freesvthe last vestige of North Ameri- can territory of Japanese forces."; The absence of opposition to the big naval bombardment was one of the indications of the beginning of the end for the Japanese on Kiska. Doubtless this shelling was a 'major part in the relentless pounding that ultimately forced the enemy decision to give up the island. Two days later when American and Canadian troops made their landings no enemy forces were found on Kis- ka. Fogs presumably aided the Jap- anese in evacuating the remnants, of 'their garrison, once estimated at 10,000 men. * * * Kiska Opens Route to Japan ADAK, Aleutian Islands, Aug. 19.- (Delayed)- (AP)- "Our recapture of Kiska without opposition means that we have completed our northern road to Japan," Vice-Admr. Thomas G. Kinkaid, Commander of the North Pacific, said today. He added: "Our completed chain of air and naval bases also will pro- tect our surface vessels and our ship- ping units two-thirds of the way to Tokyo." Admiral Kinkaid said it was be- lieved United States surface craft sank some of the ships evacuating Japanese troops from Kiska. Cadet Petersen, Former Daily Night Editor, Killed in Crash Naval Air Cadet Henry J. Petersen, former University student and junior night editor on The Daily editorial staff,, was killed Friday when his training plane crashed near Joy Air- port, Roseville. Word "of Petersen's death was brought to his mother, Mrs. Louise J. Petersen of 1614 Morton; by Cmdr. Harry Kipke, former University foot- ball coach who is now head of all naval' aviation cadet training in Michigan and adjoining states. Cause of Crash Is Unknown The cause of the crash is still un- known; only detail available being the evidence of four golfers on a nearby golf course who saw the plane nose into some trees and crash, according to Commander Kipke. A member of The Daily staff since his freshman year, Petersen received a junior appointment as night edi- tor as a second semester sophomore during the 1942-43 fall term. He Was Rated Valuable Rated as one of the most able of the junior members of the staff, Petersen decided to enter the Navy instead of remaining in school. He was one of the "best-liked staff mem- bers," according to Daily editors, who said, "It doesn't seem possible that such a thing could happen to Hank before he even finished his training." Petersen, a 1940 graduate of High- land Park High School, confined his campus activities to The Daily, as nn o~f itc r.cn a ,'.fi'rr mzpmvhp~rc, fnl-. INSIDE SLANT ON HOW THE ARMY W ORKS: Military Police Battalion To Invade Ann Arbor~ The Army will invade Ann Arbor at 10:30 a.m. tomorrow when 800 Military Police roll into town to give Ann Arbor an inside slant on how Uncle Sam's soldiers work. Tent City To Be Set Up A tent city, complete in every de- tail, will be set up immediately upon arrival at West Park. Civilians will have a chanee to inspect modern weapons of mobile warfare at the West Park camp site, to witness a sham battle' at Ferry Field complete with tanks Ferry Field. A reviewing stand will be set up in front of the Union. Heading the parade will be the 728th M.P. band, followed by the 792nd battalion and several mobile units. The University groups will follow. Various local organizations will come next in line, while mem- bers of the St. George Riding Academy will end the parade with a group of 20 decorated horses. The sham battle will begin at 7 p.m. when the task force arrives at Ferry Field. Task Force Units Listed The 792nd M.P. Battalion will be accompanied by the 728th M.P. Battalion band from Camp River Rouge. In the Armored Forces detachment are two 33-ton medium "General Sherman" tanks, two of the light "Honey" tanks, an amphibious jeep called a "Seep" and heavy trucks and trailers to carry the tanks between cities visited by the Army Salute Caravan. Civilians May Inspect Civilians are invited to inspect the IArmv , nifnmn f-d fnlr n nt+ ,',nr.n.A bass singer known professionally as Michael Stewart to radio listeners; Junior leader (Cpl. Verna Nelson of What Cheer, Iowa, singing membei of the Women's Army Corps sta- tioned at Fort Sheridan, Ill., who was with the St. Paul .Opera Company, Pfc. William H. Hodgson, cornetist and co-writer of "Music Goes Round and Round" and Cpl. Carmen Del- Guidice who does clarinet specialties, Wounded Soldiers To Speal Two wounded soldiers, back in the United States recuperating after hos- pitalization following overseas ser-