Weather Fair and Warmer Saturday; Partly Cloudy Sunday Y Of ficial Publication Of The Summer Session ~Iait33 Editorial Enthusiasm In The G.O.P. VOL. L. No. 11 Z-323 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, JULY 6, 1940 PRICE FIVE CENTS Final Break Seen Between France And Great Britain Bill sawyer's Band To Play On Air Sunday Reich Terms Monroe Doctrine Interpretation 'Untenable;Hull Is Quiet On Martinique Situation -- i Neutral Sources 'Reveal Newest Peace Feelers Extended By Germany Gibraltar Raided By French Planes Britain and France last (Friday)- night were going through the mel-. ancholy formalities of erasing the last vestiges of the entente which was to have won the war and become a basis for new, peacetime Europe. Britain, alone against the axis, literally cleared her shores for her own battle. While German warplanes early to- day (Saturday) continued their re- gular forays against England, a neu- tral diplomatic source in London pre- dicted that new German peace "feel- ers) would be extended within three or four weeks. Convinced Of Failure He said, however, that most neu- treal diplomats and observers had been convinced in advance of the failure of any such overtures in view of the "New British Aggressiveness" in regard to the French fleet. Presumably in prelude to a com- plete diplomatic break,, already re- potted ordered by the French Petain Government, the charge d'affaires in London, Roger Cambop, presented to the foreign office a stern and bitter protest against the smashing of the French Mediterranean fleet by Bri- tish naval guns. Cambon resigned, presumably in protest to his government's protest. His superior, Anbassador charles Corbin, sent his own resignation to Petain last week. British sailors in Alexandria stood by ready to fire on French ships, if necessary, to prevent their escape from that British base in Egypt. 'No ship Shall Leave' The British pledged themselves to see that "no French ship shall ever leave Alexandria to surrender to the enemy. The French remained aboard their ships apparently undecided as to the next move. One French battleship, four cruisers and a number of small craft are at Alexandria. Three British cruisers were re- ported to have landed at Gibraltar 30 bodies of British sailors killed in the battle. Britain's big stronghold at Gibral- tar was raided by bombers yesterday for the first time since the war be- gan but almost all of their bombs fell into the sea. A Madrid radio broadcast heard in London said it had been "established" that the raid- ing planes were French. Culture Course Enters Second Week Of Talks Theme Will Be 'Religion, Education: Freedom Of Mind And Spirit' Topic of the second week of lec- tures and round table discusions of the Graduate Study Program in American Culture and Institutiois will be "Religion and Education: Freedom of Mind and Spirit." Five noted lecturers, all authori- ties in their fields, will deliver six talks during the week. All lectures will be held in the Rackham School Auditorium and will be open to the public. The week will close with a round table discussion. The first of the week's lectures will be presented by Prof. William W. Sweet of the University of Chicago, who will talk on "Church and' State in the New World" at 8:15 p.m. Mon- day. Tuesday at 4:15 p.m. Dr. Du- mas Malone director of the Harvard University Press, will talk on "Person- al Achievements of the Clergy," and at 8:15 p.m. President Dixon Ryan Fox of Union College will speak on "Religion and Humanitarianism." Dr. Malone will lecture again at 400 Brains Required For League Exercise In a program of quizzing at the League dance last night. Betty Woo- ster and Ed Love emerged victorious from the field. Ten questions were posted about the ballroom for which all interested parties offered written answers. Love, the winner of this part of the program, was asked to speak over the microphone. His only comment was "Hello, Ma." The second part was conducted along the lines of a radio broadcast with Dick Slade announcing. Betty Wooster defeated the other five con- testants as she emerged with a per- feet score. Her comment at the end was "It was a hard fight but I won." There were four sets of questions with Pete Antonelli quizzing the boys and Norm Oxhandler quizzing the girls. Earl Stevens' Band played to a crowd of 400 dancers, all of whom were able to participate in the first quiz. Prof. Cowan Demonstrates Vocal Actions Voice Mechanics Shown In Linguistic Institute Lecture By Pictures X-ray motion pictures, with syn- chronized sound track, showing the vocal organs in operation during actual speech, together with high speed motion pictures giving a direct view of the vocal cords in action, were the chief exhibits offered last evening by Prof. Milton Cowan of the University of Iowa in his Lin- guistic Institute lecture, "The Acous- tic Analysis of Speec Sounds." "Traditional linguistics," comment- ed Professor Cowan, "long has been aware of the need for studying the intermediate link between speaker and hearer, that is, for analyzing the actual sounds of language. As early as 1743 an attempt was made to view the vocal cords by means of a pharyngeal mirror, and in the nineteenth century other attempts were made with improved devices. "Only within the past 10 years, however," said Dr. Cowan, "has sci- ence made available the devices which already have opened approach- es to the solution of linguistic prob- lems." Two of these devices, he pointed out, are the x-ray motion picture camera and the high speed camera which, using a continuously moving film with a revolving crystal- line compensator lens, is able to pho- tograph at the rate of 4,000 frames a second. The high speed camera, which has been developed at the Bell Telephone laboratories, has produced pictures which have offered clear substantia- tion to the theory of Helmholtz, the nineteenth century investigator. Helmholtz claimed, and thus began a controversy which still continues, that the harmonics of the human voice originate in the larynx and are not greatly affected or modulated by the pharyngeal musculature. Union's Orchestra Given Chance To Appear On Fitch BandWagon By BARBARA DeFRIES Following in the footsteps of many famous band leaders, Bill Sawyer and his orchestra featured during the winter at the Union, will start on the road to fame Sunday by broad- casting on a national hookup with the Fitch Band Wagon program at 6:30 p.m. over WWJ. The members of the Fitch . Band Wagon program audition numerous young, rising bands throughout the country and feature them each Sun- day during the summer as the up and coming band of the week. The ob- ject of this program is to discover new talent and to present it to the public for approval. Many young bands, previously featured on the Band Wagon have found success in a comparatively short time and Saw- yer hopes that this will prove to be a valuable step in his career also. Sawyer is a native of Traverse City and began his musical activities by participating in the high school band and local orchestras. He received his degree here in the School of Music in 1939 and has been working on his Masters. Bill's work, play, recreation and hobby are all embedded in music. He has written various musical selec- tions, two of which will be featured tomorrow night. He does all the arranging for his band which is com- posed of University students who in most cases have been developed and trained by their leader. Because of the increasing popular- ity of Bill Sawyer's orchestra and because of the personality of the 12 musicians, Stanely Waltz, general manager of the Union, is endeavoring to make connections with WJR, De- troit, for a half hour broadcast of dance music from the Union ball- room each Friday night. Engineering Parley Is To Open Today Diesel engines and the analysis of indicator cards will feature the sec- ond' series of lectures sponsored by the Interal Combustion Engine In- stitute at 9 a.m, today in the Am- phitheatre of the Rackham Building. Sponsored jointly by various de- partments of the engineering col- lege, the Internal Combustion Insti- tute this summer is featuring talks by technicians loaned from industry who will present the various phases of modern problems connected with internal combustion engines at week- ly lectures. No Comment On Rumour Of British Blockade Is Delivered By Secretary Information Said To Be Incomplete WASHINGTON, July 5.-(P)-Sec- retary of State Hull declined com- ment today on unofficial reports that Britain was establishing a vir- tual blockade around the French island of Martinique, in the West Indies, to prevent movement of any French naval units or planes from there. Hull said his information on the situation was incomplete but indi- cated it was being studied, and, meanwhile, withheld any opinion as to its possible implications for Amer- ican neutrality. It was reported in diplomatic quarters that British destroyers, car- rying out the British attempt to seize the French fleet and keep it out of Germany's hands, had moved in- to the vicinity of Martinique to pounce upon any ships emerging from there. 'Star Wagon' Will Conclude Four-Day Run Production's, Stage Effects And Costume Features Are ProgramHighlights Many interesting stage effects and costume features highlight the Michigan Repertory Players' produc- tion of Maxwell Anderson's "The Star Wagon," which concludes its four-day run at 8:30 p.m. today in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Among them are the archaic car invented by Stephen Minch played by Norman Oxhandler, which is pulled on and off the stage simulat- ing an automobile ride, and the Star Wagon itself which rises on the stage as though floating off in space. Interesting costumes include a pair of bloomers, considered shocking in 1903, 12 pairs of high shoes similar to those worn in those days and many other examples of clothing in that era, such as ankle-length skirts, shirt garters and celluloid collars. The drama, a Broadway success in 1937-38, deals with two men, Minch and Wicks, who, by means of the star wagon, relive their lives to please Minch's wife. Later they realize that they had taken the right road of life after all and come back to the pres- ent and to happiness. Starred in the production are Ox- handler, Truman Smith as Hanus Wilks, and Mary Pray as Martha, Stephen's wife. 1. 1 1 Prof. Dodge Warns Assemb Conservation Must Be Learned American Agriculture Has ify still further their traditional cul- tures,Been Of Soil; he forecast, they may be able BeenWastfulOf Sil;to bring themselves into harmony Methods Must Change with the earth. "If agriculture is maintained only By KARL KESSLER at the cost of fertilization and irri- gation," he warned, "American cul- To support the people of the ture must somehow embrace a pro- United States we must learn to con- vision for a redistribution of income trol the forces of nature, as well as visionf aethisution icoe the trends of our economy, Prof. that will make these expenditures te tD. Dodge of the geography .possible for the farmer." If in ten- Stanleydepar.mentyestrdayhedog yaeitry and absentee ownership, he department yesterday warned those continued, we find responsibility for assembled for the concluding lecture the Joads and the dust storms, Amer- on regional varieties of cultural de- ican culture must be revised as to velopment in the graduate study its fundamental legal clauses in or- course on American culture and in- der that these -abuses may be done, stitutions. away with. The traditional American agricul/ If the cost of things bought from ture, Professor Dodge pointed out, the corporations of New England is has been carried on only at the ex- too high, Professor Dodge indicated, pense of an exhausted soil. Inherent- American culture must provide more ly, the soils of the American con- nearly equal price scales. tinent support the traditional agri- If adaptibility means anything, he culture only at the expense of being concluded, it means that we shall so washed or blown away. manage our cultural trends that Impatience, he observed, has been they do not transcend the possibil- a characteristic of the American peo- ities of the land as expressed in the ple; but impatience is incompatible natural regional differences of the with the care necessary for the United States. preservation of the land. Freedom of enterprise, he general-" ized, has also been a characteristic SRA Director of the American people, but where they have been free to farm as they their own land, but also the land Op n M e t h y h v e n f e o f r s t e Oe e twis h e d , th e y h a v e d e s tr o y e d n o t o n lyth i o w l a d b u a s o h e a n of others. Gulleys and blowing sand Here M ionday do not respect fences and other prop- erty bounds, and one result has been the Joads of our dust-bowl. Religious Leaders, Clergy But adaptability, too, Professor Dodge added, has been a character- Plan Series Of Forums istic of the American people. Adapt- In Annual Conference ability is being shown, he noted, though slowly and sometimes reluc- M tantly, to the program which has More than 100 religious leaders been devised for the reclamation of and clergy will convene' with stu- the dust-bowl areas. If this charac- dents and faculty for the Sixth An- teristic of adaptability be retained, nual Conference on Religion open- if the American people learn to mod- inrr Mnndav with a week !'of lec- 0 odywt ek/o e- r r a i J a r r State Department Warns German Diplomats Not To Criticize U.S. Policy Foreign Comment Termed Improper WASHINGTON, July 5. -fP-- Confronted with a challenging note from Germany calling the United States governmens interpretation of the Monroe Doctrine "untenable," the State Department today served notice anew that it would uphold the doctrine, and, in addition, virtually threatened to oust any German dip- lomats in this country who publicly discussed American policy. The latter action was evoked by the fact that Baron Von Spiegel, the German consul general at New Orleans, had been quoted in the press as saying that Germany would not forget the aid given her enemies by this country. A State Department announce- ment said it appeared the consul general thought he was not speak- ing for publication and that it was "pgrhaps due to a misunderstand- ing" that publication resulted. Matter Taken Up "The matter has been taken up with the Germany embassy here," said the announcement, "and it has been pointed out that public discus- sion of questions relating to this country's policies and attitudes does not properly come within the prov- ince of foreign government officials in the United States. Then the department added point- edly that permission granted to for- efgn government officials to remain in this- country is dependent upon observance of this rule. The exchange concerning the Monroe Doctrine grew out of the United States' action in informing the Reich on June 18 that it would not "recognize" nor "acquiesce" in any transfer of Western Hemisphere territory from one non-American power to another. This amounted to a notice to Germany not to try to take over French, British or other possessions in the new world. Three Point Reply The German reply, as given out in substance by Secretary of State Hull today, made these three points: That Germany has "given no occa- sion whatever for the assumption" that she intends to acquire territory in this hemisphere 'and that the American note to Germany was this "without object." That the interpretation of the Mon- roe Doctrine implicit 'in the Ameri- can note was "untenable" because it would "amount to conferring upon some European countries the right to possess territories in the Western Hemisphere and not to other Euro- pean countries." That the Monroe -Doctrine's prin- ciple that Europe must not inter- vene in American affairs can be "legally valid only on condition that the American nations for their part do not interfere in the affairs of the European continent." Prof. Preuss Talks Today Excursionists Travel Today To Cranbrook, Fourth Tour By Summer Students Is Conducted By Prof. Ruel ChurchiHM Summer Session excursionists will depart on the fourth tour of the sea- son at 8:30 p.m. today from in front of Angell Hall bound for the Cran- brook Schools ' in Bloomfield Hills, to return at 4 p.m, The tour will be conducted by= Prof. Ruel V. Churchill of the mathe- matics department, who is director of Summer Session excursions. Schools of the Cranbrook Founda- tion are the gift of Mr. and Mrs. George G. Booth of Detroit and are located about 20 miles north of that city. There are three schools in the Foundation, Cranbroow, Kingswood and Brookside. The excursion group will visit all three schools, Cranbrook for older boys, Kingswood for older girls, and Brookside for younger boys and girls. They will be conducted on the visit at Bloomfield Hills by the executive secretary of the Cranbrook Founda- tion, Dr.Frayer, tures, conferences, forums, and luncheon meetings. Arranged by the University Com- mittee on Religious Education, the conference will take as its theme, "Religion and National Develop- ment." Centered around this sub- ject will be the speeches of religious leaders of the Midwest. Kenneth Morgan, director of the Student Religious Association, will open the luncheon lectures speaking on "Religion in India." Professor- Emeritus Leroy Waterman of. the Oriental Languages Department, will keynote Monday's meeting at 3 p.m. speaking on "Religion in National Development" at the W. K. Kellogg Institute Auditorium. Prof. William W. Sweet of the Divinity School of the University of Chicago will analyze religion's place in the nation's historical develop- ment in his four lectures before the conference. Dr. Edward Fitzpatrick, president of Mount Mary College for Women of Milwaukee, will address the group on "Roman Catholicism and American Culture," while Rabbi Louis Binstock, who has recently returned from Germany and Russia, will describe Jewish education. and contributions to American culture. Unique feature of the program opened for the first time will be the attendance by Michigan clerbymen and professional religious leaders without fee in ten courses offered by the Summer Session for the week of the conference. Michigan Band To Open Season With First Concert Tomorrow Ho wTo Apply For Positions Is TalkTopic "How am I to apply for a job?" is a question frequently asked by col- lege graduates and those approach- ing graduation; it is in attempt to answer this question that the Uni- versity Bureau of Appointments and occupational Information, under the direction of Dr. T. Luther Purdom, has arranged a series of three demon- stration lectures. Appearance and attitude: right and wrong, will feature the opening dem- onstration at 7 'pm. Tuesday in the Rackham Lecture Hall. Demonstration of the various "rights" and "wrongs" of job appli- cation will be dramatized by a cast of students, together with a run- ning commentary by Dr. Purdom. The program will attempt to present the most common faults shown by the average job applicant, together with the corresponding formulas for success. Laboratory training in band tech- niques is offered directors and con- ductors from all parts of the coun- try by the University of Michigan Summer Session Band which opens its concert season at 4:15 p.m. to- morrow in Hill Auditorium under the baton of Prof. William D. Revelli. Complete in its symphonic instru- mentation, the Summer Session Band is one of the few concert bands in the country which boasts of a full complement of woodwinds. The personnel of the band itself has seena ranid rie in memhrshin 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 o-iven in thela iatt nronnures and First Smunmer Vesper Service To Feature Hopkins And Loucks Will Talk About Monroe Doctrine And Defense The second lecture in the Summer Session Series on "American Policy in the World Crisis";will be delivered by Prof. Lawrence Preuss of the Poli- tical science department at 4:15 p.m. Monday in the Rackham Lecture Hall. He will speak on "The Mon- roe Doctrine and Hemispheric De- fense." Introduction to the series was giv- en last week by Prof. Howard M. Ehrmann of the history department when he spoke on "The European Backgrounds of the Present War." Lectures in the series will be delivered each Monday during the Summer Session by members of the Univer- sity faculty and by visiting lectur- ers, according to Dr. Louis A. Hop- All students and faculty are in- vited to attend the first Summer Session Convocation and vesper ser- vices at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Hill Au- ditorium. Principal speakers on the program arranged by the Committee on Reli- gious Education and the University Musical Society will be Dr. Louis A. in A Minor, the program will fea- ture songs of contemporary Amer- ican composers. The chorus and as- sembly will sing the National Hymn accompanied by Walter Kimble at the organ. Saar's arrangement of "Ave Ma- ria," "Voix Celestes," and Stos;el's arrangement of Whitman's "Beat,