TWo THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, JULY 8, 1945 All B-29's Return Suful f-rorn C 00 'lane Raid No Jap Planes Challenge Blow By Superforts Nip Anti-Aircraft Fire Is Meager, Inaccurate By The Associated Press GUAM, Sunday, July 8 - Not a single American B-29 was lost in Saturday's 600-plane raid - the fourth in six days against Japan's mainland-which burned and blast- ed five aluminum, oil, rail and in- dustrial centers with 4,000 tons of bombs. No Japanese fighters challenged the raiding mission, probably the largest yet, the 20th Air Force an- nounced today. Anti-aircraft fire was meager and inaccurate. 30 Cities Already Hit The attacks brought to 30 the number of Japanese homeland cities hit by B-29 fire raids. Reconnaisance photographs showed the total area of ruins, now accurately observed in 25 of the cities, had reached more than 126 square miles. Crews of the Superfortresses in Saturday's mission saw fires blazing through clouds far beyond Nippon's majestic Mt. Fuji. The 12,000-foot peak, highest in Japan, reflected towering infernos above the Shimizu aluminum pro- ducing center, Nippon's largest, and the cities of Kofu and Chiba. Hit Oil Refinery Other targets, outside the Mt. Fuji area, were the Maruzen oil refinery, 35 miles southwest of Osaka, and Akashi, aircraft producing city near Kobe. Most spectacular of the conflagra- tions was at Shimizu, 20 miles south- west of Fuji. The flames literally burned the clouds apart, reported Lt. Samuel Hooks of Goldsboro, N. C. He explained the phenomenon was caused by thermal air currents. (Japanese Army and Navy district communiques, as broadcast by Tokyo radio and recorded by the Federal Communications Commission, claim- ed the B-29s struck around midnight Friday and during early Saturday and that fires were under control by dawn. The communiques estimated more than 400 B-29s participated and failed to claim any was shot down. Encounter Light Opposition The returning B-29 crewmen said Japanese fighter opposition was nil and antiaircraft fire generally light. Seventh Air Force Mustang fight- ers from Iwo Jima reported they des- troyed eight Japanese planes and damaged 25 others in a strafing sweep over the Tokyo area and Ky- yshu Island airfields Friday. ussian Club Wdill Meet Tomorrow Students in Russian classes and those interested in Russian culture are invited to attend a meeting of the Russky Kruzhok at 8 p. m. EWT (7 p. m. CWT) tomorrow in the Inter- national Center. At this, the first meeting' for the summer, plans for future programs will be arranged, group singing of Russian songs will be featured and an election of officers to fill vacant summer positions is to be held. ~ VBLIthe Spirit' Tickets on Sale At endelssohn Single admissions for "Blithe Spirit, 'which opens the seventeenth season of the Michigan Repertory Players of the speech department at1 8:30 p. in. EWT Wednesday through, Saturday, will be placed on sale at 10 a. m. tomorrow in the box office of the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. The Players are among the first non-professionals to :e granted per- mission to produce "Blithe Spirit."' (A cablegram to Noel Coward in England brought consent for the re- lease of his recent comedy. Of all the 29 plays, revues, and; operettas written by Coward "Blithe Spirit" has been his greatest success. nter-Allied War Crimes Executive London audiences witnessed for two minals to justice. They hope to years the story of the peace-loving L. to R.: Judge Robert Jackson, husband who finds himself with two 1; M. G. Nikitchcr(o,. deputy pres- wives on his hands at the same time. e French Court of Appeals. One is the practical-minded second ----_ -- - ----_ wife and the other the beautiful, imp- ish shade of his first wife, Elvira. In New York it ran for 87 weeks and the Broadway company went on a thirty-week tour last winter, which - --_ ------------ took it to the Pacific coast Ruth Moyer Waring, M. D., Instructor in Surgery. SCHOOL OF DENTISTRY Cornelius Doezema, D. D. S.. Cli- nical Instructor; Jean Emmanuel GJorup, D. D. S., Clinical Instructor; -- Warren Hebrard Jessop, D. D. S., Cli- nical Instructor; Norman Leroy Lar- The following are the lectures to zelers, D. D. S., Clinical Instructor; be given this week at 3 p.m. EWT (2 Henry Gordon McDermaid, D. D. S., p.m. CWT) in the University High Clinical Instructor; Aloys Charles School auditorium: "The Psychology Metty, D. D. S., Clinical Instructor;: ,, BUTTER IN AUGUST: Revised ar Requirements Allow for Civilian Increase By The Associated Press Civilians will get a little more but- ter for a little less nLion points next month. Tlie Agriculture D p lrtint and Office of Price Administration, in a, joint announcement yesterday. said revised war requirements will make possible an increase of about 12 per cent in the civilian butter supply. The new point value will be an- nounced later. It is expected to be 20 points a pound instead of the cur- rent 24 points, effective July 29. 10,000,000 Pound Increase The August civilian supply will to- tal 90,000,000 pounds. 10,000,000 more than the allotment for each of the last few months. Reflecting somewhat reduced mili- tary requirements and a prospective lower level of production, the govern- ment will require butter makers to set aside only 30 per cent of their August output for war uses. This compares with 50 per cent this month. Decision to lower ration values fol- lowed reports that the conimodity is accumulating in civilian distribution channels. An Associated Press survey showed this to be the situation generally throughout the country. An example was Pennsylvania, where food offi- cials said 1,817,172 pounds were in storage, 854,249 pounds more than last month. Egg Supply Tightened Meanwhile, the egg supply tighten- ed further. With production running below a year ago, the Agriculture De- partment reported that during June and early July, demand exceeded the available current supply by an in- creasing margin. Many grocers limit- ed customers to as little as three eggs each. Live and dressed poultry supplies at terminal markets continued far below trade demands, reflecting heavier consumption nearer points of production. WAR CRIMES EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE MEETS-Members of the I Committee meet in London to set up machinery for bringing war cri: have a detailed setup to present to the prgjected Big Three meeting.I U. S..Supreme Court; Sir David Maxwell Fyfe, British attorney genera ident of the Soviet Supreme Court, and Robert Falco, counsellor of th Unversit Promotions. (Continued from Page 1) SCHOOL OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION Charles N. Davisson, from Instruct- or to Assistant Professor of Market- ing. SCHOOL OF FORESTRY AND CONSERVATION Dow V. Baxter, from Associate Professor to Professor of Forest Path- ology. SCHOOL OF MUSIC Marguerite Hood, from Assistant Professor and Director of Women's Glee Club to Associate Professor of Music Education and Director of Women's Glee Club; Clyde Vroman, from Instructor and Academic Coun- selor to Assistant Professor of Mu- sic Education and Academic Coun- selor. COLLEGE OF ARCHITECTURE AND DESIGN Walter W. J. Gores, from Associate Professor to Professor of Design. SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH Kenneth A. Easlick, Associate Pro- fessor to Professor of Public Health Dentistry; Ella E. McNeil, Associate Professor to Professor of Public Health Nursing; Marguerite F. Hall, Assist- ant Professor to Associate Professor of Public Health Statistics; Gordon C. Brown, from Instructor to Asso- ciate Professor of Epidemiology. PHYSICAL EDUCATION LeRoy M. Weir, Assistant Supervis- or to Associate Supervisor of Physi- cal Education. SCHOOL OF NURSING Esther M. Latimer, from Instructor and Supervisor of Out-Patient De- partment . to Assistant Professor of Nursing and Supervisor of Out-Pa- tient Department. Alfred M. Lovell, from Pro- fessor and Acting Chairman to Professor of Electrical Engineer- ing and Chairman of the De- partment of Electrical Engineering; William M. Worrell from Professor and Acting Chairman to Professor of Semitics and Chairman of the De- partment of Oriental Language andi Literatures; William C. Steere, from Associate Professor of Botany and Research Associate to Associate Pro- fessor of Botany and Curator of Bry- ophytes in the University Herba- rium. Robert S. Heppenstall, from Spe- cial Assistant Professor to Assistant Professor of Mechanism and Engi- neering Drawing; Irene C. Place, from Visiting Assistant'rofessor to Assist- ant to Professor of Secretarial Prac- tice; James D. Prendergast, from Visiting Assistant Professor to As- sistant Professor of Drawing and Painting; Charles W. Spooner, Jr., from Assistant Professor of Mechani- cal Engineering to Assistant Pro- fessor of Mechanical and Marine Engineering; Wilma T. Donahue, from Instructor in Psychology to Lecturer in Physical Education. Emerson F. Greenman, James B. Griffin, and Volney H. Jones from Associate Curators to Curators in the Museums of Anthropology. Rog- er L. Morrison, Professor of Civil Engineering, was appointed Acting Curator of the Transportation Li- brary in the College of Engineering; Allen Douglas Maxwell, Associate Professor of Astronomy, was appoint- ed Acting Chairman of the Depart- ment of Astronomy; Herbert H. Vau- ghan, Instructor in Surgery, was ap- pointed Supervisor of the Blood Bank. Clyde Vroman, Instructor in Education to Lecturer in Education; LeRoy M. Weir, from Instructor in Physical Education to Lecturer in Physical Education. The following new appointments to the rank of instructor also were an- nounced: MEDICAL SCHOOL J. Marion Bryant, M. D., Instruct- or in Internal Medicine; John W. Henderson, M. D., Instructor in Oph- thalmology; Martha Down Jones, M. C., Instructor in Ophthalmology; Dorm Lee Hinerman, M. D., Instruct- or in Pathology; Ned Black Kalder, M. D., Instructor in Surgery; George Ridgway Minor, M. D., Instructor in Surgery; Donald Alexander Pol- lock, M. D., Instructor in Obstetrics and Gynecology; C. Dekle Taylor, M. D., Instructor in Otolaryngology; _____._ , ION SCHOOL NEWS, R I Horace Mann Oren, D. D. S., Clinical' Instructor: Charles Edwin Presnell, D. D. S., Instructor; Ralph Aldrich zelere, D. D. S., Clinical Instructor; Leon Segat, D. D. S., Technical In- structor; Walter Henry Swartz, D. D. S., Clinical Instructor. SCHOOL OF MUSIC Howard Randolph Chase, M. Mus., Instructor in Theory; Ted Manly Evans, Visiting Instructor in Wind Instruments; William David Fitch, M. Mus., Visiting Instructor in Wind Instruments; Theodore Heger, M. Mus., Instructor in Music Literature; Benjamin Owen, B. Mus., Instructor in Piano. Aussie Seventh 0 1 Division Drives On in Borneo MANILA, Sunday, July 8 - UP) - Australian Seventh Division Troops have pushed six miles northeastward beyond the now-secured Borneo oil port of Balikpapan and are thrusting steadily inland from Penadjam Point, across Balikpapan Bay, a Southwest Pacific communique re- ported today. Other elements of the some Aus- tralian division were driving north- ward towards the Sambodja and Samarinda oil fields, 23 miles and 55 miles, respectively, northeast of Balikpapan. Mined roads and artil- lery fire were used by the withdraw- ing enemy to defend these last two important Japanese-held oil areas. of Character, by Harry J. Baker, Director of the Psychological Clinic, Detroit public schools tomorrow; "How to Locate Materials on Specific Educational Problems," by Warren R. Good, instructor in educational psychology, Tuesday; "Contemporary Trends in Foreign Language Teach- ing," by Prof. Charles C. Fries of the English department, We'dnesday; "Health Education Developments in Michigan and Other States," (speak- er to be announced), Thursday; "Teaching as a Dramatic -Art," by William J. Sanders, president, State Teachers College, Fitchburg, Mass., Friday. The organization of the Men's Educaticn Club has been complet- ed and the following officers have been elected: President, E. D. W a g n e r, Superintendent o f Q cheols of Charlevoix; vice-presi- dent, Harry Frieda, Director of Physical Education, Lakeview High School, Chicago; secretary, L. P. Cushman, Superintendent of Schools, Vicksburg; treasurer, H. E. McBride, Principal of Junior High School, Euclid, Ohio; chair- man of the Executive Committee, Eugene W. Larson, teacher of mechanical drafting, Ann Arbor High School. The next meeting of the club will be held Wednesday in the Michigan Union. Prof. Har- ry C. Carver of the mathematics department who has, recently re- turned from Europe will discuss some of his experiences and ob- servations. The Education Club is open to all men in the summer ses- sion. Members of Pi Lambda Theta will meet at 8 p.m. EWT (7 p.m. CWT) Thursday in the West Conference Room of the Rackham Building. Phi Delta Kappa, honor fraternity for men in education, meets regularly at 6:20 p.m. EWT (5:30 p.m. CWT) Tuesdays in the Michigan Union. Members assemble at the desk in the lobby and proceed in a group through the cafeteria to the faculty dining room. The speaker for this Tuesday will be Dr. F. D. McClusky, Director of Scarborough School on the Hud- son. Members of all chapters are in- vited to attend. The Women's Education Club will hold its next meeting at 7:15 p.m. EWT (6:15 p.m. CWT) Wed- nesday in the Michigan League. The program will be arranged by the Planning Committee. Begin- nig this week, a series of Wednes- day luncheons will be held in the Russian Tearoom of the Michigan League. Members of the Institute en School Nursing will be guests at the first luncheon, and Melvin Dollar, Resident Lecturer in Pub- lic Health Economics, will be the spnaker. The Wcmen's Education Club, in cooperation with the Men's Education Club is planning an all-school of Education frolic to be held July 18 in the Women's Athletic Building. * * Tours of University .libraries for all students interested will be con- ducted this Tuesday and Wednesday afternoons. Further information con- cerning these tours may be secured in any of the School of Education libraries. The Michigan State Normal Col- lege is sponsoring two programs of interest to education students. The first will be held Wednesday and Dean James B. Edmonson of the School of Education will preside. Clark Tibbitts, Director of the Insti- tute for Human Adjustment will take part in the program. Thursday a con- ference on. rural education will be held. Both of these conferences are open to the public. The Bureau of Appointments will be open for registration of teachers and prospective teachers at 4:15 p.m. EWT (3:15 p.m. CWT) Monday in Rm. 205 Mason Hall. With reference to this registration Dean Edmonson said, "It is good business for teachers and school . administrators to keep their records with the Bureau up to date. It frequently happens that very desirable positions are lost to candidates whose records do not con- tain recent information." Displays of useful teaching ma- terials in various high school sub- ject fields can be found each week in the University High School lib- rary. This week pamphlets, pic- tures, charts, maps, and recent books of special interest to teach- ers of social studies are being fea- tured. Much free material relat- ing to educational problems has been placed in the library also where students may secure copies. * * * E. E. Giddings of the Grand Rap- ids schools who is state director of the N.E.A. will lecture on "Issues in the Proposed Federal Aid Bill for Education" at 4:15 p.m. EWT (3:15 p. m. CWT) Wednesday in the Univers- ity High School auditorium. * * An extensive exhibit of new text- books will be maintained by the Michigan representatives of the publishers of textbooks and other instructional materials. A special exhibit of the University Library Extension Service will be a feature of the exhibits. L. A Continuous from 1 P.M. COOL! STARTS TODAY! .Ewr11I TE AROUND THE CLOCK WITH WPAG CIJAS.SJFIEDAou:ninN SUN., JULY 8, 1945 8 :00-News. 8:05-Organ Music. 8:15-Salvation Army. '8:30-Frankie Masters. 9:00-News. 9:05-Ralph Ginsburg. 9:30-Ava Maria Hour. 10 :00-News. 10 :15-Edmond Pierson. 10:30-Charlie Barnett. 10:45--Jesse Crawford. 11:00-News. 11:05-First Baptist Church. 12:00-News. 12:05-Mario Morelli. 12:30-Music & Verse. 12:45-Paul Baron. 1:00-News. 1:15-Baseball Brevities. 1:25-Baseball (New York at Det.) 5:00-News. 5:15-Johnny Long. 5:30-Imperial Male Chorus 5:45-Dance Music. 6:00-News. 6:05-Wilson Ames. 6:15-The Bible Hour. 6:30-Concert Hall. 7 :00-News. 7:05-Let's Dance. 7:25-Band of the Week. 7:30-Music for Sunday. 8:00-News. 8:05-Dance Time. 8:15-Howard Farrar. 8:30-Daniel Leiberfeld. 9:00-News. 9:05-Milt Herth Trio. L er ecton z.Modemn Goolin FOR RENT LIVE BETTER permanently in PITTSFIELD VILLAGE. You'll get more out of life -in this permanent community of 422 apartment homes, privately owned and managed, that offers country life with city conven- iences. On Washtenaw Road, be- tween Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti. Parks, playgrounds, school. One-story 2-level arrangements save steps. Elect. refrig., gas stove, two bed- rooms. $52-$62 mo., unfurnished. Model apartment open daily 9 to 6 and Sunday 3 to 6; or phone Ann Arbor 2-6553. WANTED TUTOR WANTED for Spanish I by junior in Engineering School. Michigan Daily Box No. 6. SMALL furnished house or apart- ment by officer and wife for 6 months or less. Call Redford 8962 collect. N 0 W LOST REWARD: For return of wrist watch removed from the Men's Room at Michigan Union on June 21. Watch is Graduation gift of great senti- mental value. Leave at Union Desk or mail to Dave Mulholland, 610 S. Lansing St., Mt. Pleasant, Michigan.I No questions will be asked. LOST: Ladies' wrist watch, platinum. Initials K. C. on back. Waltham, at Whitmore Lake July 4. Reward. Call P. M. Tseng, 6738. LOST: Zippered case with import- ant records in Union. Very neces- sary that it is returned. Call P. M. Tseng, 6738. LOST-Easterbrook fountain pen and silver multicolor mechanical pencil from case. Also eversharp re- peater at Saturday University regis- tration. Call 2-4007. - - ALSO SOMETH ING MUSICALj DIDN'T EAT WAY BROADWAY FARMER LATEST NEWS OF THE DAY Coming! "EXPERIMENT PERILOUS" The Department of Speech Presets The Michigan Repertory Players OPEN TO SERVE YOU Cojfe t e juici 4andtzich e4 * jice & i/b "THE MALE ANIMAL" July 18-21 "QUALITY STREET" Opening Wednesday Night Wednesday thru Saturday 8:30 P.M. "BLITHE SPIRIT" HILARIOUS FARCE by Noel Coward "OVER 21" Aug. 8-11 'NAUGHTY MARIETTA' Aug. 15-20 Aug. 1-4 C1M~t-1 C A "I~CClfAWC Al1 PI AVC fnM. Al r PTf "tfD~ftW I ~11UiYLL u u'