CLOUDY SHOWERS CJT r A6ia n :aii4V EMPEROR'S HORSE See FIELD & SCREAM, VOL. LV, No. 29S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, AUGUST 12, 1945 PRICE FIVE CENTS Jap Paper sahi Prepares People for Surrender r 4 NavyNeeds Drop;_Cutbacks Start AlliedOfferWouldHave y Hirohito Puppet Ruler Construction of 95 Ships Halts; Deluge of Army Cancellations Due Officials Anticipate 98 to 100 Per Cent Cut In Munitions Purchases When Japs Surrender TO MEET SEPTEMBER 4: Truman Reconvenes Congress For Action on Reconversion Declaration of Terms ReceiVed in Bern; V.J Announcement May Come Today By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Aug. 11-The Allies told quavering Japan today they would dictate orders to her Emperor "from the moment of surrender" and tossed back to Tokyo the bitter decision on immediate peace or more war. But to Washington, London, Moscow and Chungking the hour of final victory appeared near. in history's most horrible war. The latest declara- tion of Allied terms was transmitted through neutral Switzerland. Bern - handed it over late today to Japan's < > i <±) By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Aug. 11-Lessen- ing Navy needs brought a halt today to the building of 95 ships costing $1,200,000,000 and Army officers told of plans to cut war purchases by an Experts Expect Army Release Of Five Million War Department Quiet About Demobilization By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Aug. 11-Five mil- lion or more men may be released from the Army within 12 months after V-J Day. This is the estimate of military' experts familiar with problems con- fronting the Army; the War Depart- ment is saying nothing officially. The first to get out, it is believed, will be the 550,000 soldiers who al- ready had a score of 85 points for combat, service and dependency and are eligible now for release. The critical point score or dis- charge is expected to be cut promptly after Japanese surrender and there was some speculation that the older men in the Army might be given earlier discharges. This would mean, informed sources, estimated,. the re- lease of an additional 1,000,000 or 1,500,000 within three or four months. By that time, the Japanese terri- tory should be fully occupied and the Army then in a position to release an additional three million or more men in the ensuing 8 or 9 months. This would leave a force of 3,000,- 000 or less. The occupation of Japan is expected td require perhaps 1,000,- 000 men. The German occupation force is now fixed at 400,000. Garri-. s.ons such as Alaska would take ap- )roximately 500,000 and the remaind- er presumably would be assigned to Army centers in this country to oper- ate the supply system, hospitals, ports and similar installations. Statehood for Alaska Favored WASHINGTON, Aug. 11 -(R)- Secretary Harold L. Ickes has ap- proved statehood for Alaska as part of the InteriordDepartment'sterri- torial policy, acting Secretary Abe Fortas announced today. "The Department of the Interior favors statehood for Alaska," said a statement of the department policy formulated for the transmission to Ernest H, Gruening, Governor of Alaska, by Secretary Ickes following legthy discussions with officials of the Division of Territories and Island Possessions. Any action to admt Alaska to the Union would have to be authorized by Congress. Fortas' announcement came while Secretary Ickes was on a vacation. Army To Follow 'U' Lead on V-J Day The Army will suspend its training program at the same time and for the same period as the University suspends classes on V-J Day, Col. Reginald C. Miller, commandant of U. S. Army forces in Ann Arbor, an- nounced yesterday. Capt. Woodson Michaux, comman- dant of Navy units training at the University, announced Friday that the Navy, also, will go along with University V-J Day plans. CAMPUS EVENTS Today A program honoring Far Estrn stdnt will he amount exceeding $25,000,000,000 on a yearly basis. Fifty-six combatant ships are in- cluded in the Navy 'cutback, which War Mobilizer John W. Snyder at- tributed to a review of what was re- quired to whip Japan. There was no formal announcement of the Army program but Snyder made it clear that the real V-J deluge of cutbacks was yet to come. 98 to 100% Munitions Cut Army officials talked of a cut of 98 to 100 per cent in the purchase of munitions, tractors and other heavy equipment once the Japanese surren- der is final. They made these other estimates: Service force requirements, now running at $1,800,000,000 a month, will be cut 80 per cent or about $1,400,000,000. Air service requirements, now about $750,000,000 a month, will be cut 90 per cent, or $675,000,000. These estimated cuts total $2,115,- 000,000 a month-$25,380,000,000 over a 12-month period. Food Purchase to Remain Same Food purchasing is expected to re- main at about the same heavy vol- ume for a time at least. In announcing the Navy cutback, Snyder took oyer for the White House the issuance of official news on re- conversion. Other government agen- cies were told to keep their war-to peace plans private until President Truman gives the signal. The purpose of this taboo, it was explained, is to allow coordination of plans of various agencies and to pre- vent disclosure before peace is an accomplished fact. Army To Reduce Buying Snyder, in announcing the Navy cutback, said only that "The Army also will make immediately a sharp reduction in its buying program.'' The program, announced and indi- cated, threw into sharp focus the pre- diction of Government officials that around 5,000,000 munitions workers will lose their jobs in 60 days after the Japanese quit. More than half of these-approxi- mately 3,400,000 persons--are engag- ed in shipbuilding and in the aircraft and ordnance industries. Half May Retire Of the 5,000,000 due to be released, expectations are that perhaps half will retire from the labor market. The others will become job-seekers along with about 1,400,000 currently unemployed to bring the total to ap- proximately 4,000,000. About 3,000,000 of those now in war production are expected to stay on with present employers, but they will shift from munitions to civilian pro- duction. Government officials could make no estimate of how long it may take for 4,000,000 persons who will be out of jobs to find work in civilian produc- tion. Snyder asked cooperation from lab- or and management,and urged man- ufacturers whose contracts are trim- med to cancel immediately their or- ders for scarce materials, so these may go to provide civilian goods and jobs. Naval Program To Continue After V4J Day Capt. Woodson Michaux, com- manding officer of the Navy college training program at the University indicated last night that the war's end would have little effect on the status of men in Navy training here for "some months." "I don't see any immediate effects as far as status is concerned," Capt. Michaux said. "Legally, men in the naval reserve may continue in service for six months after the President de- clares the cessation of hostilities." It was indicated that the NROTC, a neace as wella a wartime noaramI By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Aug. 11-Congress will cut short its vacation and recon- vene probably on Sept. 4 to act on five major issues involved in a sud- den change from war to peace. The date was decided on today at a conference of President Truman and Senate Majority Leader Barkley of Kentucky. House Majority Leader McCormack, in Massachusetts, agreed by telephone. -8 Barkley told reporters at the White House these subjects are to be taken up: Unemployment Compensation 1. A bill to provide a maximum of $25 a week unemployment compensa- tion up to 26 weeks on a nationwide basis, the Federal government to sup- plement funds where states do not provide such a scale. 2. Renoving the surplus war prop- erty disposal task from the present 3-man board to a single administrat- or. 3. The so-called full employment bill designed to link management, labor and government into a vast ef- fort to provide perhaps as many as 60,000,000 jobs in peacetime. 4. Decisions on what legislation might be needed to keep alive for a U.S. Internees T oBe Released At War's End WASHINGTON, Aug. 11 -(P)- Surrender of Japan would mean lib- eration for approximately 16,700 Americans presently interned in the home islands or enemy-occupied ter- ritory, a check of War, Navy and State Department records disclosed today. These and internees of other Allied nations would be transported by the Japanese government to "places of safety, as directed, where they can quickly be placed aboard Allied transports," under terms of today's four-power reply to the Jap sur- render proposal. Internee Figures Incorplete American figures on interned na- tionals are incomplete because it has been impossible for the International Red Cross or neutral power repre- sentatives to visit some Japanese- occupied areas, the State Department said. Japan presently has 13,330 Ameri- can war prisoners - 9,605 from the Army; 2,036 from the Navy, and 1,689 from the Marine Corps - according to latest figures. American civilian internees in Jap- held' territory total 3,339, but only 176 of these are held in Japan proper, the State Department said. Approx- imately 1,200 of the total are in Japanese-held parts of China, most of them around Shanghai. 689 Women Among the 3,339 are 689 women, according to War Department sta- tistics. The War Deparement said most U. S. Army prisoners are held in the home islands. Most of the 176 Amer- ican civilians presently in Japan were construction workers on Guam and Wake Islands at the time of their capture by the Japanese early in the war. For some unknown reason, the Japanese government never has per- mitted repatriation of the Guam and Wake groups, the State Department said. while those war agencies which still might have a job to do. Government Reorganization 5. Reorganization of the govern- ment set-up, merging a number of agencies within regular departments and setting up others as independent. This was one of President Truman's principal proposals soon after he took office. Barkley said he is getting in touch immediately with committee chair- man to get to work on the legislation involved, complete hearings and "have something ready" for the cal- endar by the Sept. 4 date, which he did not describe as definite, but probable. There is no need for Congress to re- turn before then, Barkley pointed out, for the very reason that this spade work has yet to be done. Asked whether the President had recommended or requested the return of the law makers, Barkley said mere- ly that the action is being taken with Mr. Truman's "full approval and co- operation." -terms to Japs Are Explaied WASHINGTON, Aug. 11-(P)- This is what the reply of the Big Four powers-to the Japanese of- fer to surrender-means in effect so far as the royal house is con- cerned: 1. Because the Emperor is the key figure in Japan, the Allies will use him in ruling Japan. 2. But this doesn't mean the Emperor can keep his job indefi- nitely. He can keep it until some future time when the Japanese people can decide whether they want to have an Emperor at all. They'll be given a chance to vote on it. THE 'MEADOWLANDS': Three Driving Russian Armies Cross Mountains, Peril Hingan LONDON, Aug. 11 -(A)- Russian armored spearheads, in lightning 50- mile advances, burst across the great Khingan Mountain range in western Manchuria today and broke into the river-cut valleys leading down to the Japanese war arsenal city of Harbin, Moscow announced. The pile-driving Soviet smashes that have covered 155 miles in two days tore through natural Japanese defenses in western Manchuria in disregard of the exchange of peace notes between Japan and the Allied nations. Moscow's third Japanese war bul- letin revealed three Soviet Far East- ern armies had been thrown into the great battle for Manchuria. Veteran commanders of the European eastern front led the assault under supreme command of Marshal Alexander M. Vasilevsky, former Rad Army chief of staff. The three tank-tipped armies, breaking into Manchuria at least at five points along the mountainous 2,000-mile frontier, were converging on Harbin from the west, north and Japan's Crown Prince Comes To Prominence SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 11-The Japanese people were kept in ignor- ance that their leaders were suing for peace, but Tokyo newspapers ap- peared to be paving the way for sur- render announcement and Nippon's boy Crown Prince suddenly was ush- ered into prominence. Suggestnig the possibility that Hirohito's only son, 11-year-old Ak- ihito, is being groomed to succeed his father at some -date not too dis- tant, a program of publicity seemed to have been launched in his behalf. The Tokyo radio announced to the world that Saturday morning newspapers carried pictures of the Crown Prince and told of his inter- est - and anxiety over the air raids -in the war. east in drives that threatened to cut off Japanese armies in northern Manchuria. The Soviet advances brought hope of quick liberation to many American prisoner of war camps in Manchuria. Some 480 to 500 miles separated the tips of a giant pincer moving into Manchuria from the west and east along the axis of the Chinese Eastern Railroad. Moscow dispatch- es said the encirclement of tens of thousands of crack Japanese troops in northern Manchuria was a dis- tinct possibility. Allied Planes Strike at Japan GUAM, Sunday, Aug. 12 -()- While American and British fleets presumably stood idle off Japan for the second day, Admiral Nimitz an- nounced today that their carrier planes Thursday and Friday de- stroyed or damaged 711 enemy planes and 94 ships in what may have been the last big air strike of the war. Failure of powerful forces under Admiral Halsey to attack during the recent negotiations over Japan's ex- pressed willingness were declared to be still according to previous plans and not influenced by the peace re- port. Nimitz issued a communique mak- ing a final report of the air strikes of Thursday and Friday against nor- thern Honshu from Yokohama to the northern tip of the island. Smishing into such hitherto un- damaged air bases as Mamurogawa and Obanazawa, the ports of Ona- gawa and Okachi Bay, and the in- land cities of Masuda, Iwaki, Kori- yama, Matsushima and Shiogama, planes of the combined fleets found' good hunting. Nimitz' communique increased the previously announced bag of planes by 188 and placed the two-day toll of ships at 35 sunk and 59 damaged. These included seven destroyers or destroyer-escorts sunk and seven more damaged. ministertin the Swiss capital, for re- lay to Tokyo. It was the answer to Japan's offer yesterday to surrender -provided she could keep her Em- peror and his sovereign prerogatives. Staff Sent Homne , Then, at 6 p. m. (EWT) the White House sent its staff home and said "There will be no announcements to- night." Tomorrow (Sunday) it may be a different story. Tomorrow may be V-J Day. For most diplomatic experts held the opinion that Japan would realize that by battling hopelessly on she merely would postpone, at the cost of more destruction and slaughter, im- position of the same stern terms which now confront her. Supreme Commander Would Control The four great powers told the Japanese that a still unnamed Allied supreme commander would control them through their Emperor. They withheld any assurances that Hiro- hito or any successor could remain indefinitely on his throne. The Japanese people eventually will decide for themselves, they said, whether there is to be an Emperor at all. The fate of the man the Nipponese consider a combination of God and Emperor-and the question whether he or others can guarantee surrender compliance-were the only obstacles to peace. Otherwise both sides were willing to abide by surrender terms laid down in the proclamation, of Potsdam. Under the declaration Japan would lose her stolen empire and shrink to peaceful existence in the home islands. Statement Sent by Radio From the Swiss legation here, where it was delivered by a State Depart- ment official, the Allied statement of intentions to the Emperor went by radio to Bern. There the chief of the Political De- partment's foreign division called in. Japanese Minister Shuminshi Kase and handed it over at 3:25 p. m. (EWT). Kase dashed from the Parliament building to a waiting automobile, promising to transmit the document to Tokyo at once. He had no com- ment beyond this: "I'm in a hurry." Preparation for Surrender Radio Tokyo appeared to be pre- paring the Japanese people for sur- render. Here in Washington, gov- ernment authorities toiled on recon- version plans, and Senate Majority Leader Barkley said Congress prob- ably would cut short its vacation on Sept. 4. As if to give the Japs a taste of what peace would be.like, the Japa- nese got a temporary respite from the terror of Superforts, from the rav- ages of atomic bombs. Land fight- ing went on. Presidential Secretary Charles G. Ross disclosed that the supreme com- mander "will be an American." Name Unrevealed Ross could not say at the time who the man would be. Speculation cen- tered at once on General Douglas MacArthur. There was mention also of Admiral Chester W. Nimitz and General George C. Marshall. The terms sent to Tokyo today re- affirmed that surrender must be in accordance with the Allied proclama- tion issued at Potsdam July 26. Under that declaration the enemy would be stripped of her power to make war, wouldsbe bottled up in four principal islands. From a practical standpoint, dip- lomatic authorities suggested the new Allied proposal had merit. The Em- peror is the constitutional head of the government and it would be eas- ier for the Allies to work through him than anyone else. In addition, he is chief of the (See JAPAN, Page 6) Chinese Advance ,11 17> - r. Obey Hirohito Toyko Paper Tells Japanese Face Reality with Calmness, Courage By The Associated Press NEW YORK, Aug. 11-The Tokyo newspaper Asahi in an article in its Sunday, Aug. 12, edition, called up- on all Japanese "to do his or her part as his majesty's subjects in fullest obedienceof the august wish of his majesty" and to maintain national unity "if worse comes to worse," the Domei agency reported tonight in a wireless dispatch recorded by the FCC. The English language dispatch, beamed to the United States, quoted Asahi's "top column feature article" as saying that since the beginning of Japanese history "the Japanese nation has gone through many an ordeal and kept growing by courage- ously overcoming such ordeals." A Thorny Path "The path through which our peo- ple trod in national growth," Asahi added, "has been an extremely thorny one. In the numerous national crises which our ancestors have calmly and courageously gone through our na- tional destiny was placed in gravest danger, either internally or extern- ally." "Even in the worst chaotic stage in each national crisis our people always been gratified to find a rally- ing point of their souls and action. The western term, 'wandering soul,' has no place in our language. "Always Found a Way" "By faithfully obeying his majes- ty's august wish our people have al- ways found a way out of suichcrises. Our ancestors have thus overcome many a national crisis and handed down' 1:- their posterity Japan as she is now with her spirit and blood." "The Soviet Union's abrupt decla- ration of war on Japan, coupled with the United States' resort to atomic bombs, entailing the most atrocious mass slaughter of civilians, on a scale unprecedented in human history, has greatly intensified the gravest na- tional crisis. She stands at the cross road whether or not she is able to maintain her unique national policy and uphold the honor of the Japa- nese race." With "Courage-Absolute Calmness" The newspaper said that all Japa- nese must "face reality squarely with absolute calmness and with the great- est courage." "Closest compliance with the aug- ust wish of his majesty, in complete disregard for one's own private sel- fish interest is the only source from which the nation can derive strength to live and revive, carrying on their undying national tradition. "Whether or not we are able to uphold the national honor handed down by our ancestors, whether or not we are able to prove ourselves worthy of the name of the Japanese nation in this worst crisis, solely de- pends on whether or not we will do our part as his majesty's subjects," it continued. "If we leave nothing undone in performing our duty as his majesty's subjects, which is most fundamental, the Japanese people will remain im- mutable even if we were to be con- fronted with still greater difficulties, multiplying the present difficulties." Suggest Closing Local Stores at 6 p.m. Saturdays The Retail Merchants division of the Chamber of Commerce has voted to adopt a recommendation that gen- eral merchandise stores in Ann Ar- bor be closed Saturday evenings after 6 p. m. EWT beginning Aug. 18 . The action was taken after a sur- vey sponsored by the retail merchants revealed that a majority of merchants considered open hours on Saturday night to be unprofitable because of the small amount of trade. Any changes because of seasonal occasion, such as Christmas, will be determined in advance at a regular merchants ~meeting. 'ROUND THE WORLD REACTIONS: 'Kill the Emperor' Returning Troops Cry By The Associated Press NEW YORK-The man in the street kept an eye on the newspaper headlines and an ear attuned to the of "Kill the Emperor!" and "To Hell with Hirohito!" broke out. * * * SAN FRANCISCO'-As though to ington announcement of the four big powers' reply to Japan's surrender offer, which said that the authority of the Emperor would have to be sub-