, Tw1w 4f[tr Ig"n 'lit; WEATHER Fair and Warmer Slight Winds VOL. LV, No. 8-S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, JULY 13, 1945 PRICE FIVE CENTS Four Japanese Cities Pounded by B-29's 'U' Foreign Students Address >> SOIC Rally Held at Lane Hall -6. In Behalf Expresses of 'U' Administration, Hopes for Success of Dean Lloyd Project Marine,. Navy Planes Smash Factories and Rail Terminals Kenney Promoted To Top Air Commander Moves Advanced Headquarters to Okinawa By The Associated Press GUAM, July 13, Friday-More than 500 B-29s spilled 3,000 tons of fire and demolition bombs before dawn today on a Tokyo Bay oil center and four Japanese cities after Marine and Navy planes had battered a big naval air station, factories and rail lines at the south end of the daily- pounded enemy homeland. Shortly after the 21st Bomber Command disclosed the sixth Super- fortress strike in 13 days at Nippon, Fleet Headquarters reported a "strong flight" of Marine Corsairs tore into< One-hundred fifty people assembled at Lane Hall last night to hear speakers from foreign nations tell of conditions in their native lands. Sponsored by the Student Organization for International Cooperation, the rally was held to welcome Jack Gore, who is back from the Washington Youth Conference, and to initiate plans for the ,adoption of a foreign university. Opening the program, Dean Alice Lloyd, representing the University administration said, "I want this to be one of the most representative move- Taft Opens , Fight Against Bretton Woods Barkley Favors Plan To Avoid Past Errors By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, July 12-Opening a Senate'floor fight against the Bret- ton Woods agreements, Senator Taft (R.-Ohio) declared today the pro- posed Interndtional Bank would be- come a "device for draining our sav- ings out of the United States for the benefit of the rest of the world." Barkley Replies He drew an immediate reply from Majority Leader Barkley (D.-Ky.) who said the agreements represent 'at least a fair chance" of avoiding the sort of mistakes made after the last war. These mistakes, he said, led to the 1929 depression. "No nation can preserve prosper- ity for itself if there is chaos in the rest of the world," the Kentuckian asserted. Officially, the legislation for Amer- ican participation in the Interna- tional Monetary Fund and the Inter- national Bank, proposed in the agree- ments, will not reach the Senate floor until Monday. ..It has passed the house. 5,000-Word Speech Taft opened the fight ahead of time with a 5,000-word prepared speech against the proposed $9,100,- 000,000 bank 'U. S. subscription $3,175,000,000). He said he would deal in detail later with the $8,800,- 000,000 international stabilization fund (U. S. quota $2,750,000,000). Union To Hold Mixer Saturday 'Best music on record' will be play- ed at the first Union mixer of the summer term to be held from 2:30 to 5 p. m. EWT (1:30 to 4 p. m. CWT) tomorrow in the ballroom of the Union, Paul John, social committee chairman, has announced. "Although we have not definitely planned any Union dances for the summer," John said, "if enough people show interest in the mixer we will arrange for a series of dances, both indoor and outdoor." A strictly stag affair, the mixer offers an opportunity for new stu- dents on campus to get acquainted with sophomores and upperclassmen. USO Hostesses To Meet on July 22 Please disregard the USO notice in yesterday's Daily. The meeting will be held at 4 p. m. EWT (3 p.m. CWT) July 22, in the USO ball- room. All junior hostesses are required to attend this meeting unless a written excuse is filed by 4 p. m. of that day in the USO office. Girls failing to attend or give written excuses will be permanently dropped from the club. -uments the University haspever had. Students have the support of the University in any project which will enlarge our vision and help students of other lands." Ting Chang Ku, president of the Chinese Students Club, described the odessey of the students of the University of Tsing Hua as they moved from Peiping to Chang Sha to Kunming, on foot, by boat and by bicycle. Relating the life of these students he entered a plea for help to his countrymen. Madame Lila Pargment of the Rus- sian department traced the history of the education movement in Rus- sia. She told how learning continued, even during the siege of Leningrad when starvinghstudents worked in basements to gain their precious edu- cation. "The students are beginning to rebuild now, brick by brick. Let's help them to finish building." Father Sophacles cited our indebt- edness to Greece as the cradle of knowledge, asking aid for the Univer- sity of Athens. "Out of the war have come youth movements of which American youth knows little about," Gore said. He stated the principle points discussed at the Youth Conference as the maintenance of peace, the needs of youth, the rehabilitation of devastated countries and racial. equality. "After the 63 day uprising in War- saw in 1944, not a building was left of the University," Stefani Albrecht of Poland said. "The University of Warsaw is non-existent in the physi- cal sense, but in an idealistic sense it still exists in the minds of those who hope to rebuild it." "French students can't believe that they are no longer under the German occupation," Pierre Raynaud said. "Americans can give the French people the feeling that they are free again, which is as important as any material aid." "Adopting a university is only the framework in which to solve the problem of the rehabilitation of Europe," Max, Dresden of Holland asserted. "The people need hope and guidance in the gaining of faith in their own ability to solve their problems." U.S., Britain 'Invade' Br lin BERLIN, July 12-P)-The United States and Britain took over control of 12 of Berlin's 20 boroughs from the Russians today and American counterintelligence officers immedi- ately began examining Soviet-ap- pointed German administrators and policemen to weed out possible Nazis. The American officers indicated that efficient Russian-named civil servants would be retained regard- less of whether they were Commu- nists or Social Democrats or had oth- er non-Nazi affiliations. U. S. units which had been wait- ing since midnight of July 4 to take over moved into their occupation1 zone at 9 a. m., and British officers assumed control at noon. American truck convoys were organized to feed 750,000 Berliners, while the Britishi accepted responsibility for 900,000 in their zone. THESE MEN WILL RULE BERLIN-These four generals-Berlin's "kommandanture"--will take over the government of the bomb-shattered capital of Germany. Left to right are Major Gen. Floyd L. Parks, of the U. S.; Col. Gen. Alexander V. Gorbatov, of Russia; Major Gen. L. 0. Lyne, of Britain, and Major Gen. Geoffrey deBeauchesne, of France. The four will rotate as head of the group, serving 15-day terms in that capacity. I Former Grid Star Is a 'Nursemaid' "Nursemaid to a bunch of women" is the job of Lt. Edward W. Czak, rough-and-tumble foot- ball player here back in 1942, T. Hawley Tapping, general secre- tary of Alumni Association, point- ed out yesterday. The 1942 graduate is resident officer at the Atlantic Hotel, Casa- blanca, which is reserved for women only. "Sooo, there I am alone with 60 women. What a war this has been for me-from a foxhole in Italy to a luxurious hotel room in Casa- blanca," he wrote to Robert O. Morgan, assistant secretary of the, Association. Chinese 1Troop .recover U.S. Bomtber .base By The Associated Press CHUNGKING, July 12-Chinese! troops pushing beyond Liuchow-re- covered U. S. bomber base which was turned into a mammoth booby trap by the retreating Japanese-are driv- ing toward Yungfu, 30 miles from Kweilin, site of another abandoned air field, the Chinese command said today. The "most elaborate mining and booby trapping of the whole eight years of war in China" was found at Liuchow's airfield, indicating that "the further the Japanese retreat toward their chosen major battle position, the rougher the pursuit will become," an Associated Press dispatch from Liuchow de- clared. Chinese headquarters meanwhile announced a setback on the South China coast where the Japanese cap- tured Tinpak, 170 miles southwest of Canton. The Chinese also said ene- my forces at Dong Dang just inside the Indo China border had made repeated attacks against Chinese frontier positions 75 miles northeast of Hanoi, but asserted these thrusts were repulsed. The high command said its troops moving up the Hunan-Kwangsi rail- road from Liuchow had scored fur- ther gains toward Kweilin, and had FREE AT RACK HAi1I: 'Beethoven Concerto ',Red Films Wll Be Shown Today The "Beethoven Concerto" is being presented to the campus by the Sum- mer Session Office at 8230 p.m. EWT (7:30 p.m. CWT) today and tomor- row in the Rackham Auditorium. Accompanying the Russian feature are two shorts, "The Red Army Chorus," and the "Swan Lake Bal- let." There is no admission charge. The "Bethoven Concerto" is a musical concerning a children's national music contest in Moscow. The plot revolves around the prob- lem of a music professor who hopes to see his son win the contest. However, one of his other pupils is more talented than his son and in a weak moment the professor discon- tinues his lessons, blaming Vladick, the more talented of the two for an injury to his son's hand which was caused during the children's play. Young Vladick is heartbroken, and in a moment of rage he throws the professor's Beethoven cadenza in a locomotive. His sister recruits the childaen of the neighborhood and v ith the help of a very talented dog te music is found. The children try to help Vladick get his lessons via a radio-tele- phone contraption. The professor, Truman Heads For C mf erence Big Three To Meet in Potsdam Next Week ABOARD THE CRUISER AUGUS- TA WITH PRESIDENT TRUMAN, July 12 - () - President Truman neared Europe tonight for a confer- ence which will cover so many prob- lems that it may last longer than any previous "Big Three" session...-.. Meeting is Scheduled It was revealed aboard this war- ship that the conversations with Prime Minister Churchill and Pre- mier-Generalissimo Stalin in con- quered Potsdam will get under way Monday or Tuesday of next week. The President was reported con- vinced that the meeting on Berlin's outskirts will outlast those of Que- bec, Teheran and Yalta. The Yalta meeting lasted eight days. Except for the date of the meet- ing itself, Mr. Truman's schedule still was kept secret for security reasons. Reach Antwerp Sunday (From Belgium, however, it was re- ported that the presidential party was due to reach Antwerp Sunday enroute to Potsdam. The 137th Regi- ment of the 35th Division arrived in Antwerp today to serve as honor guard. Mr. Truman served with the 35th as an artillery officer in World War I, and it was at his request that. the troops from that outfit drew the assignment.) Bi Battle Rages PastBalkpapan MANILA, July 13, Friday-(1')-A violent battle beyond Balikpapan was reported today with Australian and Dutch troops wielding flame-throw- ers in an attempt to encircle formid- able Japanese ridge positions north of the captured Borneo oil port. At the same time, a one-mile ad- vance east of Baliknaann was scored repenting his foolishness, offers to take Vladick back. Vladick in the meantime has writ- ten his own cadenza which is superior to the professor's. In Moscow, he can- not pass the preliminaries because of the feeling of insecurity resulting from the lost lessons, but the pro- fessor's son passes and plays Vla- dick's cadenza. The film ends happily with both children winning the con- test together. Milli Delieries To Be Resumed Today in Detroit By The Associated Press DETROIT, July 12-Milk deliveries to some 130,000 families whose sup- ply was cut off four days ago by a strike are scheduled to be resumed Friday. Elsewhere on the labor front, how- ever, the outlook was less encourag- ing as 4,100 workers were idle in dis- putes. The strike of United Dairy Work- ers (CIO) members at the Detroit Creamery Co. and the Ebling Creamery Co. actually was ended Wednesday but company spokes- men said processing of raw milk required nearly two days before deliveries could be resumed. When the walkout began Monday, union officials said office workers were protesting failure of three branch managers doing cashier work to join the union. Inside dairy work- ers and truck drivers later left their jobs in sympathy. The number of idle tonight includ- ed 2,900 employes of the Graham- Paige Motors Corp., 500 at the Amer- ican Metal Products Co. and 700 AFL workers at 12 lumber yards. Total Casualties To Date Are Revealed WASHINGTON, July 12 - () -- Combat casualties reported by the armed forces during the war rose to 1,049,104 today with the Navy turn- ing in its heaviest weekly increase in months. The total was 12,167 higher than last week. The Navy chalked up 7,846 of the rise-nearly double the Army increase of 4,321. The aggregate-915,718 for the Army and 133,386 for the Navy-in- cluded 243,165 killed, 635,839, wound- ed, 48,777 missing and 121,323 prison- ers. the Kanoya Naval Air Station on Kyushu the day before. On the same day, Navy search planes destroyed a factory, damaged another and wreck- ed rail traffic on eastern Kyushu. In Touch with Fleet (A dispatch from the cruiser Au- gusta taking President Truman to the Big Three Conference said the Chief Executive was in touch hourly with the powerful U. S. Third F leet off Japan. (Building up toward "the air satu- ration of Japan," Gen. Douglas Mac- Arthur announced at Manila that his veteran air leader, Gen. George C. Kenney had become top tactical air commander and had moved advanc- ed headquarters of the Far Eastern Air Force to Okinawa.) Along a 480-mile strip from the southern island of Shikoku north- ward to an industrial city 60 miles north of Tokyo, the sky giants dump- ed their cargoes of destruction, bring- ing to nearly 18,000 tons the weight of bombs they have unloaded on Japan since July 1. Oil Center Smashed The big Kawasaki oil center on a reclaimed island in Tokyo Bay, pre- viously hit in an April raid, was the target of demolition bombs. The four industrial cities, all raid- ed for the first time, were showered with incendiary bombs in the same sort of saturation attack that has been erasing Japan's war industries one by one. They were: Utsonomiya;, industrial city of 80,000 population 60 miles north of Tokyo. Ichinomiya, west of Tokyo and nine miles northwest of the often-bombed munitions city of Nagoya. Tsuruga, 55 miles northwest of Na- goya on the coast of the main home island of Honshu. Teamwork That Paid Off Uwajima, on the west-central coast of the southern home island of Shi- koku. The blows on the home islands coincided with new successes by U. S. air blockaders in the Yellow Sea and came close to the heels of heavy strokes at the empire climaxed by a 1,000 carrier plane raid on Tokyo's air fields. * * * Carrier Raid Kept a Sec ret GUAM, July 12, Thursday-(P)- Heightening the mystery of where the big U. S. Third Fleet will hit next, Adm. Chester W. Nimitz an- nounced today that no further in- formation has pierced the radio blackout concerning the 1,000-plane carrier strike at more than 70 Japa- nese airfields Tuesday. Instead, he reported the setting afire of three cargo ships off the China coast by search privateers of Fleet Air Wing one that same day; told of Marine aircraft assaults Mon- day and Tuesday in the northern Ryukyus; and confi'rmed previous Okinawa reports that some 200 raid- ers plastered airfields on the south- ern Japanese island of Kyushu. Plea Is Made For Immediate OK of Charter Vandenberg Expects Hearing Completion By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, July 12-Groups claiming millions of members today filled the Senate Foreign Relations Committee record on the United Na- tions Charter with pleas for quick ap- proval. Senator Vandenberg (R.-Mich.) said he thought the hearings could be comhpleted tomorrow. Ask Ratification In addition to a stream of witnes- ses asking Senate ratification of the San Francisco charter, the committee put on record piles of favorable let- ters and telegrams from labor, pro- fessional, veterans, church and women's organizations. Vandenberg predicted that the committee will be ready to send the document to the floor of the Senate next week. Chairman Connally (D.-Tex.) read a statement from Bishop G. Brom- ley Oxnam, head of the Federal Council of Churches of Christ in America, who emphasized the moral need for world security assurances. Vandenberg said the Bishop repre- sented 20,000,000 churchmen. Women's Group Support Dr. Helen Dwight--Reid asked ,for U. S. entrance into the peace agency and continued full American parti- cipation. She spoke for a dozen nationwide women's groups, including the American Association of Univer- sity Women, the Federal Federation of Women's Clubs, the National Board of the Y.W.C.A., the National Women's Trade Union League and the United Council of Church Women. Women Begin Sports Tourney The summer sports tournament sponsored by the Women's Physical Education Department will open Fri- day, July 20, it was announced yes- terday. The tournament will include the following sports: two-ball foursome and women's singles in golf; mixed doubles and women's singles and doubles in tennis, badminton and archery for women. Registration blanks must be hand- ed in at the Physical Education De- partment office in Barbour Gym or at the desk in the Women's Athletic Building by Thursday, July 19. -- ---------------- Tournament Registration Blank Name ..................... . . Phone ........ Activities ..........J struck out for Yungfu turing Luchai, 28 miles Liuchow. after recap- northeast of State Is Over Top In War Loan Drive DETROIT, July 12-(P)--Michi- gan went over the top in the Sev- enth War Loan by a higher margin than in all but one of the previous drives, it was disclosed today. Frank N. Isbey, Michigan Chair- man of the Treasury War Finance Committee, said the state's total sales were $747,548,732.25, or 49.2 per cent more than the $501,000,000 quota. CAMPUS EVENTS Today The Summer Session Of- fice will present "Beetho- ven Concerto," a Russian film, at 8:30 p. m. EWT (7:30 p. m. CWT) in the Rackham Auditorium. Today The Newman Club will hold a party from 7:30 to 9:30 p. m. EWT (6:30 to 8:30 p. m. CWT) in the clubrooms at St. Mary's Chapel. Tndayi Allriduis tiuidnts are NO MORE FILIBUSTER? Fight Over FEPC Ends- Agree On Appropriation of $250,000 PROF. WILLIAM HABER: Nationally-Known Economist Will Return to U' in November Prof. William aber, nationally- known economist, on leave from ther University economics department since January, 1942, will return to the University for the fall semester : beginning in November, it was learn- ed yesterday.: Prof. Haber is serving as Director for Manpower in the Office of War Mobilization and Reconversion. He :: <;::; A' = 4F 'Job-Jumpers' Not Army Material WASHINGTON, July 12 - () - Selective Service tonight discontinued the drafting of "job jumpers" over 26 who fail to meet the regular army physical standards. It announced immediate carcella- tion of so-called secondary calls which had put these men in special groups that did not qualify for regu- lar duty. Provisions for the induction of other job-jumpers are being retain- ed. This means that registrants over 26 who are physically fit will con- WASHINGTON, July 12-UP)-The congressional fight over continuing the Fair Employment Practice Com- mittee ended tonight with House and Senate agreement on a $250,000 ap- propriation to run it in the 12 months haeinnina Julv 1. would make their sentiments known and a larger appropriation would be given the agenicy. He launched into what he termed "extended discussion" - sometimes' another name for filibuster - in an