W eather Cloudy, Possibly Showers i 1: 4r b11igat Official Publication Of The Summer Session :4IaiI3 Editorial ~More Unity, Not Uniformity VOL. LL No. 34 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, AUGUST 9, 1941 Z-323 PRICE FIVE CENTS Draft Bill May Lose In House Administration Heads See Defeat Or Revamping From Representatives Opposition Is Seen From Republicans WASHINGTON, Aug. 8.-(I)-Ad- + ministration leaders in the House ex- pressed apprehension today that the bill to retain the rank and file of the army in service for an indefinite period was in danger of defeat or drastic revision. The leaders, who declined to be quoted -by name, glumly disclosed they had counted noses and found a score or more of Democratic mem- bers would not commit themselves. This group apparently was in a ppsi- tion to settle the issue. Republicans Oppose Bill On the Republican side of the aisle much opposition was indicated. Members of that party held a con- ference Wednesday, and Rep. Martin of Massachusetts, the Republican leader, said afterward "the majority of sentiment" appeared to be in favor of retaining Reservists and National Guardsmen, but letting selectees go. Despite this attitude, there was for the time being, at least, no talk of compromise. The Senate, which passed service extension legislation yesterday, achieved a high measure of unity behind the bill by imposing an 18-month limitation upon the added services of the Army men. But in the House the leaders spoke only of fighting it out-win or lose-on the straight cut issue of an indefi- nite extension. Time Will Tell Of course, as the situation develops they may, and possibly will, change their minds and support a time limi- tation. What they fear in that event is that the numerically heavy oppo- sition will be able to reduce the limi- tation to six months or thereabouts, which Administration spokesmen say would be about as worthless as hav- ing no legislation at all. With this threatening situation be- fore them, the sponsors of the bill were in fighting mood, and Chair- man May' (Dem.-Ky.) of the Mili- tary Committee, led off the debate with a vigorous speech in its favor. He stated the Army's position on the issue: unless thee is an exten- sion of service, draftees, National Guardsmen and Reservists - who make up a large proportion of the Army's officer personnel-must be mustered out, and the Army will dis- integrate. The Issue "The issue," he said, "is whether the Congress will go ahead with what it started to do last year when it passed the original (selective service) act." It would be argued, he said, that the men were promised their dis- charge after a Year of training, but: "That isn't true. That isn't a fact. The Congress made no such promise, unless it was somebody seeking re- election to office who told his con- stituents that." Rep. Fish (Rep.-N.Y.), the rank- ing Republican member of the For- eign Relations Committee, told the House the bill was part of a "gigantic conspiracy" to involve the United States in the war. 'This is not a bill for national defense," he said, "but to crusade all over the world. The real issue in- volved in this breach of promise bill is a carefully and skillfully directed plan to take us into another overseas war." Rep. Shafer (Rep.-Mich.) said he feared the service extension measure was a "prelude to another A.E.F." He said a poll of his congressional dis- trict showed "93.1 percent of the peo- ple are looking to Congress to keep this country out of the European mess." Gasoline Boat Goes To Blazes DETROIT, Aug. 8.-(/P)-The Transiter, 180-foot all-steel tanker of the Transit Tankers and Termi- nals, Ltd., Montreal, with 15,000 bar- rels of gasoline aboard, explbded and burst into flames tonight on the Rouge River. TI , ship docked here last night ar.a loaded the gasoline today at Japan Says'Nazi Way' Can Break Up Blockade Declaration Is First Official Statement That Nippon Is Being 'Encircled' (By The Associated Press) TOKYO, Aug. 8.-The Japanese Government for the first time today made accusations previously offered only unofficially that Britain, the United States, Nationalist China and the Dutch East Indies were encircling Japan, and a naval officer declared baldly that this encirclement could be easily broken by adoption of "the German fashion." Writing in the newspaper Hochi, Lieutenant Commander Tota Ishi- maru, a naval expert, observed: "Manchukuo, China (arid by this he meant that part of China now in Japanese occupation or control), Indo-China and Thailand have joined the co-prosperity sphere. Now we can draw on Indo-China and Thailand for iron, coal and rice and other food. Difficult To Get Rubber 'Getting the (Dutch) Indies oil and Malay (British) rubber is a bit more difficult, but should be a cinch if we tackle the problem after the German fashion." The declaration Thailand was a member of the 'co-prosperity sphere appeared premature, since that little country is the very center of the cur- rent Oriental crisis and so far as could be established still had not de-! cided whether to join Japan's train or cooperate with Britain and the United States. The formal accusation of An- glo-American-Chinese-Dutch actionj against Japan was made throughj Public Policy Study Group To End Series By EUGENE MANDEBERG 1 Several outstanding speech au- thorities will visit Ann Arbor next week to participate in the second an- nual Speech Conference opening here Monday under the sponsorship of the University's speech department. Included on the conference pro- gram, which will continue Tuesday and Wednesday are Prof. Bower Aly, director of forensics at the Univer- sity of Missouri; Prof. W. Norwood Brigance, chairman of the depart- ment of speech of Wabash college; Prof. R. G. Hunter, chairman of the department of speech at Ohio Wes- leyan University; Prof. Charles R. Strother, associate professor of speech pathology and clinical psychology at the State University of Iowa; and of Speech, will speak in the Kellogg Auditorium on "The Place of Public Address in American History." Concluding Monday's afternoon program, a discussion will be held at 3:30 on forensics by Professor Aly, who serves as editor of the Debate Handbook series of the National Uni- versity Extension Association, placing special emphasis upon tthe national high school debate question for 1941- 42. Closing the day's activities, a der - onstration debate on the high sct ol -4.xcdap au ut Juana lenuut 'uolsanb ment of speech, will be held at 8 p.m. in the Rackham Lecture Hall. The Tuesday meetings will feature speech science, radio, and high school rlaowa.-incAt 90an m.Professr S tro- WASHINGTON, Aug. 8.-(YP)-The United States directed sharp thrusts at both Japan and Germany today, asserting the Nippon Empire brought on its own self-proclaimed "encircle- ment" and that the Nazi government was casting longing eyes toward the' Western Hemisphere. Answering official Japanese con- tentions that the United States, Brit- ain, China and the Netherlands were drawing a ring around Japan, Secre- tary of State Hull told a press confer- ence there was no occasion for any law-abiding and peaceful nation to become encircled. He added that a country like Japan, if it were law- abiding, was in no danger of encir- clement except by itself. He implied the Japanese statements were considered a mere pretext for further expansion moves, possibly in- to Thailand. At the same time he "another expose of Roosevelt secret power politics." The German sources said they had material establishing that President Roosevelt was seeking domination of South America and was secretly "grasping for other bases" there. Hull described this as a transparent, piece of propaganda which he said was not likely to deceive or even be seriously considered by any country in the Western Hemisphere. The Nazi charges came, he re- marked, from a grouphrepresenting a government which had ruthlessly seized some 15 countries in Europe and had been looking with longing eyes to this Hemisphere for further conquest. His comment was interpreted as further evidence of concern here over reported German demands on the Vichy Government for bases and other Harold Brighouse Play Ends Run Here Today Harold Brighouse's play "Hobson's Choice" will be seen for the last time in Ann Arbor this summer at 8:30 p.m. today in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Starring Hiram Sherman and Whitford Kane, the play involves the adventures of an old man who is try-