PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, AUGUST 2, 1945 PAGEFOURTHURDAYAUGUT 2.194 Potsdam Conference Ends; Report To Be Made Tomorrow, Big Three Leaders Keep Silence While Meeting At Cecilienhof, German Prince's Residence Punctured Once, Mississippi Back On Hunt for Hiding Japs Battleship's Firepower Increased 300 Per Cent j After it Fights for Three Months Without Repair By The Associated Press POTSDAM, Aug. 1-The chieftains of the world's three most powerful nations tonight finished the broad blueprints of their common future foreign policies dealing apparently with the Pacific war as well as the rebuilding of a peaceful European continent. Their report to the ,world was scheduled for release Friday in Mos- cow, Washington and London. Keep Secrecy President Truman, Premier Stalin and Prime Minister Attlee adhered to the last to the self-imposed secre- cy behind which the Big Three have worked in Potsdam since July 7. As they moved through the closing diplomatic formalities, a fleet of transport planes waited at a nearby military airfield to whisk Truman to Plymouth and a meeting tomorrow with King.George VI, and to return Attlee to London to take over the reins of the Laborite Government. Stalin To Leave Stalin andvForeign Commissar ** * Truman Ship Manned By VU'Graduate Member of Engine School in 1920 A University graduate is captain of the Augusta, the ship which took President Truman, and Secretary of State James Byrnes to the Potsdam Conference, a letter informed T. Hawley Tapping, general secretary of the Alumni Association. Capt. James H. Foskett, comman- der of the Augusta and a recipient of a British award for his work in the Mediterranean Theater, attend- ed the School of Engineering here in 1917-18 and 1919-20, and was a member of Delta Upsilon. At the outbreak of the war, Capt. Foskett was working in Washing- *ton at the office of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee, Naval Intelli- gence Branch. After a year he went to the Mediterranean as liai- son officer on the staff of the Commander in Chief of the East- ern Mediterranean and Levant. For his part in the invasion of Sicily and other activities in the Mediterranean Theater; -Lord Hali- fax, on behalf of the British, con- ferred the title of C. O. B. E. (Com- mander of the British Empire) on Capt.dFoskett. From the United States he received a Legion of Merit award and a citation. Two months ago, Capt. Foskett was ordered to the Augusta from his command of the USS Savanah, where he had been stationed since April, 1944. Johnson Asks Release of Five Million Soldiers WASHINGTON, Aug. 1--A)-Sen- ator Johnson (D-Colo.) demanded today that the Army discharge 5,- 000,000 men, shortly after the Gov- ernment promised additional army aid to ease the railroads' manpower situation. Asserting in a speech prepared for Senate delivery that an army of 7,- 000,000 or 8,000,000 men never can be used against Japan, Johnson said the War Department's "lack of co- operation" in returning surplus troops to civilian life is "blind, stu- pid and criminal." Snyder Issues Order The promise of future Army aid to railroads, taxed with the job of re- deploying troops from the Atlantic to the Pacific, came from War Mobil- ization Director John W. Snyder. He said the War Department will fur- lough 4,000 men temporarily to take railroad jobs. Early discharge of more than 3.000 men with railroad and shop experience was forecast by the Army yesterday. 3,000,000 Men Maximum "The maximum number of men that we can transport, supply and use on the Japanese front by the end of 1946 cannot be more than 3,000,- 000 men," Johnson said.h , Air Vets Will Get U. S. Duty WASHINGTON, Aug. 1-0-)-Thet Army Air Forces disclosed tonightf that 80 percent of its combat veter- ans from Europe and the Mediter- ranean will be assigned to duty in the United States. Maj. Gen. Frederick L. Anderson,1 assistant chief of Air Staff for per-; sonnel, said in a talk over the Mut- ual Broadcasting System that the Vyacheslav Molotov may depart al- most immediately by special train on the long journey to Moscow. The full score of what the Big Three accomplished may not be dis- closed for a considerable time - per- haps not before a decisive turn is reached in the Japanese war. Soviet Military Future Stalin, by lending the prestige of his physical presence to the Truman- Churchill-Chiang Kai-Shek ultimat- um from Potsdam to Japan, and by consenting to the disclosure that he had talked in the palace here to Ad- miral Lord Louis Mountbatten, Brit- ain's highest commander in the Far Eastern struggle, gave strength to the widespread belief he was actual- ly coordinating Soviet military forces with those of the United States in the Asiatic theater. Apparent Agreement Had There is evidence that proposals of a military aspect which Truman presented to Stalin were such that bargaining was not necessary. Agree- ment in principle apparently had been reached previously by the Big Three. Thus, U. S. Secretary of War Stimson could leave Potsdam much earlier than Truman's political ad- visors. On the European side of the par- ley's agenda, there were numerous indications that 'agreement came quickly for some issues which observ- ers on distant sidelines had specu- lated might be severely disputed. Voice Disorder Study To Be Speech Topic "Special Techniques in the Diag- nosis of Voice Disorders" will be the topic of a talk to be given by Prof. Charles R. Strother, guest lecturer for the speech department, at 4 p.m. EWT (3 p. m. CWT) tomorrow in Kellogg Auditorium. Prof. Strother, who is particularly interested in organic voice disorders, is Associate Professor of Speech and Psychology at Iowa State University, director of the Psychology Clinic there and the author of many professional articles. The lecture tomorrow is open to the public. At 8:30 a. m. EWT (7:30 p.m. CWT) Saturday Prof. Strother will hold a round table discussion of voice disorders with members of the Speech 323 seminar at the speech clinic. * * * WTono-Bungay' Readings Given Readings from H. G. Wells' "Tono- Bungay" by Prof. Louis M. Eich form- ed the program of the weekly assem- bly of the Department of Speech yes- terday afternoon. Before the readings began, Prof. Richard Hollister read a tribute to the late Dr. Ray K. Immel, who, with Prof. Eich and Prof. Hollister, form- ed the early faculty of the speech de- partMent, shortly after it was found- ed by Prof. Emeritus Thomas C. True- blood in 1892. STOCKING UP FOR INVASION-Two American soldiers examine the rows of amphibious "ducks" lined up at a Manila depot in the Philippines, where Army Serv ice Forces are gathering supplies to be used in future invasions in the Pacific. The Philippines have become a staging area similar to the one England became prior to the Normandy invasion. HUMOR, TRAGEDY ON OKIN AWA: Famous Island Ofe rs GI Memories 4 By S/Sgt. VIC KALMAN 1 (Marine Corps combat'Correspondent) OKINAWA-World-shaking events haye taken place since American troops landed on Okinawa April 1, but years from today Marines and soldiers may recall the little inci- dents-humorous and tragic-which won't be in history books. It was on Okinawa that word came of President Roosevelt's death. It was here that Ernie Pyle, Lieutenant General Simon Bolivar Buckner, Jr., and thousands of our friends were killed. It was here, too, that we learned of Germany's collapse, of the end of Hitler, Himmler, and Musso- lini. And it was here, during one of the longest and bloodiest battles of the Pacific war, that tense, tired men found relief in laughter--even in the gratitude of children. Interrupts Poker Game En route to Okinawa an officer in- terrupted a poker game. "Didn't you men see the signs pro- hibiting gambling?"he asked. "Oh, we're not gambling, sir," a Marine private said. "No? Then what's that money do- Stevens iscuss Co-ops New Intercooperative Council Group Chosen Albert K. Stevens of the University Extension Service, who is working on the new labor education program, will discuss the "Cooperative Move- ment in America and Abroad" at 7:15 p. in. EWT (6:15 CWT) tomor- row at Robert Owen House, 1017 Oakland. Preceding the talk, a buffet dinner for cooperative members will be served at Owen House. At a recent meeting of the Inter- Cooperative Council, Dick Hunt was elected president, Homer Underwood vice-president, Vivian Lundin secre- tary, and Gabriel Alleq treasurer. SOMEWHERE IN THE PACI- FIC-According to Marine Platoon Sgt. Horace E. Templeton of Odes- sa., Tex., a Marine commanding officer and his interpreter stopped in a small village on southern Oki- nawa to find out if friendly troops had passed through, reports Staff Sgt. Ed Ruder, Marine Corps com- bat correspondent. Even before the question was asked, it was answered. A brown-skinned youngster yell- ed from the side of the road: "What cookin', Joe, Got any candy?" ing on the table?" the officer de- manded. "We're using that to keep score with," came the bland answer., On L-Day-minus-1 two Marines were cleaning their rifles on deck. "Don, are you scared?" one. of them asked. "Nope." "Honestly? You even a bit scared?" "Nope, I'm savin' tomorrow." Date for Meeting Col. Wilburt S. mean you're not all my scared for Brown, popular They bleat continually and the sound is similar to a child's cries. One night two infantrymen in the First Marines were awakened by wail- ing. j"I wish that goat would cut it out. He sounds just like my baby daugh- ter," one said. "Yeh, I'd better take a shot at him, or he'll keep us awake all night," the other answered. Shot Brings Silence The shot brought silence, but not for long. Half an hour later, the bleating resumed. They shot again -ducking each time because of a possible answer- from Jap snipers- but the crying continued throughout the night. In the morning, tired and angry, the Marines went out to get the goat, which still was wailing. And in the underbrush 20 yards from their fox- hole they found the culprit-a two- year-old Okinawan girl! One 'of the tired, angry Marines reached into his pocket. Two chocolate bars later, everyone was happy. French Poet Is Topic of Talk Picard Will Discuss Paul Valery's Work "Homage To Paul Valery" is the topic of a talk to be given by Richard Picard of the romance languages de- partment before a meeting of the French Club at 8 p. m. EWT (7 p. m. CWT) today in the Union. Picard will present an introduction to the art of writing poetry, taking examples from the works of Vaude- laire and Mallarme. Picard will discuss Paul Valery, contemporary French writer and poet who died last week. Valery lived in France during the occupation and exerted a great deal of influence there. Some of Valery's poems will be read by Picard. By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Aug. 1-The Bat- tleship Mississippi, punctured by a suicide plane January 9 at Lingayen Gulf in the Philippines, is back on the prowl for Japanese with 300 per cent more fire power. The Navy waited until today to tell about the action. Went On Fighting Twenty-two men were killed on the "Old Miss." Eighteen more were injured, and so was the 28-year-old battlewagon. But she went right on fighting for three months, then went to Pearl Harbor for permanent re- pairs and general overhaul. The extra fire power, added during the overhaul, the Navy said, "prob- ably will save the lives of hundreds in the future." Plane Hits Ship It was early in the afternoon when a carrier-based dive bomber danced around on the Mississippi's super- structure, grazing the navigation bridge, damaging several anti-air- craft guns, putting two larger guns out of action temporarily,, and rip- ping out some communication chan- nels. Before the enemy plane went over the side, its bombs ripped loose and exploded 15 feet from the battle- ship's side. Seventy-five shrapnel holes were found in the skin of the Gale Points Out Valid China Bid, For Manchuria Dr. Esson M. Gale, director of the International Center speaking yes- terday before the Ann Arbor Rotary Club, described Manchuria as a ma- jor post-war prize of empire, to which China has the most valid title. Reviewing the'history. of this rich- est segment of Northeast Asia, Dr. Gale pointed out that Japan his con- sidered it an. essential buffer state against either Russia or China, whereas Russia is interested in Port Arthur and Dairen as alternatives to gaining. a year-round port on the Dardanelles. "With the Japanese Empire now visibly disintegrating, the problem of who will inherit this area comes a- cutely to the fore," Dr. Gale said. , "Whether an experience of nom- inal independence in the past 15 years will dictate a demand for a genuinely independent state by the Manchurians or a reversion to China may depend on Soviet Russia, hold- ing the key to this enigma of the future of East Asia," he concluded. Old Miss' and the bomb blast bashed in four watertight compartments along the port side. Fixing the partly flooded blisters was the first consideration. Cofferdam Built A cofferdam was constructed of metal, manila, canvas and mattres- ses," the Navy said, "and rigged to conform to lines at the ship's side. "Forced into position by flotation pressure, the cofferdam stopped the leak long enough to enable welders and cutters to repair the shrapnel holes, and eventually empty the flooded areas. Confab Opens On Vocal Music For Schools Start Two-Day Parley For Visiting Teachers A two-day Conference on School Vocal Music, sponsored by the School of Music for visiting teachers, opens today in the Grand Rapids Room of the League. The morning session will open at 9 a. m. EWT (8 a. m. CWT) at the Grand Rapids Room of the League with Haydn Morgan of Michigan State Normal College as chairman. A demonstration and discussion of the high school chorus will be led by Carol Pitts of New Jersey State 'Teachers College. This will be f ol- lowed by the lecture, "A Well Ad- ministered Music Department-As I See It," delivered by Ennis Davis, music publication editor. The afternoon session will con- vene at 1:15 p. m. EWT (12:15 p, in. CWT) in the Grand Rapids Room with Miss Pitts as chairman. An address will be delivered by Claude Rosenberry, state director of -music in Pennsylvania, on the subject, "Music and Character Building." Following this, there will be a symposium, on "Choral Objectives, Materials and Proced- ures."k The evening session will consist ,of a chamber music concert to be held at 8:30 p. m. EWT (7:30 p. m. CWT) today in Pattengill Auditorium of Ann Arbor High School. A Mozart and Brahms program will be performed by Gilbert lRoss, violin; Robert Swenson, cello; Louise Rood, viola; and Joseph Brinkman, piano. The program is part of the regular chamber music series. commanding officer of the 11th Ma- rines, was late for a staff meeting and explained: "We were stopped by an MP ser- geant, who insisted we put chains on the jeep. If he'd have been a major, I'd have given him a piece of my mind. "But you can't argue with a Marine sergeant!" If the dove is a bird of peace, cer- tainly the goat is her animal count- erpart. There are thousands of goats on this island. Few are found in com- bat areas. Far behind the lines, how- ever, in fields and abandoned houses, one sees them contentedly munching straw mats and old kimonos. *They have one disconcerting trait. Jet Plane Hits 589 M. P. H Jordan Hall Entertains Deans, Faculty Deans and faculty members were the guests of honor at the Jordan Hall faculty dinner last night in the dining room of Stockwell Hall. After dinner coffee was served at Jordan Hall. The guests of honor were Miss Alice Lloyd, Dean of Women; Joseph Bursley, Dean of Students; Prof. ames Edmondson, Dean of the chool of Education, and Mrs. Ed- mondson; Deal Walter Rea, Assist- ant Dean of Students, and Mrs. Rea; Dr. Clarence Yoakum, Dean of the Horace Rackham School of Gradu- ate Stud eies, and Mrs. Yoakumn; Dr. and Mrs. John Sundwall, Prof. and Mrs. L. Hopkins, Mr. and Mrs. Fran- cis Shiel, Miss Kathleen Hamm, chief, dietitian; Miss Dorothy Leslie, Stock- well Hall Dietitian; and Mrs. Walter Newell, house director of Helen New- berry. The United Summer underlie EWT (3 (7:15 p. indicate( THURS: Aft United Eve Ideals in FRIDAY Afte United i Eve: United S NEW YORK, Aug. 1-(,)-Travel- ing nearly as fast as sound, a jet- onference Programpropelled P-80 -"Shooting Star" roared in from Dayton, Ohio, and se are the remaining lectures of , the Conference on the hissed to a stop at La Guardia Field States in the Postwar World, now being sponsored by the today after covering the 589 miles Session Office for clarification of some of the problems that in one hour and two minutes. the peace. The afternoon lectures, will be held at 4:10 p. in. The trim gray superstreamlined :10 p. m. CWT) and the evening lectures at 8:15 p. m. EWT craft, described by 'the Army as the . m. CWT) in the Rackham Amphitheatre unless otherwise world's fastest, touched the runway . an hour and 341/2 minutes after leav- DAY Aing Wright Field, Dayton. The pilot, DAY, AUGUST 2 Col. William H. Council, said the ex- ernoon: Charles M. Davis, "Problems in the Relations of the tra 321/2 minutes were taken up by States and the Southwest Pacific." landing preparations. !ning: Dwight L. Dumond, "The Conflict of Tradition and Displayed publicly for the first : American Life." time, to mark the Army Air Forces' (, AUGUST 3 38th anniversary, the jet-propelled ernoon: Frank L. Huntley, "Problems in the Relations of the fighter flew most of the way at 20,000 States and Japan." feet because of adverse weather. Its ning (Hill Auditorium): Homer Ferguson. "The Role of the top speed has been announced as tates Senate in Framing the Peace." more than 550 miles an hour and its ceiling as at least 45,000 feet. Sorry, NL.o Seeds in This Fruit Salad NISEI AID TRAINING: Army Gets Preview of Jap Soldiers By The Associated Press FORT GEORGE G. MEADE, Md. July 26-Pacific-bound GIs are get- ting a preview of how the Japanese soldier looks, fights and thinks. Military intelligence training units which include in .their personnel Nisei, Americans of Japanese paren- tage, are doing the coaching. To date, the army has seven such teams at ground forces installations, includ- ing one here, with three more sched- uled to go into operation by August 1. Both the soldier new to battle and the veteran of fighting in Eu- rope who is being redeployed thru the United States will be taught by these teams. The Nisei coaching troops use weapons captured from the enemy; they speak Japanese in the manau- vers; move in the short, half-trot of the Japanese soliders and wear en- emy uniforms. The Nisei are volunteers for the training team jobs. The army felt that it could not order these Ameri- can citizens to play the distasteful role of so hated an enemy. Daily, a Nisei stands before outdoor classes while an officer points at him and expounds: "There is a Japanese rifle- man, your enemy. He is tricky, he is murderous. Watch him. Learn his methods carefully." The GI sees some of the favorite techniques of the small Japanese unit. A light machine gun squad shows how the enemy prefers to take an American position - a machine gunner crawling out toward the po- sition to draw fire and attention while another man moves in closer to blind the defenders of the posi- tion with a smoke grenade screen; then a flanking sweep by the major- ity of the 13-man squad to take the position with a sudden charge. American troops are taught the words they will use in the attack on the Nipponese: kosan shiro (sur- render); te wo age (hands up); ijime wa shimasen (we will not harm you) and uguku to utsu zo (if you move, I'll shoot you)................. Object lessons on what happens to souvenir collectors (and what Yank isn't a collector?) are thrown in the course for whatever value they may have. An old axiom is repeated for the benefit of the unwary who thinks the enemy is dead because he looks that way: "If he doesn't stink, stick him!" The GI is made familiar with en- emy weapons. He learns how they operate, in the event that he cap- tures and is required to use an enemy gun. By comparative demonstrations with similar American weapons, he is taught how to identify the sharp crack of the .256 caliber rifle, com- ,monly used by enemy infantry, told to listen for the tell-tale rattle of the dust cover on the enemy rifle when the bolt is pulled back prep- aratory to fire. He hears that the common Jap- anese light machine gun chatters with a higher, apparently quicker tone than an American gun, that the heavy machine gun has a slow- er cyclic rate of fire, about the ca- dence of a woodpecker working on a hollow tree. He learns the miaxi- mum and effective ranges of his enemy's weapons. Most of the special military intel- ligence training units are made up of about two white officers, at least one of them with Pacific experience., several white enlisted men and a dozen or so Nisei soldiers. Although we never may have seed- less watermelons due to the expense and time involved in producing them, many other seed-fruits may be grown seedless by using a chemical with a jawbreaking name, 2, 4-dichlorophe- noxiacetic acid. Prof. F. G. Gustafson of the botany department who as early as 1936 had developed seedless fruits has recently been conducting experiments with the growth hormone. Fruit Without Seeds Applying the chemical growth-pro- moting substance as a spray to the plants will produce fruit without seeds. Plants so sprayed, Prof. Gust- afson states will continue to grow withnn t Co fC' a 1rnrA nn1 +imp Th of the leaves making the leaves of a tomato plant more jagged, smaller,' and even thicker. However, the to- mato; itself looks and tastes like ordinary fruit-except that it does- n't have seeds. Prof. Gustafson, therefore, is experimenting with an- other chemical which doesn't change the leaf structure. The first plants he grew were seedless, and he is now waiting to see if the second crop will be the same without additional spray- ing. Weed Killer Despite being a growth-promoting substance, a high concentrate of 2, 4-dichlorophenoxiacetic acid is a pow- erful weed killer. This concentration plantain are impervious to its tion. ac- Another growth experiment is be- ing conducted on the importance of zinc to plant growth by Chang Tsui, a Chinese student. Although zinc is present only in infinitesimal quanti- ties, it appears to be necessary to praper growth. Growing the plants in distilled water, to which is added all the elements necessary for life except zinc, Tsui is attempting to find out the - influence of zinc on the growth hormone content in plants. I - - I 4ter tMe tAie4 IA 1rV A IEhrD nflIf TnrrI DROP IN FOR A SNACK