I WTeathetr 1"air atld wainmr today and Monday. L 4bp r4 41v AMW t !R an ai't Editorial Threat Of Fascislam Lies In America . VOL. L. No. 161 Z-23 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, MAY 12, 1940 PRICE FIVE CENTS FDR Denounces Invasion; Pledges 'Moral'Assistance President Applies Neutrality To Lowland; Denounces Daruel Invasion' in Message WASHINGTON, May 11. -(P)--President Roosevelt replied in a most friendly vein tonight to an appeal from the King of the Belgians that he support little Belgium's fight against the Nazi invaders with all of his "moral authority." In his message to Leopold III, the soldier-monarch, Mr. Roosevelt de- nounced the "cruel invasion" of Belgium, The Netherlands and Luxembourg. "The people of the United States hope, as I do, that policies which seek to dominate peaceful and independent peoples through force and military aggression may be arrested," he said, "and that the government and peo- ple of Belgium may preserve their integrity and their freedom. "As an old personal friend I send you my warm personal regards." At the same time, the President issued a proclamation applying the Neutrality Act to the Low Countries ------------ Strong Belgian Fort Captured, Germans Say Vital Positions Are Taken Along Maastricht River, High Command Claims German Di IVIS1I In on Said Stopped By French Churchill Fo: { I Nazis Attribute Gain London. - - - in the same manner that he had invoked it previously against Ger- many, France and England. The principal practical effect of this ac- tion was to forbid American credit to the Dutch Government. Regard- less of the Neutrality Act, the Bel- gian government is barred from bor- rowing in this country by the John- son Act. The latter statute forbids extension of credit to governments which have defaulted on previous war debts to the United States. Even before Mr. Roosevelt extend- ed application of the neutrality law to the newest belligerents, Chairman May (Dem.-Ky.) of the House Mili- tary Committee came out today in favor of repealing the Johnson Act and revising the neutrality statute to permit the granting of credit to Britain and her Allies. Relaxation of the Neutrality Act had been advocated previously-pri- or to the German invasion of the Low Countries-by Senator Adams (Dem.-Colo.). When he broached the idea, however, the general reac- tion was that the suggestion was early. Chairman Pittman (Dem.- Nev.) of the Senate Foreign Rela- tions Committee said at the time that the Allies were estimated to have sufficient financial reserves to go two years without credit. Several legislators predicted pri- vately today that, if the President were to recommend repeal of the Johnson Act and neutrality law re- vision, Congress would support him. Others said, however, it was too early for such a step. Many members of both houses praised the address in which Mr. Roosevelt predicted last night tiat the 21 American Republics would act together. Britain Passes American Exports To Netherlands WASHINGTON, May 1. -(P)- Great Britain and France today gave clearance through their contraband patrol to American exports destined for the Netherlands and Belgium. The British embassy said the Allies would dispense with navicerts on ship- ments to the Dutch and the Belgians. Navicerts are certificates, obtain- able by shippers from British con- sulates, which state that designated exports are not contraband and therefore not subject to seizure by the British contraband patrol. The British Embassy said navicerts still would be issued for shipments to the Netherlands and Belgium if ship- pers desired them and that the navi- certs would be issued promptly if ships involved were to call at neutral as well as allied ports. Meanwhile, agriculture department officials said the extension of the war to the Netherlands and Belgium threatens-if the German invasion assumes broad proportions-an im- poitant market for American farm products and an important source of supply for the United Kingdom. SRA Director Will Give Talk Co-Ops Will Hold Open Meeting Tomorrow Students interested in the cooper- ative movement on campus are in- vited to attend an open meeting at 4.p.m. tomorrow in the Union featur- ing talks by Kenneth Morgan, director of the Student Religious Association, William H. Rockwell, '41, and June Harris. '40. M. C. Krueger Will Address Church Group Socialist Party Candidate For Vice-President Post Will AppearMay 17 Maynard C. Krueger, 1940 vice- presidential candidate of the Ameri- can Socialist Party and professor of economics at the University of Chi- cago, will speak on the "American Scene" at 4:15 p.m. May 17, at the Congregational Church under the auspices of the recently formed Thomas and Krueger For President Club, Daniel Suits, '40, announced yesterday. Professor Krueger was the keynote platform speaker at the Socialist Party presidential convention held in Washington, D.C. last month. His running mate is D orman Thomas, former Presbyterian minister who is now his party's candidate for the presidency for the fourth consecutive time. Professor Krueger is one of the country's most widely known radio speakers on economic subjects through his participation in the Uni- versity of Chicago Round Table dis- cussions and is a member of the So- cialist Party National Executive Com- mittee, Suit ssaid. Barrymore's Diana Will Arrive Monday Diana Barrymore, 18 years old and beautiful, will step off the train in Ann Arbor at 11:10 p.m. tomorrow. The youngest member of the Royal Family of Broadway, Miss Barry- more has been engaged for a role in Shakespeare's "Winter Tale" which opens here Tuesday, May 21, as the second feature of the Dramatic Sea- son. She is arriving early in order to make preliminary arrangements for the play, and incidentally to see Ann Arbor. The time of her arrival has been announced in answer to the flood of requests received from campus groups To Newest Weapons By LOUIS P. LOCHNER BERLIN, May 11.-(41)-A "new type of weapon" enabled the armies of Adolf Hitler to capture Eben Emael, described as the strongest fortress in Belgium's Liege defenses, the German high command announ- ced tonight. The fort's commander and 1,000 men surrendered, the announcement said. A picked air force detachment, in a slanting attack from above, already had put the fort out of action yester- day, the command said, and held its garrison in check with the new weap- on until an army unit attacking from the north arrived and forced the sur- render. "Further and more precise details must of course be kept in the dark," authorities said of the new weapon. It was a matter of speculation whe- ther this was the weapon which Hit- ler mentioned in a speech at Danzig last year and which has had experts guessing at its nature ever since. (There also has been speculation whether it was the magnetic mine.) Eben Emael was the second fort claimed to have been taken in the Liege fortified zone, where the Im- perial German steamroller was stalled for a week of frontal assault in 1914. This time the German armies sliced through the Dutch appendix province of southern Limburg, which virtually is undefendable, seized Maastricht, on the border between the western edge of Dutch Limburg and Belgium, and captured the Albert Canal in Maastricht and to the west of it. (An official Belgian communique admitted the Germans gained "a foothold," at heavy cost, in the Bel- gian -defensive positions about Maa- stricht, but insisted, "around Liege, our positions remain intact." French military sources acknowledge the Germans had taken Maastricht). Authorized sources said German troops who occupied Belgian and Netherlands airports yesterday still held them today, but were "fighting with Belgian and Dutch troops."- (In London, the Netherlands for- eign minister said all airdromes seized by the Germans in Holland had been recaptured). Senior Swingout Will Be May 26 Swingout, annual feature of grad- uation will be held May 26, it was announced by Phyllis Simmons, '41, and Tom Tussing, 'chairmen of the committee for the event, feting sen- iors of all colleges. Making their first appearance in their caps and gowns, the Class of '40 will assemble according to schools for their march through campus LONDON, May 11. -( ')--- With characteristic speed, Winston Church- ill tonight formed a new British gov- ernment of all parties and gathered around himself a new streamlined, five-man war cabinet while Allied forces raced against time for vantage points in the Low Countries and swapped blows from the air with Ger- man warplanes. The war cabinet, replacing the old eight-man board of strategy of Nev- ille Chamberlain, includes Chamber- lain, Lord Halifax, Foreign Secre- tary under the resigned prime min- ister, and the Labor Party leaders, Clement R. Attlee and Arthur Green- wood. Its information was announced as British and French troops sped to positions alongside their new Dutch and Belgian allies, Royal Air Force planes blasted away at German con- centrations and communications in the Rhineland and British naval planes gave Adolf Hitler a dose of his' own surprise strategy with sudden stabs against German-occupied Ber- gen, on Norway's west coast. In addition to the premiership, Churchill retained the Portfolio of Defense Minister and designated Chamberlain Lord President of the Council; Attlee, Lord Privy Seal; Greenwood, Minister Without Port- folio; and kept Lord Halifax in his old foreign post. Religious Groups Meet To Discuss Varied Problems Student religious groups will meet to hear professors of various depart- ments discuss problems of religion, world government, and student af- fairs. Prof. Albert Hyma of the history department will address the Student club of St. Paul's Lutheran Church on "Lutheranism" following the student fellowship supper at 6:30 p.m. "Heart and Mind" will be discussed by Prof. John L. Brumm of the jour- nalism department at the meeting of the Wesleyan Guild of the First Methodist Church at 6 p.m. At the same time the Westminster Student Guild o' the First Presbyterian Church will hear Kakhri Maluf, ex- change fellow from the American University of Beirut, Syria, describe "The Mission of Syria." Freshman Society To Initiate Group Phi Eta Sigma will initiate more than 60 freshmen at its annual ini- tiation ceremony which will be held at 5:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Union. The initiation will h followed b a . The War At 2 A.M. BERLIN, May 11.--(A)-By1 ing military forces in The Net lands West Indies, the newsp National Zeitung said tonight British "carried the war into t tory which comes within the s of the Monroe Doctrine." * , ,* LONDON, May 12 (Sunday) -A German radio broadcast h here early today said Essen, w the great German Krupp p Works are located, and two0 German towns had been bombe Allied planes. * * * AMSTERDAM, May 11-(RP)- Netherlands General Headqua announced tonight that the D army had recaptured a town the enemy in a four-hour coux attack and killed "all soldiers' a German armored train. Wa ite Frames ,juvenile Crin Prevention B Professor Of Law Seh Will Present Stat At CapitolGatheri Prof. John B. Waite of the School will journey to Washin D. C., this week to present to American Law Institute for its sideration a model statute, desi to prevent repeated juvenile c which he has drafted in cooper with a committee of the Instit If the proposed statute receive approval of the Institute, it wi sent with that body's recommend to the legislatures of the 40 or states which will convene in the islative year, 1941. The Law Insitute, in session 15-17, comprises approximately of the outstanding lawyers and Jt from all over the nation. A mittee of the institute and Prof Waite have been studying the1 lem of juvenile delinquency special examination of measur provide adequate prevention o peated juvenile crime. The model statute, the resu two year's research, proposes to e lish a central state authorit whose jurisdiction all young pe convicted of crime will be come instead of prison. Westwall Attack; rms New Cabinet Netherlands Stop German East Advance; and- Nazi Forces Gain Foothold In Belgium ther- aper But Report Indicates 'Heavy Casualties' the terri- scope WAR BULLETINS WASHINGTON, May 11.-(P)-- The Red Cross cabled $100,000 to -{A') Belgium and the same amount to The Netherlands today for relief teard of the military and civilian wounded. there The Red Cross also announced it had ordered 100 ambulances for Atms use in the war zones. other BRUSSELS, May 11.-(P)- This Belgian capital was bombed from d by the air again tonight. Heavy detonations resounded in the center of the city, and an air raid alarm was in effect from 6:20 p.m. to 7 p.m. Civilian casualties in Saturday's bombings were said authoritatively -The to be higher than on Friday, first day of the German invasion. rters The city of Liege also was heavily bombed Saturday. hutch AMSTERDAM, May 11.--(')- Americans in The Netherlands were from advised by United States Minister George A. Gordon tonight to "stay nter- put" as he deemed it inadvisable to attempt to cross any Dutch fron- on tiers. -- French Resist Attack By ROY P. PORTER PARIS, May 11.-(P)- Seasoned French troops in the Sterck region of the Moselle River valley today beat off the largest German attack on .e the Maginot Line since the war started, military sources reported. An entire German division of 14,000 men was said to have been halted in its tracks. The Nazi movement just east of Luxembourg reportedly was crushed from the strongly fortified front-line positions to which outpost units [001 withdrew yesterday at the first assault by Nazi advance guards. tute Additional forces quartered in the subterranean Maginot Line supported the battle squads with artillery and machine gun fire and tonight the ng military spokesman here said the battle area was quieting down. At the same time, a French high command communique said the Law Germans had lost heavily in fighting in the southern part of Luxembourg. gton, Meanwhile, Germany's blitzkrieg troops were said by French military the sources to have driven across the Maas River in Southern Holland, occupy- con- ing the city of Maastricht, on the Belgian frontier, and to have occupied gned the town of Arnhem, in East Central Holland. (The censor deleted four rime, words in this dispatch, apparently relating to towns being occupied.) ation The Allies were rushing troops to the aid of the low countries, the ute. communique revealed. s the .. "Our troops continued their advance across Belgium, aiding their ll be Allied troops at various points by the action of their advance groups," the ation high command reported. "The advance is going on rapidly." more . German troop landings on beaches in the vicinity of The Hague have leg- caused a "troubled" situation in Holland, military authorities said. The Germans first began to land troops yesterday as their motorized May forces were crossing the eastern Dutch frontier. 750 British planes bombed and strafed the beaches yesterday while the udges Dutch troops attacked German units. The landings began again today and com- this afternoon military spokesmen said the situation was uncertainal- fessor thisgaftenoon hmilta pmens aidptesttion rtn prob- though the Dutch detachments were reported to be In control. with es to Netherlands Fight For Existene f re- ti By J. REILLY O'SULLIVAN lt of AMSTERDAM, May 11.--(P)-The invaded Netherlands today stamped stab- out dangerous enemy segments in a German blitzkrieg pattern which y to persistently planted air troops behind the most carefully laid defenses and rsons dumped its first bombs in the ancient heart of Amsterdam, city of canals. pitted The Dutch high command announced the German advance had been Michigan Nine Beats OSU, 5-2 As Tennis, Track Teams Win I Drama Season Opens Monday; Ruth Chatterton In Pygmalion' E 1 l 7 By S. R. WALLACE Ann Arbor's great white way will come to life for the next five weeks when the Lydia Mendelssohn The-; atre house lights dim on the 1940 Dramatic Season opening 8:30 p.m. tomorrow. Ruth Chatterton, supported by Barry Thompson and Louis Calhern, will play the lead in the Season's initial production, "Pygmalion." The comedy is scheduled to run every evening through Saturday, with mat- inees Thursday and Saturday at 3:15 p.m. At least one New York producer will be in the audience tomorrow. Miss Chatterton, who will appear as the cockney Eliza, is deciding whe- ther or not to do the play in New York next fall, and the reaction of playgoers here may prove a deciding factor. Barry Thompson will play the male lead as Professor Higgins and Louis Calhern the role of Colonel Pickering. Also appearing are the English actor Richard Temple as banquet which will be held at 6:15 By NORM MILLER p.m. Until the fifth inning of yester- Richard Ludwig, '42, secretary, an- day's game with Ohio State little nounced that 36 students from the Mike Sofiak had made 21 consecu- Schoolof Literature, 27 from the en- tive trips to the plate without the gineering school, and one from he semblance of a base hit. School of Archiecture will be initia- But the Wolverine pepperpot ted. couldn't have picked out a better spot to snap out' of his batting lethargy than he finally did. Stepping into the batter's box with George Harms on third base, Dean To Tal Captain Charlie Pink on first, and lk a the score tied at 1-1, Sofiak un- leashed a sharp single to right field to score Harms and send Michigan Will Address Freshman off to a four-run outburst that Advisers At Jordan netted the Varsity a 5-2 victory over the Buckeyes. The four hits the Wolverines made Helen Page, Assistant Dean of Wo- infhurinighole inh a e men of Miami Universiy, Oxford, innthis nnin inoupe d ohe innocuous blow in the second cn Ohio, will address the recently-ap-c stituted the sum total of all the pointed student assistants for Jor- safeties the Varsity could muster off dan Hall on the system they will m- Ohio State's Gene Dornbrook. But augurate next fall to provide added the five runs they produced proved freshman orientation in the fresh- more than enough to turn back man dormitory ata dinner at 6 p.m. Coach Fritz Mackey's wariers be- Chosen for personality, leadership hind the brilliant pitching of Lyle and scholarship, each assistant will Bond. advise eight to ten women of the The slender righthander yielded house and assist the direction and only five scattered hits and fanned student government of the house. eight men as he chalked up his Among those selected for the new third straight Conference triumph. positions are Lorraine Judson, '43, Bond was touched for a run in the Jean Misner, '43A, Jane Wright, '43, (Continued on Page 3) Dorothy Bogart, '43, Charlie Boyd, '43, Evelyn Spamer, '42Ed, Shirley Tia inehids Win partisans were generally well satis, fied with the result, since their cin- der path squad was previously trounced by Michigan in the indoor season, 79-15. George Ostroot and Stan Kelley each chalked up double victories for the Maize and Blue, Kelley copping the high and low hurdles, while Os- troot captured the shot put and the discus throw. The expected duel between Mich- igan's Warren Breidenbach and Ohio's Capt. Jack Sulzman in the quarter mile failed to materialize when the Buckeye forsook this event in order to run and win the 220- yard dash, and place second in the 100-yard dash and the 220-yard low hurdles. Breidenbach, without the Ohio ace to push him, beat out his (Continued on Page 3) Tennis Team Victorious (Special To The Daily) SOUTH BEND?,Ind. May 11. - Michigan's first doubles team, Sam Durst and Tom Gamon, gained Mich- igan's only point in the doubles, but it was sufficient to give the Wolver- ines a 5-4 triumph over the Notre Dame tennis squad here this after- noon. The match was Michigan's fifth 5-4 match this season and the third one they've managed to win. Hero this afternoon was Tom Ga- mon who in addition to teaming with stopped on the Eastern front and that both British and French troops were now fighting side by side with Dutch soldiers. in the southern part of the great seaport city of Rotterdam and on Dordrecht Island, to the southeast. If the Germans had been able to hold these western Holland bases they would have been in superb con- dition to strike across the narrow neck of the North Sea at England. An estimated twenty persons were killed and many injured when a long German bomber, flying o'er the crowded streets of mid-Amster- dam at 11 a.m. (5:40 a.m. E.S.T.), dropped bombs. German Troops Win Foothold In Lowlands BRUSSELS, May 11. -(P)- Sup- ported by planes and armored cars, powerful German forces won a foot- hold in Belgian defense positions near the Netherlands city of Maastricht to- day. But a government communique to- night reported the Nazis had sus- tained "heavy losses" in attacks.on Belgian fortifications, and claimed "our positions remained intact" around the fortified town of Liege. (The German High Command claimed capture of Eben, Emael, strongest fort in the Liege chain com- manding the crossing of the Albert Canal and the Meuse River at the west of Maastrict, 15 miles north of Liege itself. DNB, official German news agency, said another Liege fort fell into German hands yesterday). Tonight's communique said: "During the day important enenmy f,.n.. ii, aar s of nn4A n rennac n m- RUTH CHATTERTON office have been requested to call 1