PAGE SIX
TiHE MICHIGAN DAILY
SU1.DAY, AVCi1S 12, 1945
PAGE SIX SUNDAY, AUGUST 12, 1945
HIGHLIGHTS
ON CAMPUS
'Co-Hop' To Be Held . .
"Co-Hop," the second outdoor street
dance in University history, will be
sponsored by the Inter-Cooperative
Council from 9 p. m. to midnight
EWT Saturday in the driveway be-
hind University Hall.
Music for the dance will be played
over the University public address
system. Kaeti Boenheim, chairman
of the dance said, "There have been
many requests for an outdoor dance
since last year's great success'. A new
tradition seems to have been start-
ed," she added.
* * *
Westlund To Speak --.
Dr. Norman Westlund, director of
the Saginaw Valley Children's Cen-
ter, will speak as guest lecturer for
the Department, of Speech from 2
to 4 p. m. EWT Tuesday at the
Speech Clinic.
"Causes of Personal and Social
Maladjustment" will be the topic of
Dr. Westlund's talk, which will be
given in connection with the wprk
of the Speech 323 seminar on voice
disorders. All interested persons are
invited to attend.
Hood, Owen To Play .. .
Louise Hood, violinist, and Ben-
jamin Owen, pianist, will present a
School of Music faculty concert at
8:30 p. m. EWT Tuesday in Patten-
gill Auditorium of the Ann Arbor
High School.
The program will consist of com-
positions by Jacobi, Griffes, and
Bloch. The general public is in-
vited.
Russia Is Topic . . .
"Russia has too long been an in-
ternational ghost; we must turn on
the light and realize that there is
nothing mysterious about Russia at
all," said Prof. A. Lobanov-Rostov-
sky of the history department in a
recent interview.
Pr9f Lobanov will speak on
"What Not To Believe- About Rus-
sia" before a meeting of Russky
Kruzhok, Russian Circle, at 8:15
p. m. EWT tomorrow in Rackham
Amphitheatre.
Discussing some of the erroneous
beliefs concerning Russia, Prof. Lo-
banov will analyze them from the
standpoint of history, geography,
economics, and politics.
All interested are cordially invited
to attend.
* * *,
HOPWOOD A WARDS:
G
I
Writing Contest Closes Friday;
$500 To Be Given in Prizes
TRUMAN AND CABINET CONFER ON JAP SURRENDER OFFER-President Truman and his Cabinet confer at the White house as it was dis-
closed that the United States is in communication with its allies on the broadcast Jap surrender offer. From left: Secretary of Agriculture Clinton
Anderson; Secretary of Labor Lewis Schwellenbach; John B. Blanford Jr., of National Housing Agency; J. A. Krug, War Production Board; John
W. Snyder, Office of War Mobilization; Leo Crowley, Foreign Economic A dministration; Secretary of Commerce Henry Wallace; Under-secretary
of Interior Ade Fortas; Postmaster General Robert Hannegan; Secretary of War Henry Stimson; Secretary of State James F. Byrnes; Truman;
Secretary of Treasury Fred Vinson; Attorney General Tom Clark; Secretary of Navy James V. Forrestal.
Debate To Be Given
. .
.
A demonstration debate will be the
feature of the weekly assembly of the
Department of Speech at 4 p. m.
EWT Wednesday in the Rackham
Amphitheatre.
The topic under discussion, the
peacetime conscription of able-
bodied men from 18 to 24 years
old, is the one to be used in high
school and possibly university de-
bating during the coming year.
George Hale and Helen Pate will
speak for the affirmative and Vir-
ginia Alley and 'Carolyn Binkley will
form the negative team. The speeches
will include six minutes of argument
and four minutes of cross-question-
ing.
* * *
Typhoon Hits
New Battleship
Near Okinawa
GUAM, Sunday, Aug. 12-(P)-The
new Battleship Alabama, it can now
be disclosed, was damaged by the
typhoon which hit the Third Fleet
near Okinawa June 5- wounded by
the elements after escaping un-
harmed two years of warring action
in the Atlantic and the Pacific.
Quickly Repaired
But, Fleet Headquarters announced
today, she "was quickly repaired and
once again she is adding to her rec-
ord of doing a big and tough job
quietly and efficiently."
The Alabama took part in 12 con-
3ecutive operations as one of the
screening ships of fast carrier task
forces. She not only escaped damage
herself but no carrier she was screen-
ing in any of the operations was
reached by Japanese bombs, torped-
oes or Kamikaze planes.
After being commissioned at Ports-
mouth, Va., Aug. 16, 1942, the Ala-
bama guarded Atlantic convoys until
Aug., 1943, when she joined the Pa-
ific Fleet.
She supported the invasions of the
Gilbert Islands and her 16-inch guns
ater thundered in the Marshalls,
the Marianas, the Palaus, at Hollan-
dia in New Guinea and at Leyte in
.he Philippines.
It was the Alabama which first
;ave the rest of a task force warn-
ing that a big air fleet of Japanese
was approaching to attack in the first
'attle of the Philippines Sea. Amer-
ican carrier pilots got away in time
,o meet the attack in the air and
:make their part of the battle a "tur-
tey shoot." *
IRA To Hear
Stevens Talk
Albeit K. Stevens of the University
Extension Service will speak on "Poli-
tical Action and Racial Discrimina-
tion" before a meeting of the Inter-
Racial Association at 8 p.m. EWT
Monday in Lane Hall.
He will attempt to show how far
political legislation can go ahead of
;ocial attitudes and the effect that
these attitudes have on existing stat-
utes.
'In this connection, he will review
the effects of the New York State
Ives-Quinn Bill, the Fair Employ-
ment Practices Commission Bill, and
various state and local legislations
dealing with racial discrimination in
restrants and other local enter-
orises.
After Stevens lecture, there will be
an informal question period to be
followed by iefreshments and enter-
tainment presented by IRA members.
This lecture is the sixth in the
current IRA series, "Techniques For
Eliminating Racial Discrimination In
Your Community." The public is in-
vited to attend the lecture.
New Model Autos
Produced in Jersey
NEW YORK, Aug. l1-(lP)-Auto-
,nobile production will return to the
East on Monday with the first 1946
model civilian passenger car built
east of Detroit rolling off the assem-
bly line of the Ford Motor Com-
pany's Edgewater, N. J. plant.
The company announced it had
managed to convert to peacetime
production without any mass layoff
of employes.
Ford spokesmen announced five
other branch plants were being pre-
pared for early passenger car pro-
A,4-nrtin qot.Piifahlj-,N. Y.VDalas.i
Dr. Hall To Discuss Problems of Pidgin Languages
"Pidgin Languages: Problems and
Implications" will be the topic of Dr.
Robert A. Hall, Jr., when he speaks
at 7:30 p.m. EWT Tuesday in the
East Lecture Room of the Rackham
Building in the Linguistic Institute's
series of introductory lectures on lin-
guistic science.
Oral Approach
Dr. Hall, who is demonstrating the
oral approach method of teaching
Spanish at the Institute this summer
and is assistant professor of Italian
at Brown University during the aca-
demic year, has been interested in
Pidgin languages for some time. His
England, U. So
To Hold Secret
Of Atom Bomb
SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 11-(/P)_
Armed with the atom, English-speak-
ing democracy finds itself for the
time being the steward of mankind's
future,
Realization of this is inherent in
President T uman's declaration
Thursday night that the United
States, Britain and Canada would
not disclose the secret of the atomic
bomb "until means have been found
to control the bomb so as to pro-
tect ourselves and the rest of the
world from the danger of total de-
struction."
Threat to Humanity
The full meaning of the discovery
of atomic fission and its control re-
mains locked in the future, but one
thing is clear already.
The threat of utter annihilation
to large segments of humanity, never
before practicable, now can become
a reality.
Whether America is ready to ac-
cept it or not, this can mean a vast
shift in the balance of world power.
definitely toward the hands that
hold this new threat.
Application to Other Uses
It will take years perhaps to ap-
ply the principle of atomic fission
to other uses, but it can scarcely be
doubted that it will be done.
The implications of atomic energy
in peace may eventually be just as
revolutionary. The possessors of
atomic energy to drive industry and
communications will have an econ-
omic weapon which might well sur-
pass in effectiveness this first child
of the domesticated atom - the
atomic bomb.
Should We Share Secret?
No nation without this power be-
hind its factories, its carriers, its
entire economy, could compete with
those who used it.
The question facing the English-
speaking peoples today, therefore, is
first, whether to share this great
new secret.
Already there are voices against
that. Senator Wiley (R-Wis.) is one.
He notes that our secrets have been
shared in the past, and used against
us.
Past discoveries of comparable im-
portance in their time - such weap-
ons as gunpowder, the armored ship,
radio, the airplane - were not kept
secret.
Many of them never were secrets,
but the spontaneity with which sim-
ilar discoveries were made in many
countries leading to the develop-
ments of these weapons suggests
that it could not have been kept
secret long, if at all.
"You can't change the mind of
man," comments Senator O'Mahoney
(D-Wyo.). "This discovery will not
remain a secret. We must see to it
that it is used for peaceful purposes
and the United Nations organization
is the logical agency to do that."
"Melanesian Pidgin Phrase-Book and
Vocabulary," which was first publish-
ed in 1943 by the United States Armed
Forces Institute of Madison, Wiscon-
sin, has been distributed extensively!
among members of the armed forces
in the southwest Pacific. He is also1
the author of a scientific monograph
on Melanesian Pidgin and an article
on Chinese Pidgin.
Dr. Hall will discuss not only the
types of Pidgin English which are1
used in various parts of the world
but also other pidgin languages and
"creolized" languages that are based
on pidgin tongues.
'Music of Speech'
Alia scheduled by the Institute this
week is a public lecture-demonstra-
tion, "The Music of Speech," 'by Dr.
Kenneth L. Pike, lecturer in phonet-
ics in the Institute.. Dr. Pike, who has
just published a book on the intona-
tion of American English, has an-
nounced that he intends to present
materials of interest to students of
speech, drama, music, English, and
foreign languages.
Dr. Pike has done extensive work
in the recording and analysis of
American Indian languages. He is a
director of the Summer Institute of
Linguistics of Glendale, California,
an organization which trains scholars
to record from native speakers lan-
guages of which no adequate written
descriptions exist. He has also coop-
erated in the preparation of mater-
ials for teaching English to speakers
of other languages at the English
Language Institute.
Fries To Speak
The Linguistic Institute's luncheon
VU'Professors
To Broadcast
rrDuring Week
William C. Trow, professor of edu-
cational psychology, will speak on
"Schools and Character Values," at
2:45 p. m. EWT Monday on WKAR.
Prof. Hereward T. Price of the
English department will talk about
books at 2:15 p. m. EWT Tuesday on
WPAG. "The Jew in Post-War Ad-
justment," to be broadcast at 2:45
p. m. EWT Wednesday, will conclude
Dr. Edward W. Blakeman's series.
The "Adventures in Research" fea-
ture at 2:30 p. m Thursday on
WPAG will be a transcribed pro-
gram, "An Insect Zoo."
Dr. John W. Riegel will give a final
talk on "Looking at Management-
OPA Labor Relations" at 11:15 p. m.
Thursday on WJR.
Jap Prisoners May Lack
News of Surrender Bid
SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 10-(M)-
A large group of Japanese prisoners
obediently went about their duties
at the Army Captive Processing Cen-
er on Angel Island today without
any outward sign that they had
heard of their empire's bid for peace.
They were not officially told of
Nippon's offer to surrender but they
may have heard it "over the fence,"
Maj. John A. Whilock, commanding
officer of the center, said.
Daily, with "no coddling," they
are being shipped out in groups of
150 to 250 to other centers in day
coaches over, the land they had hoped
to conquer.
conference Thursday at the League
will have as speaker Prof. Charles C.
Fries, director of the Institute, who
will speak on "The Work of the Eng-
lish Language Institute."
Thursday evening the Institute will
hold, intead of its usual lecture, a
question and answer program, at
which a panel of members of the In-
stitute faculty will answer questions
on linguistic problems. Questions by
beginners in linguistic study are es-
pecially welcomed, and may be left
any time up to Thursday at the Eng-
lish department office, 3221 Angell
Hall.
Japan ...
(Continued from Page 1)
Army and Navy and solely responsible
for making peace.
Religious Leader
Beyond that, he is the religious
leader of his people-and the Allies
have committed themselves to estab-
lishing freedom of religion in Japan.
The four great powers decreed that
the Emperor must authorize and en-
sure the signing of surrender terms
by the Japanese government and Im-
perial general headquarters.
They said he also must command
all 'armed ,forces to cease operations
and give up their arms-wherever
they are located.
The enemy government was told to
take war prisoners and civilian in-
ternees, as directed, to places where
they can be put quickly on Allied
transports.
Allied Forces To Remain
A final decree was that Allied arm-
ed forces will remain in Japan until
the purposes of the Potsdam declara-
tion are achieved. A million Ameri-
cans may be used for occupation.
With every facility at its command,
the Office of War Information blank-
eted Japan with word of the Allied re-
ply.
All OWI transmitters have been
"lashed together" into a single net-
work, an OWI spokesman said. The
Allied reply is being broadcast every
hour through combined facilities on
;he west coast, Hawaii and Saipan
and is receiving the heaviest play
ever given a news event in a broad-
cast to Japan, he said.
France Asks Association
Late today, France asked formally
to be associated with any surrender of
Japan. She lest Indo-China to ram-
pant hordes of yellow men early in
the Pacific war. The request was filed
orally by Ambassador Henri Bonnet
in a call at the State Department.
Under the surrender terms on
which the Allies are insisting, Japan
would lose all the vast territory she
has grabbed since 1914-Korea in due
course would become free and inde-
pendent; Manchuria, Formosa, and
the Pescadores Islands would be re-
turned to China.
'Starlite Roof' Dance Has
12 Patrons, Chaperones
Patrons for the "Starlite Roof"
dance, held on the terrace of the
Rackham Building Friday were: Dean
and Mrs. Clarence Yoakum, Dean
and Mrs. Peter Okkelberg, Prof. and
Mrs. Howard McKlusky and Prof. and
Mrs. Doland Ketz.
Chaperones were Prof. and Mrs.
Norman Nelson and Prof. and Mrs.
Clarence Thorpe.
Eight awards totaling $500 are of-,
fered campus literary talent in the
annual summer Avery and Jule Hop-
wood writing contests which closes
Friday.
All manuscripts are due in the Hop-
wood room by 4:30 p. m. EWT Fri-
day and winners will be announced
the following week.
Four Fields Open
Four fields of entry are open, with
two prizes of $75.00 and $50.00 to be
given in teach. Judges for the fields,
all members of the English depart--
ment, are Drama and fiction: Prof.
Norman E. Nelson, Prof. Carlton F.
Wells, and Morris Greenhut; Essay;
Prof. Henry V. Ogden, Dr. Edward T.
Calver, and Albert K. Stevens; poet-
i'y: Prof. Bennett Weaver, Rosamond
E. Haas, and Dr. Richard H. Fogle.
Prominent Playwright
.Hopwood, a graduate of the Univer-
sity in 1905, became a prominent
American playwright, the author of
numerous farces and comedies which
made him a millionaire. In his will,
he left a large sum to. his alma
mater to be invested, the income from
Far Eastern
Students To Be
Honored Today
A program to salute our Far East-
ern students on the end of the war
will be held at 8 p. m. EWT today in
the International Center.
Speakers, Refreshments
Speakers and refreshments will
highlight the occasion to which all
Far Eastern students, their friends,
and members of the faculty are in-
vited.
Those who will speak and their
topics are: Dr. S. M. Gale, counsel-
lor to foreign students, whose topic
is "An Old China Hand Greets the
Peace"; Dean James B. Edmonson
of the School of Education whose top-
ic is 'The University Congratulates
the Chinese Students"; and Miss Bet-
ty Chin, a student here from Chung-
king, who will speak on "As a Chi-
nese Girl Saw the War."
Prof Rufus To Speak
Other speakers on the program will
be Prof. W. Carl Rufus, secretary of
Barbour Scholarship Committee,
whose subject is "America, China, and
Korea in the Peace" and Miss Ros-
alie Jhung who will speak on "Korea
at Long Last Free." Miss Jhung is
a native Korean now attending the
University. Last speaker for the eve-
ning will be T. C. Ku, president of
the Chinese Students Club. "What
the War's End Means To Us Chi-
nese" is Ku's subject.
which would be used as prizes to
those who "perform the best creative
work in the fields of dramatic writ-
ing, fiction, poetry, and the essay."
The summer contest is open to stu-
dents of the session and term alike.
Those planning on entering should
secure the statement of rules and reg-
ulations in the Hopwood Room.
Moore To Lead
Orchestra in
Herbert Opera
'Naughty Marietta' To
Be Given This Week
Dr. Earl Moore, head of the music
school, will conduct the orchestra for
the Michigan Repertory Players' last
offering of the season, "Naughty Mar-
ietta."
The School of Music is collaborat-
ing for the eleventh consecutive seas-
on with the Department of Speech
in the presentation of Victor Herb-
ert's popular operetta. "Naughty Mar-
ietta will open Wednesday and play
through Saturday including the Sat-
urday matinee. An additional per-
formance will be given Monday.
Prominent Musician
Dr. Moore has not served as con-
ductor for the Players since their pro-
duction of "Midsummer Nights
Dream"hten years ago. He is recog-
nized throughout the country as one
of the leading figures in music circles.
The Players throughout their hi-
story have presented practically all
of Gilbert and Sullivan's works. Oth-
er operettas seen in recent years in-
clude "The Chocolate Soldier" and
"Hansel and Gretel," Records reveal
that this year's "Naughty Marietta"
will be the first time a Victor Her-
bert score has been done.
Large Cast
The orchestra will support a large
cast of principals and chorus, and
the most elaborate scenery of the
season will be in the background.
Herbert Philippe of the speech de-
partment designed the sets, and Lucy
Barton, costumiere, is in charge of
more than a hundred costumes need-
ed for the performance. Prof. Val,
entine Windt is directing the operetta
and Ivard Strauss and Jack Bender
are technicians.
France Asks Association
WASHINGTON, Aug. 11-0P)-The
French government officially asked
Secretary of State Byrnes today to
be associated with the United States
Russia, Britain and China in the
signing of any act of surrender with
Japan.
ONLY ONCE A YEAR CAN YOU GET
LJOTIONS
Phillips Will Speak .
0 .
Lester H. Phillips of the politi-
cal science department will speak to
the Post-War Council on the "Pots-
dam Conference" at 7:30 p. m. EWT
Tuesday in the Union.
Addressing the final Post-War
Council meeting of the year, Phillips
will outline the significance of the
Potsdam agreement, the basis for
the Japanese surrender offer. He
will discuss the terms of this agree-
ment as they will furnish the basis
for the settlement of peace in both
Europe and in the Pacific.
The public is cordially invited to
attend the lecture.
* * *
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McCracken To S*ng
. . .
Florence McCracken, mezzo-so-
prano, will present a recital in par-
tial fulfillment of the requirements
for the degree of Master of Music
at 8:30 v. m. EWT tomorrow in
Pattengill Auditorium of the Ann
Arbor High School.
Miss McCracken will sing selec-
tions by Debussey, Gluck, Mednikoff,
Dvorak, Rachmaninoff, and others.
A pupil of Arthur Hackett, she is
choir director and contralto soloist
at the Memorial Christian Church.
The public is cordially invited to
attend.
Parr To Lecture . .
LIMITED
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