CLOUDINESS SHOWERS Lw0 Da j 100 YEARS IN ANN ARBOR See Story, Page 6 VOL. LV, No. 258 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, AUGUST 5, 1945 PRICE FIVE CENTS MacArthur Gains, Extended Control Ryukyu Isles To Be Bases of Invasion Forces During Final Battle for Japan MANILA, Sunday, Aug. 5-(P)-General MacArthur announced exten- sion of his Pacific army command to the Ryukyu Islands Saturday, thus for the first time assuming control of conquered Japanese soil in his drive "on to Tokyo." The announcement declared that the Ryukyus, with the Philippines, "form a great semicircular base from which a mighty invasion force is being forged under the primary responsibility of General MacArthur for the final conquest of Japan." General Doolittle's Eighth Air Force, to be based on Okinawa, will be under General Spaatz' U. S. Army Strategic Air Forces, which remain sepa- Attlee Appoints New Civil Lord Of Admiralty Three Considered Possibilities as U.S. Deputy on Security Council; Former Navy Edwards Gets Stoker Post Jap Hosptal Ship' Carries War Materials By The Associated Press MANILA, Aug. 5, (Sunday)-A Jap- anese hospital ship which used its "free conduct" under Red Cross in- signia to move contraband war sup- plies through the Allied blockade of the East Indies is being taken into port by a U. S. Seventh Fleet patrol vessel. General MacArthur's headquarters yesterday announced interception of the hospital ship, which also- carried apparently faked soldier patients. The U. S. Sixth Army reported an additional 882 Japanese had been killed in the last three days on Luzon, the principal Philippine island. London received a report that Lt. Gen. Tomoyuki Yamashita, Japanese supreme commander during the Phil- ippines campaign, had been killed on Luzon in a bombing attack. MacArthur's report of the board- ing of the hospital ship, in the Banda Sea north of Timor and roughly 400 miles north of ,Australia, said ap- proximately 1,500 Japanese aboard were listed as patients. When the boarding party removed bandages from some of the patients, no wounds were found. 4 Machine guns, ,'iv llimeters.shells and other ammunition were found packed in cases marked "medical sup- plies," headquarters said. In the announcement, neither the course of the vessel nor the port to which it is being taken was disclosed. The Japanese still occupy most of the islands between New Guinea and Borneo, although the Allied block- ade has cut off all possible escape, ex- cept for possible small scattered groups. The hospital ship's crew was listed as 13 officers and 63 men. Chinese Block Japs at Tungan CHUNGKING, Aug. 4-()-Chi- nese forces battered toward the stra- tegic rail town of Tungan, only 24 miles from the former American air base city of Lingling, today and threatened to block the Japanese withdrawal from Kwangsi province in South China, the Chinese com- mand reported. Striking from the fallen Japanese bastion of Sinning, 55 miles northwest of Lingling, Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek's troops made "much pro- gress" toward Tungan in a sweep through the Japanese defense ring, a communique said. The Chinese drive toward Tungan threatened to cut the Hunan-Kwang- si railroad in Hunan province, block the main avenue of the Japanese es- cape from Kwangsi and halt a with- drawal toward the great communi- cations hub of Hengyang-keypoint of Japanese resistance south of the Yangtze river. Inexpensive Shoes To Be Non-rationed WASHINGTON, Aug. 4 -(P)- A large selection of inexpensive shoes for adults will be removed from ra- tioning for the period Aug. 27 through Oct. 13, the OPA announced today. Shoes covered by the order are those made before March 1, 1944, and retaiing at $3.50 or less a pair. This action was believed to have been taken in preparation for termi- nation of all shoe rationing early next year. CAMPUS EVENTS Today The Graduate Outing Club will meet for a hike -rate from the MacArthur command. Units under MacArthur already in the area or moving up from the Phil- ippines include General Stilwell's Tenth Army and Gen. George C. Ken- ney's Far East Air Forces, which in- clude the Fifth, Seventh and 13th Air Forces. The extension of command, which became effective Tuesday midnight, was not a sudden shift. MacArthur previously had announced the ap- pointment of General Stilwell to suc- ceed the late Lt. Gen. Simon.Bolivar f Buckner, Jr., as commander of the Okinawa-conquering Tenth Army. Admiral Nimitz, under whose over- all command Okinawa and a dozen smaller islands were occupied, pres- umably remained in command of naval forces in the Ryukyus. (As the command extension was announced, Senators Johnson (D.- i Colo.) and Stewart (D.-Tenn.) de- clared in Washington that they fa- vored promoting MacArthur to over- all command in the Pacific). The Ryukyus, extending from For- mosa to the Japanese mainland, form the natural invasioh bridge which MacArthur would follow in the "on to Tokyo" declaration he issued Feb. 6 in proclaiming the fall of Manila. Japan still holds the by-passed Sakishima group, between the Oki- nawas and Formosa, and the north- ern Amami, Tokara and Osumi groups. Okinawa is about 600 miles from the Philippines and only 325 miles from Japan's- mainland...... 1 The Ryukyus change apparently was made under the U. S. joint chiefs of staff assignments of April 5, divid- ing Pacific commands. Railroads in Japan Mauled Vital Network Being Ruined as in Germany By The Associated Press GUAM, Sunday, Aug. 5-Japan's vital network of railroads are receiv- ing the same aerial mauling meted out to Germany's system, but the Nipponese are taking it with little opposition. opAs the psychological warfare of pamphlets was renewed by the big Superforts and Japan's shipping was stymied behind B-29 dropped mines, Nippon's inner transportation prob- lems increased. Raided Tokyo U. S. Army Strategic Air Forces announced yesterday that 97 Mus- tangs raided the Tokyo area Friday and destroyed 14 locomotives, dam- aged six more and 50 railroad cars. Only ten enemy interceptors met the challenge. Two of them were shot down. Gen. George C. Kenney's Far East Air Forces, which alone have counted fcr 2,846,932 tons of enemy shipping sunk or damaged in the first seven months of this year, similarly have paid special attention to inland transportation systems. No Opposition Continued absence of Japanese in- terceptor opposition is based on a Nippon policy of hoarding air strength for the Allied invasion, Tok- yo radio said. Leaflets bearing the Allied demand for immediate surrender have been dropped on Japan in a renewed cam- paign by the Superfortress command aimed directly at the Japanese peo- ple. They told the Japanese they would be treated justly, but prom- ised "prompt and utter destruction if the ultimatum was not accepted. DisabledVeteran To Continue Plans ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., Aug. 4 -(A')-Undaunted by the loss of parts of all four of his limbs, a Starke, Fla. By The Associated Press LONDON, Aug. 4-Prime Minister Attlee appointed a former RoyalNavy stoker, Walter James Edwards, as Civil Lord of the Admiralty tonight, putting the 44-year-old veteran of two wars on the admiralty board be- side Britain's senior admirals. Edwards, often described as the "member of Parliament for the lower deck," was one of 33 junior mini- sters named by Attlee. The Prime Minister also selected nine Ministers, virtually completing the administra- tion which will direct theaLabor par- ty's far reaching program of econ- omic change for Britain. Known affectionately as "Wally" to his fellow East Enders in London, Edwards was elected to Parliament Prof. Barnes To Speak The British elections will be dis- cussed by Prof. E. H. Barnes of the history department at the meeting of the Post-War Couicil at 7:30 p. m. EWT (6:30 p. m. CWT) Tuesday in the Union. A discussion and question period will follow. in 1942. He is believed to be the first civil Lord with wartime fleet service. Thepost usually is filled by a civilian. The newly named ministers are: George Tomlinson, 55, works; Lew- is Silkin, 56, town and country plan- ning; James Griffiths, 55, national insurance; Lord 'Winster 60, civil aviation; Edward John (Ted) Wil- liams, 55, information; The Earl of Listowel, 39, postmaster general; John Burns Kynd, 43, Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster; Hartley William Shawcross, 43, attorney gen- eral; and Maj. Frank Soskice, solici- tor general. IRA Will Hear Talk by Hawley Professor's Lecture To Be Fifth in Series "We have a tremendous accumula- tion of facts on the subject of race but not enough money is spent on the alleviation of racial discrimina- tion," Prof. Amos H. Hawley of the sociology department said in a re- cent interview. Prof. Hawley will address the in- ter-Racial Association on the subject "Real Estate, and Employment" at 7:30 p. m. EWT (6:30 p. m. CWT) Monday at the Union. Prof. Hawley has emphasized that discrimination can be alleviated'when the segregation of racial groups is solved. He said, "The more the Ne- groes can scatter, the less will they become a distinguishable group. Non- segregation is equivalent to assimila- tion." He claimed that all minority groups have lived in segregated areas and this may explain their peculiar posi- tion of social and economic inferior- ity. Prof. Hawley then stated that em- ployers were using minoritie for strike breaking purposes in order to divide and weaken labor. "Discrim- ination comes mostly from within labor itself," he said. Prof. Hawley's lecture will be the fifth in the current IRA series, "Tech- niques For Eliminating Racial Dis- crimination in Your Comnunity" Debate To Be Held on WPAG The "Wake Up, America" Quiz De- bate at 5:30 p. m. EWT (4:30 p. m. CWT) today over station WPAG will present Dr. Alfred P. Laidler, Execu- tive Director of the League for Indu- strial Democracy, who will discuss "Does Economic Security Endanger Personal Liberty?" The discussion will have its foun- dations in the degree of government responsibility which should accom- pany the economic security called full employment. Preside Helps World Solve Troubles Of Finances Funds To Be Set-up For International Use By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Aug. 4-Through President Truman's signature on three big bills, the United States committed itself today to help the world solve its financial, economic and food problems. The White House announced that the Chief Executive, cruising home- ward from a Big Three Conference at Potsdam, had penned his name on measures under which this coun- try will: International :Fund Ante up nearly $6,000,000,000 for a world bank and an international fund designed to promote postwar trade and stabilize exchange rates, in accordance with an agreement worked out by 44 nations at Bretton Woods, N. H., last summer. Lend Capacity Increase from $700,000,000 to $3,- 500,000,000 the lending capacity of the Export-Import Bank to help with reconstruction when the fight- ing stops. Joins Organization Join a United Nations food and ag- riculture organization, with annual dues expected to run up to $1,125,000 which will try to put the world on a betert diet. The administration backed all three measures as essential to put- ting strong economic and social props under a Un ited Nations League intended to maintain lasting peace. First to Ratify The United States was the first country to ratify the Bretton Woods Plan for a $9,100,000,000 bank for reconstruction and development, and an $8,800,000,000 stabilization fund. They will begin operating when countries contributing 65 per cent of the total fund have ratified, and that may take a year or more. This country will hand over $3,175,- 000,000 to the bank and invest $2,740,- 000,000 in the stabilization fund. The bank will make loans directly to finance productive enterprises. Aggressive War Termed ,Crime LONDON, Aug. 4-(P)-The four- power war crimes conference ap- proached agreement tonight upon an historic document indicting aggres- sive war as an international crime. The document will blueprint pro- cedure for an unprecedented mass trial of Germans listed as arch crim- inals - men who formulated Nazi policy, high military chiefs who exe- cuted it, ranking diplomats who in- trigued it, industrialists and finan- ciers who gave it substance. The trial itself will be held in Nuernberg, for years the scene of the Nazy party's annual congress. It will open before an international mili- tary tribunal Sept. 1, with represent- atives of Britain, France, Russia and the United States prosecuting. The prospective list of defendants was reported by a responsible Ameri- can source to include Hermann Goer- ing, Joachim Von Ribbintrop, Franz Von Papen, Alfred Rosenberg and members of the German General Staff such as Grand Admiral Karl Doenitz and Field Marshals Gerd Von Rundstedt and Wilhilm Keitel. Simultaneously, the high tribunal will be asked to convict the Nazi terror-atrocity organizations. If a guilty verdict is returned, it will mean a blanket conviction as war criminals of all Germans who can be established to have been vol- untary members of the Gestapo or the SS. Signs i + T 0 300 s Harbin ;1 " Wakkanai STATUTE MILESk MANCHURIAVlisR/k '~V~dwotokOtaru *Sapporo' *_ Mude akodate " dn, - Raskin " pIingkow'Amo; / Sea of- Akita KOREA J" JAPAN YellowSe0 Sea SaHONSHU TsngaaFusan - /-to ma * 9KY Kobe SSaseb VSHIKOKU / KYUSZ I SHANGHAI /// SHIPPING BLOCKADE ESTABLISHED ABOUT JAPAN-Plane sym- bols and shaded line illustrate blockade of Japan islands and Korean ports by mines sowed by airplanes. The 20th Air Force announced there are no major shipping lanes, ports, or harbors remaining that offer safety to Japanese shipping. BROADWAY PLAY: Over 21' to Be Given This Week by Repertory Players Winant, Dunn, Cohen Leading Choices for Job Davies Would Become Ambassador to Britain Economic Bills Ruth Gordon's "Over 21" will be the fourth play of the season presented by the Michigan Repertory Players Wed- nesday through Saturday in the Ly- dia Mendelssohn Theatre. Ruth Gordon has starred in a long list of Broadway plays, but "Over 21" is her first achievement as a drama- tist. After reading many scripts and finding them unsuitable for her, Miss Spaim Rejects 'Unjust' Words Puts Blame on Exiled Spanish Communists By The Associated Press LONDON,- Aug. 5, Sunday-The Madrid Radio at midnight last night broadcast a Spanish government com- munique saying that Spain "rejects as arbitrary and unjust" the Big Three's Potsdam statements concern- ing the Spanish-government. 'Defamatory Campaign' The broadcast, heard by BBC, quot- ed the communique as saying that the government considered the state- ments to be the "result" of a "de- famatory campaign" conducted by Spanish Communist exiles. The communique said, in part: "Spain, following a course of dis- cretion and good will while confront- ed with singular misstatements which did not involve her directly, refrain- ed from formulating her reservations to the agreements of the San Fran- cisco conference which in any case were reached in the absence of prac- tically all European countries. Inconsistent with History "But on being now so unjustly re- ferred to, she sees herself obliged to declare that she does not accept anything inconsistent with her histo- ry, her people or the services which Spain rendered to peace and culture. "Spain proclaims once more her peace loving spirit, her good will towards all peoples and trusts that, once the passions exacerbated by war and propaganda are allayed, the pres- ent judgment will be reconsidered. Envoys Due in Russia MOSCOW, Aug. 4-(AP)-Chinese sources said today that Premier T. V. Soong and China's new foreign mini- ster, Dr. Wang Shin-Chieh, were ex- pected here within four or five days to resume the discussions, suspended during the Potsdam meeting. Gordon took matters into her own hands and decided to write a play for 'herself. The result was "Over 21" one of the biggest hits on Broad- way of the season according to thea- tre critics. It has just been released for non-professional production. AAF Officer "Over 21" concerns Army Air Force officer candidates and their wives. Its title comes from somebody hav- ing said that a man over 21 can't learn anything new. The story is about a man of 39, a former news- paper editor and now an officer can- didate who is beginning to thing there may be some truth in the state- ment. He is assisted in his struggles to pass exams by his brilliant and famous novelist wife, who has come from Hollywood to join him in camp. The play pictures the troubles a sophisticated couple of about 40 try- ing to battle the idiocyncrocies of tourist camp abode and army life with all its rules and regulations. To the casual observer, the novelist wife is as scatter-brained as they come, but she does succeed in pushing her husband through training to gradu- ate 271 in a clas sof 353! Blase Miss Parker The comic situations, lines and stage business have been compared by one reviewer as comparable to "You Can't Take It With You." Broadway rumor has it that Miss Gordon pat- terned her heroine after her friend Dorothy Parker. The audience is left to picture the blase Miss Parker.in a tourist cabin in Miami, sans kitchen sink, running water, and electric lights that have their switches on the front porch, plus many other situa- tions of equal nature. Tickets for the play may be pur- chased at the Lydia Mendelssohn box office. Veterans Meeting To Be Wednesday The third summer meeting of- the Veterans Organization will be held at 7:30 n. m. EWT Wednes- day in the Assembly Room of Lane Hall, Bob Andrews, VO pres- ident, announced yesterday. The group will discuss housing problems for fall term and pre- liminary plans for a picnic. In addition, the advisability of co- operative eating will be dealt with. All World War II veterans are ' urged to attend the meeting which is open to War 11 vets only. ' By The Associated Press Aug. 4-The names of U. S. Am- bassador John G. Winant, Assistant Secretary or State James Clement Dunn and Benjamin V. Cohen, Spe- cial Assistant to Secretary of State James F. Byrnes, were advanced in American diplomatic circles tonight as the leading choices for U. S. dep- uty on the Big Five Council of For- eign Ministers. There was speculation that Winant would be succeeded as Ambassador to Britain within a few weeks by White House Advisor Joseph E. Da- vies, now homeward bound from Potsdam. Davies told friends just before his departure that he would be return- ing soon, but he did not say in what role. Reports that Winant would be re- lieved soon of his assignment were strengthened by the fact he was not among those invited to Potsdam, and that the European Advisory Commis- sion, on which he was American rep- resentative, has been eliminated af- ter drafting recommendations fbr occupation and control of enemy countries. Dunn and Cohen were with Tru- man and Byrnes at Potsdam, and their presence was interpreted by some American diplomatic sources as giving them the inside track for the post on the important Foreign Minites Council. Some gave the edge to Cohen over Dunn, since the former worked as special assistant to Byrnes, who will name the deputy. Byrnes is expected to name the deputy when he returns to Washington. The first meeting of the Council will be held in London, which will be the normal seat, not later than Sept. 1. Johnson Insists On Army Cut WASHINGTON, Aug. 4-(IP)--Sen- ator Johnson (D-Colo. challenged Secretary of War Stimson today to refute a calculation that no more than 3,000,000 American soldiers can be employed inrthe Pacific by the end of next year. Carying on a fight begun Wednes- day in the closing session of the Sen- ate, Johnson urged that the army be scaled down to a sensible figure based on logistics and not on the military fortunes of high officers who do not relish the idea of being busted'." Johnson made public a letter to Stimson saying "Your Aug. 2 state- ment that you must have an overall army of 7,000,000 men is most dis- heartening." "Your decision," Johnson wrote, "means millions of bitter, discon- tented men milling around in the United States in uniform during the next 18 months." Independently, Senator Taft (R- Ohio) in the course of a proposed program for Congress declared that "the stupid, stubborn policy of the War Department in maintaining an army as big as it was on V-E Day should be overruled. It is impossible to see how even 7,000,000 men can be used in the war against Japan, and we still have about 8,300,000." Johnson declared that General Douglas MacArthur must have every man he possibly can use, but told Stimson: "With a 7,000 mile supply line to buck, the bottleneck is not our de- sires, but it is the shipping facilities available. Nothing can be done to increase them now." Terrific Impact of Plane's Blow Told NEW YORK, Aug. 4 -()- Steel i ., THROW OUT YOUR GRAMMARS: Fries Describes NewA nnroach to Lanzuace Study I i