THE MICHIGAN DAILYF4 s Sleeping America Is In Mortal' Danger, Van Paassen Declares (Continued from Page 1) (Continued from Page 1) 'Girl From Leningrad' through" cannot hold true any more, the foreign correspondent said, be- cause this time the United States is also vitally concerned with the out- come of the war. And we cannot stand aside and wait for something miraculous to happen. Van Paassen pointed out that the Germans, now synchronized with Japan, have carried out a highly successful policy of defeating superi- or naval powers by going around them by land. In Russia, where the Soviets out- planned the Nazi planners, Hitler is not- well off, but outside of that a~rea, the Axis is winning this war, not losing it, van Paassen declared. The events of this summer and fall will in all probability decide who will win this war, though it need not end this year, the author of "Days of Our Years" said. In regard to Pearl Harbor, van Paassen vigorously pointed out that Kimmel and Short are only to blame in small measure. It is all of Ameri- ca who failed to see the danger of Japan, though warned by every thoughtful observer and Japanese writings as far back as 16 years ago. Concluding his address with an eye to the future, van Paassen explained his view that to merely bring back the governments in exile would not be sufficient excuse to keep on fight- ing. "The day of the little independ- ent countries is over," he said. "We must come out of this war with a united Europe, bound peacefully to- gether by economic ties. It cannot be done the Nazi way, with brute force." day announcement is made of nego- tiations, we may be quite sure that the deal is already completed or near completion. French troops are not being sent there to "protect the is- land against all invaders," but to hold it while France makes the deal with Japan. Swinging over to India, van Paas- sen was of the opinion that America looks "a little silly" sending a com- mission there when the Japanese are already in Burma. But from this, and from the attitude of the Austral-, ians, it is becoming more 9,,nd more apparent that the United States, di-t rected by President Roosevelt, is gradually taking over the leadership of the Allied Nations. Van Paasssen believes that the old "British Empire" days are over, and that the United States will come out of this war the leader of the world powers. Inanswer to the oft-rumored dec- larations that Russia is to be feared and not trusted, van Paassen pointed out, "if the British Tories can deal with Russia, we ought to be able to do anything at all." He added that if Trotsky were alive, the situation might well be different, but Stalin is not a Communist, but rather a Na- tionalist, satisfied to work with Rus- sia alone and not the whole world. "Anyway," van Paassen said, "Rus- sia will be far less 'dangerous' if we collaborate with her, than if we at- tempt to keep her isolated. And as for Russians being slaves, no slaves would ever fight the way they are, even with a loaded gun at their backs." Filmed on location along the former Mannerheim Line under the direction of Red Army officers, "Girl From Leningrad," celebrated Rus- sian film based on World War 11, will be presented by the Art Cinema League at 8:15 p.m. today and at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre. yAlumni May Obtai Reading Lits n 466 Subjects ......... ..... HOSIERY Ray De Chine Hosiery, 3-thread weight at 89c, silk hosiery in 2- and 3-thread at $1.00 and $1.15. BLOUSES "Joan Kenley" tailored in white and all cofors at $2.00 and $3.00. SMARTEST HOSIERY SHOPPE Michigan Theatre Bldg. Prof. Aiton To Talk To Newman Club Speaking on "A Phase of our Good Neighbor Policy," Prof. Arthur S. Aiton of the history department will address the second Newman Club communion breakfast after 10 o'clock mass Sunday in the Union. The breakfast will serve to end the spring membership drive and to in- itiate new members into the Club's activities. Joe Rodecker, '42, is in charge of the event. James Landers, '43, will act as toastmaster, and Fa- ther McPhillips and Albin Schin- derle, '42, will also speak. Guests include Dr. and Mrs. Ed- ward W. Blakeman, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Morgan, Prof. and Mrs. W. A. McLaughlin, Dr. and Mrs. Harold W. Held, Dr. and Mrs. Thomas Fitz-, gerald and The Rev. Frs. Otte, Mc- Mann and Alcuin. Study Program Offeredt To Encourage Interests On Part Of Graduates1 Assuming that the educational pro-t cess does not cease with graduation,f the Bureau of Alumni Relations andt the Library Extension Service haveY prepared up-to-date reading lists onr some 466 subjects, any of which will be sent to an alumnus of the Univer- sity upon request.t The two agencies have long felt that it is desirables toencourage a continuation of personal reading and study on the part of individual alum-k ni. It is also felt that many former students would be interested in car- rying on the programs of study they began in their undergraduate years at the University. Prepared for all those concerned with such mental development, the lists include books on everything from ancient Indian art and phila- tely to labor legislation and the law of the press. In addition to the hundreds of lists which have been prepared in co- operation with faculty members over a period of 12 years, the Library Ex- tension Service has also published three books of the same nature. The first two of these are entitled Alumni Reading Lists, Series I and II, while the third in the series is entitled What To Read. books does not represent the entire service offered by the University to its knowledge-hungry graduates. Any alumnus who desires a list of books in any subject which has not previously been tabulated may write to the Bureau of Alumni Relations and have a special list prepared for him. The work will be done with the aid of the most competent members of the faculty in the particular field desired. The Bureau has recently an- nounced that since the task of pro- viding such reading lists for alumni was started in 1930, some 64,000 have been distributed to more than 9,000 alumni. A new pamphlet has just been is- sued by the Bureau which records all the lists available. 'Settin' 'Em Up' Keeps 'Em Flying Don't blush now . . . . . It's all for defense . ... . It was recently reported that ten tons of tin cans were taken from the University dumping grounds east of Observatory . . . and a large number of them turned out to be beer containers. These cans are taken by truck to Detroit and sold to a company which puts them through a spe- Cors To Giv Lecture Sei arch_27 Three Talks To Be Of] Sientific S By Well-Known Drs. Carl and Gerty Co the United States' well kn band and wife teams, will series of three lectures Mar 28 which will be of specialh students of medicine and logical sciences. The lectures, all of whi( given in the Rackham Amp will run as follows: "The Role of Enzymes1 hydrate Metabolism," by Cori, 4:15 p.m. March 27. "The Isolation and Pro Some Enzymes Concerned bohydrate Metabolism," by Cori, 8:15 p.m. March 27. "The Enzymatic Conv Glucose to Glycogen," by Cori, 11 a.m. March 28. These lectures are under sponsorship of the Depa. Biological Chemistry and t of Medicine. The Drs. Cori are from W University Medical School Carl Cori is head of the D of Pharmacology, and Dr.C is a research associate in department. Born in Prague, Czec the Coris both received the Prague in 1920 and cam country in 1922. From th here until 1931, they work chemists at the State In the Study of Malignant D Buffalo, New York. Since have been associated with ton University. The Coris are well know studies on the synthesis of the reserve carbohydrate o and the fuel for muscula in recognition for his wor Cori was elected a member tional Academy of Scienc All of the lectures will b the public. Air Pro gra Given On I In Commi Improvement of comm reational, educational an life is advocated by the U Committee on Adult Educ der the guidance of Prof. McCluskey of the School tion, every Tuesday at 3:4 station WKAR. The purpose of this w gram, broadcast from the State College studio, is tw( cording to William Morse. of the show. Primarily intended for communities of central M aim is to "stimulate repr of clubs, churches, schools groups to form communit which would plan how to problems," Morse explaine The second goal of the cation group is to revive interest in current proble the already formed Mich cils. Organized since Septe Adult Education group d its 15-minute broadcast community programs thro state and nation," Morse present general principles ization and methods of for councils." Small town c Michigan, Virginia and Pe have provided material for Morse declared. The adult education broadcast a similar series from Ann Arbor's Morris WJR, "with fewer exa, more theory," Morse adde CLASSIFIED ries IRECTORY LAUNDERING Given LAUNDRY - 2-1044. Sox darned. 4bt)Jc~ts CarefulYwork at low price. 2c Team LOST and FOUND ri, one of BROWN WALLET-Valuable identi- iown hus- fication and license cards. Re- ward. Lost Wednesday, vicinity of present a General Library. 2-2248, "Dick." ch 27 and 280c interest to MISCELLANEOUS the bio- -_ - _ __ _ __ - _ _ MIMEOGRAPHING-Thesis bind- ch will be ing. Brumfield and Brumfield, 308 hitheatre, S. State. 6c Special tryout for campus BMbCs in Carbo- tonight at the Union. No identifi- Dr, Carl- cation card needed; only $1.35, and Dr. Carl a date. Keep 'Em Dancing, Limited peties -of with Cr WASHED SAND AND GRAVEL- Dr. Gerty Driveway gravel, washed pebbles. Kilins Gravel Company, phone ersion ofI7112. 7c Dr. Carl TRANSPORTATION the joint SAVE MONEY rtment of Driving? We find paying passengers. the School Going away? We locate rides. Na- tionwide service. Fee nominal. fashington DETROIT AUTO TRAVEL where Dr. Detroit, Michigan epartment 2970 W. Grand Blvd. Madison 6268 Gerty Cori HELP WANTED the same hoslovakia, STUDENT with architectural train- In MD's at ing to do defense house drafting. eto this Write Box No. 7, The Daily. eir arrival ted as bio- Xttue for )iseases in 1931 they Washing- n for their glycogen, f the body A r exercise. k, Dr. Carl of the Na- es in 1941. a be open to W -1Wo can live ai That is-two shirts. Th shirts are one. Arrow I L fe it's a sports shirt and a your fancy. This inge Arrow, is now one of t unity rec- puses. Labeled Sanfon d cultural shrink even I%! See iti Jniversity's ation, un- Howard Y. of Educa- 3 p.m. over eekly pro- Michigan in charge the rural ' ichigan, its esentatives and other y councils, solve local ~d. adult edu- an active ms among igan coun- S T A T E S T R E E I AR mber, the escribes in t "various ughout the said. "We of organ- rming local councils in nnsylvania the shows, committee s last year Hall over mples and - ed. se TH it's the same shirt ERE'S a shirt tha It's convertible-y 875 with a tie and it's perf ords off when you get lion handsome, expensive-lc Arrow Doubler comes i labeled Sanforized (sly has two pockets an "Mitoga" figure-fit. Get WHO IS IT? S cheaply as one! e reason is that the two Doubler is the name and dress shirt according to rnious shirt, invented by ie favorites of U. S. cam- zed - guaranteed not to today! REAL ESTATE BUILD YOUR HOME in University Gardens-large tracts, trees, hills, restricted. $800 up. Parley, 2-2475. 275c TYPING TYPING: L. M. Heywood, 414 May- nard St., phone 5689. MISS ALLEN-Experienced typist; 408 S. Fifth Ave. Phone 2-2935 VIOLA STEIN-Experienced legal typist, also mimeographing. Notary public. Phone 6327. 706 Oakland. WANTED TO BUY MEN'S AND LADIES' CLOTHING. suits, overcoats, typewriters, musi- cal instruments, ladies' furs, Per- sian lamb, mink, watches, dia- monds. Pay from $5 to $500. Phone Sam, 5300. 229c Shows Daily at 1-3-5-7-9 P.M. NN.1.....,,- S r1, { t t i i i ti 1 1 DOROTHY LAMOOR WILLIAM HOLDEN EDDIE BRACKEN JIMMY DORSEY AND HIS ORCHESTRA I.BE n HEOg 808 EBERLY and HELEN O'CONEL I MICHIGAN with th li bolmb~b-i I9tg T*" ith .ARR NEO sUT CRAIN Coin "JOH NNY EU SundayI~UZ NOWESHOWING Mats'. 25c Ev08 40r" inc. The distribution of these lists an r '" c , ' ' '' .f _ T.. .. AGERrt ROBERT TAYLOR LANA TURNER i All Proceeds For Allied War Relief EEL L E NT/i"oeel.wo/d r "***...EXCITING!" S- Wanda'ale -DailyNewe -PACKS A WAR-TIME WALLOP!" -ArcherWuisten NYPost "BEST FOREIGN FILM OF THE YEAR." -WM. BOEHNEL, NEW YORK TELEGRAM. Fine acting, expert direction and a first rate script make GIRL FROM LENINGRAD excellent entertain- ment . . . It makes all the Hollywood offerings about the later Florence Nightingales look like so many tinted picture postcards . The battle scenes are thrilling." Extra * Tigers Captured Alive in Siberia * Hairless Hector (Cartoon) MENDELSSOHN THEATRE d cial baling machine so that they can be repaired and used over again throughout the defense emergency period. Forty to fifty tons still remain in the dump to be removed in the future .-. . Screwy 'Gar g' Maddens Bugs Frustrated TypI Lice Run Ragged By Hard Work Topsy-turvy conglomerations of-in- cidentals have been working the type lice into a frenzy of late, ever since Gargoyle's editors put into working order their plans for a real Screwball magazine this month. Contributing to cause the frantic antics of little Oscar and his cousins is a certain confusion resulting from the appearance of strange notations under the head, Album of Beauty. They have seen this head before, but what appears beneath is something entirely new and definitely different. A new connotation has been given the word "beauty," a meaning smacking of revolutionary standards of measurement and the birth of a new order on the University campus. All of this, plus a multitude of other brain children will become pub- lic property Tuesday when the March Gargoyle comes into its own, after weeks of inspired preparation. RECORD HIGHLIG ARTURO T conducting the NBC. BRAHMS SYMPHON The powerful, exciting Brahn is dramatic perfection under t batoji of Toscanini. Hear t symphonic work just released bration of Toscanini's 75th ani Recorded in Carnegie Hall. MAURICE EVANS an present important sce "A A C T AT LIBERTY Row 4 ,4 0 508 E. WILLIAMS Formerly University Music Hous wmblool HTS of the MONI rOSCANINI - Arrow's Doublev Symphony Orchet Y NO. 1 in CM m's First he magic Alb his great Five in cele- niversary. um M4 12" rec t knows how to relax! 'u can wear it alliday ectly smart; take the tie ne and you can have a oking sport shirt! n a variety of fine fabrics hrinkage less than 1%), A has Arrow's famed Doubler today! d JUDITH ANDERSON nes from Shakespeare's I ________Also _____ I i I "'RCTLU I