P~AGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, NOV. 4, 1937 Frank Murphy Will Open 1st Press Meeting Public Is To Be Admitted To 19th Annual Session; Plan 3-Day Program (Continued from Page 1) Benson of the Bureau of Government on "Trends in Administrative Re- forms," and Prof. James K. Pollock of the political science department on "Democracy and the Short Ballot." Discussion will be led by Harold D. Smith, State Budget Director, and by George Burke and William Brown- rigg, chairman and director, respec- tively of the State Civil Service Com- mission. At 6:30 p.m. a University dinner will be given the members of the Club. Dean Edward H. Kraus will preside and President Ruthven will speak. The School of Music will furnish music. At 9 p.m .a smoker will be held in the Union Ballroom, featuring "The World in Pictures and Comment," by George Averill and Chet Shafer, At 9:30 a.m. Friday, a symposium on "World Peace and the Press" will be held in the ballroom. Prof. Pres- ton W. Slosson of the history depart- ment will be the first speaker. Prof. Lawrence Preuss of the political sci- ence department will then speak on "The American Neutrality Policy and the News," and Louis Weil, editor of the Port Huron Times-Herald will talk on "Foreign News Dispatches." General discussion will follow. Press luncheons for the Associated Press and Michigan Press Association will be held from 12 noon to 2 p.m., at which time a symposium on "Free- dom of Speech and Press" will be con- duted in the ballroom. Prof. Hobart R. Coffey of the Law School will speak on "Some Legal Trends in Free Speech Issues"; Prof. John F. Shep- ard of the psychology department on "Academic Issues in Freedom of Speech"; Prof. Roy W. Sellars of the philosophy department on "The Phil- osophical Concept of Freedom"; Stuart Perry, editor of the Adrian elegram, on "Publicity and Court proceedings" and the Rev. Charles W. Brashares of the Methodist-Episcopal Church, on "Free Speech and the Pul- pit." General discussion will follow. At 6 p.m. the Press Club Banquet will be held, with George Averill pre- siding Philip A. Adler, staff corres- pondent of the Detroit News, will speak on "Observations Abroad." W. S. Gilmore, editor of the News, will introduce the speaker. At 8:15 p.m. a theatre party will be given club members at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, where Play Production, under the direction of Frederic O. Crandall, will present "Puppets," a three-act drama written for the occassion. A reception for members of the Club and faculty will be given at 10:30 p.m. in the lobby of the League. A business meeting will be held at 10 a.m., Saturday, following by a club luncheon at 12 noon. At 2 p.m. the group will attend the football game at the Stadium, as guests of the Athletic Association. Hitler May Raise Question Of Colonies, Ehrmann Believes _____ I (Continued from Page 1) he said, on the basis of the present German-Japanese alignment. In addition, Germany wants to wipe out the "colonial-guilt lie," that she mismanaged her colonies and mis- treated natives. This charge was widely made during the World War and given some official sanction by the British in the Blue Book of 1918, which has since been discredited, Pro- fessor Ehrmann said. , Germany further bases her case for colonies on the pre-armistice agreement of Nov. 5, 1918. In October of 1918 Germany asked for a peace based on Wilson's Fourteen Points. In the pre-armistice agreement that fol- lowed the Allies consented to make peace on these points, subject to cer- tain modifications not affecting col- onies. Point 5 of Wilson's program provided for an impartial adjustment of all colonial claims in accordance with the interests of the natives and the government claiming the terri- tory. The wholesale seizure of all her colonial possessions accomplished in 1919 and the system of mandates that excluded Germany are, according to the German view, direct violations of Wilson's Point 5 and the pre-armis- tice agreement, since they represent thinly disguised annexation. That the Allies' were interested in stripping Germany of her colonies from the beginning, Professor Ehr- mann said, is illustrated by the fact that the Treaty of Londo of 1915 promised Italy an increase in her ( African holdings if England and iFrance got German colonies in returnil for Italian support in the war. Further proof of the Allies' designs on the Reich's territories is given in the agreement on March. 1916 to di- vide German Togoland and Kamerun between England and France. In the early part of 1917, the British, French, Russians and Japanese made another secret treaty to assign Gor- many's Pacific islands. north of the equator to Japan and south of the equator to England. In the settlement that followed the war German East Africa was dismem- bered. The Tanganyika territory was assigned to Britain as a mandate; Belgium secured Ruanda-Urundi as a mandate and Portugal annexed the Kionga triangle. German Southwest Africa went as a mandate to the Union of South Africa and Kamerun was divided between England and France as a mandate and part given outright to the French. The area that France received outright she had ceded to the Germans in 1911, as compensation for permitting France to take over Morocco. Finally, Togoland was divided into a British and French mandate. Return of colonial possessions to Germany would involve Great Britain, France, Belgium, Portugal, the Union of South Africa and the League of Nations, which has control of the mandates through a commission. So far, Professor Ehrmann declared, none of these states has displayed any eagerness to yield its gains. ~U ~ urn. 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