Weather Considerable Cloudiness With Occasional Rain. LLiur fflFr ia :Iazt33 Editorial Presidential Campaign And War Emotionalism.., VOL. L. No. 168 Z-323 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, MAY 21, 1940 PRICE FIVE CENTS 27 Candidates Enter Union Publications Office Races Entire Campus Will Selec Six Vice - Presidents, Three Board In Control Members This Thursda Gins Withdraws Name From List The deadline for petitioning for candidacy in the all'-campus election Thursday for six Union vice-pres- idents and the three student mem- bers of the Board in Control of Stu- dent Publications passed last night with one additional candidate, Chris- topher Vizas, '41, officially placed on the Student Publications ballot. This addition, however, was offset by the declination yesterday of My- ron Gins, '41, of Cleveland Heights, Ohio. Ten candidates still remaining in the Publications race are: James Allen, '40, Birmingham; William El- mer, '41, Dearborn; Albert Mayio, Grad. (incumbent), Detroit; James Nielson, '41, Winnetka, Ill.; Donald Richey, '41, Charlotte; Ganson P. McTaggert, '41, Albany, N. Y.; James Tobin, '41, Highland Park; Richard Waterman, '40, Albany, N. Y., and Philip Westbrook, '40, (incumbent) Escanaba. List Of 'Candidates The official list of candidates for the six Union vice-president posts includes: from the Law School, A. Robert Kleiner, '41 of Grand Rapids; Charles M. Lovett, '41L, of Detroit, and James l P'rench, '41L, of De- troit; candidates from the Literary and Graduate schools are Harold Singer, '41, of Detroit; Richard Flet- cher, '41, of Benton Harbor, and Marshall Brown, '41, Janesville, Wis- consin; medical school candidates are Harold E. West, '41M, of Ann Arbor; Joseph Juliar, '41M, of Mt. Clemens, and George E. Waeck. Dentistry Candidates Those candidates from the Den- tal School are Burdette Stone, '41D, of Flint, and Raphael Sanjurjo, '41SpecD, of Santuro, Puerto Rico; candidates from the Engineering and Architecture colleges are George Davidson, '41A, of Detroit; Peter Brown, of Galesburg, Illinois, and Charles Kerner, '41E, of Milwaukee, Wisconsin; candidates from the Col- leges of Business Administration, Forestry & Conservation, Music, Pharmacy and Education are Russel LaBelle, '41F&C, of Pittsburgh, Pa.; G. Robert Harrington, '41BAd, of Albany, N. Y., and Miles Dean, '41BAd, of Bay City. Golfers Fare Badly In Battl Michigan Squad Fades In Afternoon Rounds (Special To The Daily) COLUMBUS, Ohio, May 20.-After jumping to a quick lead in the morn- ing round, Michigan's undefeated golf team faded badly in the after- noon and wound up third behind Illi- nois and Ohio State at the half-way point of the 72 hole medal play in the Western Conference champion- ship battle. Capt. Bob Palmer led the way in the first 18 holes with a four-over- par 76 as the Wolverines racked up a first round total of 312 strokes. But the entire team with the exception of Bill Black, slumped on the last 18 holes of the day, finishing with a four-man team score of 636. fllinois, the team the Wolverines whipped in their last home match, led at the end of the first 36 holes with a team score of 628. The Buck- eye hosts took second with 634 with Michigan two strokes behind. Bill Gilbert, Ohio State's blond sophomore, shot a one-over-par' round of 71-74-145 to take the lead in the individual championship race with Michigan's Bob Palmer eight (Continued on ?gage 3) Medical Group To Hold Last ..Business Meeting The Pre-Medical Society will hold its last businesmeetine 'of the se- Preuss, Smithies, Witt To DiscussWar Issue Germans Claim Capture OfLaon; Student Senate's Syinpo To Be GivenAt 7:30 Prof. Lawrence Preuss of the politi- cal science department, Prof. Arthur Smithies of the economics depart- ment and Herbert Witt, executive t secretary of the American Student Union, will take the stand and testify on theStudent Senate's symposium 1 on "Can America Stay out of the r War?" at 7:30 p.m. today in the Union. When questioned about his atti- tude, Prof. Preuss stated that he be- lieves America should do every thing tpossible for an Allied victory. But he thought the question of sending an expeditionary force across is merely an academic point. "We are 1not prepared now and when we fin- ally would be able to send armed sup- port it will be too laty to have a de- cisive effect," he declared. In a statement to the Senate com- mittee in charge of the symposium, Witt declared: "The military events of the past week and the consequent hullabaloo in Washington and in the press has not shaken the convicition of hundreds of thousands of students that the war abroad is neither in the interests of the Eureopean peoples nor in the interests of Americans. Amer- ica is not in danger of invasion. The Group To Hold Aninual Parley Glover To Give Welcome Address; Session Aims To Publicize Advances The ninth annual Pharmaceutical Conference will be held at 2:30 p.m. today in the amphitheatre of the Rackham Building and pharmacists from all over the state are expected to attend. The conference, held for the pur- pose of publicizing advances in phar- macy, will be opened by Professor C. C. Glover of the University School of Pharmacy who will present the address of welcome. The speakers will include Dr. B. V. Christensen, Dean of the College of Pharmacy, Mr. Arthur Secord of the Speech Department and Dr. A. C. Curtis of the University Medical School. At 7:45 in the Rackham amphi- theatre, micro-moving pictures of living embryos at various stages in; their development will be shown. Ac- cording to Prof. Clover, pictures will' present a marvelous technique in the photography of living tissue. Dr. B. M. Patten of the University Medical School will be the speaker, School Of Forestry To Hold Banquet The Annual Senior Banquet for Forestry School students will be held at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Allenel Hotel, it was announced yesterday.1 Faculty, seniors and graduates of the School of Forestry and Conserva- tion are invited to attend, Dave Reid,1 '40F&C,. general chairman, an- nounced. P.M. PR On Foreign Policy Tonight At Union Drive Toward Paris And The Sea; RFC Offers Credit For Defense ROF. LAWRENCE PREUSS .. ..'debates on war greater danger lies in war loans, pro- vocative statements, and swollen armaments that are heading us to- ward another A.E.F." Professor Preuss is a recognized authority on international law. Pro- fessor Smithies is known as an ex- pert on economic theory. A Rhodes scholar, he later held a post in the Australian civil service as an econ- omist. Witt is a graduate of New York University. He was chairman of a world conference of student organizations in Paris last fall. Witt succeeded Joseph P. Lash as secre- tary of the ASU at that organization's convention last winter. This is his second appearance in Ann Arbor. He was here previously in March. The audience will be invited to par- ticipate in the discussion after the speeches. Varsity Netters IBeat. State,, 6-3 Victory Is Fourth Straight Over Lansing Squad By BUD DOBER The Wolverine netmen success- fully closed their 1940 dual meet season and brought their season record to ten victories and six losses when they defeated the Michigan State tennis squad in East Lansing yesterday, 6-3. This was the second time in three days that Michigan defeated State and the fourth time in two years that Coach Leroy Weir's tennis teams have defeated State net teams by a 6-3 count. With their last dual meet success- fully stowed away, the Wolverines will rest today, preparatory to leav- ing for the Big Ten Tennis Meet to be held in Evanston Thursday, Fri- day and Saturday. Coach Weir an- nounced, however, that he would work out this afternoon with Harry Kohl and Bob Jeffers, third doubles team. As in Saturday's match with the boys from E~a st Lansing, a split in the singles placed the burden of the meet upon t Le doubles combinations. The same teams who had swept' (continued on Page 3) Expansion Aid To Industries Is Proffered' Aircraft Industry Declines; Says It Needs No Help For Present At Least WASHINGTON,, May 20. .-(A)- The RFC offered Its credit facilities to industries whicti lack capital for expansion necessitated by the Nation- al Defense Programfl today, while on a conference of airbraft manufactur- ers came official word that for the present at least they needed no help. Jesse Jones, the RFC chairman, issued a statement 'saying his agency was ready to cooperate with the banks in making secured loans for national defense purposes, by taking 75 per cent of such loans or underwriting 75 per cent, leaving the bank carry- ing 25 per cent of the advance. 'Sufficient Capital' After conferring with the Nation's principal aircraft builders in a hur- riedly summoned session, Secretary Morgenthau told reporters the indus- try had sufficient capital, and enough skilled workers to meet the present demands of the defense situation, without sacrificing labor standards. The development came as a sur- prise to some officials who had been discussing the possibility of RFC loans for the purpose of building addition- al plant capacity, or of having the Government build new plants direct- ly, retain ownership, and lease them to private builders. This possibil- ity apparently remained in the long- range picture. Appropriations Pushed Meanwhile, a Congress pushing the defense appropriations through at top speed heard from Rep. Martin of Massachusetts, the Republican House Leader, an inquiry as to "how the Administration intends to finance these new demands." In reply, Rep. Rayburn of Texas, the Democratic leader, said that seri- ous consideration was being devoted to that problem and that a recom- mendation would be made by the ex- ecutive departments. Berlin Claims Paris Says (By The Associated Press) By KIRKE L. SIMPSON The fate of Allied armies in Flan- ders hangs perilously on the con- fused battle along the western flank of the huge salient Germany has carved into northern France in a dozen days and nights of fighting. Whether massed French forces holding the road to Paris at the depth of the pocket and along its southern flank forced the Nazi at- tack to veer westward, or whether the shift conforms to German grand strategy is not clear. There can be no doubt, however, that Berlin has now staked hope of quick and crush- ing victory on the effort to break through to the Channel between Mau- beuge and St. Quentin and cut the Allied armies in half. Berlin's Claims Berlin claims already to have pierced this front to the Cambrai- Peronne Line, the old Somme battle area of the World War. If this is true, the German westward drive has already dangerously undermined the Allied lines in Flanders and is threat- ening England with all the horror of Nazi air attack across the narrow Straits of Dover. Paris, however, says the main battle front is well eastward of the Cam- brai-Peronne Line. The French place the major fighting on the front be- tween La Fere, which is due south of St. Quentin, and Landrecies," which is southwest of Maubeuge. Both are on the Sambre River, but it has already been crossed westward Sphinx Chooses 25 New Members; Will Give Dinner 'Torture in the manner of Egypt will be the fate of 25 junior men to- day when Sphinx, honorary junior men's society, conducts its annual Spring initiation here today. Tapping ceremonies were held about the campus last night. A ban- quet will conclude the ceremonies to- day. New members are Normal Call, Bud Chamberlain, Goodwin Clarke, Bob Fitzgerald, Jim Galles, John Gillis, Paul Goldsmith, George Harms, Dan Huyett, Bob Ingalls, Roger Kelly, Strother Martin, Jay McCormick, Bill Newton, Al Owens, Bud Piel, John Rookus, Dick Scherling, Gus Share- met, Bill Slocum, Don Stevenson, Wayne Stille, Ben Thorward, Bob Westfail and Al Wistert E by the Germans on a relatively wide front, as has the Somme at St. Quen- tin. Troops Imperiled At least 300,000 Allied troops, ex- clusive of remnants of the Dutch army, are imperiled in the Flanders area by the Nazi thrust westward for the Oise-Sambre crossings. In the struggle to prevent these forces from being caught in the Nazi trap, the Maubeuge-Valenciennes - Cam- brai triangle is a crucial sector. Between Valenciennes and Mau- beuge, Berlin claims to have beaten back a Franco-Belgian force attempt- ing to "escape" southward. Berlin also asserts that the British in Flan- ders are racing by forced marches for the channel ports. There is no reason to doubt it, although it may not yet be a dash to reembark, but a sweeping retirement to a new line of defense, Price Control Declared Valid By High Court Congressional Regulation Of Interstate Industry Is UpheldIn 8-1 Vote WASHINGTON, May 20. -jP- The Supreme Court, in a decision upholding the Bituminous Coal Act, ruled 8 to 1 today that Congress can constitutionally prescribe price-fix- ing, marketing controls and other regulatory remedies to cure "chaotic conditions" in interstate industry. The Act was passed in 1937 after an earlier regulatory law, called the Guffey Coal Act of 1935, was ruled invalid. The aim of the legislation was to curb the "over-production and savage, competitive warfare" which, Justice Douglas said in today's ma- jority opinion, had "wasted;" the bituminous coal industry, "Labor and capital alike were the victims," the opinion observed. "Fi- nancial distress among operators and acute poverty among miners pre- vailed even during periods of gen- eral prosperity. This history of the bituminous coal industry is written in blood as, well as in ink." If the operators themselves "had endeavored to stabilize the markets through price-fixing agreements," Douglas commented, they "would have run afoul" of the Sherman Anti-Trust Act. Fate Of Allied Armies Depends On Battle Along Western Flank Cambrai-Peronne Line Is Pierced; Battle-Front Is Further To East Nazis Report Storm Troops' Forward Push Louvain Library Ruined; Germans Say 60,000 Enter Northern France (y The Associated Press) The capture of Laon, for centuries a strategic position 75 miles north- east of Paris, was claimed tonight by the German High Command Even there, the German announce- ment said, Nazi storm troopers did not stop, but continued on six miles beyond Laon in a southwesterly di- rection to the Oise-Aisne Canal. At the end of 11 days of the Ger- man blitzkrieg through the low coun- tries and into France, the High Com- mand said, the Nazi war flag was waving over the citadel of the city which Von Kluck's army took in August, 1914, and which remained in German hands until October, 1918. At the same time another German thrust veered to the north, heading toward the English Channel with the object of trapping Belgian and British units making a stand in that area. War's destructiveness in Belgium was brought home sharply to United States citizens with the word that the great Louvain library, erected on Herbert Hoover square by con- tributions of many university stu- dents, had been destroyed by fire. Newspaper correspondents touring the front as guests of Adolf Hitler saw the building in ruins, its 700,000 volumes considered lost. 'Claiz Gains The German High Command said the shifting thrust to the west-away from the road to Paris-gained be- tween 20 and 30 miles on a line north from St. Quentin, which was in Ger- man hands. If successful, the new drive to the Channel would imperil 300,000 Bri- tish soldiers on the Allies' north flank. It would also gain new bases for a lethal attack on England, just 20 miles across the Channel from Calais, France. Sixty thousand German mechan- ized troops, comprising five full divi- sions, were engaged in the battering march across the plains of northern France. The main objective, it appeared, was to drive a wedge between the French forces defending Paris and the Allied Armies (British, Belgian and French) in Belgium. Troops Drop Back Allied troops in the north imme- diately dropped back to meet the new threat on the Channel, ready for a backs-to-the-sea stand against the menace of a Nazi invasion of England. (Prime Minister Winston Churchill has already warned that England's "own day" of defending her soil is imminent.) The lightning shift in German tac- tics, reportedly dictated by Reichs- fuehrer Hitler himself in his head- quarters "somewhere on the Western Front," followed reports that Gen. Maxime Weygand, 73-year-old new commander-in-chief of the Allies, was massing a huge army to "pinch off" the 50-mile deep Nazi salient into France on the Meuse River front. The French acknowledged late yesterday a Nazi report that St. Quentin, 80 miles northeast of Paris, the scene of some of the bloodiest fighting in the World War, had fall- en to the Germans in a furious see- saw battle. Pulp Edition Of Garg To Appear Thursday More Indians will bite the dust and more criminals will be tracked down by wily master minds; new war heroes will be created and roman- tic love will again triumph. Gargoyle will bring them all to campus Thursday when the June issue of the campus humor magazine makes its appearance in the form of x _ . ,3 Play Season's Win ter's Tale' OpensToday The second and most ambitious Dramatic Season production will in- corporate a seasoned professional troupe and the University Symphony Orchestra into Shakespeare's "The Winter's Tale" opening 8:30 p.m. to- day in the Lydia Mendelssohn The- atre. Mady Christians, supported by Di- ana Barrymore, Louis Calhern, Hir- am Sherman and Joseph Holland, will take the lead in the seldom-done comedy. Whitford Kane, well-known for his appearances here in the past, will also play a part, this being the only Shakespearean play he has ever appeared in. The University orches- tra is collaborating with a musical score adapted from the French im- pressionists. University students who will appear The 'dloes' Invade Ann Arbor: Women's Voices Fill Palmer Field: Lantern Nigit Contest Honors Go To Pi Beta Phi Songsters Jeff Davis, One-Eye Conmnelly Will HighlightHobo Day Today Jeff Davis, King of the Hoboes, received an offer to go out to the coast with the Hollywood anct flIaway and One-Eye Connelly, world's cham- again for another film. players are Richard Levy, 4lSpec, gate-crasher, together with a With Davis will also be Skeets Helen Ralston, 40Spec, Robert Simpson, famous hobo, who is known Reeves, Jack Gelder, '40, John motley troupe of bonafide hoboes, for his ability to imitate sounds of Schwarzwalder, Grad, Norman Ox- will climax Congress' gala Hobo Day, trains, birds, children, cats, dogs and handler, John Jensen, '40, June Mad- when they put on a program at 8 so forth. ison, '40Ed., and Mary Jordon, '40. p.m. today in the Union. King Jefferson was starred in a The play has been directed by Prof. Davis will come to Ann Arbor direct special radio broadcast over Station Valentine Windt, of the speech de- from the convention of the League CKLW Sunday from Windsor, loca- partment, and lighted by Feder of of Hoboes of the World, where he tion of the Hobo Convention. New York. was reelected emperor last Sunday. Hobo Day ceremonies will include Ticke for "The Winter's Tale" Connelly is prominent in gate- the general attiring of the student will be on sale at the Lydia Mendels- crashing circles and notorious among body in hobo rags for the entire day. sohn box-office for evening perfor- the ranks of sports promoters. He In the evening His Majesty will judge mances today through Saturday at has, in his long career, walked in a contest in which the student most 8:30 p.m. and matinees Wednesday many an exit backwards and slipped resembling the typical American vari- and Saturday at 3:15 p.m. through many an entrance gate un- ety of hobo will be selected. Women noticed. He was successful in crash- may also participate in the contest. L l Tt ing every game in the 1939 World's However, according to David Panar, S . l h* Jtigg E ercngseV Series. Incidentally, he picks Brook- '42E, secretary-treasurer of Congress, President Of AIEE lyn to beat the Yanks in the 1940 it is not necessary to be attired as a l J t By FRANCES AARONSON Outsinging 23 opponents, Pi Beta Phi sorority took first place in the annual Lantern Night song contest last night. Delta Gamma sorority placed second, while Jordan Hall sang into third. With 92 per cent participation in WAA activities, Alpha Delta Pi was awarded the participation trophy for having the highest house score, of 212 points. "May you go through life with the spirit symbolized by this cup," said Dr. Margaret Bell in pre- senting the trophy. Kappa Delta, with 139 points, took second place, and Zone I was a close third with 138 points for the past year. The cup is awarded on the basis of per cent of participation and degree' of success in competitive sports. Theta Xi fraternity, winners of the Sing last Thursday night, added their othy Shipman, outgoing president of the League; Harriet Sharkey, form- er president of the WAA; Betty Slee, chairman of the 1939-40 Judiciary Council; Mary Frances Reek, former president of Assembly and Barbara Bassett, outgoing president of Pan- hellenic Association. Seniors in caps and gowns carried Japanese Lanterns symbolic of the traditions and honors of the graduat- ing class. They were preceded by the Michigan Band and a police es- cort. At Palmer Field, where the traditional "M" formation was taken by all women, the entire assemblage sang "The Yellow and the Blue" while senior women passed to their succes- sors the lantern symbols of their class. An innivation this year was the open house held by Couzens Hall for all song contest participators. The' nurses' home also extended invita-