7WeBather Fair and waurmer today; tomorrow partly cloudy. Cig iA~~fr ia attg Editorial Mr. Roosevelt's Pledge . I Official Publication Of The Summer Session VOL. L. No. 18 Z-323 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, JULY 14, 1940 PRICE FIVE CENTS a Four Named By Committee For Summer Parley Keynoter i Parley Talks Hobbs, Preuss, Parker, Morgan To Be Keynote Speakers At Sessions American Poicy Will Be Discussed The four keynote speakers for the Summer Parley on "This War We Live In," which opens Friday at 4:1 p.m. in the Union Ballroom, were named last night by the parley com- mittee, headed by Helen Corman. They are: Professor-Emeritus Wil- liam Hobbs, of the geology depart- ment, Prof. Lawrence Preuss of the political science department, Prof. DeWitt Parker of the philosophy de- partment and Kenneth Morgan, di- rector of the Student Religious As- sociation. Professor Hobbs, recognized as a leading world geology authority, will consider the possibilities and value of United States' active aid to Brit- ain. Will Discuss Limited Intervention Professor Preuss, who will discuss limited intervention, is a noted au- thority on international affairs. In two recent lectures he declared strongly for a hemisphere defense policy for this country. Third keynoter, Professor Parker, will present the non-intervention view at the Parley and also speaks Wednesday in the American culture serieson "Trends in American Aes- thetics." To Give Pacifist's Opinion The pacifist's opinions of this war we live in, will be presented by Ken- neth Morgan, director of the SRA. Panel sessions will open Saturday afternoon at 3:15 p.m., with con- claves on religion, education, civil liberties, and the national election. The meetings will reconvene in the evening at 7:45, followed by a gen- eral closing session at 9 p.m. 'Grand Illusion' Will Be Shown By Art Cinema French Film To Be Given At 8:30 P.M. Today In Rackam Auditorium The Art Cinema League will pre- sent the French film "Grand Illu- sion" at 8:30 p.m. today in the Rack- ham School auditorium. This is the second of the four programs to be given this summer by the Cinema League. 'ySelected by the National Board of Review of Motion Pictures as the best film of 1939 to be produced in any country, "Grand Illusion" was written and directed by Jean Renoir, son of the famous French painter. Starring in the picture are the French actors, Eric Von Stroheim, Jean Gabin, Pierre Fresnay and Dita Parlo. A war story with no battle scenes, "Grand Illusion" is based on Director Renoir's own experiences in World War prison camps. The dialogue, in French, German and English, will be supplemented by sub-titles in English. Short subjects will also be shown.. Dita Parlo, a refugee from Ger- many's Third Reich, pla'ys one of the most moving parts, that of a widowed German mother who gives shelter to two French soldiers who have escaped prison camp. Fresnay and von Stroheim, as French and German aristocrats respectively, por- tray the passing during the war of the old European hierarchy of the classes, each serving the army of his country. Gabin is cast as a man of the people, whose escape from prison camp is bought at the price of Fresnay's life and who finds love when sheltered by Miss Parlo. Laws Of .motion Bow On Physicists'. Holiday Physical theories received the wa- ter test yesterday when members of Chicago Begins To Get Crowd Of Democrats Delegates To Convention Determined To Push 'Draft Roosevelt' Move By RICHARD L. TURNER CHICAGO, July 13.-(AP)-Demo- crats determined to "draft Roose- velt," some happy and some unhappy about it but nearly everyone con- vinced he will accept the nomination, poured into this convention city to- day to join in a carnival prelude to next week's national convention. Bushels of red and white and blue buttons bearing the motto "Just Roosevelt," and the silhouette of a rooster rampant adorned hundreds of lapels, proclaiming in advance the keynote of the big party gather- ing. Big Shots Present Familiar big shot faces from Washington, cabinet members, mem- bers of important boards. and com- missions, Senators and House lead- ers were commonplace in the gay hotel lobby throngs. Men who no longer ago than yesterday said good- bye to each other in the capital stopped to shake each other's hands and gather in groups to resume a briefly interrupted discussion of the one question mark of the conventiont whether the President, would' accept the nomination. Two ;nen knew, and they, secreted in the fastnesses of the huge Ste- vens Hotel, the convention head- quarters, were in busy conference with their aides and casual callers. The two-Chairman James A. Far- ley of the Democratic national com- mittee, who has been averse to a third term for the President; and Secretary of Commerce Harry L. Hopkins, the President's confidant and personal convention representa- tive-in fact went into conference with each other during the day. Hopkins called on Farley. Interesting Chatt "We had a very interesting chat about the pending situation," Farley jovially told a press conference later. "He said Farley was running all right." Farley is a candidate, and one whose name is to go before the convention whether the President's is presented or not. He has been planning to relinquish his post as national chairman. However, much pressure was being exerted upon him to continue for a time, as a gesture toward party harmony. Conference On Education To Convene Round Table Discussions, Talksr By Eminent Men To HighlightConvention Exhibits To Clarify Different Phases Convening here tomorrow for the eleventh annual summer Education Conference Week, teachers and ed- ucatorsfrom the Midwestuwill at- tend the Conference on Guidance and Adjustment of Youth, Book- Week Conference, Teacher Education Conference, and Reading Conference featuring the newest materials in each of these fields presented by ex- hibits and outstanding educators. Addressing the members of all con- ferences Friday Dr. Eugene B. Elliott, state superintendent of pub- lic instruction, will speak on Mich- igan's Program for Out-of-School Youth." Prof. H. Y. McClusky, now serving as associate director of the American Youth Commission, will describe the educational implications of the Commission's work while Prof. Stuart A. Courtis of the School of Education will lecture on "What Youth Should Be Taught About De-. mocracy." The first meeting of round-tables on guidance and reading will open at 3 p.m. tomorrow in the Univer- sity High School. Preceding these sessions H. B. Masters of the W. K. Kellogg Foundation will speak on "Utilizing Community Resources in a Program of Guidance" at 10 a.m., and Prof. Isving A. Anderson of the School of Education will discuss the "Psychology of Teaching Reading and Remedial Reading" at 2 p.m. Continuing the round table discus- sion Dr. Russell A. Beam, educational director of the CCC of the Sixth ,Corps Area, will lead the considera- tion of "Guidance of Out-of-School Youth"; Dr. Henry Beaumont of the University of Kentucky, "Techniques of Handling Emotional Conflicts"; Prof. George E. Carrothers of the education school, "The Use of the Cooperative Study"; George H. Fern. assistant state superintendent of public instruction in charge of voca- tional education, "Occupational Ad- justment of Youth"; and Dr. F. G. Macomber of the University of Ore- gon. "Curriculum Revision for Ef- fective Guidance in the Secondary School" at 3 p.m. tomorrow. At the same time Prof. Irving H. Anderson of the education school (Continiued on Page 2) f Excursionists Visit War-Time Canada With No Fatalities (Special to The Daily) NIAGARA FALLS, N. Y., July 13- Without even a dirty look from offi- cials, the Summer Session excur- sionists here on the sixth excursion of the season passed today into war- time Canada and out again, no fa- talities recorded. The Canadian trip included nu merous points of interest including the Horseshoe Falls, largest of Niag- ara's two divisions. Tonight the group has been amus- ing itself by watching the varied- colored lights play on the cascading waters of the American Falls pro- ducing an effect as beautiful as it is awesome. Advanced Flying Classes For To 2B In Viehigan Bein Tooro CAA Names Nine Students For Training Course Will Last For Two Months Advanced training for 20 select graduates of the CAA primary train- ing program in Michigan will begin here and at the Wayne County Air- port tomorrow Prof. William W. Gil- bert, director of the program, an- nounced here yesterday. Named by CAA officials for ad- vanced training are nine Michigan students; the remaining 11 students will be trasferred here from Wayne University, Kalamazoo College, Bay City, Flint and Jackson. Selections Listed University students selected for the advanced training are: James E. Ke- hoe, '42E, of Wawatosa, Wis.; James E. Monahan, '41, of Oshkosh, Wis.; Warren R. Robinson, '42E, of Chi- cago; Richard G. Fogg, '42E, of Moylan, Ja.; John E. Starr, '41E, of Portland, Mich.; David P. Spengler, '41, of Altoona, Pa.; Jerry G. Mich- ael, '42E, of Geneva, Ill.; Harold A. Eisele, '42E, of Fowlerville, and John K. Williams, '41E, of Buffalo. Scheduled to begin tomorrow, the chous will terminate on Sept. 15. Organized to give sufficient train- ing for a commercial pilot's license, the training program includes work in aerobatics, precision maneuvers, night flying and cross country navi- gation. The basic training 50 horse- power planes used in the primary course will be replaced by Meyers bi- planes and Ryan trainers, rated at about 120 horsepower. Ground Work Here Ground work for the advanced course will be given, here during the evenings, but actual flight work, totaling 50 hours for the entire course, will be concentrated at the Wayne County Airport. Students selected for the program have been named for flight scholarships covi ering all expenses, including room and board. Housing for the course will be in Williams House in the West Quadrangle. A teaching staff of five experts in various phases of aviation has also jeen announced. Prof. Henry L. 'ohler of the automotive engineer- .ng department will give instruction in aircraft engine design and main- tainance; Leslie Trigg, '41E, will be in charge of aerodynamic and air- .raft; Jack Cline, '41E. will instruct in navigation and radio work; Mr. Chamberlain, professional pilot and Link Trainer instructor, will direct training in navigation and instru- ments, and Glen C. Togue of Flint Junior College will teach meteorol- ogy. 32 Ships Enter Mackinac Race Sixteenth Contest Began Under Good Conditions PORT HURON, July 13. -()- Barring unforseen developments, the vanguard of the 32 sailing craft that left here at 2 p.m. today in the six- teenth running of the Port Huron- to-Mackinac Island yacht race was expected to be somewhere off the mouth of Saginaw Bay by Sunday morning. A 15-mile-an-hour breeze was blowing out of the northeast today as the skippers maneuvered their charges across the starting line, and the sky was clear. The weatherman promised fair weather for Sunday but would not predict what kind of wind the sailors would encounter. Considerable tacking for position was expected to develop during the night as the various crews settled down to the 249-mile grind. First over the starting line was Eddie Wunch's Minx, a sloop flying the colors of the Bayview Yacht Club, This was in the racing cruiser race. Close behind the Minx came the Royono, owned and sailed by J. B, Ford, Jr., of Grosse Pointe. Six German Raiders Said To Be Sent Down Into Straits During Air Battle 12 Planes Felled Set AsDay's Total (By the Associated Press) LONDON, July 13-Britain's dash- ing and cocksure air fighters sent six German raiders spinning to de- struction into the Straits of Dover in an afternoon air battle today and Britain's leaders proclaimed the is- land's air defenses had proved them- selves stalwart and deadly. The British straits triumph, re- ported in an Air Ministry communi- que, raised the day's total of felled Nazi planes to 12, six fighters and six bombers. At the end of another week of ceaseless air bombardment, Britons confidently claimed that repeated Nazi raids to "soften" Britain for invasion had failed and .that British power to resist had grown with each hour. In all, official statistics showed the Nazis have lost 91 planes from July 4 to tonight. Three bombers were shot down earlier today in raids which have become part of the daily pattern along British coasts in the Nazi effort to starve and frighten the nation into impotence. Two were downed during the morning, one falling into the Eng- lish Channel, and another this after- noon in a fierce sky fight in clouds high over a southwest coast town. Summing up the results of a week's air attack, British authorities said the Germans had lost more than $4,000,000 worth of aircraft and had inflicted only "slight" damage on shipping, the British Achilles' heel. "The German high command com- muniques are systematically mini- mizing German air losses," an authoritative British source com- mented. Recounting British reprisal raids, authorized sources said about 20 tons of heavy bombs were dropped on docks, factories and oil storage plants at Emden, causing many fires and explosions. U. Of Iowa Acting President Named IOWA CITY, Ia., July 13.-(P)- Dean Chester A. Phillips of the University of Iowa College of Com- merce has been named acting pres- ident of the University, it was an- nounced here today. He will suc- ceed Eugene A. Gilmore, who re- tired as president July 1, until the State Board of Education appoints a permanent president. Dean Phillips is at present at the University of Indiana where he has been giving a series of lectures. Dean E. Blythe Stason of the Uni- versity of Michigan had previously been offered the presidential post, and had declined it. Rice's 'Two Ott, ArtIsland' To Re Given A cast of 67, headed by David D. Itkin, Virginia Baka and James Moll, will be seen at 8:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre in Elmer Rice's drama of New York, "Two on an Island." The play, which is presented un- der the auspices of the speech de- partment, deals with the struggles of a young couple, Mary Ward, played by Miss Baka, and John Thompson, played by Moll, who try to acclimate themselves to live in the big city. Itkin, a former director of the Moscow Art Theatre and guest di- rector of the Michigan Repertory Players this season, portrays Law- rence Ormont, a fiery excitable pro- ducer. Other leading roles will be played by John Schwarzwalder as Samuel Brodsky; Truman Smith as the sight-seeing guide; Vincent Jukes as William Flynn; Betty Gallagher as Mrs. Dora Levy; George Shapiro as Frederic Winthrop; Ray Pedersen as Heinz Kaltbart; Norman Oxhandler as Clifton Ross; Vivi French as Helen Ormont; Nancy Bowman as Mrs. Ballinger, and June Madison as Mrs. Williams. Prof. Whicher To Open Third Week Of Talks To Address Culture Group On 'Native Impulses In American Literature' Opening the third week of lectures and round table discussions of the Graduate Study Program in Amer- ican Culture and Institutions, Prof. George F. Whicher of Amherst Col- lege will speak at 8:15 p.m'. tomor- row on "Native Impulses in Amer- ican Literature." Professor Whicher took his A.B. degree at Amherst in 1910 and his A.M. and Ph. D. degrees from Colum- bia in 1911 and 1915 respectively. A university fellow at Columbia in 1913, he became instructor of Eng- lish at the University of Illinois in 1914, and in 1915 went to Amherst, where he is now professor of history. Author with George M. Whicher of a book of verse, "On the Tibur Road," Professor Whicher has also written "The Life and Romances of Mrs. Eliza Haywood." He was editor of the Amherst Graduates' Quarterly from 1919 to 1932, and is a con- tributor to the Cambridge History of American Literature, Dictionary of American Biography, and of articles, verse and reviews to ;various period- icals. German High Command Says Enemy Blockade Is LargelyIneffectual Announce Capture Of Valuable Ships BERLIN, July 13.-. 'P)-Germany claimed today to have successfully challenged Britain's greatest histor- ic weapon-the navy-in "successful operations overseas" by the Nazi fleet. The high command formally as- serted that these operations-pre- sumably directed from Norwegian waters-had resulted in the capture of valuable prize ships, and military commentators declared this proved the British blockade to have become "ineffectual in a high degree." But while that blockade is being torn apart, they added, the German counter-blockade is becoming "more perceptible day by day." Navy Now Can Operate "Units of the German navy now can operate on the high seas without the English fleet being able to pre- vent the Germans from conducting the trade war in Atlantic and other waters," they said. In the same connection, responsi- ble quarters ridiculed the announce- ment of the British Admiralty that it had cut off Germany from the Atlantic by a mine belt from the Shetland Islands, near the Norwe- gian coast, to Greenland. "Besides," these quarters added, "the British apparently have over- looked the fact that we are in pos- session of an extensive stretch of the Atlantic coast since the collapse of France." The high command reported the sinking of 24,767 tons bf "enemy cargo space" by one submarine, and it was added semi-officially that 40,000 tons of British shipping were damaged yesterday by the air force alone. Other Sinkings Listed German planes also were said to have sunk a patrol boat and a 2,009- ton merchantman, and to have greatly damaged five other merchant ships. Nazis already had claimed the sinking since the start of the war of a total of 4,320,213 tons of "enemy merchant shipping or shipping space usable to the enemy," a figure more than half of Britain's aggregate losses in the entire World War. Italians Claim Planes Have Split British Fleet ROME, July 13.)-( - Italins claimed tonight that their war planes have rubbed out Malta as an of- fensive threat to Italy after blasting with bombs a British Mediterranean battle fleet which split into three parts under punishment from the air. Fascists said also that constant Italian air bombardment over far- flung fronts in the Mediterranean and Africa was preventing some 1,300 British planes there from ever being used in the defense of the British Isles against a German on- slaught. Virginio Gayda, the editor who often speaks for Mussolini, wrote that the British, under renewed bombing of Malta, had withdrawn their heavy warships from that for- tified island, which is only about 55 miles from Italy. The big men o' war have been sent to Alexandria, said Gayda, and Malta now is only a temporary §helter for lighter craft. * Malta's airfields were reported heavily damaged. Gayda went on to say that Italy's share in the axis war plan is four- fold: The first objective is Malta, the second such British bases in Egypt as Alexandria; the third to paralyze British sea power in the Mediter- ranean by scattering warships and convoys and fourth, to protect Ital- ian shipping and communications between the mainland and East Africa. If Britain lost Egypt, Gayda said, English Navy Is Reported Hard Hit By Nazis, Italy; British Claim Air Victory I University Fresh Air Campers Prepare For Campaign Tuesday, HihSchool B and Clinicih To Gie First Summer Concert Today A program of 11 numbers, rang- Fillmore, dedicated to former Mayor ing from Bach to Sousa, will be Wilson of Cincinnati is fourth on the featured at the first summer concert program, followed by "Dream Pan- of the High School Band Clinic at tomime" from the opera "Hansel and 4:15 p.m. toda yin Hill Auditorium. Gretelk by Englebert Humperdinck. Under the direction of Prof. William This is the theme used by the Ford D. Revelli, the Fifth Annual Band Sunday Evening hour. Clinic comprises 136 high school A quick-step march, "Cincinatus," musicians, representing nine states, by H. A. Vandercook will be followed now enrolled in the three week course by "King John" by R. L. Moehlmann, here sponsored by the School of a tone poem portraying all the ma- Music. jestic pomp of an English court. Guest conductors today will be "American Army" -by Gernardo Cleo G. Fox of Kalamazoo and Dale Iasille, a spirited six-eight march C. Harris of Pontiac. dedicated to the United States Army Opening selection of the afternoon by the eminent Italian composer, program will be "High School Cadets" and "Crusader" by Forest L. Buch- by John Philip Sousa, Americas tel, a tone interpretation of the ro- The "Welcome Mat" was hung out at the University of Michigan Fresh Air Canip at Patterson Ldke today, as its peacetime army made last- minute preparations to attack Ann Arbor in its annual Summer Tag Day drive Tuesday. Prof. Allen Sherzer, of the engin- eering college will show colored movies of his trip to Craig Harbor, campus and downtown Ann Arbor Tuesday selling the familiar tag pic- tured on this page. The campaign will be held from 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., after which the boys will at- tend a free movie as guests of the Michigan Theatre. The first four week camping period, which is accommodating more than 140 boys, ages 9 to 17, from cities in southeastern Michigan will close Friday, with 140 more boys coming for the second half of the season, starting July 22. This unique project in human en- gineering accepts boys to the camp with no regard to race, color or creed, and offers them all a full program of clean, outdoor living. The boys are guided in their work by 35 grad- uate student counselors, who are en-