Weather Slightly warmaer; Unsettled. L2 i gau ~Iaitr Editorial Fight Fire With Fire?, i Official Publication Of The Summer Session VOLUME L No. 2 Z-323 ANN ARBOR., MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 1940 PRICE FIVE CENTS 'Stop Willkie' Move Begun At Convention InPiladelphia Eight Members Of House Lead Effort To Prevent Nomination Of Willkie Governor Stassen Sounds 'Keynote' PHILADELPHIA, June 24.-()- The drive for Wendell Willkie pushed1 on into new ground today, but in op- position there sprang up a "stop Will- kie" iovement, led by eight members; of the National House of Representa- tives. Meanwhile, the Republican Nation- al Convention o f1940 met briefly,I bustled briskly through the band- playing and cheering fanfare of its opening ceremonies and recessed to meet again tonight and hear its "key- note" sounded by young Gov. Harold E. Stassen of Minnesota. In his speech Stassen called on his fellow Republicans to lead the Na- tion forward on four broad fronts to supplant what he termed a seven- year record of Democratic "failure." Attacks Third Term "The saddest chapter of the last four years," he said in the keynote] address for the party's Natoinal Con- vention, "has been that the national administration instead of keeping its eyes, statesmanlike, upon the wel- fare of the people of this nation, has turned its political gaze upon a third term." The youthful official proposed an "advance with a decisive and de- termined step" in national prepared- ness, "Fifth Column" defense, dom- estic economic welfare, and govern- mental ,effectiveness and integrity. On each of these fronts, he asserted, the Roosevelt administration has failed. 'No Help For Allies' Touching on foreign policy, Stas- sen said in his prepared speech that "future welfare cannot best be served by simply burying our heads in the sand," but he added: "We are too woofully weak to give the Allies that material assistance this nation wants to give them. "Let us determine and define where our interests lie," he urged. "Clearly in the first instance they lie in this hemisphere." Throughout the day, reports of growing Willkie strength, much of it not to take the concrete form of Willkie votes until after the first bal- lot, were received from delegations representing many sections of the country. Memberships TO Art Cinema Now On Sale Tickets for the four programs to be sponsored this summer by the Art Cinema League will be on sale this week at the Union, the League and Wahr's Book Store. No tickets will be sold for indi- vidual performances. The member- ship fee of $1 covers one admission to each of the programs. Examples of four types of movie will be shown, the American docu- mentary film, the French film, the, Russian film and the German film. They will be shown at 8:15 p.m. Sundays at two-week intervals be- ginning June 30 in the amphitheatre of the Rackham School. The first showing will be of the American documentary film, of which four examples will be given. The League has selected "The Ri- ver," "The City," "The Plough That Broke the Plains," and "New Schools for Old," as outstanding document- ary films of immediate importance. "The River" +concerns the prob- lems presented by the great Missis- sippi and pictures that river from its source to its delta, shows the river at flood and the great levees that hold it within its banks. "The Plough That Broke the Plains" deals with the Western plains and the problem of soil erosion in the dust Prof. Jones Will Open American Culture Study Literary College Cooperates In Graduate Analysis Of American Scene By Lectures, Round Tables Annual Parley Will Be Begun HereJuly 19 World Events To Be Aired; Helen Corman Named As General Chairman Four Viewpoints Will BeExpressed The Second Annual Summer Par-, Fighting CeasesInFrance As Great Britain Prepares For Hitler's Next Attack With seven departments of the literary college participating, the Graduate Study Program in Ameri- can Culture and Institutions will un- dertake a five week series of integrat- ed lectures and round tables on the American scene beginning Monday. Meanwhile, students enrolled in the program began work yesterday under the faculty members in charge of the course in the various depart- ments. Departments cooperating are economics, English, geography, his- tory, philosophy, political science and sociology. Five Weekly Lectures The lectures and round tables are arranged under five divisions, one to be held each week during the series. The topic for the first week is "Re- gional Varieties of Cultural Develop- ment." For the next four weeks the topics are, in order, "Religion and Education: Freedom of Mind and Spirit," "Literature and Art: Free- dom of Expression," "Commerce and Industry: Freedom of Enterprise" and "Government and Politics: the Individual and the State." At 8:15 p.m. Monday, Prof. Howard M. Jones of Harvard University's English department will give the opening lecture on "American Liter- ature as an Instrument for Cultural Analysis." Prof. Dumas Malone, di- rector of the Harvard University Press, will speak at 4:15 p.m. the Registration Figures Show SlightIncrease Total of .4,673, Students Register; Gain of 38 pOver 1939 Is Revealed A slight increase in regi :tration for this year's Summer 'Sesion as contrasted with the 1939 session was seen in the tabulation released late yesterday by Miss Marion Williams, University statistician. A total of 4,673 students had regis- tered by 4:30 p.m. yesterday as con- trasted with a total of 4,635 at the same time last year, representing a gain of 38. In the undergraduate schools a total of 1,639 had completed ther registration. 644 were enrolled in te College of Literature, Science and the Arts, 388 in the College of Engineering, 13 in the College of Pharmacy, 51 in the College of Ar- chitecture and Design, 198 in the School of Education, 62 in the School of Forestry and Conservation and 283 in the School of Music. 129 students have registered in the Medical School, 214 in the Law School and 35 in the School of Busi- ness Administration, making a total of 378 in the professional schools. At closing time yetserday 2,656 students had enrolled in the Grad- uate School, as contrasted with the 2,589 registering in 1939. following day on "The Geography of American Achievement." At 8:15 p.m. that day, Prof. Charles S. Syd- nor of Duke University's history de- partment, will talk on "The Old South as a Laboratory for Cultural Analysis." Wednesday of that week Professor Malone will lecture on "Tides in Sec- tional Achievement," and a talk on "The Conflict and Fusion of Cultural Groups in the Interior Plains" will be given by Prof. Edward E. Dale of the history department of the Univer- sity of Oklahoma. Thursday after- noon Prof. Stanley D. Dodge of the geography department will speak on "Cultural Trends in Relation to Re- gional Differences." Concluding the week's program will be a round table discussion on "Re- gionalism and Nationalism" with Prof. Verner W. Crane of the history department as chairman. Sweet Opens Second Week The second week's program will begin Monday, July 8, with a lecture on "Church and State in the New World" by William W. Sweet, pro- fessor of the history of American Christianity at the University of Chi- cago. Tuesday Professor Malone will talk on "Personal Achievements of the Clergy" and President Dixon Ry- on Fox of Union College will speak of "Religion and Humanitarianism." Wednesday of that week Professor Malone will lecture on "Evangelists and Statesmen of Education" and Prof. Edgar B. Wesley of the Uni- versity of Minnesota's School of Ed- ucation will talk on "Education as a Responsibility of the State." Thurs- day, President Ernest H. Wilkins of Oberlin College will speak on "The Social Responsibility of Education." That week's round table will con- cern "Religion and Education in American Life" and will be conducted (Continued on Page 2) Emery Eighth In Links Battle Leads Wolverine Golfers; GopherAce Is First Michigan's Jack Emery fired a one over par 73 on Ekwanok's hilly layout yesterday to gain an eighth place tie as the field of 170 played half of the 36-hole qualifying round in the National Collegiate Golf Tour- ney. The dynamic Detroiter finished in a deadlock with Michigan State's Warren Tansey and Henry Castillo of Louisiana State. He put together a neat 36 and 37 to lead all of' his Wolverine mates in the title play. Emery was three strokes back of Minnesota's blond Neil Croonquist, who shot the first nine in 33, and then came home in 37 to post a two under par 70, the best mark of the first day's firing. Croonquist, who is also president ofdthe Inter- collegiate golf body, would have been under 70 except for some of his putts, which refused to drop on the (Continued on Page 3) End Of Hostilities Means Little To Most French, Simpson Says German Command Orders Hostilities Stopped At 6:35 ley, featuring faculty-student dis- cussion of world events, will be held July 19-20, according to an announce- ment made yesterday by Helen Cor- man, '41, general chairman. The Summer Parley, an institu- tion inaugurated during the 1939 Summer Session, is an extension of the parleys held each winter and spring during the regular school year. The parleys were designed primarily to bring together faculty members and students for an informal con- sideration of significant current hap- penings. They are sponsored by the Student Senate. In addition to Miss Corman, the main chairmen for the Summer Par- ley include Tom Downs, '40L, per- sonnel; Norman A. Schorr, '40, steer-] ing committee; Anabel Hill, '41, pos- ters and programs; Margaret Camp- bell, '42, secretaries, and Chester1 Bradley, '42, publicity. These per-I sons will take charge of the general1 arrangements for the Summer Par- ley. The subject of the war will be the general topic of the Summer Parley. At the first open session four view-1 points on the war will be presented1 by faculty members: one on limited' intervention, another on complete participation, a third on non-inter- vention, and the fourth on the paci- fist attitude toward the present con- flict. Following this opening session, the Parley will be divided into four panel discussions: the national elections, education, religion and civil liberties. Each of these topics will be consid- ered in its relationship to the war. At the final open session, an attempt will be made to integrate the vari- ous subjects discussed at the panel meetings. More than 40 faculty members have been invited to participate in the panel discussions. Each panel section will have a student chairman and several student advisers. These persons will be announced later in The Daily. Comedy Opens TwelfthYear Of Drama Club The MichigantRepertory Players will open their twelfth annual sea- son tomorrow night wi a produc- tion of "The Critic," oy Richard Brinsley Sheridan. The curtain will rise at eight-thirty. Performances will also be given Thursday, Friday, and Saturday nights. A large cast has been assembled and prepara- tions, which have been underway for more than two weeks, will have been completed by then. The play is under the direction of Dr. William P. Halstead of the speech depart- ment, which sponsors the Players. Valentine B. Windt, Managing Di- rector of the Players, has stated that the revival of "The Critic" is especially appropriate because of a nationwide interest in the eighteenth century just at this time. Theatre groups all over the country are do- ing revivals of other Sheridan plays as well as plays of the period by Goldsmith and others. Elaborate sets, costumes and chor- eography, the latter under the direc- tion of Ruth Bloomer of the De- partment of Physical Education, help to make the production a spectacular pageant as well as a highly effective comedy. More than fifty actors will take part, including such familiar favor-. ites as June Madison, James Moll, John Schwarzwalder, George Sha- piro, Roy Rector and Alfred Wilkin- son, while several actors new to Rep- ertory audiences as Hugh Norton, John Weimer, Doris Barr and Wil- liam Kinzer will be ser. Daily Tryouts The Summer Daily will accept a limitd nimhAr of tTrvoutn in- By KIRKE L. SIMPSON (From Associated Press Dispatches) For millions of French citizens outside the shriveled territory left to that vanquished nation by Ger- man-Italian armistice terms, to- night's cease-firing order will have little real meaning. The continuing war between Bri- tain and the Nazi-Fascist Allies makes a potential air battlefield of all coastal France, both east and west, and all of her vast industrial life taken over by the victors in mili- tary occupation - everything in France except the meagre area in which her surrendering government holds sway. The rupture of relations between Britain and the Petain Ministry in France which accepted German ar- mistice conditions means just that. By that act, still to be formally con- summated by Britain, the grief and amazement expressed by Prime Min- ister Churchill at the form of French capitulation is in process of transla- tion into grim deeds. It accounts for British official publication of a sum- mary of the German armistice terms. The Petain Ministry appears to have agreed to turn over its war plants .in German occupied regions which include the whole French coastline facing England, and the major industrial cities and towns that produced weapons for the French armies. It also has agreed to surrender its coastal fortifications in working order; to afford the victors full and free access to its roads and railroads in order that German and Italian forces may be shuttled back and forth across France as the exigencies of the war with England require. With French signature of these terms, all of those war making fa- cilities in France became legitimate targets of British attack as would the French fleet and merchant ma- rine if the ships should seek to com- ply with an order of surrender or in- ternment by the Petain Government. The British Government and navy could not reasonably be expected to accept the German pledge to refrain from using the French fleet if sur- rendered. Fuehrer Offers Thanks To God Student Co-op Invites Campus To Open House Event To Be Held Tonight At Wolverine; Dancing, Refreshments Are Free Open house will be held at the Michigan Wolverine, students coop-, erative restaurant, from 8 to 11 p.m.' today in its quarters at 209 S State Street. Refreshments will be served free of charge to all Who attend, whe- ther they are members of the Wol- verine or not, and dancing will take place on the raised dance floor. All students are invited. The organization was formed here eight years ago in order to provide students with board at cost and last year served more than 600 people daily. This year,. with a recondi- tioned kitchen and a number of other improvements, the Wolverine is equipped to handle a larger num- ber. Membership for the Summer'Ses- sion is one dollar which entitles stu- dents to receive 20 meals for $4.50 and receive a discount on 20 per cent on all cleaning and laundry bills. Student heads of the cooperative are Joseph Gardner, '41BAd, trea- surer; Donald Counihan, '41, pur- chasing agent, and John Stevens, '42BAd, personnel director. Davis To Give History Sketch Of University Educator's Speech First In Series Of Lectures In University High "Highlights in the History of the University of Michigan" will be the topic of Prof. Calvin O. Davis of the School of Education as he opens the series of lectures sponsored by the School for the Summer Session at 4:15 p.m. today in the University High School Auditorium.. Professor Davis will trace the de- velopment, organization and admin- istration of secondary education in Michigan and from the founding of the University in 141. Sketching the significant trends from colonial denominational schools to the pres- ent state institutions, Professor Da- vis will point out the change is tak- ing place in the growth of the Uni- versity since it opened its doors to, seven students in 1841. Expansion of the University's services through- out the state and nation and the growth of Michigan alumni will also be cited. As the senior member of the School of Education faculty, Frofes- sor Davis -has served as secretary of the school and editor for many years of The North Central Associa- tion Quarterly. BERLIN, June 24.-(1)-Germany, with Fuehrer Hitler offering thanks to God, announced tonight the end of the war against France and the Reich single-mindedly swung its at- tention toward England for an on- slaught which one informed source said "will be like nothing the world has ever seen." By pre-arrangement with Italy, the high command ordered German arms down six hours after Germany was notified that France and Italy had agreed to an armistice. Thus the cessation of hostilities was ordered for 1:35 a.m. tomorrow (6:35 p.m. EST Monday). Flag Displayed Hitler, in a formal proclamation read to the people who had been called to their radios, declared: "In humility we thank God for his blessing." The Fuehrer ordered flags dis- played for 10 days and bells rung throughout the Reich for seven days. The "cease fire" order marked the end of a six-weeks campaign which brought France, Belgium and The, Netherlands to their knees. He had acquired all the coastline facing Bri- tain from the Arctic in Norway to the Spanish border,,. Prepares For England When Hitler unleashed his power- ful war machine against the 'Low Countries and the Allies on May 10, he proclaimed in an order of the day that it was the beginning- of a fight that "decides the fate of the German nation for the next 1,000 years." Preliminary preparation for the great drive against England included further advances by German forces in France, extending the Nazi grip on coast vantage points useful against British seapower, and a tour of inspection by Grand Admiral Erich Raeder to make certain that Nazi naval units and naval facilities were ready for the word "Go!" Polish Support Britain In Fight Against Nazis LONDON, June 24. - Supported by a wandering Polish army and die-hard French leaders in exile who claimed to speak for the French fleet and empire, Britain prepared grimly tonight for Adblf Hitler's next onslaught. Arrival of the Polish forces from France was disclosed by General Wladyslaw Sikorski, the Polish Prime Minister. In a broadcast he declared "the great body of our armies, safely back from France, is landing on the shores of Great Britain," and will "continue to fight, shoulder to shoulder, with the powerful British Empire for a free and independent Poland." The size of the surviving Polish forces, driven across half of the con- tinent since last Sept. 1, was not given. Britain barred the export of all goods to French territory in Europe, including the island of Corsica. With Britain pushing steadily to strengthen her home defenses, Har- old Nicolson, Parliamentary Secre- tary to the Ministry of Information, asserted in a broadcast that "the day will come, and not so very far dis- tant, when the air will be under our command." British resources, he said, would permit this. France Fights Futilely Awaiting Armistice BORDEAUX, June 24.-(MP-Van- quished France, bowing to the de- mands of both Italy and Germany, continued her futile defense in the last official six hours of war tonight Americans Must Understand Nazi Methods, McDowell Says Work Begins At Camp Davis; Practical Experience Offered By CHESTER BRADLEY Americans must clearly understand Germany's methods of non-military penetration in the Near East, if they are to cope effectively with the Fas- cist menace in this hemisphere, Dr. Robert H. McDowell, research asso- ciate in archaeology, declared -yester- day. This penetration, economic and ideological in character, has been almost completely successful in the Balkans, according to Dr. McDowell, so that Yugoslavia, Rumania, Greece and Bulgaria are today dominated by the Nazi regime. Dr. McDowell pointed out that the economic penetration is actually a policy of "nibbling," and is based -uT uva auo jvt uorgdumss u 4! uo flict continuous oppression on others and can achieve endless gains, pro- vided one advances slowly and cau- tiously. Its prime purpose at all times has been to make the economy of a foreign country subservient to man orbit, uually without their prior knowledge. Included among the effective in- struments of ideological penetration has been 'the propagandizing work carried on by the Nazis among the ,students throughout the Balkans and the Near East, Dr. McDowell con- tinued. The ideological penetration has often accompanied the economic penetration, he pointed out, as can be observed in the operations of the economic commissiones and the tech- nical experts which work in foreign countries out of Germany. Since Latin America occupies an economic position in respect to the European continent analagous to that of the Balkans in respect to Germany, the United States must decide what it can do to fight back the threat of Fascist penetration in that sector, Dr. McDowell declared. Latin America's economic goods are needed by Europe, and Latin America "must export or die," Dr. McDowell stated. Though Washing- By ALLEN T. RICKETTS CAMP DAVIS, JACKSON, WYO., June 25 (Special to The Daily)- Eight engineers and two botanists started their summer ' curricula Monday, June 17, in the 11th season of the University's Rocky Mountain Field Station, Camp Davis. Twenty- two geologists, arriving Sunday, June 23, completed the camp roster for the summer. Camp Davis offers excellent topo- graphical conditions for all three fields. The engineer is afforded all types of terrain on which to prac- tice, while the geological field of the region is excellent, although requir- ing a good deal of climbing at times. The botanists in the field already report enough material close-at- hand to keep them busy for many summers. The town of Jackson, 20 miles to the north, is the Mecca for all stu- dents on week-ends. The local slo- Four University camps, three in Michigan and one in Wyoming, of- fer practical experience during the Summer Session to students of geol- ogy, surveying, biology, geography and forestry. Jackson Hole, Wyo., is the site of Camp Davis, oldest of the four. Camp Davis was established in 1874 under the supervision of the late Prof. J. B. Davis and specializes in geology and surveying. The surrounding vicinity offers op- pertunities for study of strata and structural formations in the nearby Grand Teton Range and the Gros Ventre River. Also a study of the general physiography and structural geography of the route between Ann Arbor and Wyoming is made by the campers, including the Driftless Area of Wisconsin, the Bad Lands of North Dakota and the Black Hills. Largest of the camps is the Bio- logical Station on the shores of