Weather Fair and coider. AL 4br -016, AL Idah.- Ap ttg Editorial lTiare Crreiatin In SRA Lectures, I VOL. L. No. 117 Z-323 ANN ARBOR,- MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, MARSH 13, 1940 PRICE FIVE CENTS RUSSO-FINNISH CONFLICT HALTED "7- :-+Q Lecturer And T eacher Pause In Talk Parliament Meets To Consider Pact Diet In Helsinki Must Give Approval To New Treaty Within Three Days HELSINKI, March 13 (Wednesday)--(P)-The future of Finland's second war of independence apparently lay in the hands of the Finnish Diet early today, although an announcement at 2 a.m. (7 p.m. E. S. T.) said the delegation in Moscow had not yet confirmed the signing of the reported peace treaty. It was indicated the treaty would not be binding on Finland until the Diet had ratified it. Foreign Office Is Silent The foreign office declined to deny or confirm Moscow and Berlin announcements that a peace agreement had been signed. The severity of the terms, heard here over the Moscow Radio brought shock and bewilderment to the Finns. They had felt that if the Soviets were seeking peace they would be willing to lighten the heavy demands which resulted in the undeclared war. Instead, the new terms as understood here were considerably worse than the originals proposals. The semi-official Finnish News Bureau said no confirmation of the signing of a treaty had been received from the Finnish delegation headed by Premier Risto Ryti. Any agreement signed in Moscow presumably will not come into force until it is ratified by the Diet and all " Louis Untermeyer (right) and John E. Moser, teaching fellow of the English department of the College of Engineering were photo- graphed in an apartment in the Union during a discussion of some photographs yesterday. Nativity Of American Culture Discussed By Louis Untermeyer signs pointed to a thorough exam- ination of the document by that body. Eighty-five members of the par- liament-the largest representation of any one party in that 200-member body-belong to the Social Demo- cratic party headed by Foreign Min- isted Vaino Tanner. Diet Meets The Soviet government has heaped abuse upon Tanner ever since he as- sumed office in the coalition govern- ment formed after the outbreak of the war. Activities of the Diet were kept a closely guarded secret this morn- ing as they have been since the war started. It is known, however, that it went into session last night and there was little doubt that the agreement with Moscow was under discussion. One spokesman, when asked early today for an estimate of the situa- tion, said "The Diet has not yet decided." Earlier it was officially denied that Finland had sent an answer to Rus- sin proposals. Britain, France Ready To Help PARIS, March 12-(IP)-France and Great Britain have an expedi- tionary force of at least 50,000 men ready to sail on a moment's notice to aidtFinland and are prepared im- mediately to take an official organ- ized part in the Finnish-Russian war if the Finns choose to keep on fighting, Premier Daladier declared today. Only a formal appeal from Hel- sinki is necessary to set the Allied war machinery in motion, Daladier told a cheering Chamber of Depu- ties. This was his reply to the long- debated question whether the West- ern Powers should allow themselves to be drawn into war with Russia and Germany at the same time. Daladier added that "a decisive, answer in one sense or the other" had been promised by Finnish For- eign Minister Vaino Tanner follow- ing the decisive meeting of the Fin- nish Parliament which is to take the Russian peace terms under consid- eration. This meeting may come anytime. ASU Will Choose Officers Tonight At Term Meeting Officers for this semester will be elected at the semester Conference of the American Student Union at 7:30 p.m. today in Room 231 of Angell Hall. The conference, which is open to the public as well as members, will' provide a good opportunity for new students on campus to become ac- quainted with the aims and activities of the ASU, Miriam Wellington, '41, chairman of the meeting, stated. A tentative program of events for Arts Academy To Hold 45th Meeting Here Conference Will Discuss Cultural And Scientific Trends In U.S. Research More than 400 scholars will de- scend on Ann ArborFrida-y and Pat- urday from towns all over they state for the 45th Annual Meeting of the Michigan Academy of Science, Arts and Letters. Discussion of the latest scientific and cultural developments as well as research will occupy the delegates in their two-day session which will be open to the public. The Academy will consist of 14 sections which will hear papers and reports presented on developments in their fields. The sections include ones in anthropology, botany, eco- nomics, forestry, geography, geology and mineralogy, history and political science, landscape architecture, lan- guage, philosophy, psychology, san- itary and medical science, sociology and zoology. Dr. Charles A. Guthe," president of the Academy as well as director of the University Museums, will give the presidential address at 8 p.m. Friday in the Amphitheatre of the Rackham Building. His subject will be "Museums and Education." Other featured speakers during the meeting include Prof. Jesse S. Reeves of the political science department discussing "Foreign Policy of the United States and the War" at 12:15 p.m. in room 222 of the Union, and Pinsang Hsia, joint manager of the Bank of China, New York City, ex- plaining "Chinese Reconstruction Amidst Destruction" at 12:15 p.m. in the Union. Student Senate To Meet Today Will Discuss Tuition Fees, Election, Peace Council Reports on the Spring Parley and on the current investigation of the cleaning price war will be heard at' the meeting of the Student Senate at 7:30 p.m. today in the Union, Arnold White, '42, secretary, said yesterday. Listed on the agenda as new busi- ness for the meeting are the coming Senate elections, the problems of the recent raise in tuition fees and dis- cussion on the newly formulated Peace Council, White said. It has been tentatively decided to hold the Senate elections before Spring Vaca- tion, as has been the policy in the By HERVIE HAUFLER I An American culture that has ati last focused itself on America formed the theme of Louis Untermeyer, dis- tinguished poet and anthologist, when he spoke yesterday on "Pio- nerss and Liberators" before an over- flow audience in the Rackham Am- phitheatre. This thesis of an America that has discovered its nativity, he ex- plained, is the foundation upon which he will build his series of six lectures during his three-week stay here as a guest of the engineer- ing English' department. Something happened at the turn of the century, Mr. Untermeyer said, which permitted American art to free itself from the narrow limits of European and Classic imitation. Until then America was despised as material for art. America was crass, commercial and industrial. Art was in love with an imported article. Even when an American used native materials, as did Longfellow in "Hia- Pr of. H oirnan Will Discuss Scholarships Prof. Charles Holman of the Uni- versity of Chicago will be in Ann Arbor all day today to confer with students interested in Big Ten com- petition for a $500 scholarship in the Chicago Theological Seminary, Dr. Edward W. Blakeman, counselor in religious education, announced yester- day. One University student will be nom- inated this semester to enter compe- tition for the scholarship which is effective next year. Interested per- sons should interview Dr. Blakeman. He will arrange appointments with Professor Holman. Advanced :tudies in religion are also available through the Margaret Kraus Ransdell fellowship which pro- vides annually one year of graduate work in any University selected. This scholarship, instituted as a memor- ial to the late Margaret Kraus, daughter of Dean and Mrs. E. H., Kraus, is open to any student of the University watha," he treated it in a foreign manner, with foreign rhythms. Against all this Walt Whiman made a declaration of independence, Mr. Untermeyer declared. Whitman broke away from the authority of Europe in three ways-in spirit, in material and in form. Revolution In Spirit Mr. Untermeyer described Whit- man's revolution in spirit as a dis- covery that there is beauty in the commonplace. Whitman struck up marches for the humble, broke through the false facade of imported beauty and made America rivet its attention on the neglected part of everyday existence, he said. To do this Whitman discarded the conventional forms, the pretty poet- isms which passed for art. According to Mr. Untermeyer, Whitman used the language of ordinary conversa- tion, as if speaking to another per- son. "He saw that a nation without tradition has no past," Mr. Unter- meyer explained, "but he also saw hat a nation with only tradition has .o future." Informal Discussion An informal discussion of his lec- ture will be conducted by Mr. Unter- meyer at 4:15 p.m. today in the Men's Lounge of the Rackham Build- ing. The next lecture of the series, to which all students are invited, will be given next Thursday. In addition to the series, Mr. Un- ermeyer will give a University lec- ture on "Poets of the Machine Age," at 8:15 p.m. today in the Rackham Lecture Hall. Louisiana Tornado Kills 10, Injures 24 SHREVEPORT, La., March 12- ()-Ten persons were killed, 24 in- jured and' hundreds left homeless here tonight in the wake of tornadic winds which cut a path of destruc- tion across the city shortly after 4:30 p.m. today. Damage to the Libby-Owens-Ford plant was estimated by company of- ficials at $200,000; at the state fair grounds at $100,000 and elsewhere in the city at hundreds of thou- sands more. House Votes To Increase Naval Budget Bill Gives Navy Authority To Build 43 Vessels, 1,011 NewAirplanes Funds For Work To Be Voted Later WASHINGTON, March 12.-()- A $655,000,000 expansion of the United States Navy won House ap- proval today in record-breaking time and by the overwhelming vote of 303 to 37. The bill, which was sent to the Sen- ate after about four hours debate, authorizes the Navy to build 21 new combat ships, 22 auxiliary vessels and 1,011 airplanes in the next two years. Funds for the work, however, would have to be voted later. Final passage came after the House had shouted down an amendment by Representative Schafer (Rep.-Wis.) to halt the sale of naval planes or plane secrets to all foreign govern- ments and another by Representative Fish (Rep.-N.Y.) which would have eliminated three proposed aircraft carriers from the bill. In addition to the carriers, which Fish contended were unnecessary, the measure would authorize construction of an unspecified number of cruisers and submarines. The exact number of each category to be built was with- held in an effort to keep the ships' size a secret. Informed members conceded, how- ever, that the cruisers would be sub- stantially larger than the 10,000-ton "treaty cruisers," now the Navy's largest. Urging approval of the program, which he said was all the Navy could handle with existing construction facilities in the next two years, Chair- man Vinson (Dem.-Ga.) of the hIouse Naval Committee declared the in- crease was necessary because the im- minence of a general European war, coupled with conditions in the Far East, "presents a therat of world con- flagration." 'Thomas Tals On Socialism Here Thursday 'Does Democracy Need Socialism' To Be Topic Of Political ; Leader Norman Thomas, national chair- man of the Socialist party, will speak on the topic, "Does Democracy Need Socialism?" at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Natural Science Auditorium. Mr. Thomas' lecture is sponsored by the League for Liberal Action. The national socialist leader, prominent in politics for more than a decade, has run twice for mayor of New York City, once for governor of the State of New York and three times for president of the United States in 1928, 1932 and 1936. As co-editor of numerous publica- tions for the League for Industrial Democracy, Mr. Thomas has written many articles n social and economic conditions in the United States. Mr. Thomas' lecture is the fourth in a series of six sponsored by the Club. Vital Territory Fi hting Is Stopped At 4 A.M.; Moscow Announces Terms MOSCOW, March 13-(AI)--Soviet Russia early today announced offi- cially the signing of a peace treaty with Finland which wrests as the spoils of three and a half months of invasion Finland's defense bastions on Baltic and Arctic seas and makes part of the vast territory of the U.S.S.R. the whole fortified Karelian Isthmus, where uncounted Russian and Finnish dead lie beneath the trampled snows. The treaty must be ratified within three days, but hositilties will cease, under its terms, at noon today-4 a.m. Eastern Standard Time. Finland Gets Peace Finland gets peace; a yearly rental of 8,000,000 Finnish marks (about $120,000) in return for a lease on her Hanko "Gibraltar" at the mouth of the Gulf of Finland; and evacuation of the Petsamo Arctic district by Soviet troops. SHE GIVES UP: 1. The entire Karelian Isthmus and its Soviet-penetrated Manner- heim Line. 2. The shell-wrecked city of Viipuri, once Finland's third metropo- lis, and the islands in its bay. 3. All the shores of Lake Ladoga, largest in Europe, and three towns. Both on-the lake's western isthmus shore and on its northern coasts thousands of Russian troops have been slain. 4. Hanko, naval base on the southwest, and the surrounding penin- sula, on a 30-year lease. This area will form Soviet naval-military bases. 5. Part (correct) of the Sredni and Rybachi Peninsulas in the far north, on the Arctic Ocean. 7. Certain islands in the Gulf of Finland. 8. A great slice of northeastern Finland, including Kuolajarvi. 9. A railroad, to be built during 1940, which will link the White Sea within northern Russia to the Gulf of Bothnia, west of Finland, the railway bisecting Finland above her narrow waistline. 10. Free transit for Russian goods across the Ptsamo Arctic area from Russia to Norway, duty free. 11. The right to maintain any Finnish warships, submarines or war- planes in its Arctic waters, with the exception of small coast guard vessels. Exchange of papers of ratification of the treaty is scheduled to take place in Moscow. In Helsinki tonight, shocked Finns said the fate of the war still was up to the Finnish diet-there was no indication it had ratified the treaty. However, under the pact, at 10 a.m. on March 15 (2 a.m. E. S. T.) Finnish and Soviet troops are to begin to withdraw to their new frontiers a man of which was appended to the treaty. The treaty was described in the official Moscow communique as one which will "create mutually stable and mutually peaceful relations," based 'n nrerise conditions of "enduring mutual security"-especially for the Soviet cities of Leningrad, at one end of the Karelian Isthmus; Murmansk, in the Arctic, and the railroad which connects them. (Actually, its terms gave Russia an uncontested clutch on the northern Baltic. Before she invaded Finland on Nov. 30, Russia had peaceably got strategic concessions from Esthonia, Latvia and Lithuania, but these are nothing as compared to the conditions for Finnish peace. The terms, like- wise, are far harsher than the ones which Russia laid down before the Finnish invasion. (Germany profits by the treaty because she can now hope for real economic help from a Russia no longer engaged in war, and can, perhaps, extend her own influence in Scandinavia. Russia also is militarily free to 'ook to her fences on her Balkan border. (The Western Allies knew all this-and made urgent, last-minute offers of an expeditionary force of 50,000 men to defent Finland.) * * * * Interpretative: .. . Peace Terms May Also Benefit Germany's War Against Allies By KIRKE L. SIMPSON (Associated Press Staff Writer) The Russo-Finnish peace terms, as announced from Moscow, represent important gains for the Soviets, but they could conceivably prove of immediate benefit to Hitler as well. Unquestionably, the Nazis had been hoping for an end to the war in the Baltic area. They wanted to remove any danger of. developments in Finland or Scandinavia that might open the Reich's Baltic flank to Allied attack,. That tends to support the growing belief that the actual inspiration " for the Russo-Finnish peace negotia- tions came from Berlin. Foreign PohzeyThat interpretation prompted curt rejection in London of Russian peace Is Debate Topic feelers which proposed originally to cast Britain in the role of inter- mediary between Moscow and Hel- Michigan Team To Meet sinki. It tends to explain, too, the Rutgers Here Tonight undercurrent of resentment in Allied Rutgers_ capitals at Swedish intervention to United States foreign policy will promote the peace maneuvering. be the topic of debate when Michigan Measured by such a yardstick, the varitydebter opnTte.hme"anc.-.T.fl . pr. oCtier 01 directLnei varsity debaters open the home season FrnoBiihpofro iethl with a non-decision contest against to Finland on request takes on a new a team from Rutgers University at meaning. It is virtual Allied notice 8 p.m. today in the North Lounge to Berlin that even surrender of Fin- 8 the Union. land under German, Scandinavian of te MUion '4 dE and perhaps Italian peace pressure William Muehl, '41, and Edigar would not end all possibility of ulti- IC'linlton.1'4. will ftake the ?.ffihicyan _-_._ _ .--_-- - - -- --- - Soviet Is Given 'H-lutin By MARGARET WALSH Senior women will be the first to see "Hi-Falutin'," the 1940 Junior Girls' Play, which will open at 8:30 p.m. today in Lydia Mendelssohn Theater in the League, after Senior Supper. The play, which was written and directed by Richard McKelvey, is the annual project of over 100 junior women, and has been planned by Jane Grove, general chairman, and momf, horc o f n~f +1.,,,,4'.r1nl nnmn, **n J. G. P. Begins Tonight is in love with Ann, is played by Mary Ellen Wheeler, and Dartmouth Eddy, the pride and joy of all the young ladies at Temple Grove Sem- inary for Girls, is played by Beverly Bracken. Jean McLaughlin will take the part of Milly, the campus pol- itician, and Elaine Alpert will take the role of Pool-room Pete, the de- graded character so disapproved of by Mrs. Fidgett, the schoolteacher, played by Doris Wechsler. Osrood D firect smnces town typical of a college town in the 1900's, and one set includes a pool-room, a hotel, an "emporium," and part of Temple Grove School. Three More Performances After the performance tonight, at which senior women are the guests of the juniors, "Hi-Falutin'" will be given at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow, Pri- day, and Saturday, to the general public. Tickets are still on sale at the box-office in the League for some performances, and should be