CWeather Continued Hot LL 41iiau ~~Raiii Edfitoril The Language Of Goethe . I Official Publication Of The Summer Session VOL. L. No. 26 Z-323 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 1940 PRICE FIVE CENTS U. S. Blasts Soviet March Into Baltic; Halts Recognition Welles Deplores 'Devious' Ways That Russia Took Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania Reaffirms American Opposition To Force MOSCOW, July 24. -(A)- All males between the ages of 19 and 50 not previously registered for military service were ordered to- day to register in the first two weeks of September. The chief military command in a posted order also commanded women specialists between the same ages to register. These in- clude telegraphers, nurses, doctors, parachute folders and photo lab- oratory workers. WASHINGTON, July 23.-(P)- The United States, roundly criticizing Soviet Russia for "annihilating" the political independence of three Baltic republics, made known today it would not recognize their absorption into the Soviet system. Sumner Welles, Acting Secretary of State in the absence of Secretary Hull, spoke out at a press conference against "the devious processes" by which he said Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania were to be deprived of their freedom by "one of their more powerful neighbors." TheActing Secretary did not men-' tion Russia by name, but he left no doubt in any one's mind as to his meaning. Newly elected parliaments in the Baltic Republics had voted in recent days, following Red Army occupation of their countries and an intensive propaganda campaign, to+ seek union with the Soviet. "The people of the United States are opposed to predatory activities no matter whether they are carriedi on by the use of force or by the threat of ofree," Welles declared in the prepared statement he read to newsmen. "They are likewise op- posed to any form of intervention, on the part of one state, however; powerful, in the domestic concerns of any other soverign states, how- ever weak." Varro Methods To Be Treated By Prof. Kent First of the country's distinguished linguistic scholars to arrive in Ann Arbor for the third special summer, meeting of the Linguistic Society of America Friday and Saturday, Pro- fessor Roland G. Kent of the Uni- versity of Pennsylvania will appear this evening on the regular lecture program of the University's Lin- guistic Institute. He will speak at 7:30 p.m. in the Kellogg Auditorium on the subject, "Varro and his Lin- guistic Methods." One of the "old guard" in the Linguistic Society, Professor Kent was a signer of the call that led to the founding of the organization in 1927. For years he has been its secretary- treasurer, and in that office has been helpful in aiding the establishment of the Linguistic Institute at the University of Michigan. His academic post is that of professor of compara- tive philology at the University of Pennsylvania Varro, subject of Dr. Kent's lec- ture, is of especial historical interest to persons interested in language. Voluminous writer, soldier, politician, friend of Julius Caesar, Varro found time in a crowded life to engage in, considerable language research, par- ticularly in etymology. Lacking the linguistic knowledge that enables the modern scholar to trace interlingual relationships, he yet was able to make some very clever guesses as to a num- ber of Latin word-derivations. Tea Dance To Be Held At 3:30 P.M. In League The usual Wednesday tea dance will be held from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. In the League ballroom, Ruth Streel- Means Speaks On Corporate Form Question Economist Says Solution May Result Through Defense Program By HARRY M. KELSEY Claiming that the corporate form of business organization must con- tinue to exsist in order to avoid fas- cism, and that the present defense program may prove to be a trail grounds wherein the problems of the corporate form may be solved, Gar- diner C. Means of the U. S. Bureau of the Budget last night addressed the Graduate Study Program in American Culture and Institutions on "Corporate Organization and Con- centration of Economic Power." Expressing the opinion that the abolition of the corporate form would lead to fascism, Dr. Means said he believed that with "our Yankee in- genuity, a Democratic solution to the big corporation problem may be found. We may see growing out of the defense program something that can be used in peacetime without surrendering the democratic system." Three Problems Dr. Means indicated three prob- lems of special importance concern- ing the corporate form, the short run price policy, the long run, or monoply, price policy and the con- centration of power. The short run price policy, the traditional idea of perfect competi- tion and automatic adjustments, is not practical he said, for the adjust- ments do not, in practice, take place as they should. The problem, he as- serted, is to keep the long run price policy and at the same time maintain the proper balance of centratlization and decentralization of controlling power. Power Differentiation Dr. Means distinguished between centralized and decentralized power by citing the examples of the A&P form, highly centralized with all matters of policy issuing from the center, and the Independent Grocers' Alliance, where the administration is centralized but the policy is de- termined from the perifery. The lecturer introduced his topic with a survey of the 200 largest cor- porations, which, he said, in 1933, controlled 55 per cent of,.the nation's corporate wealth, 64 per cent of the instruments of production, 20 per cent of the total national wealth and from 40 to 50 per cent of the industrial wealth. Dr. Means was educated at Har- vard University, where he took his A. B. degree in 1918, A. M. in 1927 and Ph. D. in 1933. He also attended the Lowell Textile School from 1920 to 1922. From 1919 to 1920 he was a mem- ber of the Near East Relief staff in Turkey. In textile manuf cturing from 1922 to 1924, he went to the Columbia Law School in 1927 as re- search worker in economics. Group To Visit Ford'sVillage Excursionists Will Leave At 1 P.M._Today At 1 p.m. today the ninth group of Summer Session excursionists will leave in special buses from Angell Hall bound for Henry Ford's Green- field Village in Dearborn, to return to Ann Rrbor at about 5:45 p.m. Tickets for the trip can be secured up to noon today at the Summer Ses- sion Office. The trip, a repetition of last Wed- nesday's for the benefit of those who could not attend at that time, will include not only the Village proper, but also Thomas A Edison's original Menlo Park factory, laboratory and library, and an indoor museum of 'What A Life' To Open Run Here Today Clifford Goldsmith Play Stars William Kinzer In HenryAldrich Role Baird To Direct Local Production Henry Aldrich, who became Ameri- ca's high school hero in 1938 when he was portrayed on Broadway by Ezra Stone, will come to life again in the Michigan Repertory Players' of "What a Life" which opens at 8:30 p.m. today in the Lydia Mendelssohn theatre. William Kinzer will recreate the role of Henry, while taking the part of Barbara Pearson in Clifford Gold- smith's comedy is Adeline Gittlin who has had roles this season in "The Star Wagon" and "The Critic." Bar- bara, Henry's sweetheart, was played by Betty Fields in the New York showing. Theft Of Instruments The play centers on the theft of a number of band instruments in high school, the suspicion of Henry and the latter's attempts to prove him- self innocent and find the guilty party. Mrs. Claribel Baird, chairman of the speech department at Oklahoma College for Women wil direct the play. An assistant to Prof. Valentine B. Windt of the speech department for several seasons, Mrs. Baird has taken parts in a number of Univer- sity plays appearing in "The Good Hope" last summer and in "The Star Wagon" this season. "What a Life" is the first produc- tion this summer that has not caused worries for costumiere Evelyn Co- hen and art director Alexander Wy- ckoff. After working on such difficult costume jobs as she did in "The Critic," ,Two On an Island" and "The Star Wagon", Miss Cohen had only to procure a number of "youngish" dresses and suits for her characters in this play. Simple Set Mr. Wyckoff, who had to prepare extremely varied sets for "Two On an Island" ranging from that of the top of the Statue of Liberty to a typical New York coffee shop had one scene to prepare this week-a principal's office. Among the other leading members of the cast are James Bartonas Mr. Nelson; Lazelle Laughlin as Miss Shea; June Madison as Miss Eggle- ston, Roy Rector as George Biglow; Nancy Bowman as Mrs. Aldrich, and Fred Nelson as Mrs. Brady. F. D.R. Dons Political Garb ToSlapRebels Says Party Bolted Burke; Douglas And Hanes Were Always Anti-New Deal 'Indispensable Man' Derided By Wilikie By DOUGLAS B. CORNELL HYDE PARK, N. Y., July 23.-() -President Roosevelt donned politi- cal harness today long enough to speak his mind about Senator Ed- ward R. Burke, Lewis W. Douglas, John W. Hanes and former Senator James A. Reed-four anti-third term Democrats who have teamed up with Wendell L. Willkie. Prompted entirely by press con- ference questions, Mr. Roosevelt said he understood the Democratic Party had bolted from Burke; that the Ad- ministration felt the minds of Doug- las and Hanes, former government officials, ran more to dollars than to humanity; and that Reed was well qualified to lead dissident Demo- crats. The President was first asked whe- ther the word "bolt" properly de- scribed Burke's offer of support for Willkie. He made the remark about the party bolting Burke and then grinned when a roar of laughter at his answer had subsided. Burke was defeated for renomina- tion in the Nebraska primary by Governor R. L. Corchran Mr. Roosevelt was reminded, he said, of Lew Douglas and Johnny Hanes by an inquiry about how he regarded "this dissent of Jefferson- ian Democrats." Willkie Says President Is Thinking Of Politics By WILLIAM B. ARDERY CHEYENNE, Wyo., July 23.-(P)- Wendell L. Willkie, enjoying himself today in the "whoop-it-up" atmos- phere of Cheyenne's frontier days rodeo, jovially observed that Pres- ident Roosevelt's comment on Dem- ocrats who have announced support for Willkie showed "that the Pres- ident is thinking of something be- sides the affairs of state." The Republican presidential nom- inee let go some of the sharpest jabs he has delivered at the New Deal and President Roosevelt since be- ginning a pre-campaign vacation in Colorado. He told a platform crowd at Bigh- ton, Colo., that "in this country there is no such thing as the indispensable man." Detained In Marseilles; 0 S U. S. Conscription Nearer Petain Orders Daladier Senate Military Committee Approves Registration Of 42 Million Men , Senate May Pass On Bill Next Week WASHINGTON, July 23.--(R)-- Compulsory military training moved a long step nearer reality today when the Senate Military Committee ap- proved a revised Burke-Wadsworth Bill providing for registration of 42,000,000 men, of whom 1,500,000 would be drafted in the first year. Details remain to be worked out, but in the main the measure calls for: 1. Registration of all males be- tween 18 and 64. 2. Actual conscription of about 1,500,000 men between 21 and 30 in the first year, starting Oct. 1, 1940. There are an estimated 11,500,000 between these ages. 3. A training period of one year for those selected. 4. Base pay equal to that of the lower grades of the regular armed forces, starting at $21 a month. 5. Later draftees to be chosen from the 21 to 45 age groups. Senator Sheppard (Dem-Tex), chairman of the committee, pre- dicted the measure would be ready for Senate consideration next week. Sheppard did not announce the com- mittee vote, but said there were "few dissenting" voices. In explaining the measure to re- porters, Brig. Gen. W. E. Shedd, As- sistant Chief of Staff, said the men would be classified for exemptions by local boards, similar to the World War draft boards. Men with fam- ilies, he said, or men employed in national defense work would be placed in deferred groups. The War Department contem- plates that youths between 18 and 21 and men between 45 and 64 would be available for home defense ser- vice. Legislation providing this prob- ably will be submitted to Congress later. Malloy Off Detroit Squad Woody Malloy, former University golf captain, was barred from the Detroit squad in the National Public Links Chamionship Tourney by the United States Golf Association Mon- day when it was learned that he was a resident of Ann Arbor. Addresses Culture Group Nation Looks In Vain For Relief From Record-Breaking Heat Wave, DEAN CHRISTIAN GAUSS Culture Series To Hear Gauss, MaloneToday Princeton Dean To Discuss Place Of Individualism In American Life Today Dean Christian Gauss of Prince- ton University and Dumas Malone, derctor of the Harvard University1 Press will give today's lectures in thei Graduate Study Program in Ameri- can Culture and Institutions. Dr. Malone will speak at 4:15 p.m. on "The Ebb and Flow of Statecraft". Dean Gauss will talk at 8:15 p.m.; on "The Role of Individualism in American Life". Both lectures will be held in the Rackham School aud- itorium and will be open to the public. Native Of Ann Arbor A native of Ann Arbor, Dean Gauss took his A. B. degree from the Uni- versity here in 1898 and his A. M. the following year, and in 1933 received the LL. D. degree. He received a Litt. D. degree from Washington in 1914 and an L. H. D. degree from Lehigh in 1928. An instructor in the romance lang- uages department here from 1899 to 1901, Dean Gauss then went to Le- high University until 1905. In that year he was made assistant profes- sor of romance languages at Prince- ton University; he became professor of modern languages there in 1907, was chairman of the department from 1913 to 1936 and since 1925 has been Dean of the college. Lectured In New York He has also lectured at the Univer- sity of Cincinnati, New York Uni- versity and Columbia University. Dean Gauss is the author of "The German Emperor", "Through College on Nothing a Year", "Why We Went to War", "Life in College" and "A Primer for Tomorrow". He is the editor of "Selections from J. J. Rous- seau", "Democracy Today, An Ameri- can Interpretation" and "Flaubert's Madame Bovary" and the translator of Ferrero's "The Women of the Caesars" and, with Alice Gauss, his wife, Bainville's "History of France". Band To Present Ensemble Recital Students enrolled in the fifth an- nual High School Band Clinic will present the first series of ensemble recitals at 4:15 p.m. today in Hill Auditorium. Sectional directors for the ensem- ble sections are Arthur Best, wood- winds; Harold Mueller, flutes; Jo- seph White, horns, and Donald Marrs, brass. The program follows: Waldlied by Muller (horn quartet); Selection by Thurner (oboe duet); Fantasia by Johnson (clarinet quar- tet); Adagio and Minuetto, from So- nata, Op. 2 by Beethoven (woodwind quartet); Debutante by Clareke Britain Awaits Imminent Thrust After Rejecting Germany's 'Last' Offer Income Tax Upped To Pay For Defense BULLETIN VICHY, France, July 23.- (P)-- Marshal Petain's Government, launching a full investigation of Frenchmen allegedly responsible for France's entry into the war- and her defeat-tonight ordered ex-Premier Edouard Daladier and others confined to Marseilles. Daladier and several other par- liamentarians who left France when ex-Premier Paul Reynaud's government fell to Petain's "ar- mistice regime," arrived at Mar- seille today from French Morocco. LONDON, July 24 (Wednesday).- (Y)'-Britain, trading aerial blows again today with Germany, esti- mated Germany has lost at least 133 planes in the last five weeks of intensive raiding, and 4,000 to 5,000 since the war began. (By The Associated Press) Nazi Germany served notice on Great Britain last night that "wea- pons will speak" and neutral reports from Belgium and Holland indicated Adolf Hitler's promised blitzkrieg may come soon. Only Adolf Hitler and his closest aides know when Germany will at- tempt the invasion of Britain, but there were these straws in the mar- tial winds: 1. Definite and final rejection by the British of Hitler's "last chance" peace appeal voiced in his speech to the German Rechstag last Fri- day. Hitler had indicated he would await Britain's answer before loosing his military might. 2. Word from neutral sources of "greatly increased activities" in Dutch and Belgian dockyards and railways in the last few days, with Germany apparently concentrating military supplies in the lowlands, the jumping off place for an inva- sion of Britain. 3. More intense bombing activities by both Germany and Britain, with the Nazis again raiding Scotland and England and the Royal Air Force attacking aerial and oil centers in Germany. The British people learned they must pay a tremendous price for the war upon "Hitlerism." They were told by Sir Kingsley Wood, Chan- cellor of the Exchequer, that they must pay a 42/2 percent standard income tax, plus a sales tax, .which will cost them one-third of the wholesale valfue of such "luxuries" as furniture and lipstick. U.S. Proposes Joint Mandate Over Colonies Asks Action To Safeguard European Possessions In Western Hemisphere (By The Associated Press) HAVANA, July 23.-The United States proposed today that all Amer- ican republics join in a mandate over European possessions in the Western Hemisphere to keep theirsovereignty inviolable until Europe's war is over, or eventually to give them indepen- dence. At the same time, Bolivia was re- ported seeking a transcontinental South American railroad which could act in emergencies as an auxiliary to the Panama Canal in moving troops and guns from coast to coast. The joint trusteeship over Euro- pean colonies in the New World was envisioned in a draft of a conven- tion offered less than a day after the conference of American foreign ministers opened. Broadly, it pro- posed: (1) That the Americans act as trustees of the European possessions in this hemisphere. Death Toll Rises To 52; Midwest Suffers Most In Nature's Blitzkrieg (By The Associated Press) Scattered showers cooled some sections of the nation yesterday but most residents of the broad swelter- belt between the Rockies and the Atlantic looked in vain for signs of relief. Pennsylvania, New York and New England enjoyed a temperate inter- lude while the Midwest suffered anew from nature's blitzkrieg. Deaths attributed directly to the heat increased to 52 and the total of drownings rose to 165. Fifty cases of exhaustion were re- ported in Washington, D. C., alone, in the midst of 90-degree weather. Nebraska recorded readings in three figures for the seventh day in a row. The scope and severity of the sul- try spell was measured by tempera- tures of 111 in Pierre, S. D., 104 in Rapid City, S. D., 98 in Milwaukee, 94 in Des Moines and Detroit, and 91 in Baltimore and Indianapolic. In Chicago the highest mark, of the summer-95-was registered. It was the fifth consecutive day the mercury moved up into the nineties there. For the first time within the memories of the warmest attaches, coats were removed in the august She Found It Thermometer Reads 94 In Ann Arbor With No Abatement In Sight The weatherman promised that{ things would be "plenty hot" in Ann Arbor for the next few days as the current heat wave continued un- abated yesterday. For an entire hour yesterday (from' 2 to 3 p.m.) the official thermometer at the University Observatory regis- tered an even 94 degrees, a reading which to those who take pleasure in small things was one-tenth of one degree lower than Monday's and the year's hottest. There appeared to be no chance of an immediate break in the hot spell which now enters its sixth con- secutive day. At 10 p.m. last night the Observatory reported a tempera- ture of 81, a fall of only 13 degrees in eight hours' time. And at 7 p.m. it was at 86, four degrees above Mon- day night's reading at that hour. And as thousands of swimmers sought relief from the heat, the Huron River claimed another wea- ther-refugee late Monday night. William Ryan, a 22-year-old chem- ical engineer from Chicago who was on the first day of what was to be a two-week vacation, became ex- hausted while trying to swim across the river near Belleville with his 17-year-old brother Robert. Chubby Judy Ham, year and a