,.. CLOUDY WARM Li, Sw 43UU DaitV NAVY OFFICER See Page 2 VOL. LV, No. 32S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, AUGUST 18, 1945 PRICE FIVE CENTS Jap FWA Envoys Leave for Manila * * * * To Grant Loan for New * * * G 'U' Building $25,000 Given for Construction of Business Administration School To Be First on Priority Plans Following Completion of Service Building, Dormitories The Federal Works Agency has authorized a $25,000 loan for the University to help finance the plan- ning of the proposed School of Busi- ness Administration building, it was learned last night. FWA Loan Announcement Announcement of the FWA loan came just two weeks after the Uni- versity was granted a total of $29,663 for planning construction of the Fre- a ke For 'U' Officials To Be Erected Briggs Reports Early Completion of Plans Plans for University General Ser- vice Building will be completed by Jan. 1, 1946 and "construction on the project will begin as soon after that date as building materials are avail- able," Robert P. Briggs, University vice-president in charge of finances, disclosed last night. Service Building The state legislature has approp- riated $1,500,000 for construction of the Service Building which will be used for University administrators' and the Board' of Regents' offices. The Service Building will extend from the Union to Newberry Hall. Under the plan Jefferson St. will be blocked off. Officials Listed Included among the officials to be housed in the Service Building will be: the President, Provost Registrar, Vice-Presidents; Secretary and the Literary College Deans. The University News Service, the Extension Service, the Bureau of Appointments and Occupational In- formation, the Bureau of Coopera- tion, the Office of the Summer Ses- sion and the Business Offices will also be housed in the Service Building. Offices now in Angell Hall and University Hall which are scheduled to be moved into the Service Build- ing will be converted into classrooms or abandoned altogether, Briggs pointed out. 'U' Hall To Be Razed Along with the construction of the Service Building is the expected raz- ing of University Hall. Briggs indicated that construction plans on four other University post- war projects are going ahead with one of the major bottlenecks "prior- ities on building material" still a for- midable problem. War Crimes Trial Hastened LONDON, Aug. 17-(P)-The Unit- ed States, Britain, Russia and France today sent legalsrepresentatives to Nuernberg to hasten preparations to bring Germany's top war criminals to justice in the first mass trial. The Nuernberg jail already houses about 15 of the major defendants, among them Herman Goering, and others will be transferred to the one- time Nazi shrine city from other pris- oner of war camps, said Navy Lt. Arnold Dean, spokesman for Supreme Court Justice Robert H. Jackson. Argentine Abolishes Censorship of News BUENOS AIRES, Aug. 17-(P)-The Argentine government abolished the censorship of incoming and outgoing news effective today. CAMPUS EVENTS Today "Naughty Marietta" will be presented by the Mich- igan Repertory Players at 2:30 p. m. EWT and 8:30 p. m. EWT in the Lydia quency Modulation radio broadcast- ing station and the married students housing project. Exact site of the Business Admini- stration building has not yet been determined by the Board of Regents, but Dean Russell A. Stevenson, Dean of the School said that "it probably would not be constructed on the present school site. First Building The new Business Administration building, first on the University's pri- ority list following the construction of the Service Building, and apart from the dormitory projects, was de- scribed by Dean Stevenson as "a de- parture from classical architectural designs." The proposed project will be di- vided into two units, Dean Stevenson said. A three story building will house classes and laboratories while a nine- story addition will be used for faculty offices, the Bureau of Business Re- search, and the Bureau of Industrial Relations. Estimated Cost Estimated cost of building equip- ment and the site has been set at $1,500,000, Dean Stevenson disclosed. Present construction plans for the married students housing project call for eight buildings, each to contain 22 apartments. The buildings will accommodate approximately 350 res- idents. More than $23,000 of the first FWA allocation was made for planning the apartments which are expected to cost $832,900. With the site for the apartments already selected, construction is scheduled to start as soon as "quality materials are available." New F-M Station The new F-M station is to be part of the proposed Michigan Educational Radio Network now being developed by the State Department of Public Instruction. It will consist of four basic stations to be located in Ann Arbor, Cadillac, Houghton, and Mani- stique. Ann Arbor is expected to be the key station and therefore a large propor- tion of sustaining programs for the entire network will originate at the University. Pearl Harbor Files Requested By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Aug. 17-Chair- man Walsh (D.-Mass.) of the Senate Naval Affairs Committee asked the Navy today to give Congress a look at results of its investigation of Japan's sneak punch on Pearl Har- bor. The Navy held up its answer. Walsh wrote Secretary of the Navy Forrestal: "With the war in Japan ended, the explanation of military expediency, which Congress agreed to be desir- able while the war was in progress, cannot be seriously urged as reason for now keeping the matter secret." In addition to copies of the files, Walsh asked Forrestal for his ideas about making the Pearl Harbor re- ports public. The Navy department said the Sec- retary had not yet replied and that it had nothing td say until he did. Veterans Will Meet for Picnic Veterans and their guests who plan to go on the Veterans Organization picnic are requested to meet at 2 p. m. EWT today in front of Lane Hall. The picnic will be held at Island Park. In case of rain, the picnic will be held at the same time tomorrow. Petain Sentenced to Life Imprisonnient PARIS, Aug. 17-( )-Gen. De Gaulle commuted to life imprison- New Bomber Eclipses -29, Arno Reveals Pictures Weapons of Science in Future War By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Aug. 17-Gen. H. H. Arnold revealed today that the United States has a new Super-Bomb- er far eclipsing the B-29. He also predicted that any future war would bring out in full maturity terrible weapons of science now developing. With its striking range of 5,000 miles or more from base-perhaps two to two and a half times that of the Superfortress-the Air Forces chief said theanew air giant leaves no place in East Asia out of reach from existing U. S. bases in the West- ern Pacific. Atlantic Area As to the Atlantic area, he said at a news conference "use your own im- agination." At the same time, Arnold disclosed that the Air Forces already have in experimental stages rocket bombs which will "home" on their targets in reaction to heat, light or metal. And a year ago, he said, "we were guiding bombs by television from a plane 15 miles away." He asserted that the new atomic bomb already "changes the strategy for making the world safe for America." Buck Rogers Conception Couple these developments, he said, "and you have a Buck Rogers con- ception of war." He predicted the next war, if there is one, will see these weapons in use: 1-Manned or pilotless aircraft tra- veling at speeds faster than sound. "Aerial combat as we know it-fight- ers seeking out other fighters or bombers and exchanging gunfire in attempt tonshoot each other down- will disappear," he said. Guided Missiles 2-Guided missiles capable of mak- ing exact hits on targets a mile square or less in any part of the world. 3-More powerful atomic bombs, "destructive beyond the wildest night- mares of the imagination." 4-New defense weapons, such as a target-seeking rocket which will automatically strike and destroy the super-sonic planes or guided missiles. 5-Better techniques of launching, landing and supplying airborne forces who' can be dropped anywhere in the world "within a matter of hours." Dean Speaks at Linguistic Meet Farewell Banquet Held For South Americans The English Language Institute serves a useful purpose not only by teaching English and promoting an understanding of the life of the Unit- ed States among students from Latin America, but also by enabling people gathered together from many Latin American nations to learn more about one another's countries, declared Dean Hayward Keniston at the fare- well banquet of the Institute last night at Victor Vaughan House. Cultural Attache The Dean, who was cultural attache at the United States embassy at Buenos Aires from 1942 to 1944, said that he hoped the graduates of the two months intensive course would feel the same nostalgia for Ann Ar- bor that he felt for Buenos Aires, but warned them that they should dis- criminate between the good and the bad features of the customs of the United States. Dr. Egidio Orellana, of the Insti- tuto Pedagogicoin Chile, who has been observing the work of the In- stitute, Prof. C. C. Fries, the director, and Miss Margaret Moye, of the In- stitute staff, also spoke. Sixty Graduates Dr. Victor Grossi, of Chile, and Dr. Alberto Carneiro, of Brazil, spoke on behalf of the sixty graduates, most of whom are doctors of medicine or doctors of public health who will now take post-graduate medical work in various universities and hospitals of the United States. By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Aug. 17-Archi- bald MacLeish, poet-librarian, and Julius C. Holmes, soldier-diplomat, resigned today as assistant secretaries of the State Department. Their resignations, accepted by President Truman with words of thanks for their service, followed swiftly on another important State Department change. Only yesterday Mr. Truman ac- Gen. Lerch Will Speak at CATS Commencement Speculation Concerns Stay of Fourth Class Maj.-Gen. Archer L. Lerch, Army provost marshal general, will address the hundred Army and Navy officers of the third class, Civil Affairs Train- ing School, Far Eastern Area, at commencement exercises to be held at 10:30 a. m. EWT today at the Rackham Lecture Hall. With the alerting yesterday of al- most the ehtire officer complement of the School, there is some specula- tion as to whether the Fourth Class, scheduled to complete the 26-week course in military government in Oc- tober, will finish their program. A Comprehensive Program Opened here last year to train Allied officers for the occupation of the Japanese home islands, the CATS have offered a comprehensive pro- gram which includes, besides an in- tensive study of written and spoken Japanese and a study of that na- tion's institutions, training in com- munications, public health, educa- tion, finance, transportation, public safety and sanitation. Thirty-six of today's graduates have been trained in civil censorship and, according to the School's direc- tor, Dr.. Willett F. Ramsdell, these officers will censor cable, telephone and telegraph messages in Japan. Are To Help Govern Japan The remaining 64 officers have been trained to govern Japan under her new boss, Supreme Allied Com- mander Gen. Douglas MacArthur. Col. Stephen A. Park, associate di- rector of the School, will introduce Gen. Lerch, who will speak to the graduates of their new overseas duties. Dr. Hayward Keniston and Dr. Ramsdell will be guests of the Third Class at today's exercises. cepted the resignation of Under-Sec- retary of State Joseph C. Grew and the choice of Assistant Secretary Dean G. Acheson to succeed him. Secretaryships to Fill Thus Mr. Truman and his new Secretary of State, James F. Byrnes, have three assistant secretaryships to fill with new appointments. Holmes and MacLeish were both members of the "team" which took office last December when Edward R. Stettinius, then a new secretary of state, reorganized the department. MacLeish, 53 - year - old Pulitzer Prize-winning poet, resigned as Li- brarian of Congress to become the State Department's assistant secre - tary in charge of cultural and public relations. He was the first to have such a title. MacLeish's Career In 1941, MacLeish became director of the Office of Facts and Figures, forerunner of the Office of War In- formation. In his State Department post, Mac- Leish concentrated on acquainting the American public with the pro- grams for world economic and politi- cal cooperation. MacLeish has told friends he was eager to retire from public service at the close of the war to devote his full time to writing. The 47-year-old Holmes left the Civil Affairs Staff at Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower's headquarters in France and put aside his brigadier general's uniform to become assistant secre- tary in charge of administration in December. Communists Def y Chunking. Chinese Reds Continue To Collect Jap Arms By The Associated Press CHUNGKING, Aug. 17-Commu- nist defiance of Gen. Chiang Kai- Shek reached new heights today, but indications were that Chiang's troops soon would regain control of Nan- king and Shanghai. Communist Gen. Chu Teh issued orders to Lt. Gen. Yasuji Okamura, Commander in Chief of the Japanese Expeditionary Forces in China, re- questing the surrender to the Com- munists of all Japanese forces "ex- cept those troops' of your command surrounded by the Kuomintang (cen- tral government) armies." This was in conflict with the in- structions issued by Chiang's war zone commanders to Japanese troops to cease military activities immediately and to await further instructions. (A Tokyo broadcast recorded by the Associated Press quoted Okamura as saying his forces were "already in a state' of cessation of hostilities," but that part of the Chungking army was continuing its attacks on the Japanese.) Chu Teh asked also that the Japa- nese surrender their planes and war- ships to the Communists. 5 More Dailies The Daily will be published Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday of next week. Publi- cation will then be discontinued until the beginning of the fall semester, Thursday, Nov 1. MacLeish, J. C. Holmes Resign As Assistant Secretaries of State Tomorrow MacArthur Hastens Dispatch of Delegates Negotiations at Manila Will Be Preliminary To Formal Signing of Peace Agreement By The Associated Press MANILA, Saturday, Aug. 18-Japan advised General MacArthur early today that its surrender delegation had been selected and would leave for Manila tomorrow. Prodded by a brusque note from MacArthur to quit its stalling tactics, which had carried over two days, and get on with the peace negotiations, Tokyo acted without further delay. MacArthur's headquarters announced at 2:45 a. in. (2:45 p. m. EWT Friday) that the desired information had been received from the enemy capital. Delay Necessary, Japs Say The Tokyo message was brief. It said the delegation could not leave until Sunday "due to necessary internal procedure" and promised further details would follow. In Manila the Japanese delegation will hear what it must do before sur- render articles are signed and the Al- lied occupation forces march into Nippon. Site Undetermined Where that surrender might be signed still was conjectural. Details were being worked out. An Associated Press dispatch from Guam, saying that Admiral Nimitz had been appointed by President Tru- man as a United States represent- ative, suggested a battleship in Tokyo Bay was the "logical scene." Note Is Effective The Supreme Commander's curt message also may have sped the de- parture from Tokyo of three imperial parties carrying cease fire orders to field commanders, who were expected to be told some time today that they must lay down arms. They left for Manchuria, China and French Indo-China by plane yester- day under safe conduct. Only a few hours later 10 Japanese fighters and fierce antiaircraft fire greeted four unescorted U. S. heavy bombers on a photo mission over the same gen- eral area from which the enemy planes took off. Two Japanese planes were believed destroyed, and one bomber was shot up although none of its crew was in- jured. Planes Fired On Two Lightning fighters on sepa- rate reconnaissance flights over the southern island of Kyushu also were fired upon by ground batteries the same day. This sort of thing was trying to Allied patience, coming as it did close on Tokyo's report without apology to MacArthur that Japanese planes had attacked 12 Allied transport ships, probably inflicting some damage, when they approached "extremely near" the coast of the home island of Shikoku Thursday a few hours before the Emperor issued the cease fire or- der. Nips Surrender In Manchuria LONDON, Aug. 17-(P)-Japanese troops began to surrender in Manchu- ria today, with 20,000 laying down their arms, but there was no letup in the Red Army's relentless drive closing in on the great city of Har- bin from three sides, Moscow said to- night. The Japanese armies were appar- ently continuing their resistance, de- spite the ultimatum from Marshal Alexander M. Vasilevsky to surrender by noon Monday. Enemy strongpoints fell rapidly to the Russians, whose armed columns were stabbing through whatever re- sistance the Japanese could build up. Driving down the main railway line leading southeast to .Harbin through the Khingan foothills, one Red Army column advanced more than 100 miles from previously reported positions and captured Pokotu and Chalantun, the latter 240 miles northwest of Har- bin. Japs Are Told Homeland Will Be Occupied Domei News Agency Gives Nips Foretaste By The Associated Press SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 17-Dome Agency told the Japanese people to- day their sacred homeland would be occupied by the Allied powers after the final "cease fire" order was given, and that they must "extend all ac- commodations" to the conquerors. A Japanese language broadcast beamed throughout the Orient and recorded by the Federal Communica- tions Commission for the first time gave the people a foretaste of what occupation would mean, including the loss of sovereignty. "By this cease-fire agreement," Do- mei said, "the four powers of the United States, Great Britain, Soviet Russia and China will land on our homeland, and we must, extend all accommodations to the occupying forces, such facilities s transporta- tion, living quarters and food sup- plies." But, Domei added, since the Allies would not land as "combat units" the "United States forces will not directly commandeer our food supplies, liv- ing quarters and such peoples' neces- sities, or seize funds in the banks. It is needless to hold any misgivings on these points." Jap Premier Assumes Duties Hints of Nip Ambitions In Far East Linger SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 17-(AP)- Japan's new premier assumed his peace government duties today with orders for strict military observance of the Imperial order to ground arms but there were official and press hints of lingering Nipponese ambitions in East Asia. Gen. Prince Naruhiko Higashi-Ku- ni, first Imperial prince to lead the nation's civilian government, an- nounced a three-point basic policy of reconstruction, control of the mili- tary and enforcement of order, at his cabinet's first meeting, said Domei, the Japanese agency, in a Tokyo broadcast. First official act of Higashi-Kuni who holds the War Minister portfolio as well as being Premier, was to order the army to "strictly observe" Em- peror Hirohito's rescript to quit fight- ing, Domei said in the broadcast mon- itored by the Federal Communica- tions Commission. Co-&Hop To Be Held Tonight Co-Hop, an, outdoor street dance, sponsored by the Inter-Cooperative Council, will be held from 9 p. m. to midnight EWT today in the drive- way behind University Hall. Kaeti Boenheim, chairman of the dance, said, "Couples, stags and un- escorted girls are invited. It is an opportunity to get acquainted." Tickets for the dance are 25 cents per person. Booths will be placed around the driveway where refresh- ments wil be served. 'The mninirf Tarv Ja lax ~C, (l~1 Red-U. S. War Called Unlikely A future war between the United States and Russia is highly improb- able since Russia today is no longer a missionary of revolution and since her foreign policy aims have either been attained recently or are within her grasp by peaceful means, Prof. Andrew Lobanov-Rostovsky declared yesterday in a talk at the Hillel Foun- dation. Because of this, Prof. Lobanov con- siders the anticipations by some Americans of such a war to be un- founded. He believes, rather, that Russian need for aid from the United States in order to develop herself in- ternally should help bring about peaceful cooperation between the world's two most powerful nations. ABOUT THOSE STEAKS: Early End to Meat Rationing Seen. WASHINGTON, Aug. 17-(P)-An early end to meat rationing, per- haps next month, was foreseen as possible today by the nation's food chief. Secretary of Agriculture Anderson, said in an interview that he believes supply and demand warrant a quick end. He has authority to order that action. After checking prospective non-civilian requirements for the remainder of the year, Anderson said it appears that the civilian supply of cattle, hog sending any considerable quantities of meats to war-liberated areas. 3. Prospects of a decline in civilian demand due to unemployment of dis- placed war workers. 4. A desire by farmers to reduce livestock numbers before demands