NEW MUSIC COLUMN See Page 4 rr ll "tt FAIR AND WARMER VOL. LV, No. 10-S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, JULY 14, 1945 PRICE FIVE OENTS Senator Predicts Army Reduction Claims Charter Ratification Will Allow U. S. to Slash Army to Half Million By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, July 14-- Postwar reduction of the Army's strength to a half million men was forecast today by Senator Gurney (R-S.D.) in view of the Senate's expected ratification of the United Nations Charter. The South Dakota Senator, a mem- ber of the Military Affairs Commit- Fraternization Ban RelaXed Army of Occupation May.Talk to Germans By The Associated Press LONDON, July 14-The non-fra- ternization policy was relaxed today to allow American, British and Cana- dian occupation troops in Germany and Austria to talk with grownups in the streets and in public places. Up to now, they could speak only to children. The penalty for violation was a $65 fine. Almost identical statements by Gen. Eisenhower and Field Marshal Montgomery disclosed the policy change, which had been debated on the highest levels in the past month by American and British leaders. Ban Widely Flouted The action came as Gen. Eisen- hower's headquarters announced that 50,000 persons had been arrested in two months in Germany in a de- Nazification program by United States Army Security Forces oper- ating in the American occupation zone. The announcement said the arrests were continuing at the rate of 700 daily. Even before the fraternization ban was officially modified, American troops were smiling and holding hands with frauleins in the cafes of Berlin, where Russian rules control. The Russians never had any regula- tion against talking with Germans. No Dates for Frauleins The new rules, however, do not say soldiers can date frauleins. One British senior staff officer, agreeing that the wording of the announcement seemed to give a wide range for discretion, said he would interpret the orders to mean that soldiers could not walk arm in arm with frauleins, orttake them to public places to drink beer. If they were sitting in a cafe with a fraulein, he said, it would be hard to prove who brought the beer. Gen. Mark Clark, saying the modi- fication order by Eisenhower applied to United States troops in Austria, disclosed that he was studying possi- ble further relaxation of the rules there, where the Allied objective is to help Austria become an independent nation again. Union, Engine Posts Are Open Student vacancies on the Union Board of Directors and the Engineer- ing Council will be filled in a cam- pus election Friday, July 27. Candidates must file a petition containing 25signatures by noon Thursday in the Student Offices of the' Union. Petition forms may be obtained there between 3 and 5 p.m. EWT. Vice-presidents for the Union Board will be chosen from the liter- ary, engineering and combined schools, while thererare two vacan- cies on the Engineering Council. CAMPUS EVENTS Tomorrow Rev. Claude Williams will speak on the topic "What Can the Churches Do About Racial Dis- crimination?' at a meet- ing of the Interacial As- sociation at 7:30 p. m. EWT (6:30 p. m. CWT) in the Union. Tomorrow Prof. Mischa Titiev of the anthropology depart- ment will discuss "Nation- alities in the Soviet Un- ion" at a meeting of the Russky Kruzhok at 8:15 p. m. EWT (7:15 p. m. CWT) at the Interna- tional Center. tee, told a reporter he believes a regular force of that size will be ample to supply the men needed for this country's share of police work under the new international organi- zation and to garrison the far-flung outposts the United States may re- tain in the Pacific. Gurney's estimate came in the midst of discussion by charter sup- porters of when a decision shall be made on the number of men, planes, tanks, guns and other equipment the nation shall assign for peace-keeping operations under the proposed World Security Council. Chairman Connally (D-Tex.) of the Foreign Relations Committee has said that the issue should be settled in separate legislation and has asked the State Department to assist in preparing a measure of this kind. He has opposed any charter reserva- tion of this nature and there was doubt any would be offered formally, although Senator Bushfield (R-S.D.) is attempting to draft some. Subsequently, Connally told a news conference he did not believe Con- gress would attempt to define the authority of the American delegate on the Security Council until the international organization actually comes into being. He voiced the opinion that the Senate will ratify the charter after not more than 10 days of debate add- ing: "There won't be more than six votes against it in the Senate." Connally disclosed that Senator Hiram Johnson (D-Calif.) would be recorded as against approving the charter, and Senator Murray (D- Mont.) as for, with Senator Ship- stead (R,-Minn.) not recorded. Johnson was among those who op- posed American participation in the League of Nations after the last war. The committee vote on the Charter now stands at 21 for, 1 against. The committee will meet Monday afternoon to go over its formal re- port. With the Senate scheduled to consider the Bretton Woods mone- tary agreement, members will have a week in which to study the report and the 50-nation agreement before ratification opens debate. Belgian Leader Gets No Reply BRUSSELS, July 14-(/P)-Premier Achille Van Acker returned tonight from King Leopold's mountain re- treat at St. Wolfgang, Austria, and announced that the monarch had reached no decision on demands that he abdicate. (The Brussels radio said the Senate was summoned into special session immediately after Van Acker's ar- rival).~ However, Van Acker said, there are hopes that Leopold will have an an- nouncement soon. Indian Conference Closes in Failure SIMLA, India, July 14-(M)- Viceroy Lord Wavell's conference to establish a more representative government for India adjourned in failure today and Wavell said he did not intend to try again soon to solve the Indian problem. Wavell said in a closing address to the 21 Indian conferees that his principal tasks were prosecu- tion of the Japanese war and lay- ing the administrative ground- work for postwar developments and that both efforts required a stable government. Stability, he said, could not be preserved if con- tinuing political discussions pro- duced a feeling of insecurity among government servants. Navy Shuffles Pacific Area Commanders Mitscher Returns To Direct Air War By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, July 14-Rear Admiral Frederick C. Sherman, nat- ive of Port Huron, Mich., was named to command of the First Carrier Task Force today as the Navy shifted commands in its air arm in apparent preparation for showdown phases of the war against Japan. Sherman, now commander of a carrier division, succeeds Vice-Ad- miral Marc A. Mitscher who re- turns to Washington as Deputy Chief of Naval Operations for air. With Admiral William F. Halsey, Mitscher developed the present fast carrier task force which wields a flexible fleet of 1,500 planes. Secretary Forrestal disclosed the command changes, which are expect- ed to result in elevation to vice-ad- miral for Sherman, and the rank of a full admiral for Mitscher. In addition to the Sherman-Mit- scher shift, Forrestal said Vice Ad- miral John H. Towers, now Deputy Commanderein Chief of the Pacific Fleet, has been named to succeed Vice Admiral John S. McCain,rCom- mander of the Second Task Force. Rear Admiral Sherman, one of the Navy's toughest and ablest fly- ing admirals, was skipper of the Carrier Lexington when she was lost in the Coral Sea May 8, 1942. He has seen the Naval air war through from the start and has been in command of a carrier task groupwithin the fast carrier task force since last August. He is the holder of the Disting- uished Service Medal, and the Navy Cross with gold stars in lieu of sec- ond and third Navy Crosses. His first Navy cross was won in World War I when he served as commanding officer of a submarine. His other awards resulted from his service with carrier groups in the Pacific in the present war. CzechsHope To Transfer Alien Groups, Must Obtain Approval Of Big Three Parley PRAGUE, July 14-President Ed- uard Benes said today that Czecho- slovakia could begin removing its unreliable German and Hungarian residents within a few weeks if the Big Three approve at Potsdam. Nothing less than the transfer of two to two and one-half million'Ger- mans and about 400,000 Hungarians can assure the nation a reasonably secure future, Benes said in an ex- clusive interview. No Compromises Czechslovakia, he added, is deter- mined never again to try unworkable compromises with German minori- ties as it did in 1939, when the Ger- mans showed their allegiance lay across the border. Russia from the start was sympa- thetic toward the transfer plan. Ap- proval of the western powers was regarded as equally necessary be- cause their occupation forces within Germany would be obliged to make room. for Germans moved in great masses back to the Reich. Three Requirements Benes said there were three essen- tial points to the plan, which amounts to a proposal for a major population shift in Central Europe. They are, first, that it be accomplished with Big Three understanding and ap- proval; second, that it be well-or- ganized and carried out with the least possible friction; third, that the whole program be conducted as humanely as possible. Sup er-Battleships Blast At Japan; Hit Enemy in Close Range Attack; War Industries Impeded by aid .ew Units Participate, 'Adrn. Nimitz Announces PFC. WALLACE I. HAMILTON (above) of Garrison, N. Y., works on an air hose at the Santa Fe Railway shops in Chicago. He was fur- loughed by the Army to help meet railroad's manpower needs. LOSES FOUR LIMBS Percy Jones Soldiers Admire Wife for Devotion to Husband By The Associated Press GUAM, Sunday, July 15-Some of the most powerful, newest super- battleships of the Pacific Fleet today opened fire in the close-in blasting of Muroran, southern Hokkaido, Adm. Chester W. Nimitz announced today. Included were the huge, heavily-armed superships Iowa, Missouri and Wisconsin, the communique said. The target city is located in the center of Hokkaido's wide-mouthed bay, virtually flanked on both sides-- by the enemy coast.WA . TA L NC Daring Bombardment WAR AT A GLANCE Steel works and other industrial plants were hammered by the dar- BORNEO-Australian amphibious ing bombardment, the communique force seized Japanese seaplane base related. on Balikpapan Bay in 14-mile ad- The audaciously close strike fol- vance; Balikpapan Harbor in use by lowed by a day the battering of Kam- Allied ships. aishi's steel mills on northern Hon- PHILIPPINES - Americans and shu, while carrier planes ranged guerrillas captured three Northern again for the second day over both Luzon towns in mopping up against Honshu and Hokkaido. still strongly-resisting Japanese. Damages Listed CHINA-Chinese gained ground on At least 39 Japanese ships and 87 road to Kweilin and hint they are enemy planes were destroyed or dam- attacking in French Indo-China. Gen. aged, 27 locomotives destroyed and a Chennault resigned as chief of 14th steel works set afire in yesterday's Air Force and will quit Army. actions. AERIAL - American Blockade Fires started by yesterday's shell- planes continued striking Formosa ing of the steel city of Kamaishi, 275 and China coast. Okinawa-based miles north of Tokyo, raged on to- tactical planes hit Kyushu and Ryu- day and spread to the harbor. kyus group as their bag of enemy Operations Continue planes from April 7 to July 13 placed A communique from Adm. Chester at 625 destroyed. W. Nimitz .said that today "opera- tions are continuing in strength with "heavy surface units and fleet aircraft engaged."R tied at dawn as is customary, but the V. implication was made plain to cor respondents at this headquarters M onday ]V ight that announcement of the battle- ships, cruisers and destroyers again being in action was made before the Racial Discrimination ships actually started something. To Be Lecture Eremy ChallengedTSubject Thus, for the first time, the Amer- ican command was telling the Japa- nese what it planned to do and al- Racial Discrimination?" will be the most precisely when, in an amazing topic of a lecture by Rev. Claude Wil- challenge to the enemy to do some- liams before a meeting of the Inter- thing about it if he could. While only general locations were Racial Association at 7:30 p. m. EWT indicated, a more specific communi- (6:30 p. m. CWT) Monday at the que was expected later in the day. Michigan Union. Preliminary and incomplete reports Rev. Williams received his theologi- showed that despite bad weather yes- cal training in Berea and served in terday's carrier strikes destroyed 24 the Presbyterian pulpit in Memphis, grounded Japanese planes and dam- Tenn., and Paris, Arkansas. He was aged 62, sank 15 ships - including president of Commonwealth College two railroad ferries and a destroyer- and active in the"organization of the and damaged 24 other ships, includ- Sharecropper's Union. ing a train ferry and 10 medium Directs Peoples' Institute tankers or cargo ships. Not only is Rev. Williams director "No opposition to our forces was of the People's Institute of lied reported," Admiral Nimitz said. oApe Yesterday's surface bombardment Religion, but also an organizer of of Japan-first of the war-continued the Church and Labor Fellowship, unhindered almost within rifle shot an interdenominational group, which of shore for two hours, blasting and is working towards establishing a bet- firing Kamaishi's great steel mills. ter understanding between the fssChurch and labor. 1. The life of Rev. Williams has been U .t ooses written by Cedric Belfrage and re- By KATHRYN UNPHREY BATTLE CREEK, Mich., July 14- (P)-Soldiers at Percy Jones Hospital have become accustomed in the last few days to seeing a pretty, dark- haired girl with a quick smile and a Southern accent, sitting in the cor- ridor of their ward. When she isn't there, they know she can be found with her husband, Master Sgt. Fredrick Hensel, the first soldier to lose parts of. all four limbs in battle in this war. Wins Soldiers' Admiration She is Jewell Hensel, attractive girl from the Kentucky hills, who in less than a week has won the admiration of every soldier and patient at the hospital with her sincere straight- forward attitude and her obvious af- fection for her husband. These soldiers know how import- ant a wife's attitude can be in a wounded soldier's recovery - they know that Sgt. Hensel will get well faster because of her. Working It Out Together Typical of many patients' wives, she wants only to be near her hus- band as much as possible. They have had a bit of tough luck, she reasons simply, and they are working it out together: That is her attitude and she sees nothing unusual about it- anybody would feel the same, she is sure. "I don't believe any wives would feel any different," she said in her Gen. Clienriault Resigns Post WASHINGTON, July 14-()-The War Department said today it had no detailed knowledge of the reason for Maj. Claire L. Chennault's resigna- tion as commander of the 14th Air- force and retirement from the army but added that: "It is well known that Gen. Chen- nault has been operating for a num- ber of years in China under the most difficult of circumstances." slow voice. "I don't see why they should. They are the same men who went away-inside they haven't changed a bit. "You marry for better or worse, don't you? And when you have trouble, you have it together." It was on June 2, after he had been overseas since March, 1944, that Hen- sel stepped on an anti-tank mine on Okinawa. Student Plays To Be Given Radio .Airiitg Broadcasting Service Announces Schedule Joyce Siegan will conduct an in- terview of students from India, China and the Philippine Islands during the regular International Center program at 2:45 p. m. EWT (1:45 p. m. CWT) over station WKAR, East Lansing. The University broadcasting ser- vice announced that student-written and student-directed plays will be presented over WKAR this week. The program is under the general direc- tion of Prof. David Owen of the speech department. "Detour" by Claire Meisels will be given at 4:30 p. m. EWT (3:30 p. m. CWT) on Tuesday and Friday at the same time, Mavis Kennedy's "Cab 22, Report- ing" will be aired. "The Autobiography of Ray Stan- nard Baker" will be the topic for dis- cussion by Prof. Carlton F. Wells of the English department at 2:15 p. m. EWT (1:15 p. m. CWT) on Tuesday over local station WPAG. He will be followed at 2:30 p. m. EWT (1:30 p. m. CWT) by Prof. Amos J. Hawley of the sociology depart- ment. Prof. Hawley will conduct an interview of several personalities, at- tempting to find solutions to "Prob- lems of Employment in the Detroit Metropolitan Area." 'BlitheSpirit Cast Receives Floral Award "Bouquet of the Day," an early morning program on Ann Arbor's new radio station WPAG, presented the "Bouquet of the day" last Friday to the Michigan Repertory Players for Y 4 Y ,' Y p L i German Control' Group Of ficica s WASHINGTON, July 14-(/P)-The United States virtually completed to- day the selection of key officials to operate the American Group Con- trol Council in Germany. The War Department announced the appointment of three more di- vision directors and three other offi- cials, leaving only the post of Finance Director to be filled in the organiza- tion headed by Gen. Eisenhower and his deputy, Lt. Gen. Lucius Clay. Barker Directs Army Division Maj. Gen. Ray W. Barker of Roch- ester, N.Y., was appointed Director of the Army (Ground) Division which is responsible for demilitarization of German ground forces and for the surrender and disposal of war mate- rial and installations. Barker has been Assistant Chief of Staff at Su- preme Headquarters of the Allied Expeditionary Forces. Brig. Gen. Frank J. McSherry of Washington, was named head of the Manpower Division which is respon- sible to Clay on affairs regarding labor allocation, employment, work- ing conditions, housing and social insurance. McSherry served with the 15th Army Group and was a civil affairs officer in Sicily. Jefferson Heads Reparations Col. Leslie W. Jefferson of Red- cently published under the title "A Faith to Free the People." It is an expansion of the earlier works "South of God," published in this country and "Let My People Go," published in England. Second of IRA Lectures This is the second in a series of lectures sponsored by the Inter-Ra- cial Association, which has been act- ive in promoting activities and meas- ures inducive to the realization of racial unity. "Labor and Racial Policy" is the topic of a lecture to be given by Frank Marquard, educational direct- or of a local Detroit CIO union on July 23 at the Michigan Union. Chamber Concerts To Start Tuesday The faculty of the School of Mu- sic will offer the first in a series of five chamber concerts at 8:30 p. m. EWT (7:30 p. m. CWT) Tuesday, in the Pattengill Auditorium of Ann Arbor High School. Appearing will be Miss Louise Rood, who will play the viola, Prof. Gilbert Ross and Mrs. Marian Freeman, vio- linists, and Robert Swenson, cellist. Prof. Joseph Brinkman will be at the piano and Albert Luconi will be the clarinetist. ga E y arr_ Male Animal' To Open Wednesday "The Male Animal," the Michi- gan Repertory Players' second pro- duction of the season will open Wed- nesday through Saturday in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Heading the cast will be Mary Jor- dan and Don Mullin as Ellen and Tommy Turner. The nlace of action Monroe Lippman, head of the De- partment of Speech and Dramatic Arts at Tulane University, who has joined the University's speech de- partment as a guest director of the Players for the summer session. "The Male Animal" is a combina- tion of the talents of James Thurber and Elliott Nugent. With a college Male Animal," Thurber's first chance at comedy playwriting, presents his philosophy in action. Urged by Elliott Nugent, Broadwayj actor, writer, and director, to colla- borate in writing the college comedy, "The Male Animal" was brought to Broadway early in 1940 with Mr. Nugent in the leading role. It was