Weather Fair, Slightly Warmer Today; Scattered Showers Friday ig , i ' t aYi 4* 4:3. attg Editorial Rearmament Vs. Labor News .. Official Publication Of The Summer Session VOL. L. No. 33 Z-323 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, AUGUST 1, 1940 PRICE FIVE CENTS German Invasion To Be Postponed; Air Raids Planned Concentrated Dive-Bomb Attack Termed Next Phase In Pre-Invasion Action BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS BERLIN, Aug. 1 (Thursday).-The concentrated dive-bombing attack on Dover last Monday was pictured by German sources today as starting the next phase of pre-invasion action against England-systematic de- struction of her vital ports one at a time. These sources said Britain's trade and supply lanes, and the port facili- ties through which she brings in food and war supplies are the weak line in her tight-drawn defense chain. Observation planes which since have studied the havoc wrought by the Stukas at Dover reported to Berlin that at least three ships were sunk in the harbor, harbor facilities were wrecked and the port definitely was out of commission. . X,3+,,. Language Research Conference Will Meet Here Friday, Saturday Meeting To View Research In Non-English European Languages Spoken In The United States Military observers declared the preliminary raids, which Marshal Hermann Wilhelm Goering termed "exploratory flights," have been com- pleted, and the real Stuka blasting of ports has begun. The impression was given that for the time being-at least during this port-smashing phase-there would be no actual attempt at invasion. Already, drawing upon her power- ful air reserves in an effort to tight- en a blockade on England, Germany' has claimed a heavy"toll in sunken shipping. Figures relesed st night listed 1,270,000 tons of lritish shipping sunk since June 25-a weekly aver-' age of 250,000 tons. Emphasizes Tactics Authorized German spokesmen em-' phasized these Nazi tactics were to sap England's strength through de- struction of her vast merchant ma- rine. Nazi newsreels showed the sup- posed effectiveness of bomb and tor- pedo blasts on British shipping. Spokesmen side-stepped comment on the statement of Virginio Gayda, Fascist editorial spokesman in Rome, that a. direct attack on England is not to be expected immediately, but questioned the meaning of the word "immediate." So the impression grew that long lays and nights of air bombing would be made upon Britain before Adolf Hitler gives the word for any troop invasion. (Ronald H. Cross, British Minister of Shipping, confirmed that some of the normally busiest harbors were virtually closed now, but said Brit- ain was prepared for "sudden changes in our port arrangements.") Driven Westward Nazi spokesmen contended much British shipping has been driven from the Channel to western ports which they said lacked facilities adequately to sustain England. Raids in West- ern England have been intensified. (Reports from Switzerland said German-trained Italian parachute troops and heavy German forces were stationed on the west coast of the continent facing England.) In citing immense British shipping losses, Nazi spokesmen said the fig- ures should still any suspicions abroad that Germany was fighting the war "half-heartedly." Moreover, they asserted Britain had lost 370 planes since June 25 or an average of 74 a week. Two Planes Shot Down Two British planes were shot down yesterday in raids over Germany in which the pilots were accused of at- tacking the open university city of Heidelberg. Nazi newsreels showed German, troops busy in the French "peace forest" of Compeigne blowing up monuments and buildings ordered destroyed by Hitler. For some time Germany has been preoccupied in trying to settle Bal- kan unrest, particularly Hungarian and Bulgarian territorial claims on Rumania. The latter has signified her willingness to negotiate with the two countries. Axis Troops Reported Along Continent Coast (By the Associated Press) BERN, Switzerland, July 31.-Ger- man and Italian troops were reported concentrating tonight along 800 miles of the continental coast, but still the most authoritative word heard was that the time had not yet come for the great spring across the Channel against England. Biology Camp Plans Exhibit At open House An exhibit showing the organisms causing swimmer's itch, schistosome dermatitis, and the methods for com- batting the organism will be among those displayed during Visitors Day. at the University Biological Station on Douglas Lake from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday. This exhibit, of immediate interest to residents and visitors of the nor- thern lakes region, will be supervis- ed by Dr. Donald B. McMullen, who*i is directing the control work on swimmer's itch for the State Stream Control Commission. It will be only one of the many exhibits illustrating classroom work and scientific inves- tigations. Of the annual Visitor's Day, Direc- tor Alfred H. Stockard writes," On this day we make a concerted effort to acquaint visitors with the work be- ing done at the Station. This is a service which the people of Michigan have the right to expect, but which we can best provide if all come at the one time when we have demon- strations and guides for that pur- pose." The Biological Station is located on the southeast shore of Douglas Lake in Cheboygan County, on the Cheboygan-Petoskey road thirteen miles southwest of Cheboygan. Summer Band Plans Concert Frank Simons Will Direct Musicians Here Sunday The University Summer Session Band, under the direction of Frank Simon as guest Conductor, will pre- sent the third in a series of summer concerts at 4:15 p.m. Sunday in Hill Auditorium. Composed of 128 instruments, the Summer Session Band personnel is built up of band directors and con- ductors from all parts of the country. It is one of the few concert bands which boasts a full complment of woodwinds, and is complete in its symphonic instrumentation. For the directors and musicians who have registered in the Summer Session Band, the work here serves a two-fold purpose. All recently pub- lished musical scores adaptable to concert band interpretation, are made available to the band and through rehearsal sessions and the weekly concerts, the musicians and directors have an opportunity to be- come acquainted with the latest works. A secondary function of the band is the experience and instruction given in the latest procedures and rehearsal techniques of band work. Especial emphasis is given to work in tone production, interpretation, balance and intonation. German Club To Witness Carillon Demonstration Prof. Percival Price, University Carillonneur, will give a talk on how to play a carillon at 8 p.m. Thursday on the eighth floor of the Baird Me- morial Tower under the auspices of Deutscher Verein. By HAROLD B. ALLEN Heralding a period of closer co- operation among scholars interested in cetarin aspects of Ameircan cul- ture, the first Confeernce on Research in the Non-English European Lan- guages Spoken in America will be held in Ann Arbor Friday .and Satur- day, Aug. 2 and 3, under the sponsor- ship of American Council of Learned Societies and with the local support of the Linguistic Institute. Prof. Hans. Kurath of Brown Uni- versity, who as director of the con- ference arirved in Ann Arborhlast week tocomplete arrangements here, has enlisted the participation of a number of noted scholars. They will present a series of papers in five ses- sions during the two-day program. These sessions are open to all persons interested, Professor Kurath an- nounces. The Friday meetings will be held in the Rackham Amphitheatre be- ginning at 2 p.m. The first session, dealing with the German language in this country, will last until 4 p.m. Appearing on this program will be the following: Prof. Hans Kurath, "The Dialect of the Pennsylvania 'Dutch';" Prof. Alfred Senn, Univer- sity of Pennsylvania, "Problems in the Study of Swiss Dialects in America;" Prof. R-M. S. Heffner, University of Wisconsin, "German Settlements in Wisconsin."~ At 4 p.m. the Scandinavian section will meet, with Prof. Einar Haugen of the University of Wisconsin dis- cussing "Norwegian Dialects in the Middle West." At 9 p.m. the Slavic section will meet, with Dr. George Merriam Talk Will Conclude Culture Series Talk TodayWill Survey Function Of American Political Party System Concluding the five week series of lectures in the Graduate Study Program in American Culture and Institutions, Prof. Charles E. Mer- riam of the Universty of Chicago will speak at 4 :15 p.m. today on "The Function of American Political Parties." The lecture wil be held in the Rackham School auditorium and will be open to the public. Students enrolled in the'Program and members of the University fac- ulty will meet for the final round table discussion at 7:30 p.m. in the Rackham School amphitheatre. The subject will be "Political Institutions in a Changing World" and the dis- cussion will be led by Dean Emeritus Henry M. Bates of the law school. Professor Merriam, a graduate of Lenox College in 1893, took an A.B. degree from the University of Iowa in 1895, an A.M. and a Ph. D. de- gree from Columbia University in 1897 and 1900 respectively, and in (Continued on Page 4) L. Trager of Yale University present- ing his paper, "The Slavic-speaking Groups of the United States." Both sessions Saturday are sched- uled for the auditorium of the W. K. Kellogg Building. The Spanish sec- titon will meet there at 9 a.m. Prof. Hayward Keniston of the University of Chicago, chairman-elect of the department of moderr languages at the University of Michigan, will offer a "Review of Research in American Spanish." He will be followed by Prof. Navarro Tomas of Columbia University, who will discuss "The Linguistic Atlas of Spain and the Spanish of the Americas." At 11 a.m. the French section will meet to conclude the conference. The two speakers are as follows: Prof. W. Von Wartburg, University of Chicago, "To What Extent is an Atlas of Louisiana French Possible and Desirable;" Prof. E. F. Haden, McMaster University, Toronto, "The French-speaking Areas of Vanada: 'Acadians' and 'Canadians'." Eugene A. Nida Views Studies On Languages Application Of Descriptive Techniques To English Outlined In Talk Here Applying the same descriptive technique which the modern linguis- tic scientist uses in making an ob- jective study of an unrecorded lang- uage like that of a Mexican Indian tribe, Eugene A. Nida, faculty mem- ber of the Summer Institute of Lin- guistics at Siloam Springs, Ark., last evening outlined to members of the Linguistic Institute the results of such an approach to the English language. Since the traditional analysis of English has been conditioned by the known analysis of other European languages, and principally by that of Latin, linguists for some time have attempted to approach English in such a way that it may be described without the distortion and falsifi- cation that result from making it fit into the patterns of other lang- uages. The method employed by Mr. Nida, who is himself an experienced re- searcher with Indian languages, is to apply to English three of the four factors postulated by Professor Leon- ard Bloomfield, noted linguist who has been offering a series of lectures in Ann Arbor this summer. One factor, that of phonetic change, Nida ignored because it is not distinctive in most English speech. The other factors are word-order, modulation, and selection of forms. These three factors produce the patterns of Eng- lish, said Nida, patterns which when thus seen purely objectively, are found to be relatively simple. Train Wreck Death Count Reaches 38 Gasoline Propelled Motor Coach Strikes Freight; Explodes In Flames Four Passengers Survive Accident (By the Associated Press) AKRON, O. July 31.-A head-on' collision on the Pennsylvania rail- road carried 38 persons to flaming death tonight. A gasoline-propelled railroad mo- tor coach, shuttling from Hudson, ., to Akron, crashed into a double- engined freight train of 73 cars. The motor coach, pushed back 200syards along the track, burst into flames. Coroner R. E. Amos said there ap- parently were only four survivors in the coach-two of thema seriously burned. Most of the victims were burned to death, he added. The clothes were burned off many of them. Amos said his information indi- cated the death toll might reach 42. The last of the bodies was taken from the flame-seared wreckage at 9:15 p.m., three hours and 15 min- utes after the collision. One Survivor Listed One survivor was Tod Wonn, 24, of Akron. He was brought to a hos- pital here with leg and arm injuries. The gasoline car had made con-' nections at Hudson with Pennsyl- vania passenger trains from Cleve- land and Pittsburgh. The freight was northbound from Columbus, O. The collision took place in fair wea.ther at the front street crossing near the Pennsylvania's Silver Lake junction. None of the trainmen on the freight evidently was hurt. There were believed to be eight railroad employes on the coach, only one of whom survived. The lead locomotive telescoped in- to about half the length of the coach. Fuel tanks burst and flames envel- oped the wreckage. The state highway patrol broad- cast a general alarm for ambulances, and vehicles were rushed from Akron, Barberton, Kent, Ravenna and Cuyahoga Falls. The Cuyahoga Falls fire department sped all avail- able apparatus to the scene. Fail To Take Siding L. M. Wolcott, trainmaster for the line's Cleveland division, said 'the coach apparently failed to take a siding to permit the train, north- bound from Columbus, to pass. He said the locomotive was not derailed or damaged extensively. Wolcott said the coach conductor, Harry Shaffer, leaped to safety, but that he believed two other crew mem- bers were killed. They were Engine- man T. L. Murtough and baggage- man Charles J. Bilderback, both of Orrville. The accident occurred at about 6 p.m., Wolcott said. It was the second big railroad wreck in the United States in the last four months. The Lake Shore Limited, Chicago-bound on the New York Central, jumped its tracks at Gulf Curve, Little Falls, N. Y., April 17, killing 31 persons. i . Japan Rejects British Protest On Spy Action Official Spokesman Suma Warns Arrest Of British 'Spies' Will Be Continued (By the Associated Press) TOKYO, July 31.-Foreign Office Spokesman Yakichiro Suma said to- night Japanwould reject British pro- tests over her arrest of more than a dozen British citizens accused of spy- ing and indicated the arrests would continue. "It would be entirely unreasonable for Britain to make any sort of pro- test in connection with the arrests," he said. "All persons attempting to spy into military secrets will be dealt with relentlessly." Suma 'did not disclose the number arrested, but said the authorities had "sufficient evidence" against those held. (British Foreign Secretary Lord alifax said yesterday strong protests already had been delivered to the Japanese both in Tokyo and Lon- don. Four prominent British business men who had been picked up now were released, it was reported. (Britain has demanded th'e release of all her nationals and Lord Halifax denied the Japanese charges that a British "espionage network" exists in Japan. (Shanghai reports said the Japan- ese anti-espionage drive spread to North China today, with British and Chinese officers of the Salvation Army at Peiping and Tientsin being asked to appear before Japanese Gendarmerie to explain their activ- ities. None were arrested as far as could be learned, it was said.) * ** Sabotage Seens As Possibility Camden Fire Investigation To Probe Causes Today CAMDEN, N. J., July 31.-',)-An inquiry that will reveal the "possibil- ity" of sabotage was outlined tonight while firemen searched Camden's $2,000,000-fire ruins for the bodies of seven missing persons. Mary W. Kobus, municipal safety commissioner, said she had heard Immediate Need For Conscription Cited By Stimson New Secretary Of War Predicts Collapse Of British Defenses Within 30 Days WASHINGTON, July 31.-(')-Bluntly warning, that Great Britain may be prostrate in 30 days, and the United States menaced simultaneously from two directions, Secretary of War Stimson urged immediate military conscription today, while a Senate committee worked out a compromise peace-time draft bill for submission to the Senate. At the same time the House, in a drowsy, sparsely-attended, three-hour session, passed what may be history's biggest appropriation bill-nearly five billion dollars for warships, warplanes, guns and an almost endless list of preparedness items. The day also brought what many considered a significant development in the imposition of an embargo-ordered by President Roosevelt-forbid- ding shipment of aviation gasoline to non-American nations, except for use of American interests abroad. As it stood tonight, after the re- visions of the Senate Military Com- mittee, the draft bill would require all men 21 to 30 years old, inclusive, to register (instead of 18 to 64 as originally proposed.) These men would be liable to compulsory service. In addition, one-year voluntary en- listments would be made available to all men 18 to 64, inclusive. The measure also contained rigid provisions safeguarding the jobs of those called up for service, permit- ting the National Labor Relations Board to take court action, if neces- sary, to force an employer to rehire a conscript at the end of his period of duty. Final Approval Planned The committee planned to give the measure its final approval tomorrow and prospects were that it would go before the Senate next week, there to run the gauntlet of a determined opposition. Meanwhile, it was plan- ned that the Senate should take up legislation recently requested by President Roosevelt empowering him to call out the National Guard for a 12-month period of training. Stimson, the 72-year-old Republi- can whom President Roosevelt called to duty as his Secretary of War, was emphatic both in urging compulsory military service, and in detailing what he considered the dangers which this country faces today. "A prudent trustee," he told the House Military Committee, "must take into consideration that in an- other 30 days Great Britain may be conquered and her fleet come under enemy control. Across the Pacific there is a powerful Japan in sym- pathy with Italy and Germany. "We've got to very radically revise our prejudices about our first line of defense. Would Be 'Super' Fleet "A German victory over England would give her a fleet outranking that of the United States and a ship- building capacity six times that of this country." As for conscription, Stimson said: "If there is ever a lesson we've learned, it is that the only way to meet a war situation is by a compul- sory system of raising our own ar- mies." He asked the members of the com- mittee to "consider whether we are not confronted with a far greater peril today than we were in June, 1917." The action of the Senate Military Committee followed receipt of com- munications from Stimson saying the War Department "urgently recom- mends" passage of the bill and that it had the approval of the Budget Bureau. The latter stated: "You are advised that the general objectives of the proposed legislation are in ac- cord with the program of the Pres- ident." The gasoline embargo was an- nounced by Stephen T. Early, the President's secretary. Prof. Dawson Speaks On Liberty; Need For Dynamic Society Cited By HARRY M. KELSEY The fate of liberty depends for many decades ahead on the military contest which is now going on in Europe and which may very soon be transferred to the western hemis- phere, Prof. John P. Dawson of the law school said in his lecture last night on "Individual Liberty as an Objective in Government" presented for the Graduate Study Program in American Cuture and Institutions. Our constitutional safeguards could quickly be rendered meaning- less if the ethical standards they ex- press were rejected by the dominant opinion in our society, he stated. The constructive effort to produce the conditions of a larger freedom, to re- lease human potentialities for im- mensely greater human achieve- ments, may have diverted into a stupendous military effort, lasting many years and by no means assur- of freedom were first given specific content and effective protection. If England goes we, with the Brit- ish dominions, will stand alone, Pro- fessor Dawson asserted, and if that happens, our courage and our faith will receive their severest test. The concept of freedom, for which many men have fought and died, is still worth fighting for, Professor Dawson claimed. Tolerance of the views of others, a feeling for the worth and dignity of the individual human being, the sense of our com- mon humanity should generate a deep emotion and a passionate con- viction, he maintained; the issues could never be more clearly defined for us. The whole view of human nature and society which has slowly evolved in the 18th and 19th centuries is now violently rejected abroad, the lecturer observed. A small group of ,"1+11cc ad ara'nhirnc.im lnrc By MORTON C. JAMPEL Only a positive and dynamic soci- ety will bring about future achieve- ments, Dr. Dumas Malone, director of the Harvard University Press told the American Culture Institute class in his last address of the summer yesterday. He pointed to the Maginot Line as the French symbol of the static and the fixed, which led to her down- fall, as contrasted with the Panzers and Blitzkriegs, Germany's symbol of changing fluid ideas, which gave that country success. "But," he added, "we can not ex- pect any great products from Ger- many because of the supression of freedom of thought." "Movement is a sign of life," Dr. Malone said. "When movement stops social ideas stop. Of course we can have peace then, but it will be the peace of death." (Picture on Page 4) such reports and declared "they will be given serious consideration." Officials of the R. M. Hollingshead Paint Company Plant-working on a paint order for the Army and NavS in addition to its vast paint and wax business-were skeptical, however, that yesterday's series of explosions and fire were anything other than accidental. Some phases of the disaster still were obscured, but these facts stood out: Two known dead-a plant em- ploye and a fireman. Four women and three men, all paint company workers, missing. Conference On Languages Will Meet Here On Friday 1. British Seek Nazi Raider Off Brazil (By the Associated Press) BUENOS AIRES, July 31.-()- British warcraft ranged angrily off the Brazilian coast tonight in, hot pursuit of a German merchant raider already reported damaged by the British merchant cruiser Alcan- tara in a brief sea battle which re- turned war action to. the Western Hemisphere. 'Official information was sparse, but wordfrom naval circles here and in Montevideo and Rio de Janeiro agreed that the engagement occurred