THE MICHIGAN DAILY DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publ:cationi n the Bulletiniscons.ructive notice to all members of th Vuniversity. Copy received at the office of the Assistant to the President until 3:30; 11:00 a.m. on Saturday- Japanese Troops Press On To Hankow At Rate Of Mile-A-Day s° I al 0 .. ; N~ ,® i V DOC~ r ;SNHCENG ~ ~ 'JUN4E ,ATTACKS HERALD . in _ ai. UA.U&,. t bbWIIH Guinea Pigs Or School Children High School Students Say B( (Continued from Page 3) 1 U0. !0PLAN RID 12CIANG KMI-SEK HADQUATEASd A - 4-0 D1 ANKUW PUSH - ,- 9 !?INFANTRY PENETRATION KWEICHIH HANYANG IE A* JUE CAPTURED JNE BOONBLASTNGMA JL CEN HUKOWTAKEN BY APANESE AS BASE x 1D~gU FOR DRIVE ACROSS LAKE POYA6. '.;-KxUu ( GATEWAY TO NORTHERN KIAN(51, JULY ROUTE FOR DRIVE TO BREAK AUG SCN E OF 5 CANTON- IANKOW RAILROAD- 13 PRESENT FGHT TEIAND TO NANCHANO, CHINESE SN1 1* a )JULY RAILROAD FORTIFIED T)010 20 3040 50 30 PROTECT NANC4ANG NANCHANG - -.. -. _MIILE Sl i naturally as a part of their desire to know how a home may be beauti- fied. Music was introduced through glee club and orchestra and the standard of music studied raised slowly. Pure mathematics, a subject students will sometimes avoid, was soon seen to be necessary as a part of the business of buying, selling and as related to scientific study. Altogether these quite average boys and girls found thinking pleasant. School plays, the lunchroom, va- rious and. sundry entertainments all suggested new problems. The stu- dents were, of their own initiative, learning that life is of one piece. Ap- parently they thoroughly enjoyed their six years' schooling. They learned to know each other, their families, their teachers, and to put their own minds in order. They learned what Fascism, Communism, Democracy meant and why these words were in every daily paper. Nor did they come out lopsided in their interests. Starting young, they learned the coordination of school, community and country. Trips to factories, to various cities, to slums, to all places of interest broadened their picture of America. This very simple and gay account by a group of students learning cooperation and self-direction is encouraging. The book will interest all teachers and should interest most parents. Warstler Bats Phils To 5-3 Victory Over Bees PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 15-)(A--Led by Rabbit Warstler, who blasted a triple and two singles in four trips td the plates and scored two runs, the Boston Bees, today bagged 13 hits off two Phillies pitchers to nose out the tail-enders 5 to 3. A single by West, an .infield out on which West took third when the bag was uncovered, and Fletcher's double gave the Bees the deciding run in the eighth. In the ninth they added another for good measure on singles by Warstler and Garms and a sacrifice. Dick Errickson, w h o relieved Johnny Lanning after the Phils had tied the score at 3-all in the seventh, was the winning pitcher. Sylvester Johnson gave up four of the Boston runs and was charged with the defeat. -1 The map says it's about 600 miles from Shanghai to Hangkow by river, but in the year the Japanese have been hammering their way up the Yangtze toward Chiang-Kai-Shek's Nationalist Capital, they've averaged a little more than a mile a day, and still have more than 100s miles to go before reaching the city. This up-to-date Associated Press map shows important stages in the advance. O.D.MOR RILL 314 S. State St. Typewriters, Stationery, Student and Office Suppies Since 1908 Phone 6815 I FORD REHIRES 24,000 DETROIT, Aug. 15-(VP)--Approxi- mately 24,000 workers returned to the Ford Motor Car Co. plant today as the company resumed production of its 1938 (CQ) models. The company shut down a fortnight ago for the annual inventory. .rm~~ m I Uncle George Rides Pony Express Again 7The i ichigan Alumnus I nA adli~g 11L M LtOPeAI dic1 With his saddlebag strapped behind him, 88-year-old "Uncle George" Main Reading Room, the Periodical Reading Room, the Medical Reading Ohler, who pony expressed the mail 72 years age, is shown as he waved Room, and the Circulation Depart- his hat and started off with the mail at London, Ky., at a "star route" inent from 8 a.m. till 6 p.m., with the celebration. Two other pioneers of the star routes participated. Wider Security Act Is Needed President Declares 'All' Must Be Included (Continued from Page 1) cult for individuals to provide their own security, Mr. Roosevelt said, and Government must step in and help them., "We must face the fact," he said, "that in this country we have a rich man's security and a poor man's se- curity and that the Government owes equal obligations to both. "National security is not a half and half matter; it is all or none." Mr. Roosevelt said the Security Act did not offer anyone "an easy life- nor was it ever intended so to do." he added: "None of the sums of money paid out to individuals in assistance or in- surance will spell anything approach- ing abundance. But they will furnish that minimum necessary to, keep a foothold; and that is the kind of pro- tection Americans want." Social Security officials and others celebrated the birthday of the act, meanwhile, at a dinner in the hotel here. Scheduled speakers there in- cluded Senator Wagner, Secretary Perkins and Josephine Roche, form- er Assistant Treasury Secretary in charge of Public Health activities. In a statement to the press Chair- man Arthur Altmeyer of the Social Security Board mentioned one pos- sible expansion-the inclusion of federal health insurance. Altmeyer said the problem of health protection was "beginning to appear on the Official Publication for Michigan's Alumni 26 Issues Per Year ... 920 Pages 4 QUARTERLY REVIEW NUMBERS of 100 pages each. A publication worthy of your University's fine academic reputation. 12 MONTHLY NUMBERS of 28 to 36 pages each. Filled with news of alumni and campus events and personalities. 5 WEEKLY NUMBERS of 16 pages each, telling the story of the early weeks of the school year, with expert reviews of Varsity football games. 5 FORTNIGHTLY ISSUES of 16 pages each, keeping you up-to-date. $2 for I Year to Summer Students Place Your Order Before August 20th Order at the Alumni Association Offices Alumni Memorial Hall