ADOPTION OF KIEV 'U' URGED See LETTERS TO EDITOR, Page 2 7 w 4ai FAIR TODAY VOL. LC, No. 12-S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JULY 19, 1945 PRICE FIVE CENTS Plans Announced For Post-Graduate Medical Programs To Arrange Four Review Courses For Returning Officers, Civilian Md's By CAROL ZACK Post-war plans for the expansion of post-graduate programs in the School of Medicine have been announced by Dean Albert C. Furstenberg.. Four review courses, designed for returning medical officers and civilian physicians, will be offered after the war. Beyond Peacetime SchedulesA Expanded beyond peacetime schedules, a graduate program in hospital training for residents and instructors will be given for the benefit of physi- Tuesday Will Be Fresh Air Camp Tag Day Goal Set At $1,000; 100 Will Sell Tags Students and townspeople will be asked to contribute to the $1,000 goal to provide funds for the Universityc Fresh Air Camp on Tag Day nextc Tuesday, July 24.. ' Approximately 100 boys from the camp will be stationed on the cam- pus and downtown to sell the tags.- To Provide Recreation The money collected in the drivei will be used to provide recreational activities for underprivileged childrenc in the Detroit area, as well as medi- cal treatment and insurance poli- cies. In addition counselors, select- ed from colleges and universities throughout the country for work andt instruction in the camp will be paidt their tuition, room and board. Selected by social agencies, thet boys attending the camp are studiedI by persons who are trained in educa-u tion and social work with a view tot helping them to adjust to their so- cial environment. Case histories of1 the boys, obtained from their schools, the social agencies, parents and the F boy himself are correlated with the progress of his 'adjustment at the camp. Prof. F. N. Menefee, direct- or of the camp, has emphasized that "the camp administration prefers not to take children from agencies not disposed to ultilize the result of the diagnosis made at the camp." Eight Under Counselor Each camp counslor has charge of eight boys out of a total of 112 boys in each four week term. Camp instructors supervise recreational ac- tivities which include swimming, hik- ing, arts and crafts, woodcutting, cook-outs, overnight hikes and base- ball, The camp was established in 19241 on 180 acres of land on the shores of Patterson Lake, 23 miles from Ann. Arbor. Starting with tents for night shelter, the camp has grown year by year and now has 27 buildings and ant extensive and specialized staff. Sessions On Television TO Close Today The final sessions of the Televi- sion Symposium of the Departmentc of Speech will be held from 10 a. m. EWT to noon (9 a. m. to 11 a. mn. CWT) and from 2 p. m. to 4 p. m.( EWT (1 p. m. to 3 p. m. CWT) today( in Kellogg Auditorium. Lectures during the morning ses- sion will include "Careers in Televi- sion," by G. Emerson Markham, man- ager of television WRGB, and "The Hand Is Quicker Than the Eye," by Helen T. Rhodes, program producer for WRGB. Markham's talk will feature the re- quisites for working in television, and Miss Rhodes' lecture will cover some of the problems encountered in stag- ing television programs. During the afternoon session,l Markham will speak on educational programs and the philosophy behindt education by television, and Missu Rhodes will describe the steps by which "A Television Program Ist Born." CAMPUS EVENTS Today There will be a meeting of the French Club at 8 p. m. EWT (7 p. m. CWT) in the League. Today The International Center will hold a tea at 4 p. m. EWT (3 p. m. CWT).m cians whose study in medicine was interrupted by entrance into military service. This program includes con- centration in a special field and may lead to an advanced degree. Due to limited facilities, Dean Furstenberg said, priority will be given to return- ing medical officers. A new position, "Special Instruct- or," will be offered to a limited num- ber of physicians in the various de-I partrnents of the medical school. Ap- pointees to this position will be affil- iated with the department for a determinate tenure of office and will devote one-half of their time to some type of graduate activity. Intensive' courses of two months duration are tentatively planned to begin on Jan. 1, 1946. These courses are to be given for the benefit of those who desire training for 2, 4 or 6 months intervals. They will in- clude clinical application of the basic sciences, internal medicine and a course for practitioners. Offer Review Courses Brief special review courses of three to five and one-half days dura- tion will cover regular post-graduate subjects which have been offered by the Department of # Postgraduate Medicine each spring. Instruction will begin in March and continue un- til the middle of June. Half-day clinical exercises for practitioners are also included in the plan. These courses will be repeated at weekly intervals from Sept. 15 to June 1. Rdevised G.L 1Bill Of Rights Rips Through House Washington, July 18-(P-A re- vised G. I. Bill of Rights skimmed through the House by unanimous voice vote today, although several members complained about the pro- cedure which brought the measure up without advance notice. Its major provisions are designed to liberalize the loan and education sections of the overall veterans' ben- efits measure enacted last year and to overcome difficulties that have arisen in administration of the orig- inal law. The measure still requires Senate approval. It makes these major provisions: Education : Extends from two to four years after discharge the time in which a study course may be start- ed; extends from seven to nine years after the war's end the time in which education or training may be given at government cost; provides for short intensive postgraduate or vo- cational courses of less than 30 weeks; permits the government to finance correspondence courses; in- creases from $50 to $60 the monthly education subsistence allowance. Two- Week Conference To Be feld U. S. in Postwar W orld' Is Subject A two week conference on the "United States in t he Postwar World", featuring University and guest speakers, including U. S. Sen- ator Homer Ferguson, will be held on the University campus, July 23 through Aug. 3. The conference will consist of a series of 20 afternoon and evening lectures on postwar problems that underlie the peace and the concern of the United States with them. Topics Are Listed Topics to be discussed include the postwar military position of the United States, world economic co- operation, educational, religious, and interracial cooperation, political thought, world security, Soviet- American relations a n d United States and the Pacific "frontier". Senator Ferguson will speak Fri- day, Aug. 3 on the subject, "The Role of the United States in Fram- ing the Peace." Included among the guest speak- ers are: James P. Baxter, III, Presi- dent of Williams College; A. L. Burt, University of Minnesota; Joseph E. Johnson, chief of the State Depart- ment Division of International Se- curity; Henry M. Kendall, Amherst College; Kenneth S. Latourette, Yale University; Waldo G. Leland, Direc- tor of the American Council of Learned Societies; Charles E. Phil- lips, University of Toronto; and Ja- cob Viner, University of Chicago, economist and consulting expert to the Treasury Department. Pres. Ruthven To Speak A total of 11 University of Michi- gan faculty members, including Pres- ident Alexander G. Ruthven, will participate in the discussions. All of the lectures, with the ex- ception of Senator Ferguson's, will be held in the Rackham Building Amphitheatre. Ferguson will speak in Hill Auditorium. The afternoon lectures will begin at 4:10 p. m.;EWT (3:10 CWT), and the evening lec- tures at 8:15 p. m. EWT (7:15 CWT). Building Plan Announced By Normal olleg.e YPSILANTI, Mich., July 18-()-A postwar building program amount- ing to a proposed $1,864,000 was an- nounced by Michigan State Normal College today with construction scheduled to start as soon as mater- ials are available. First building of the project to be erected will be a quadrangle of two dormitories for women, which is ex- pected to cost $870,000. Other buildings included in the plan are a men's dormitory, estimat- ed cost $500,000 and a main build ing for administration and class- rooms, expected to cost $494,000. Funds for the project have been ap- proved by the Legislature. Mickey Rooney Performs For G's, Gen. Marshall Potsdam, July 18-(n)- nu b- nosed GI Mickey Rooney, former film actor, clowned tonight for ' Gen. George C. Marshall, U. S. Army Chief of Staff, and hundreds of American troops in the first "live show" within the American com- pound at the Potsdam conference. Dr. Sharfman To Arbitrate Dispute Dr. I. L. Sharfman, chairman of the Department of Economics, and former member of the Rail- wayDMediations Board, has left for Denver, Colorado, to arbitrate a dispute between the Denver Rio Grande Western Railroad Com- pany and the Switchmen's Union of North America. Upon completion of this arbi- tration he will proceed to New York City, where he will serve on an Emergency Board which will report its recommendations to the President concerning an unad- justed dispute between the Rail- way Express Agency and the In- ternational Brotherhood of Team- sters. Television Now Major Industry Markham Says Speech Department Conducts Symposium "Television, an unexplored and neglected field, is taking its place as a major industry," G. Emerson Mark- ham, manager of television station WRGB, Schenectady, N. Y.. said in an interview here yesterday. Markham and Helen T. Rhodes, program producer for WRGB, are joining Prof. Lewis N. Holland of the electrical engineering department in presenting a symposium on televis- ion under the auspices of the Depart- ment of Speech. Visualizing r a p i d expansion within five years, Markham pre- dicted that a millionreceivers and aver one hundred television sta- tions will be in operation at the end of that time. Miss Rhodes, a University grad- uate" predicted an expansion of in- dustrial television, both for purposes of education and of inter-conmunm- cation. She described the Television Sym- posium as "the most ambitious" of the television education programs of this type so far attempted in Ameri- can educational institutions. "We would especially like to ex- press our appreciation for the cor- dial reception the speech depart- inent has extended to us," Mark- ham stated at the close of the i- terview Correspondence Enrollnment Is Set at 4,879 Total gross enrollment in the Uni- versity Correspondence Study Depart- ment is 4,879, with 3,090 new stu- dents registered between July 1944 and July of this year, Mrs. Berenice H. Lee, director of the Study Depart- ment announced yesterday. The total gross enrollment figure is the equivalent of 60 per cent of the local University summer program en- rollment. New correspondence students are electing 3,478 courses, including 2,612 on the college level and 866 on the high school level. Non-credit courses are included in the latter group. Of the 2,153 armed service person- nel taking University correspondence courses through the United States Armed Forces Institute, 309 officers and servicemen enrolled directly with the Correspondence Study Depart- ment, Mrs. Lee said. 548 adult civilians, 80 high school students, and 21 prisoners of war, German and Austrian, are also en- rolled. The total increase this year in net enrollment over 1943-44 is 59 per cent. Allied Victory Is Goal as B1g Three Confer Stalin To Hear Plans For Japan's Defeat By The Associated Press Potsdam, July 18-Three veter- ans of old battlefields-President Truman, Premier Stalin, and Prime Minister Churchill--conferred again late today, with Allied victory in the Pacific a pressing goal. This second formal meeting of the Big Three was as heavily blanketed by security as yesterday's, but the trend of thought among the Ameri- can and British delegations seemed to make it certain that the ways and means for Japan's defeat would be fully aired before the Soviet leader. Separate Conference Earlier in the day, Truman con- ferred separately with Churchill and Stalin. The day's events indicated the leaders were agreed upon reaching as promptly as possible full agree- ment on issues facing them-issues upon which a speedier end of the war with Japan and the future peace of Europe may depend. Triumph Over Japan Truman, the presiding officer of the tri-power sessions, seeks as his chief goals a quicker triumph over Japan and the bulwarking of peace through solution of long-standing disputes. He lunched today at 1 p. m. with Churchill, and then later with Stalin. He was accompanied at the second luncheon by Secretary of State James F. Byrnes, his close friend and an experienced negotiator. Under Cloudy skiffs, the President walked from his residence to the lo- cal equivalent of No. 10 Downing Street. Truman, Churchill Talk Truman and Churchill talked cor- dially on the terrace while photo- graphs were taken, and then lunched inside at a table set for two. When Truman was leaving, Byrnes emerged from British Foreign Secretary An- thony Eden's house next door, where he had lunched, and met the Presi- dent at the entrance. The British delegation did not say how long Churchill and Trumann conferred, nor was there any hint of their top- ics. American Carrier Planes Backed By U.S.-British Fleet Bomb Tokyo Second Straight Day- Nimitz Says Major Part of Japanese Navy Caught Hiding Camouflaged By The Associated Press GUAM, Thursday, July 19-American carrier planes, extending the U. S.-British Fleet on the Tokyo area into the second straight day, attacked Japanese combatant ships at the great Hokosuka Naval Yard in Tokf Bay, Fleet Adm. Chester W. Nimitz reported today. This indicated that Adm. William F. Halsey, Jr's forces had discovered the hiding place of a major portion of remnants of the enemy navy, which has been in desperate hiding, under camouflage, since it was soundly defeated off the Philippines last Oct-< ober. U. S. Naval authorities have esti- mated that the Japanese have less than 10 carriers, including escort flattops, four to six battleships, in- cluding old dreadnaughts, and not many cruisers or destroyers. On March 18, Mitchner's carrier planes discovered some of the enemy ships hiding in the inland sea of Japan and irl a daring raid sank the 45,000-ton battleship Yamoto, two cruisers and several destroyers and destroyer escorts. The Japanese ships apparently moved after that and their where- abouts had been undisclosed until Nimitz' communique today reported they were brought under attack by Vice Adm. John S. McCain's Car- rier Task Force 38. Yokosuka Naval Base probably was the most obvious place for the ships to have sought to hide-in- side Tokyo Bay-for it possibly was the last place the enemy would expect American forces to seek it. Nimitz said adverse weather and poor visibility prevented reconnais- sance planes from reporting any re- sults of this audacious attack. He also reported that American and British carrier planes raided the Tokyo and East Honshu coastal areas throughout yesterday and that light naval units-cruisers and destroyers -of the U. S. Third Fleet, went close inshore to bombard the eastern Hon- shu coast last night and early to- day. The shelling carried the attacks in the Tokyo area into the third straight day. Rear Adm. Carl Holden command- ed the cruiser-destroyer force which bombarded Nojima, south of Tokyo, and other coastal installations. Nimitz said the cruisers Topeka, Oklahoma City, Atlanta, and Day- ton, and the Destroyers Ault and John W. Weeks were among those shelling the coastal city's military and industrial areas. 'Inseparable Pair To Be JAG Graduates Will Report to Same Base After Exercises The Army's 'inseparable pair,' Ed- win W. Jones and Elmer J. Redmond, will continue their streak when they report together at the Procurement Division of the Air Technical Ser- vice Command, Wright Field, O., aft- er receiving their commissions at to- morrow'sJAG School graduation-ex- ercises. Inducted into the Army at the same time, Jones and Redmond, members of the Twelfth Officer Candidate Class, have stuck togeth- er through assignments that took them to far off Africa and India, always changing stations on the same orders and receiving promo- tions simultaneously. After training together in the Unit- ed States, the "Army Twins," whose homes are on the same street in Ravenna, O., went overseas, where they were assigned similar'duties as chief clerks and guard patrolmen with the same air service group, They were both .promoted to the rank of technician fifth grade and later to corporal on the same day.. After 14 months in India, Jones and Redmond received orders to report to the Judge Advocate Gen- eral School at the University, and travelling together from India, they arrived together in Ann Ar- bor March 21, the first members of their class to report here. Even in civilian life, their careers coincided to a remarkable degree. They graduated from Ohio State U. on the same day and later went to Cleveland Law School, receiving their LLB's a year apart. Later, Red- mond served as assistant prosecuting attorney and Jnes was a special assistant in Portage County, o. JAG School To Graduate 98 Tomorrow The graduation of the 98 members of the Twelfth Officer Candidate and the Twenty-Third Officer Classes at 4:30 p. m. EWT (3:30 p. m. CWT) tomorrow at the Law Quadrangle parade grounds will bring the grand total of judge advocates trained since the JAG School moved here from Washington in September, 1942, to well over 2,000. Col. Reginald C. Miller, Command- ant of the JAG School, will admini- ster the officer's oath to the 43 mem- bers of the Twelfth Officer Candi- date Class tomorrow. Maj. Gen. Myron C. Cramer, Judge Advocate General of the Army, Col. Oscar Rand, Staff Judge Advocate, and Col. George A. Sanford, Direct- or of Training, Sixth Service Com- mand, will attend the two-day exer- cises. Gen. Cramer and Dr. E. Blythe Stason, Dean of the Law School, will deliver commencement addresses at graduation exercises Saturday, ANSWER USO RUMOR Committee To Study Decline In Enrollment of Servicemen MEN'S CLUB MEETS: George]Ieader Comments On Foreign Commitments Tn answer to the rumors about the closing of the Ann Arbor USO Club, Osias Zwerdling, president of the USO Council, stated yesterday that an Evaluation Committee had been appointed at the last Council meet- ing. Merely Collecting Data The Committee, representing the 'Mayas' Film To Be Shown at Rackham "La foche de los Mayas", or "The Dark Night of the Mayas", the third offering of the Summer Session of- fice of foreign films for the campus, will be shown at 8:30 p. m. EWT (7:30 p. m. CWT) Friday and Satur- day in Rackham Auditorium. It is a Mexican film with English titles. "Todo", a Mexican paper, has said of the film: "The Picture of the greatest onality so far made in Mexico.... We cannot help the human emotion evoked by this magnificent cinematic work. .'The Dark Night of the Mayas' makes us feel proud." University, the clergy, the social work community and townspeople, was charged with obtaining data in preparation of a budget for presenta- tion to the Ann 'Arbor Comunity War Fund and collecting information in relation to the drop in enrollment of Army and Navy trainees from the peak enrollment of nearly 4,000 to the present registration of approxi- mately 1,600 Army and Navy train- ees. "It should be pointed out that all major decisions regarding the USO are made by a council which consists of three representatives of each of eleven leading civic and communal organizations," the statement read, Widespread Representation "Within the membership of 35 there is representation from almost every section of our community," it continued. "Hence, we feel that we may assure the citizens of Ann Arbor that any decision made by the group can be depended upon to serve the best interests of the community, the University and especially the Army and Navy trainees and other mili- tary personnel for whom the USO was established." Petitions Due For Engineering Council Petitions for positions on the En- gineering Council must be turned 'in by noon EWT (11 a. m. CWT) to- mn.rx. fla Monc Jirlinarr!aru- "More responsibility ought to be assumed for our interests abroad," George Meader, Counsel of the Mead Investigating Committee of the Unit- ed States Senate told a meeting of the Men's Education Club-last night in the Union. The Foreign Economic Administra- tion is not enough, he said. We have erected all over the globe installa- tions such as airports that we can't pack up and bring back. The Com- mittee feels we ought to study the long range use of our installations abroad, the rights we could obtain, trade, air, and user rights and fran- chise privileges. "These assets belong to the Anlerican taxpayers" Meader declared. Discussing the Army and Navy, partment of Justice in its prosecu- tions. Trying to get the Army to take ac- tion against officers who have handl- ed money improperly has not been successful, Meader asserted, substan- tiating this by saying that many Army officers whose actions were re- primanded by the Committee had been subsequently promoted. Navy Two Men Overseas For Years To Get Leave LIFE IN A COLLEGE TOWN: Players Present 'Male Animal' This Week Washington, July 18-(.P)-The Navy arranged today to grant 30-day leaves to Navy personnel it can spare who have been outside the United States two years or more. Leaves, plus travel time, will be subject to approval of commanding officers who have sole discretion, an announcement said. Between 8,000 and 12,000 a month may benefit. The Michigan Repertory Players of the speech department are present- ing "The Male Animal" at 8:30 p. m. fears he caught on the 'rebound when the handsome halfback hero of their day lost his hold upon her affections. Besides treating the subjects of academic freedom and football, the n1nv includes sihiects such as the