Long May It Wave! U. 4f t *a D4 atlit- VOL. LV, No. 308 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 15, 1945 PRICE FIVE CENTS I I Victory Brings Joy to Ann Arbor Crowds on Main, Gen. MacArthur Named State Jam Traffic Flag-Decked Cars Hoot Through City; Police Commend Throngs' 'Judgment' Genuine, but n6t unrestrained, joy spread throughout most of down- town Ann Arbor last night following the announcement that the "war was actually over." At 7:05 p. m. EWT The Daily of- flee was flooded with studen'ts who had heard the long-awaited news. There was a general migration to- ward Main St. Between State and Main Streets, a greatconcentration of people on foot and in automobiles caused traffic jams which lasted well into the night. Cars, more cars than are usually seen in this quiet city, drove through the main streets loaded to the roof, displaying flags, bunting and colored streamers. Lining Main Street for this, the celebration of the end of the most horrible war in the history of man- kind, were enthusiastic crowds who, local police said, "seemed to be exer- cising exceptionally good judgment." Sailors and soldiers attached to the University service units sped through streets atop cars, shouting, dancing and kissing girls. Outside the campus area, all was quiet. There were fewer than a dozen people on the streets in the Geddes- Washtenaw section.. Few homes in this section were illuminated. At 9 p. m. the diagonal was almost deserted. The Arboretum was "neglected." A total of one car was parked at the Arb. Two Bonfires Reported The fire department reported two bonfires, but nothing serious. The same sort of report came from the city police. Sheriff's deputies report- Local USO Will Not Close Before June Members of the USQ council have decided to keep open the local club until at least June 30, 1946, unless military personnel are removed com- pletely from the campus before then. The council at a special meeting also approved a 20 per cent reduction of the yearly budget, following a rec- ommendation by the national or- ganization. Chairman Osias Zwerdling will ap- point military personnel and volun- teer workers to a special committee which will determine the future character of the USO program. All-Nations Club Dance Postponed The "Dream Dance" of the All- Nations C~lub, originally scheduled for this Saturday, has been post- poned and will be held from 8:30 p. m. to 12 midnight EWT, Aug. 25, in the small ballroom of the Union, William E. Magnum, chairman of the Club's Music and Dance Commit- tee, announced last night. ed one serious accident at Miller and Maple Rds. A discharged veteran said, "You people don't know what it's all about. You should have been there." Three Chinese boys exclaimed, "We feel jubilant." An Ecuadorian said, "I think the Americans did wonderfully. I felt like an earthquake had burst inside of me." West Quad Roars at News A sailor reported, "A tremendous roar rocked the Quad. as the uncon- ditional surrender was announced." John Rucker, a veteran of the Italian campaign who escaped from an enemy prison camp, now a Law Schoolrfreshman, said, "Myyounger brother can come back now. I'm happy for all mothers." The feeling of everybody here was summarized, simply, by a little three- year-old girl who stood on a corner wide-eyed and said, "The war's over." Franklin H. Littell, director of Lane Hall, added, "The headlines of the last few days indicate how unpre- pared we are 'to win the peace'." "A nation which in war has made the greatest production record in history has yet to prove that it can use that potential for the good life as well as for destruction." Reds Gain 93 Miles Before War Ends LONDON, Wednesday, Aug. 15- (IP)-Russian armored forces plunged 93 miles unchecked across western Manchuria yesterday before an- nouncement that Emperor Hirohito had agreed to surrender. The Red Army was striking toward Harbin and the Japanese puppet capital of Hsinking with lightning- like blows, Moscow said in its com- munique issued several hours before the Soviet radio broadcast that Jap- an had surrendered unconditionally. Supreme Commander WASHINGTON, Aug. 14 -:)- General of the Army Douglas A.4 MacArthur, who told the Filipinos "I will return" and did it, was as- signed tonight to govern the enemy he whipped on the road back. Faculty Of fers Comments On End of War By LYNNE SPERBER In commenting upon the difficul- ties facing us in the post-war period, Dean Joseph A. Bursley said, "The greatest problem is to get back to normal conditions as soon as pos- sible, to take care of the future in- flux of students." Prof. Willett F. Ramsdell, director of the Civil Affairs Training School, said, "I think it is impossible to say categorically that the international or domestic problems are most im- portant." Labor Problems Important "In the international field," he said. "our most important task is to keep the American people hon- estly informed and actively interest- ed in the maintenance of world peace, not just for the next few years, but continuously. In the domestic field," he continued, "I believe our most important problem is the de- velopment of a nationally-applicable formula or program which will pro- vide tolerance and intelligence in the solution of labor-management difficulties." "'This must involvejth edevelop- ment of a sense of justice on the part of both labor and management and include acceptance of the prin- ciple of obligation of the individual to give of his talents to society as well as to receive benefits from so- ciety," Prof. Ramsdell concluded. Japs Must Accept Democracy Prof. Joseph K. Yamigawa, edu- cational director of the Army Jap- anese Lauguage School said, "Intel- ligent and loyal Americans will, I believe, agree that the final purposes of this war are not accomplished See OPINION, page 6 Local Churches To Hold Special Services Today V-J Day Program Also Being Planned Churches in Ann Arbor-will hold special services today to observe the first day of peace. St. Paul's Church, the First Pres- byterian Church and the First Con- gregational Church will conduct ser- vices at 8 p. mn. EWT. Services at the First Methodist Church will be held at 10 a. m. EWT. A special thanksgiving prayer will be offered at the regular Friday even- ing Hillel services. The Ann Arbor Ministerial Asso- ciation will cooperate with the Cham- ber of Commerce in a special pro- gram after an official announcement of V-J Day. TCease Fire' halts Raid on Japan OKINAWA, Wednesday, Aug. 15- (/P)-The electric command to "cease fire" rang throughout the Pacific Island areas today but - first eche- lons of the Far East Air Forces were winging to'Japan on one of the big- gest raids of the war and some could not be reached to be 'called gack. Admiral Halsey, aboard a warship, cautioned his mighty Third Fleet to be on the alert. And 35 minutes after the "cease fire" order was given a Japanesebomber was shot down. "There must be watchful waiting," the Admiral said later from his war- ship in a broadcast. At Manila, General MacArthur, as- signed to accept Japan's surrender, assured: . "I shall at once take steps to stop hostilities and further bloodshed." Superforts, which struck in 800- plane strength for 24 hours ending early today, were ordered grounded along with other planes of the U. S. Army Strategic Air Force before some of them had returned from missions to Japan. Admiral Niinitz at Guam sent out "Cease offensive operations" to the fleet at virtually the same moment President Truman in Washington announced Japan had accepted sur- render terms. Back in Pearl Harbor, where Jap- an's sneak attack Dec. 7, 1941, opened the war, the same air raid sirens which shrieked that day proclaimed the war's end. There one newspaper urged that the formal surrender cer- emony be held aboard one of the warships sunk at Pearl Harbor No classes will be held and all University offices will be closed today in celebration of the end of the war, University officials announced. Official University recognition of the Japanese surrender came at 7:30 a. m. EWT today when the power- house siren sounded a five-minute blast and the French 75 mm. artillery piece in the Law Quadrangle fired a 21-round salute. No All-Campus Celebration No special military ceremonies, all- campus celebrations or services have been planned. University authorities have not yet decided whether a sec- ond University holiday will be de- clared on the official nation-wide V-J Day to be celebrated the day the surrender terms are officially signed. Army units were excusea from su- pervised study last night, and the Japanese languageschool, the JAG school and the medical units will have neither classes nor morning formation today. No Leaves Granted Navy units stood reveille formation. and will have liberty for the day un- til they report at 8:15 EWT today. No out-of-town leaves have been granted for any campus military unit. "Naughty Marietta," produced by the School of Music and the Michi- gan Repertory Players, will open as scheduled at 8:30 p. mn. EWT today. Closing hour for women's resi- dences will be 11 p. m. EWT today, Miss Alice Lloyd, dean of women, announced. Most local stores and restaurants will be closed all day, but beer and wine stores, closed for 24 hours after the surrender announcement by or- der of the State Liquor Commission, will reopen at approximately 8 p. m. Lights in the Burton Memorial Tower, out since the beginning of the war, went on last night. Percival Price, University carillonneur, will present a concert featuring his "Vic- tory Rliapsody" today. The compo- sition was written especially for the end-of-the-war observance, and will be played today and on V-J Day by carillonneurs inrUnited Nations throughout the world. Unhappy Japs GUAM, Wednesday, Aug. 15-(R)- The only unhappy men on. Guam to- day were Japanese prisoners of war held in a camp here. When they learned Japan had con- ceded defeat, they broke into cry- ing and moaning. Siren Salute Blast. 21-Round Herald Holiday 'U' To Suspend All Aetivities, Classes Today MacArthur Made Surrender Chief Signing Terms, Official Proclamation Of V-J Day Remain; Censorship To End By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Aug. 14-The second World War, history's greatest flood of death and destruction, ended tonight with Japan's unconditional surrender. Formalities still remained-the official signing of surrender terms and a proclamation of V-J Day. But from the moment President Truman announced at 7 p. m. EWT that the ehemy of the Pacific had agreed to Allied terms, the worldput aside for a time woeful thoughts of the cost in dead and dollars and cele- brated in wild frenzy. Formalities meant nothing to people freed at last of war. To reporters crammed into his office, shoving now-useless war maps against a marble mantle, the President disclosed that: Potsdam Terms Accepted Without Reservation Japan, without ever being invaded, had accepted completely and with- out reservation an Allied declarption of Potsdam dictating unconditional surrender. General Douglas MacArthur had been designated supreme Allied com- mander, the man to receive surrender. There is to be no power for the Japanese Emperor-Although Allies will let him remain their tool. No longer will the war-lords reign, through him. Hirohito-or any successor-will take orders from MacArthur. Allied forces were ordered to "suspend offensive action" everywhere. The surrender announcement set in motion a-wholechain of events among them: Formal Surrender Being Arranged To a Japanese government which once had boasted it would dictate peace terms in the White House, Mr. Truman dispatched orders to "direct prompt cessation of hostilities," tell MacArthur of the effective date and hour, and send emissaries to the general to arrange formal surrender. The War Manpower Commission terminated all manpower controls. The Navy piled a $6,000,000,000 cancellation of contracts on top of a previous $1,200,000,000 cut in its shipbuilding program. Congress was summoned back to work on Sept. 5, more than a month ahead of schedule, to get busy on unemployment compensation, surplus property disposal, full employment, government reorganization and the continuation or abolition of war agencies. Office of Censorship to Fold Up The Office of Censorship said it was getting ready to fold up. News, radio and mail censorship are due to end on V-J Day. Director Elmer Davis declared the life of the Office of War Informa- tion "soon will be over." A War Production Board official predicted that agency would go out of business once industry is on a solid peacetime basis. War Labor Board Chairman George W. Taylor predicted there would be no epidemic of strikes. Those were developments which on any other night would have com- manded smash headlines. Those developments and surrender capped a week packed with some of history's most stunning news: The first atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Russia's declaration of war, an- other atomic bomb on Nagasaki, Japan's offer to surrender if she could have her Emperor and his sovereign prerogatives, an Allied declaration that he would become merely their instrument. Surrender followed-at an instant when carrier planes of the mighty Pacific Fleet were a few seconds from the targets in the Tokyo area. Pilots eager for a last lick at a weakening foe were reported to have gotten this word from Admiral William F. Halsey, who wants to ride Hirohito's white horse through Tokyo streets: 'Shoot 'Em Down in Friendly Fashion' "It looks like the war is over. Cease firing, but if you see any enemy planes in the air shoot them down in friendly fashion." So tonight there was reason for rejoising. A war-wracked world made the most of it. Three times President Truman had to come out on the White House porch to greet tremendous crowds-75,000 people by official estimate-who jammed the streets and parks around the Executive Man- sion. They jammed so tightly against the iron fence around the White House grounds it looked as if they were coming right on through, despite military police stationed at four foot intervals. No 'Celebration' for Truman The Chief Executive spent half an hour dining with his staff. For him there was no personal celebrating, even with close friends. For days, the national capital had taken surrender reports with com- plete calm and a generous portion of salt. At 7 p. m. EWT, not a minute before or a minute earlier, it gave way to utter abandon. But across the Potomac in the Pentagon Building, nerve center of the Army, there wasn't any jubilation. There was no one left except a couple of bored public relations officers answering phones. * * * * * * ®LATE BULLETINS By The Associated Press NEW YORK, Wednesday, Aug. 15 -(P)- Japanese War linister Korechika Anami has committed suicide, the Japanese Domel Agencyre- ported today. The English-language wireless broadcast was recorded by DOWNTOWN CROWDS GO WILD: Main Street. Throngs cher Chinese Flyers By ART KRAFT Wild pandemonium broke out among the crowds that blocked all north west traffic along Main street as our car, piled high with veterans of the air war in China and flying the flags of the United States and China, threaded our way through the dlown town area. extended his hand to Chang, as a gayly decorated bicycle whizzed past the stalled Liberty street traf- fic. Cars were strung out behind us for blocks on end. Everyone, it seemed was burning that last "A" coupon just to be part of that line. Jimmy Moore, veteran of Chen- an hour earlier, to throw more than a careless glance at the half-track. Firecrackers exploded as we reached .Main street for the third time on our circuitous route. Trucks packed with kids rolled past us, trailing tin cans, whose rattle was hardly audible. Some oldsters, perched on a fire in sight as were scraps of paper' fly- ing in the breeze. On Liberty street, just past the P-Bell, one boy, perch- ed on a man's shoulders, lifted up the Daily banner-"Peace," as an old lady excitedly tinkled a dinner bell at our Chinese entourage. Earlier Clint Caster, proprietor of the Bell told us that his establish-