Weather Mostly Cloudy, Occasional Rain Jr AW rig9an :4E ait Editorial For Conservation Of War Materials? .. Official Publication Of The Summer Session VOL. L. No. 41 Z-323 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, AUGUST 10, 1940 PRICE FIVE CENTS Egyptians Ready To Face Italians LanguageMakesPeople Human, BloomfieldSays Chicago Linguist Closes Lecture Series With Talk On 'The Function Of Language' Senators Open Debate On Conscription Bill; At Britain's Side Cairo Press Warns Duce Of Dangers As Forces Are Hurriedly Trained Ita:ians Outnumber British Ten To One CAIRO, Egypt, Aug. 9-()-Egypt, a neutral thus far in the developing desert war of the Near East, pre- pared tonight to join forces with the outnumbered British at,the mo- ment that Italy's African armies make their expected attack upon this ancient land. The nation's press chorused this warning to Premier Mussolini's ar- mies: "The desert is a terrible enemy! It ii the tomb of those who traverse it!" An Italian invasion, the news- paper added, would end as did the first Napoleon's costly retreat on the plains of Russia. Abdel Rahman Azzam Bey, com- mandant of Egypt's territorial army, declared in a speech that "any ag- gressive action against, Egypt will cost the invader very dear," 'and dis- closed that 200,000 men were being hurriedly trained. Tied By Defense Alliance Egypt is tied to Britain by a purely defensive alliance which does not require her to fight alongside the British. However, Egypt has given Britain supply and communication aids, had broken off diplomatic rela- tions with both Germany and Italy and has warned Italy that she would fight if she is invaded or her cities are bombed. The newspaper Balagh remarked that while the Italian forces were estimated to be ten times superior to the British in numbers, their fight- ing ability as iot uipressive. As to rumors that there are as many as 120,000 German troops among the Italians in Libya, the pa- per said these forces were "technical and official" and "more symbolic than effective." An overwhelming victory in the biggest air battle yet fought in the Near East was claimed by the British asrthey calmlynwatched the maneu- vers of Italian troops in British Somaliland, adopting the attitude of "wait and see." Engagement Fought Yesterday This arsenal engagement was fought yesterday - military news travels slowly in these hot wastes,- over Italian Libya and 15 Italian planes were declared by the British to have been shot down in flaipes. (The Italian version was that five British planes and two Italian planes were shot down and that the Italian fighters were outnumbered 27 to 16.) The British asserted that their own formation was outnumbered two to one, but that nevertheless only two British aircraft were lost. Far to the southeast, in British Somaliland, the Italians-who alrea- dy had occupied Zeila, Hargeisa and Oadweina--called a brief halt in their drive toward the important port of Berbera and then moved on again. A British communique announcing that the Italians were advancing told also of new Italian air raids at Ge- beit in the Sudan, where it was said "a few civilians" were slightly in- jured; and in the western desert on the British Egyptian base at Mersa Matruh. Rapp Queried On Case Delay Asked Why Frank Scholl Had NotBeen Tried When Prosecutor Albert J. Rapp was asked by the Attorney General's Department yesterday to explain why Frank B. Scholl, convicted swindler. has not been tried on other charges of fraud, he said' that the trial would be begun at the "earliest oppor- tunity." Deputy Attorney General Willard McIntyre asked Rapp when Schol would be tried" for swindling Alfred S. Haab, Dexter farmer. He said it would be "best for all concerned" if 22 Contestants Enter Summer Hopwoodsj Thirty-four manuscripts, 14 in the1 fiction division, seven essays, eight1 in the poetry group and five drama,, have been submitted in the 1940 Sum- mer Session Hopwood contest by 22j contestants. The 'number is six higher than last year's figure although the same number of contestants entered papers at that time. In 1939 there were 11 stories in the fiction group, 10 es-7 says, seven poems and no dramas.- Announcement ,of the award win- ners will be made at 5 p.m. Tuesday1 by Prof. Roy W. Cowden of the Eng- lish department. The judges will al- so be mentioned at that time. Flood Victims Will Be Aided By Red Cross Thousands Are Homeless In Wake Of Torrential' South Louisiana Rains CROWLEY, La., Aug. 9.-(/P)- Red Cross, state and federal agencies hurriedly mobilied their forces to-1 day to administer emergency aid to 10,000 refugees driven from their homes in southwest Louisiana by two days of torrential rain which natives said surpassed the landmark flood of 1927. Answering urgent, .appeals from Mayor 'Matt Buatt of Crowley, in the center of the flood, Governor Sam Jones at Baton Rouge swung into action to marshall state, federal and relief agencies to send in supply boats and administer available aid. Jones estimated there were 10,000 persons homeless and in need of im- mediate supplies, declaring that most of them were "cut off from the out- side world."I He appealed for food, clothing, bedding, medicine and boats to send into the disaster area, particularly to Crowley where the brunt of the floods centered following the Gulf of Mexico hurricane which swept along the Louisiana coast into Texas two days ago. The mobiliation of relief forces got into full swing as an abatement came today in the 18 and 19 inch rains and' the winds which whipped up abnorm-I ally high coastal tides died down.- Business was paralyzed, highway traffic was flooded out, with trans-1 portation limited to boats or main line railroads. Student Editor Defends Riht Criticized By Legion Post For Opposing Bill ATHENS, O., Aug. 9.-(AP)-A stu- dent editor insisted today there was; nothing "communistic" about voicing editorial opposition to the compul- sory military training bill pending in Congress. To criticism hurlednat the Ohio University Post, student paper, by the local American Legion post and the Athens Messenger, editor Robert L. Wertman, Lakewood senior, re- plied: "If it is communistic to oppose the conscription bill, then some of our greatest Americans are communists. The Post believes that the young citi- ens who are going to be affected have a democratic right to express their views.- The K. T. Crossen post of the American Legion demanded that Mr. Herman G. James, president of the state-supported university, ban un- American elements. Panzarella And Dalgren "Language makes us human be-t ings," succinctly declared Prof, Leon-c ard Bloomfield of the University oft Chicago last evening in his discussioni of "The Function of Langage," thec fifth and last of his series of popu-a lar lectures in language presentedt this summer under the auspices oft the Linguistic Institute.I "When an animal sees desirable food," explained Professor Bloom- field, "there is the -immediate reac-c tion1 of motion of the feet toward ther food. The same may be true likewiset of a human being. But the human being, unlike the animal, may havei a quite different reaction to the stim-i ulus, for his reaction may be speech,c which in turn may affect anothers person has a stimulus and thus even- tually produce the act of securing theG food.s Speech Serves As Link1 "That is," Professor Bloomfielde continued, "speech is a link betweenf the original stimulus and the final reaction; it may ,of course, be a veryr complicated link involving not twoI persons but many persons and pro-I longed and frequent discussion. Thist relayed intermediate speech is really what makes up society, with the orig-a inal stimulus and final reaction as the biologically important parts of the series. The function of language, then, is like that of the nervous sys- tem in a multicellular organism." That to the linguist language is essentially physical in character was a contention stressed by Professor Bloomfield, who remarked that al- though the psychologist must con- cern himself with what goes on with- in the individual who is producing or hearing language, nevertheless the linguist can view language only as a verbial report of what is going on and not as a neurological report. Writing Not Language Even gesture and writing, which are sometimes called forms of lang- uage, are to the linguist only physi- cal factors from language and used as substitutes for language. "Writ- ing," said Professor Bloomfield, "is a device to store up speech re- sponses, but writing itself is not lang- uage." 9 Two particular interests are found,; Thomas Plansr Speaking Tour Candidate For Presidency Will StumpMichigan LANSING, Aug. 9.-(MP)-Normant Thomas, Socialist candidate for President, will stump Michigan to- morrow. He is to deliver the keynote speecht to the Socialist Party's state nomin- ation convention here in the morn-t ing, and address a mass meeting at night, sandwiching in an appearancer in the afternoon at the Tri-County Farmers Union Picnic at Clinton] Lake in Macomb County. Charles Walters, of Detroit, Social- ist state secretary, said the party has assured Lansing police it will abide by a decision that Saturday traffic is too congested in this city to permit a parade., Walters said a boom was under way to nominate Seth Whitmore,] Lansing newspaper writer and state softball commissioner, as the party's1 candidate for Governor. ,Whitmore, labor and real estate editor for the Lansing State Journal, said he would accept the nomination if he were unopposed, but probably would with- draw in favor of some other candi- date if he had a rival. German Film To Be Shown By Art Cinema Based on the aftermath of the last war, "Kameradschaft", a pre- Hitler German film, will be the final offering of the Art Cinema League's four film series, to be shown at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Rackham School auditorium. The film concerns a mine disaster Tax Action Requested the speaker added, in the special use of language in scientific nomencla- ture and description. This use is of interest to scientists in general be- cause this- construction of what is actually super-language enables.them to report objectively their observa- tion - "and without observation," Professor Bloomfield commented, "there would be no science." A second interest is that for linguists, who are concerned with the degree of exact- ness to be found in the super-lang- uage of science. "This super-language," he said, "is itself only an approximation of what is described, for language never tells everything about an object; but it is a systematic approximation, as when we express the law of gravitation in an education in physics. Ordinary speech on the contrary is only hap- hardly approximate, as when we exclaim, 'Whiz! That's falling pretty fast!"' In addition to the lecture Mr. Ken- neth Pike of the Summer Institute of Linguistics in Arlansas presented phonograph records and sound films to show the development of esopha- geal speech in persons who have suffered the loss of the larynx by surgical operation. Britain Recalls Troops Posted In North China Shanghai Garrison Listed In Order To Evacuate; U.S. Marines To Stay (By The Associated Press) Britain, fighting a lone battle against Germany and'Italy in Eu- rope and Africa, announced yester- day the withdrawal of her troops in Shanghai and North China which Japan had requested. A Japanese spokesman said Japan was "very pleased," and expected other belligerent powers to do the same. In Washington, Sumner Welles, acting secretary of state, said U.S. Marines stationed in China would remain there. Withdrawal of the British will leave a Japanese admiral, Moriji Takeda, the commanding officer of Shanghai defense forces as the rank- ing officer. Only Naval Units Left Britain, under Japanese pressure, already had closed the Burma Road to China, vital for war supplies to China's Generalissimo, Chiang Kai- Shek, in his fight against Japan. Japan also obtained closure of routes through French Indo-China. Departure of the British "for ser- vice elsewhere" will leave 10,000 Brit- ish subjects and investments esti- mated at £200,000,000 (approximately $800,000,000) to be guarded only by British naval units. British troops first landed in Shanghai about 100 years ago. American forces in China number about 1,650, French 2,040, and Italian 205. Meanwhile Britain claimed an overwhelming victory in the biggest air battle yet fought in the Near East's developing desert fighting. RAF fliers shot down 15 Italian planes Thursday over Italian Libya next to Egypt and lost two planes despite being outnumbered two to one, the British said. The Italian version was that they lost only two, the British five. Battle Of Communiques News of this action followed Thurs- day's great aerial battle over the English Channel in which the Brit- ish claimed to have shot down 60 Nazi planes out of 400 sent against them. Britain acknowledged the loss of 16 British planes, then later an- nounced three of the pilots had landed safely. Moreover, the British declared three more Nazi planes were shot down in scattered fighting yester- day (Friday). In a battle of communiques the German High Command asserted the British losses were 40, their own only 10. Meanwhile over 70,000 tons of shipping were sunk, the Germans declared. Defense Leaders Attend Congressional Hearing On Taxation Problems Want Uncertainty To Be Eliminated By JOSEPH H. SHORT WASHINGTON,'Aug. 9.-(IP)-Na- tional defense leaders, in a swift pro- cession today, urged immediate ac- tion by Congress to remove tax and profits "uncertainities" which they said were hampering military pre- paredness. All appeared at a Congressional tax hearing and Secretary of War Stimson, giving an example, said that although Congress appropriated $400,000,000 for a batch of 4,000 Army planes in June, the Army had' been able to sign contracts for only 33 of them. No Tax Considerations This situation Stimson and other witnesses attributed primarily to lack of special tax consideration for con- cerns expanding their plants for de- fense and to a general uncertainty over what kind of a profits levy would. be enacted. Stimson, 72-year-old Republican war chief, echoed the sentiments of Secretary of the Treasury Morgen- thau who preceded him and of Lewis Compton, assistant Navy Secretary, and William S. Knudsen, defense commissioner, who came after. Discussed By Committee Most of the discussion, at the joint session of the House ways and means and Senate finance committees cent- ered around the plea that business men wanted to know'how they would be taxed and wanted also to be as- sured of tax credits for the cost of plant expansions for defense. Stim- son said a concern which built new facilities for defense was taking an abnormal risk because the facilities might turn out to be useless in case of "a sudden cessation of the emer- gency." There was little discussion of the specific proposal, prepared by the House tax subcommittee, for an ex- cess profits and related legislation. Profits Tax Approved This proposal would levy a 25 to 40 per cent tax on excess profits, begin- ning with 1940, would permit a de- duction from earnings over a five- year period of the entire cost of plants expanded for defense and would suspend the Vinson-Trammell Act's limitation of 7 to 8 per cent on the profits from warships and mili- tary aircraft. Morgenthau declared that it was "desirable" to enact a profits tax which would provide additional rev- enue "without restricting the produc- tive activity necessary for defense." Knudsen endorsed the principle of the excess profits tax but would not express a view on the current pro- posal. Compton expressed a desire that an excess profits levy accom- pany the suspension of the Vinson- Trammell Act. Nazi Bombing Raids Continue Varied Styles Worn B yCast In Last Show? Costumes For Patience' Go From Medieval To Milk Maid Although the Gilbert and Sullivan >peretta "Patience," is supposed to take place in 1880, the costumes which are being used by the cast are f a number of periods in style. The costumes of the chorus of Rapturous Maidens, for example, represent the idea of costumiers Evelyn Cohen and Emma Hirsh as to the 19th century conception of what nedieval costumes were like. The outfits worn by the chorus of dragoon are based on authentic English uni- form models. Poet's costumes, worn by both John Schwarzwalder as Archibald Gros- venor and George' Cox as Reginald Bunthorne, were created according o the specifications of W. S. Gilbert, author of the libretto. These cos- tumes were described by both Oscar Wilde and Algernon Swinburne as ideal men's clothes. The 1880 costume worn by John Schwarzwalder is based on another model found by Miss Cohen while Patience wears a stylized milk maid's costume. The 1880 styles of the other women in the operetta are intended as humorous exaggerations of cos- tumes of the day. "Patience," which opened, Wednes- day, will continue its six-day run at 8:30 p.m. today in the Lydia Mendels- sohn Theatre. U.S. Diplomat's Statements Hit By Washington Ambassador Cudahy Seen Ready To Resign Post With State Department (By The Associated Press) 'Censured and called home for re- marks he made about conditions in German occupied Belgium Ambassa- dor John Cudahy was expected by his friend tonight to resign from the diplomatic service. The State Department, in a public statement, declared the remarks were made in "violation of standing in- struction" and disclosed that Pres- ident Roosevelt had "requested" the diplomat to return for "consultation." The Daily Mail today quoted Cud- ahy as saying "I do not retract one word from what I said" in the inter- view which resulted in his censure by the U. S. State Departnient. The Mail said Cudahy declared "undue publicity has been given to my speech of the other day." He was criticized for his remarks on condi- tions in Nazi-held Belgium. "I have done my job and I return to the United States with reports of great efforts being made by Great Britain that should inspire my coun- trymen," Cudahy told the Mail. Cudahy, Ambassador to Belgium until foreign diplomatic missions were odered out of there last month by Germany, drew sharp criticism in the British press for an interview in London in which he asserted that Belgium faced near-famine condi- tions by mid-September unless it received American food supplies. This was widely interpreted as a hint that American food should be allowed through the British blockade In commenting on the German oc, cupation, he also was quoted as say- ing he thought German soldiers be- have possibly "better than United States soldiers would have done" Senator Sheppard Claims Democracy Imperilled, Bill A 'Tragic Necessity' Japanese Threat Cited By Holman By RICHARD L. TURNER WASHINGTON, Aug. 9.-(P)-The Senate's debate on peace-time con- scription began today with Senator Sheppard (Dem-Tex) declaring de- mocracy is imperiled everywhere and Senator Wheeler ,(Dem-Mont) scorn- fully asserting that those who fear a Nazi invasion should summon cour- age to seek an immediate declara- tion of war on Germany. A momentary stir was created when Senator Holman (Rep-Ore), seeking to show that Japan, not Ger- many, is "the number one threat to our peace," said he had learned from "authoritative military sources" of the "imminent peril of the invasion of Alaska from the Pacific and the endangering of the entire Pacific slope." Later he added, however, that so far as he knew "no one is mobilizing their forces now." Work On Tax Plans Meanwhile, the House ways and means committee was at work on tax plans, including a proposal that manufacturers who must expand their plants to fill defense orders be permitted to deduct the cost from their taxable earnings over a period of five years. Secretary Stimson testified that as tax law now stands such manufac- turers face an abnormal risk because enlargements undertaken at the gov- ernment's request may be useless af- ter a few years. Another defense development was a disclosure that the Navy would strengthen its garrison at Guantan- amo Bay, Cuba, by sending 2,900 ma- rines there from Quantico, Va., next month. Guantanamo Bay is an im- portant' base for warships guarding the eastern approaches to the Pan- ama Canal. The Senate debate began with an exposition of the pending bill-under which all men between 21 and 30, inclusive, would be subject to selec- tive military training. Senator Shep- pard, chairman of the military af- fairs committee, said developments abroad had made conscription a "tra- gic necessity" for America. A larger army was needed at once, he said, to protect American interests in the Western Hemisphere. And he warned that any successful attack on the Panama Canal would make the American Navy "helpless." Spoke Of Emergency As-he spoke of what he considered the emergency in which the country finds itself today, Senator Danaher (Rep-Conn) interrupted to ask: "What evidence did the committee have before it as to the nature of this emergency?" "We didn't have any," Sheppard replied. "I already knew what it was. It is an emergency for democracy throughout, the world." Senator Lucas (Dem-Ill) asked Danaher why, if he believed no emer- gency existed, he had voted for all the billions that had been appro- priated for national dfense. The young Connecticut Senator replied that he did so because the Adminis- tration had not properly attended to the nation's defenses in the past. Lucas spoke of thendanger of attack from abroad, and then Wheeler joined the discussion. FDR Answers McNary On National Guard Service HYDE PARK, N. Y., Aug. 9.-4()- President Roosevelt, who plans to leave tonight for an inspection tour of vital New England coastal defense units, said today the chances were 100 to 1 against the National Guard serving outside the limits of the Uni- ted States or its possessions in peace-' time. Mr. Roosevelt made the observa- tion after a reporter remarked that Senator Monary (Rep.-Ore.) Repub- lican vice-presidential candidate, had voted for an amendment to the train- Two Killed, Several Hurt In EnglishTown LONDON, Aug. 10 (Saturday)-- (P)-German bombers dropped their deadly explosives on southeast, northeast and northwest England early today and were heard over Scotland and Wales in wide-ranging attacks. Two men were killed and several persons were injured in one raid on a northwest England town. Sev- eral houses were damaged. Throughout the embattled areas, anti-aircraft batteries pumped proj- ectiles into the sky. In the northeast, there was a suc- cession of loud explosives as the raiders rumbled over several cities. Tremendous explosions were heard Boy, Did He Get Told! Now He'll Volunteer i