' TI Af * 4.tit an 4 aiItj WEATHER Warmer. Thundershowers in Afternoon. VOL. LV, No. 2-S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, JULY 4, 1945 PRICE FIVE CENTS Hopkins Retires; Health Is Poor War Time Advisor for Two Presidents To Miss Next Big Three Conference Giant B-29 Raid Drops Fire Bombs On Nip Islands of Honshu, Shikoku * * * * * * * * * By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, July 3-Harry L. Hopkins, confidential White House adviser and wartime emissary for two presidents, stepped out of public life today because "I must take a rest." In frail health for several years, Hopkins turned in his resignation as special assistant to President Tru- man. The latter accepted it in a letter expressingregretand praise "for all your great and patriotic service to our country." The resignation came at a time when the President was preparing for his first Big Three conference with Premier Churchill and Marshall Stalin. Hopkins was to have attend- SOIC Council States Plans For Meeting Expect Gore To Give Youth Confab Report Representatives of the campus groups sitting on the Executive Coun- cil of the Student Organization for International Cooperation should at- tend an important meeting to be held at 4:30 p. m. EWT (3:30 p. m. CWT) tomorrow at the Union, Herbert Otto, temporary chairman has announced. This meeting is being held to make plans for summer activities of the or- ganization, and it is also hoped that Jack Gore, who attended the Wash- ington Youth Conference will be back on campus in time to present a re- port on the conference. Non-Members May Petition Campus organizations which are not represented on the Executive Council may submit to the temporary chairman a petition stating the con- tributions which the organization would be willing to make toward fur- thering the unity of world youth. Petitions will be considered at the Council meeting. Topics on the agenda for discus- sion are the adoption of a foreign University, a dance to raise funds, a rally for the Washington Youth Con- ference delegate and publicity for the organization. Organization Representatives Persons who are to serve as repre- sentatives of their organizations are Miriam Johnson, Women's War Council; Marjory Fisher, Assembly; Charlene Golay, Panhellenic; Joyce Siegan, Student Religious Associa- tion; Sheldon Selesnick, Hillel; Jeppy Madison, Michigan Youth for Demo- cratic Action; Elizabeth Hawley, Post-War Council; Kelkar, All Na- tions Club; Fred Matthaei, Inter- Fraternity Council; Harold Lester, Inter-Cooperative Council; Jim Plate, Union; Rudy Havermann, Engineer- ing Council. Further List A further list includes Bill Aker, Graduate Council; Bobbie Simonton, World Student Service Fund; Pris- cilla Hodges, Inter-Guild; Jim Shiel, Newman Club; Anita Franz, Daily; Herbert Otto, Inter-Racial Associa- tion; Jack Andrews, Veterans Or- ganization. The newly formed SOIC received official University recognition from Dean Bursley on June 20, following a series of mass meetings during which committees were organized, a name was voted upon and the con- stitution was ratified. CAMPUS EVENTS Tomorrow: The Executive Council of the SOIC will meet at 4:30 p. m. EWT in the Union. Tomorrow: Post-War Council will hold its first meeting at 4 p. m. EWT in the Union. Tomorrow: The French Club will hold its first meeting at 7 p. m. EWT in the League. All students are invited. Tomorrow :All students on cam- pus are invited to the French Tea at 4 p. m. EWT in the International Center. Tomorrow: Women Students in Education are invited to the first meeting of the Women's Education Club at 7:30 p. m. EWT in the ed that conference in the same ad- visory capacity in which he accom- panied the late PresidentRoosevelt to all previous Big Three meetinges. White House Confidant The ailing White House confidant returned to Washington recently from a special mission to Moscow, undertaken at the request of Presi- dent Truman. He has made. many such secret trips since the war start- ed, despite his failing health. In his letter of resignation, Hop- kins wrote: "The time has come when I must take a rest. I have therefore reached the decision that I should now retire from government service. Hence I shall not be able to accompany you to the Berlin area for your impend- ing conference." Substantial Role In accepting the resignation Presi- dent Truman wrote: "There are few people in the Unit- ed States who know more fully than I the substantial role you have played in the prosecution of our war." Hopkins came into the government as. Works Progress Administrator in 1935 and immediately became one of the closest advisers to President Roosevelt. Dunhel, Agard Will Lecture On Linguistics The first of the weekly Thursday luncheon conferences of the Linguis- tic Institute will be held tomorrow at the Michigan League, with Dr. Harold Dunkel, of the University of Chicago, and Dr. Frederick Agard, of Princeton University, speaking on "The Chicago Language Investiga- tion." The luncheon will be held in the League dining room at 12 noon EWT (11 a.m. CWT), and the conference will begin at 1 p.m. EWT (12 noon CWT). The number of the room in which the conference will be held will be psted on the League bulletin board on the first flor. Members of the Institute who do not wish to attend the luncheon are welcome to come to the conference. Measure Progress The investigation with which Drs. Dunkel and Agard have been asso- ciated is an attempt to evaluate the effectiveness of various approaches to foreign language teaching by mea- suring the progress of students who have been taught by different meth- ods. The work was carried on with an experimental group set up at the University of Chicago. Linguistic Science The opening session of the Insti- tute's course, "Introduction to Lin- guistic Science," to which faculty, students, and public are invited to come and disagree with the pro- fessor, was held last night in the Rackham Amphitheatre, with Prof. Charles C. Fries, director of the In- stitute, as the lecturer. His declara- tion that the modern development known as "structural linguistics," which was worked out by the study of living languages, would probably result in fuller understanding of th. structure of languages of the past provided the chief topic for discus- The second lecture of the course, on "The Nature and Function of Language," will be given by Prof. W. F. Twaddell at 7 p.m. EWT (6 p.m. CWT) Thursday. ' (See LINGUISTIC, Page 4) Daily Try-outs To Meet Students interested in working on the editorial staff of The Daily during the eight-week summer session should attend the try-out meeting to be held at 3:15 EWT (2:15 CWT) in the Student Publi- cations Building conference room. Aussies Gain Beachhead on East Borneo Capture Airfield; Oil Refineries Secured By The Associated Press MANILA, Wednesday, July 4-A field dispatch today disclosed that Aussie invaders of Balikpapan, bomb- wrecked oil center on East Borneo, have a beachhead seven miles long and two miles deep and the cap- tured Sepinggan airfield already is in operation. Reporting from Balikpapan, Asso- ciated Press Correspondent Russell Brines said the diggers, who landed there Sunday, already have buried 500 Japanese. He said the Aussies, by securing the last ridge facing the town, virtually have secured its cen- tral refineries and docks, long since rendered unserviceable to the enemy by bombing and shelling. Gen. Douglas MacArthur's com- munique today confirmed Melbourne radio reportsdthat Sepinggan airfield was captured at nightfall Monday, putting the Allied Air Force within fighter plane range of Java, heart of the Dutch East Indies, for the first time in more than three years. Brines said troops advancing on the right flank won the airfield against light opposition and also took the nearby village of Sepinggan. Although the airfield runway was cratered, one 600 yard stretch was quickly made serviceable for use by Aussie scout planes. Churchill Booed By Laborites at Poaliticl IRally By The Associated Press LONDON, July 3-Prime Minister Churchill, booed and heckled at one of the stormiest political meetings in British history, tonight carried his fight for a Conservative Party vic- tory before a crowd estimated at 25,000 persons in the Labor Party stronghold of northeast London. Greeted by organized sections of hecklers chanting "we want labor," Churchill told the big open air rally in Walthamstow Stadium that "win- ners cheer and the beaten boo." Almost constant heckling, and re- sponsive cheering by the Prim Min- ister's supporters, forced him at times to wait several minutes before con- tinuing his speech. Swapping verbal punches with par- tisan opponents, the 70-year-old Prime Minister endured half an hour of booing as he made his last major speech of the hard-fought campaign alongside Conservative candidates seeking the 27 Parliament seats in the district. "The first element of our policy," Churchill told his stormy audience, "is to beat Japan. The next thing is to bring our Army home and then we have to build up the homes and houses shattered by enemy bombard- ment." Churchill promised full employ- ment for the next two or three years as Britain starts to produce long- needed goods. He estimated six years of war had left Britain short nearly 2,000,000 homes "which otherwise would have been built, apart from all of those which the enemy blew down or broke into pieces. Why have we not re- paired and rebuilt those houses?" He was interrupted by cries from all over the stadium. "The reason why . . . " Churchill began but stopped and announced "another two minutes will be allowed for booing, if you like." SIKAMCHATKA ALEUTIANS .t RUSSIAATSAKHALTU RURMUAO KISKA Harbor MONGOLIA KRFU- : --MANCHURIA Vladivostok HKAD HONSH JAPA Farthest Extent CHINA Tokyo* Chungking Shanghai PesnLim Pociic Ocean " MIDWAY A KINAWA BONIN I oLuchow -MARCUS a FOR MOSA" BURMA Hong MARIANAs WAKE pea* T Kong Harbor IDO- PHILIPPINES " AIPAN JOHNSTON THAILAND CHINA g U M ( i EK . 'GUAM ENIWETOK YAP '. .. ; MARSHAL Brunei KWAJALEIN BQy CAROLINE IS GILBERT PALMYRA" SUMATR A SingaporeTRI - -- BORNEO - - - - - - ADMIRALTY.- -- --..-....., - - -- - - -- - - OM S - PHOENIX EQUATOR *BaIikpaanf i MoWssrSOLOMON Srat CELEBES GUINEA .s AST NDiES GUADALCANAL *' AUS(TRALIA HI" EWDE g ! STATUTE MILES A AIUT EQUATO HIGH SPOTS IN WEEK OF WAR IN PACIFIC-Major Allied blows at the Japanese during the past week included: Smashing of a Jan convoy by U. S. warships west of Kuriles, heavy Superfortress raids on the enemy homeland plus raids by Okinawa-based lighter planes, an American fleet thrust into Makassar Strait, and a Chinese push to the outskirts of Liuchow. Black areas are Japanese. (AP Wirephoto Map) LEAVES, RETIREMENTS.: Board of Regents Announces Several Personnel Changes, At its final meeting of the spring cemester the Board of Regents ap- proved several changes in the Uni- versity faculty and administrative force. Leaves of absence were granted five staff members. Those included Figures Show More Civilians Than Last Year University enrollment figures as of last night revealed a marked increase in civilian registration over the same period last year. Thus, far, civilian enrollment is 4,145 as compared with the '44 total of 3,228. Total University enrollment now stands at 5,979 with 1,053 Navy train- ees registered and 782 Army men en- tered. On the civilian registration side, women still outnumber male regis- trants, 2,427 coeds to 1,718 men. These figures are not final, Univer- sity registration officials said. Is Identified The Moscow radio said today that the Body of Dr. Paul Joseph Goeb- bels, former Nazi Propaganda Mini- ster, has been "unmistakably identi- fied." The German language broadcast, reported by the FCC, said the body had been carried from an air raid shelter under the reichschancellery in Berlin by Nazi SS troopers on the night of May 1 and that they had attempted to burn it. The body did not burn, the broad- cast said, adding that Goebbels had "remained in such a state of conser- vation that he could be unmistak- ably identified." are Miss Margaret Smith, chief re- search librarian; Dr. Lewis B Kell- um, director of the Museum of Pale- ontology; Miss Sarah K. Vann, Gen- eral Library Senior Cataloger; Dr. Margaret Bell, director of the Physi- cal Education for Women program; and Elizabeth B. Steer, assistant cat- alog librarian. The Board of Regents also ap- proved the resignations of George E. Gere, Acting Cashier; Lawrence E. Towe, Director of the News Service; and Prof. Elmore S. Pettyjohn of the Chemical and Metallurgical Engi- neering Department. Gere will become Assistant Comp- troller at the Carnegie Institute of Technology, Pittsburg, while Towe will serve as publisher of the Lassen Advocate, Susanville, Cal. Prof. Pet- tyjohn has been appointed director of the Institute of Gas Technology at the Illinois Institute of Techology. Retirement of four veteran mem- bers of the faculty were also an- nounced. These include: Dr. Waterman who became Professor of Semantics at the University in 1915 and was Chairman of the Department until 1944. He will be 70, today. Dr. Ward, a member of the Uni- versity staff for the past 42 years, has served as president of the Mich- igan State Dental Society, the Amer- ican Dental Asosciation, and the American Association of Dental Schools. Dr. Bailey who has been on the faculty since 1900 is a graduate of- the University. He will be 70 August 7. All three men will be retired with the title of Emeritus Professor. Prof. Davis Will Address Club Prof. Charles Davis of the geog- raphy department, recently returned from the Pacific after two and one half years of active service with the Navy, will address the Men's Educa- tion Club at 7:15 p. m. EWT (6:15 p. m. CWT) tomorrow in the Michi- gan Union. Prof. Davis will speak about his experineces in the Pacific war, where he served as a navy commander in the Special Air Task Force directly under the command of Admiral Nim- itz. . Entering the Navy in October, 1942, Prof. Davis was first assigned to the office of the Chief of Naval Opera- tions in Washington, D. C. From Yank Troops Roll Into Beaten German Capital By The Associated Presst BERLIN, July 3--American'occu- pation troops rolled into Berlin today, speeding through the beaten capi- - tal's mammoth wreckage to the ac- companiment of scattered waves and1 tears from bread lines and work-t chains of women and girls. The American veterans of WorldI War II entered as conquerors and returned the crisp salutes of Red Army women traffic police. There were tears of joy and cries of "God] be thanked" from some Berliners, but others were silent and sullen. 4,000 Vehical Convoy Vanguards of a vast 4,000-vehicle convoy reached suburban Zehlendorf this afternoon after leaving Halle at 4 a. m., crossing the Elbe river and driving through Russian-occupied Germany west of the capital. "Bridge trouble," however, delayed the combat veterans of the U. S. Sec- ond Armored (hell on wheels) Divi- sion and the prospects were that the division's main strength might not arrive before midnight - making them at least eight hours late in ful- filling a pledge they took three years ago to bivouac in Berlin. Red-skinned Hero A red-skinned hero of the U. S. Army was the first American soldier to enter the Russian-held center of Berlin as a veteran of the 2nd Arm- ored Division, which will take up positions in the American occupation zone in the southwestern part of the capital. He was Pfc. Harvey Natchees of the Ute Indian reservation in north- eastern Utah, a 25-year-old veteran due to return home on points after a few more days. He drove this cor- respondent to Adolf Hitler's reichs- chancellery., Girls in freshly-ironed frocks work- ed in lines along the route, removing the debris from great piles of ruined buildings. In an eight-mile drive through the center of Berlin, not a single block was seen intact. The Daily will not be pubuished tomorrow because of the Fourth of July holiday. Publication will be resumed Friday. War Veterans Form League CHICAGO, July 3--(P)-Asserting that "preservation of the American way of life can best be entrusted to those who have offered their lives Strikes Made At Industrial Home Cities Ground Forces Gain In Borneo, China By The Associated Press The tempo of the American aerial offensive against the Japanese home- land reached a new high today (Wed- nesday)-nearly 500 night-flying Superfortresses spilled about 3,000 tons of fire bombs on industrial tar- gets on Honshu and Shikoku Islands. Striking for the third time in three days, the B-29s ushered in July 4, Japanese time, by hitting Himeji, a big railroad terminal on Honshu, and Tokushima, Takamatsu and Ko- chi, on Shikoku. War industries were the targets. Allies Make Gains On Pacific-Asiatic ground fronts Allied successes were reported from both Borneo and China. On oil rich Borneo Australian invasion for- ces were reported by Melbourne radio to have captured two airfields as they punched northward from flaming Balikpapan. The Australian commander in the Balikpapan sector of Borneo declar- ed the campaign already won stra- tegically. Aussie troops pressed northward from the Balikpapan re- finery area, headed for the last Bor- neo oil fields still in Japanese hands. As the Aussies pushed along a road leading to an airstrip they came upon the scene of another Japanese atro- city-the uncounted charred bodies of native slave laborers burned alive when retreating Nipponese soldiers put the torch to a hospital. Only two survived the fire. One told his story, then died. The other is dying. Japs Claim Gains Radio Tokyo said the Japanese gar- rison at Balikpapan had "pressed the enemy, back to the coastal area" where the Aussies .landed last Sun- day, Nippon time. With another of Japan's vital homeland oil centers written off by Superfortresses, the B-29 command at Guam summed up the work of the sky giants-117 square miles of Nip- pon's main industrial and naval base cities devastated. One B-29 crewman returning from the pre-dawn strike Tuesday, Tokyo time, against the aviation gasoline and fuel refinery at Shimotus, 35 miles from Osaka, said "We won't have to go back there again." B-29s Wreck More Area Reconnaissance photos showed that the B-29s added about two square miles to Japan's homeland wrecked areas in their raid of June 29 against naval bases and indu- strial cities. The 117 square mile report does not include areas devas- tated when a record flight of nearly 6$$ Superforts hit four .Japanese naval base and industries centers with the greatest fire bomb raid of history. Food Supply To Run Low WASHINGTON -(P- American civilians are moving into the season of lowest level of meat, egg, poultry and sugar supplies since the war be- gan. Eggs, a major substitute for meat which has been scarce for weeks, are in "tight supply" the country over. Poultry is virtually non-existent in many sections. The sugar shortage is growing acute. Furthermore, bad weathe has cut into anticipated production of fresh vegetables and fruits in many sec- tions. The next two months may be the periodof greatest stringency. Some improvement in meat supplies is ex- pected to show up early in August. The new pack of canned goods will begin to show up on retail shelves. Prospects are, however, that it will fall below this year's pack and how much civilians will get is yet un- certain because needs of the armed forces have not been determined. But sugar is expected to be short until next year and this summer's shortage likely will reduce home can- nine. IFC ORGANIZES PROJECT: Fraternity Rushing Registration To Be in New men on campus, returning vet- erans and all others interested may register for fraternity rushing from 3 to 5 p. m. EWT (2 to 4 p. m. CWT) every day except Saturday until July 13 in the Interf-raternity men may be initiated at any time during the semester providing they are not on warning or probation. Interfraternity Council serves as the medium through which the var- ious fraternities carry on rushing. The council orovides each fraternity Theta Delta Chi, Zeta Beta Tau and Zeta Psi. However, actives of other frater- nities, although their houses are at present occupied, will nevertheless carry on rushing activities. "With the rise in the male enroll-