Weather Cloudy and Cooler Y U Sitigau ~~IAit I " . 1 "1 - Editorial Student Apathy Is Attacked,.. VOL. IJI. No. 10 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1941 Z-23 PRICE FIVE CENTS Lend-Lease Fund Increase Passed By House Group 7 - -- - - - - - - Coed Defense Planned rra ining University By Soviet Admits Pressure .As Red Troops Retreat; Courses In Nutrition, Red Cross And Home Nursing Set Up By New Emergency Committee Five Billion Dollars Asked For Aid To England; Started Through House Neutrality Change Js Sought By F1R WASHINGTON, Oct. 8. -UP)--. President Roosevelt's request for a $5,985,000,000 lend-lease fund was approved overwhelmingly by the House Appropriations Committee to- day and its backers started it through Congress with a cry that "clouds of airplanes" and "acres of tanks" are needed to beat Hitler Within a few minutes after the committee approved a $6,159,416,229 omnibus bill carrying the aid fund, Chairman Cannon (Dem.-Mo.) took it to the House floor for three.days of debate with this statement: "Our allies abroad are fighting with their backs to the wall and cannot suriive without our assistance. And if they succumb we must at some portion of .ur continent be faced by an aggressor who in two short years has destroyed every nation in Europe. We must supply them with 6louds of airplanes, acres of) tanks and munitions, to equal and surpass the vast streams of machinery flowing from aggressor countries." But Republicans promptly retort- ed that since very little of the first $7,00.,000,000 lend-lease appropria- tion of last March had been spent, the current fund was not needed im- mnediately. Representative Raber (N.Y.), sen- ior Republican committeeman, told the House there was "place after place" where the President's recom- mendations could be cut and an- nounced :he woud propose, among other things, a $300,000,000 cut in a $1,875,000000' lump sum for agricul- tifal, industrial and other commodi- ties. Neutrality Change Sought By FDR WASHINGTON, Oct. 8.-(UP)-Pres- ident Roosevelt will ask Congress to- morrow, for an amendment to the neutrality act permitting America'n cargo ships to mount guns, legislative leaders reported today. The President hopes, it was said, that later tCongress will also rescind provisions of the same law which forbids the ships to enter ports of belligerent nations. A decision to confine the legisla- tion to the armed ship issue was reached today at a White House con- ference attended by leading members of both parties from both branches of Congress and also by :Harry L. Hopkins, Co-ordinator of the Lease- Lend pregram, and a close personal adviser of the President. Hopkins and several others' were reported to be deeply disappointed at the decision not to include repeal of the ship movement restrictions in the legislation. Some officials ex- presed a hope, however, that some- where aloar the bill's parliamentary course-probably in the Senate F"or- eign Relations Committee,-such a repealer would be added to the mea- n sure. So much stress was laid upon this point, in fact, that conjecture was aroused as to whether the grand strat- egy adopted was not this: To avoid too much opposition in Congress by asking for only a part of what is actually wanted and insert the re mainder when a favorable opportun- ity arises. It was decided the House should take up the measure first of all, with hearings to begin Monday be- fore its foreign affairs committee. School Board Kills Request For Appeal The Ann Arbor school board, a ma- jority of its members now pro-Hais- ley since the recent election, last night voted 6-3 to withdraw a 're- quest, made to the state supreme court by the old board, asking for an appeal on the state tenure commis- sion's decision compelling a hearing for the Superintendent. The case has been pending before the court since the commission's de- M niin at summer. ' Jobs For Students But No Students For Jobs * Faced with the unique situation of having literally hundreds of approved job applications and none of the ap- plicants, NYA officials today appealed to those students who applied for NYA work this summer to come in and make out personnel records so that they can be put to work. Already over 600 students are working on projects, but the NYA administration estimates that when summer applicants report between 800 and 900 will be given employ- ment. Those who have not yet com- pleted their records should come to 205 North Hallibefore Saturday. Serbian Rebels Fight Germans In New Battles Insurgents Resist Nazis In Mountain Warfare; Execution Toll Mounts BUDAPEST, Hungary, Oct. 8.-1P) -At least 90 persons have been killed in new mountain battles between a German army punitive expedition equipped with flame throwers, and Serbian insurgent bands, dispatches from Belgrade. reported tonight. The German expedition was said to' have put hundreds of Serbs to death, but to have met fierce re- sistance in some areas. Fighting from village to village, the Germans were met at times by bands number- ing as many as 500 men, it was stated. One large band was said to have attacked a village near the Morava River in the eastern part of Nazi- occupied Serbia, in old Yugoslavia. After several hours of fighting the insurgents were said to have been routed. The Belgrade )newspaper Novo Vreme said 31 men were killed, 80 wounded, and 17 taken prisoner. Another report described battles at Sikola between important forma- tion of 'Communists and insurgents and the Serbian regular' army. Twen- ty-seven Communists were said to have been killed and four imprisoned. ASME Members Open New Season Presenting three mechanical en- gineering faculty men who outlined the past, present and future of the organization, the student section of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers held its opening meeting of the semester last night. Speakers were Prof. E. T. Vincent, who summarized the past history of the chapter, Prof. R. S. Hawley, who told of the relation between the local organization and the national sec- tions, ,and Prof. R. C. Porter, who outlined the future plans for the society. By DAN BEHRMAN Stressing the need for college wo- men -to take a more important part in community life whether at peace or war," Dean Alice C. Lloyd an- nounced yesterday a program of co-ed participation in the defense effort. Recommended at the first meeting of the newly-formed University wo- men's defense committee, the three- point program consists of credit and extra-curricular courses in nutrition, Red Cross work, and home nursing. The Red Cross course, open to1 sophomore, junior, and senior women, will consist of a minimum twenty hours work with a Red Cross certifi- cate to be given upon its completion. Although definite sections have not been made up, Dean Lloyd urged all women interested to register immedi- ately with Miss Ethel McCormick at the League. "Whether for defense purposes or not," Dean Lloyd declared, "this is an excellent course for any woman to have." She also applied this state- ment to the credit work in nutrition which will be offered next semester. In the field of home nursing, ex- tra-curricular training has been setl up through the League. Women in- terested in this work should report to Miss McCormick. Reviewing the purpose of the new- ly-inaugurated program, Dean Lloyd asserted that the best way for women to support defense activities is to face their community responsibilities. "There are special demands in time of war," she noted. "It -is to meet the demands of our present sit- Anti-Fascistic College Group TQ Meet Here. uation that this committee on de- fense activity is planning certain training, both curricular and extra- curricular." In describing the "special de- mands," Dean Lloyd referred to an American Council of Education Re- port on women in defense work. The report declares that a growing short- age of dietitians, nutritionists, bac- teriologists and social workers coup- led with government staff require- ments has placed the college-trained woman in a position of new impor- tance. With Dean Lloyd as chairman, the women's defense committee consists of Mrs. Byrl F. Bacher, Miss Adelia M. Beeuwkes, Dr. Margaret Bell, Miss Laurie E. Campbell, Miss Hazel G. Herringshaw and Miss Ethel A. Mc- Cormick. Maurice Evans Will Present Lecture ,Here Noted Actor To Inaugurate 1941 Oratorical Series With Talk Tomorrow, Stepping from the mustiness of college classrooms and tomes will be a different Shakespeare when Mau- rice Evans, noted Shakespearean actor, presents "Shakespeare in the. News" 4or Oratorical Association audiences in Hill Auditorium tomor- row. The noted actor's appearance will be a red-letter event not only for the British Relief Fund, to which he will donate proceeds, but for the local audience. Nazi High Command Says Russian Ninth Army Is CaughtIn South" Moscow Defenses Shaken By Troops (By The Associated Press) MOSCOW, Oct. 8.-The Soviet armies below Moscow withdrew today from the important railway town' of Orel after furious fighting, the Red Army High Command announced to- night in a terse confession of mighty German pressure on t o central sec- tors and just above the Sead! Azov, on the extreme south. Orel, on the Moscow-Kharkov- Rostov railway, some 220 miles' south of Moscow and 68 miles east of Bry- ansk, was squarely in the path of thev southern aim of a week-long German enveloping mdvement intended to trap and destroy the Russian Armies defending the Soviet capital. Its fall put the second of two mighty Nazi columns in much more menacing position below the capital, while to the west the other supreme thrust was operating from the vicin- ity of Vyazma, only 125 miles short of Moscow. Advances Acknowledged In the far south German advances were acknowledged by the Soviet Command'sadmission that fighting was raging about Melitopol, on the Sea of Azov along the gateway to Rostov on the River Don and to the Caucasus beyand. (The Germans al- ready had claimed to be well beyond Melitopol with the 'seizure of the Azov ports of Ossipenko and Mariu- pol.) But it was on the Moscow ap- proaches where the hour of greatest crisis was at hand. There, in the greatest mechanized battle ever fought, the central Rus- sian armies beat back desperately at a series of mighty concentric thrusts by which superior German forces were slowly extending their bloody salients. Great Nazi Losses Reported In a terrible chaos on two ill-de- fined and shifting fronts, German advances were acknowledged here and there. But they were achieved, said Soviet military dispatches, at immense cost, to the invaders-rin- cluding more than 500 tanks de- stroyed-and by rushing up great new bodies of armored troops and infantry and fresh squadrons of dive bombers for this supreme test of the war in the East. Russian engineers sweating under unending German fire, broke the bitter terrain with hundreds of miles of trenches and tank traps. Meanwhile in Washington the White House today accused the Nazis of distorting for propaganda pur- poses a lettet in which President Roosevelt assured Premier Joseph Stalin of supplies to fight Hitler. Nazis Claim New Trap Singing, Coeds Will Compete Tomorrow Preliminary auditions in the School of Music-Hour of Charm $1,000 tal- ent search for singing coeds will be held 7 p.m. tomorrow at Morris Hall. Ten of the 30 entrants will be named to sing at the Michfgan finals to be held at the Lydia Mendelssohs Theatre Wednesday. A competent accompanist will be on hand, but entrants may bring their own pianist, Prof. Arthur Hack- ett said. All girls must bring their own music.' The four-man voice faculty of the music school will judge the competi- tion and will team up with two mem- bers of the Hour of Charm all-girl orchestra Wednesday to judge the finals. The three best voices will be re- corded, and one of the three will be chosen Michigan's entrant to sing on the Hour of Charm on Novemp- ber 16. Wreckage Still Bloeks Lake Ore Steamers Soo Channel Is Expected To Be Clear Of Debris Within Next 24 Hours -BULLETIN '- SAULT STE. KARIE, Thurs- day, Oct. 9.-UP)---The approach to one of the two main locks of the St. Mary's River canal was cleared of obstruction early to- day and ore-bearing freighters tied up for nearly 48 hours re-. sumed movement. SAULT STE. MARIE, Oct. 8.--VP) -A 120-ton locomotive, sprawled on the St. Mary's river bottom beneath 25 feet of water, still defied workmen who labored into the chilly night in a furious effort to restore navigation on the busiest iron-ore waterway in the world. Using a huge-derrick boom with a known lifting power of 167 tons, the wreckers struggled with the loco- motive throughoutdthe day, but were unable tb get it out of the path huge freighters must follow through the locks. The engine plunged into the west approach to the two biggest locks yesterday when one arm of a large Bascule bridge collapsed. Two men in the cab were drowned. Engineers hope to drag the loco- motive to one side of the channel, in a position roughly beneath thea damaged bridge Farm. Then they will try to remove the wreckage that is now fouling the good arm. German Forces Menace Moscow; Crisis Is Near For Capital Of Russia Reich Casualties Said To Be High (By The Associated Press) BERLIN, Oct. 8.-General Fedor Von Bocks German armies of the center are fighting a chain of vast and furious battles of annihilation with the backbone of the Red army within 125 miles of Moscow, and the Soviet Ninth Army is cau'ght in ca- tastrophe in the south along the shores of the Azov Sea, the Supreme Nazi Command announced tonight. Locked, admittedly, in a strugg of tremendous moment with the flower of the Soviet Union's defen- sive power on the Central Front, the Germans were reported to have erec- ted a "kettle" of encirclement and destruction already around several Russian armies in the Vyazma ara after tearing a breach in a stalwart Red line of fortifications Vast of Smolensk. Capital Defenses Shaken Military spokesmen said the outer defenses of the Soviet capital were thoroughly shaken and that "a solid German front" is within125 miles of the Kremlin. Far to the south the Ninth Armyof Marshal Semeon Budyenny was de- clared to have been cut off from re- treat after a crushing defeat on the Melitopol front north of the Sea of Azov, with between six and seven Russiai div sion facing de- struction in a tight trap and "weak remnants" trying to flee to Rostov on-Don at the eastern extremity of the sea.. A special communique-the second of the day-said a German tank army, backed by Italian, Hungarian and Slovak units, smashed south- ward to the Sea of Azov from Dnie- peropetrovsk, joining forces at Oss- ipenko (Berdyansk) with Gerrtan and Rumanian forces coming along the coast from the west. 3,500 Prisoners Taken. The grain-iron port of Mariupol is only a little over a hundred miles from Rostov, easternmost point reached by the German imperial armies in the last great war. Sei- official advices inditated one Soviet division already was /considered de- stroyed in this seacost area, and 3,500 prisoners taken. Commentators would not say Mos- cow was immediately meraced; they insisted, a they have often done be- fore, that destruction of Russian fighting men, not the capture of cities, is their main objective. They frankly described the defenders of the Moscow front a "the most and 'the best-equipped divisions of the Bolshevik, armed forces," and they said Timoshenko has had the time and the opportunity to reorganize regular and reserve 'forces after the early battles of Minsk, Bialystok and Smolensk. One source-the commentary ser- vice Dienst Aus Deustchland-as- serted that in the case of Timo- shenko's forces "there is not the slightest' doubt that the objective- I(destruction) - is alm os t accom- plished." Evans comes to Ann Arbor at the Student leaders from the campuses pinnacle of his career, the outstand- of Michigan State College, Wayne ing actor of the day. Here he will University and the University will be seen not in one role, but in many meet at 8:00 p.m. today in the Union roles as he presents the most fam- to form a United Student Commit- ous speeches in his exhaustive Shake- tee Against Fascism. spearean repertoire. Committees will be formed at all Tickets for the complete Oratorical three schools and then a state exec- Association Series will remain on sale utive council, with a representative today and tomorrow. The box office from each committee, will be ap- at Hill Auditorium will place single pointed. tickets for the Evans presentation Preparations will also be made at on sale today at 10 a.m. They will the conference for three large mass also be on sale tomorrow. meetings to be held simultaneously j "Shakespeare in. the News" will be on the three campuses sometime in the curtain raiser in the 1941-42 November. Emphasis will be placed, Oratorical Association Series. on preparing a common policy for action against fascism. Students who have been invited from Michigan State include Tom Green, managing editor of the Mich- igan State Spartan; Tom Connelly, member of the Student Council, and Rose Taylor, representative of Hillel. Robert Swarthout of the Wayne Collegian, members of the Mackenzie Board, the Student Council and the Interfraternity Council at Wayne have also received invitations to at- tend the conference. Students from the Student Senate, the 'Chinese Students Club, the In- terfraternity -_Council, The Michigan Daily, Hillel, the Student Defenders of Democracy and other organiza- hions are to represent the University at the meeting. , 41 Welsh Coal Miner In Racham: t Jack Jones Will Deliver Talk On British Labor Here Today W'olga-Vol ga' To Be Shown, Art Cinema Will Present1 Russian. Picture "The audience is, having the time of its life"--this review by a critic in the newspaper PM describing howI a New York audience reacted to the new Soviet musical comedy "Volga-,# Volga" foretells the film's reception1 here, Art Cinema officials say, at its showings 8:15 p.m. Saturday and Sun- day in Lydia Mendelssohbn Theatre. The program will also include a Russian newsreel of fighting on the Eastern Front and an English docu- mentary film of an RAF raid on4 Nazi-held islands.f "Volga-Volga," the first of Art Cin- ema's showings this season, is t humorous story df the musical ri- valry between Strelka, a girl letter- carrier who writes, popular music in secret, and her fiance, Aliosha, who toots an unpopular bass tuba in public. When her boy-friend sneers at the idea that a girl letter-carrier can write music, Strelka becomes /indig- nant and there is a lover's quarrel. The battle of the ,sexes becomes a battle of the saxaphones when thel two lead rival groups down the Volga ,river to compete in a nation-wide music festival. After a series of ludicrous musical ind nautical mishaps, Strelka wins irst prize in the competition for her "Song of the Volga," proving that :ven creative music is a field no longer barred to women. Congress Appoints Two To Its Executive Council ---------------------- Conservation Institute Opens: Dana Stresses Need For Saving Natural Resources OfAmerica With fifty-seven years as a Welsh coal miner and wage negotiator be- bind him, Jack Jones will speak here today at 8:00 p.m. in the Rackham Amphitheatre on "How British Labor Views The War." Jones' address, part of the public lecture program of the Committee To Defend America, will present the po- ition of the English worker in this conflict while dispelling "the illusion of a capitalists' war." Jones brings twenty-six years underground in Wales' coal centers and a long record in the British Labor Party to the platform. Although Jones' activities in World War II have consisted of civilian de- fense work in "Coventrized" areas, he 'as served a total of eight years in he British army and was wounded Several times in 1914-18. Jones' occupations since the Armis- By HALE CHAMPION - Defining conservation as socially wise use of our natural resources, Dean Samuel T. Dana of the forestryi school today opened the two day program of the Conservation Insti- tute with a keynote address on "Where Do We Stand in Conserva- tion?" Speaking at the morning session in; the Rackham Building, Dean Dana; emphasized that biological and en- gineering conservation techniques were much more highly developed than actual use of them would indi- cate. - He also stressed ifs was in large part up to the individual to acquaint him- self with the problems involved so that conservation could be made a reality by assuring the adoption of socially sound conservation policies. Jay H. Price:regional forester, con- tinued the session with a discussion People." Mr. Reynolds explained in detail how forest now improperly managed might become of both indus- trial and rcreational importance. Those forests which are now go- ing to waste in the eastern part of the country with proper handling could be developed into locally im- portant industries, he claimed. He went on to say that the develp- ment of a community forest-for recre- ational purposes would also enable us to rpalize forest utility. President Ruthyen greeted the dele- gates at luncheon' and afterwards a discussion of local conservation pro- jects was followed by a field trip which visited many of these pro- jects. Prof. Paul B. Sears of Oberlin, speaking atuthe evening banquet on "This Is Our Life," said that con- servation is political and social dyna- mite and that we will never solve our Legislature Meets, Tomorrow After 'Sitdown Strike' LANSING, Oct. 8.-(iP)-A van- guard of senators and representatives descended on the capitol today, seek- ing to arrange battle lines for a finish fight when the legislature reassem- bles tomorrow after its unpreceden- ted "sitdown strike" against Governor Van Wagoner. Interviews with the early arrivals riade just one thing clear: That they were just as confused concerning means of procedure to permit restor- ation of peace and an orderly ad- journment as anybody else in the capitol. Rep. Maurice E. Post, Republican, Rockford, Speaker pro tempore of the House and influential in swinging votes, and Senator D. Hale Brake, I _ ...__ #.,. .. .. ,..