Weather Fair and Cooler ig Official Publication Of The Summer Session i3attg Editorial An Open Letter To Our Representative .. VOL. LI. No. 36 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, AUGUST 12, 1941 Z-323 PRICE FIVF CENTS Hul Warns U. S. Needs Long Draft 'Exceedingly. Bad' Effects On American Foreign Relations Is Foreseen Leaders In House Push Senate Plan WASHINGTON, Aug. 11.-P)-A warning that failure of Congress to extend the service of the Army rank and file would have an "exceedingly bad".effect on American foreign re- lations came from Secretary of State Hull today as Administration forces prepared for a bitter fight in the House tomorrow on an 18-month ex- tension. Hull, speaking at a press confer- ence, authorized quotation of the words "exceedingly bad." A general; reading of the newspaper headlines, he said, should emphasize that dan- gers to the United States exist and he recalled he repeatedly had warned of the objectives of some nations in the direction of unlimited conquest by force. Wil Pass House 'While most factions agreed the House would pass some sort of legis-9 lation to keep selectees, national guardsmen, reservists and regulars in; uniform beyond their present terms,F Democratic sponsors said Hull's, statement might mean new votes- for1 the 18-month compromise, they; agreed to sponsor in an attempt to attract votes.- The House bill, as it now stands,1 would authorize an indefinite exten- sion of the service, but party polls, indicated that proposition would be defeated.f Will Seek Compromise , Consequently, it was decided at a conference of Speaker Rayburn, Democratic Leader McCormack of Massachusetts" and members of the Military Committee to seek only an 18-month extension, as was approved by the Senate.. Chairman May (Dem.-Ky.) of the Military Committee announced he would ask the House tomorrow to adpt almost the exact language ap- proved by the Senate. He also said he would propose that the Secretary of War be given au-' thority to release from the Army, uponrequest, persons whose reten- tion would "subject them or theirc wives or other dependents to undue hardship."d 'Gondoliers' To Open Run Tomorrow Gilbert and Sullivan's noted comic opera, "The Gondoliers," will be of-.. fered as the last presentation of thef Michigan Repertory Players of theE Department of Speech at 8:30 p.m.l tomorrow in the Lydia MendelssohnP Theatre. The opera will be continued through Tuesday, Aug. 19, with the exception of Sunday. Under the direction of Prof. Val-E entine B. Windt and Prof. Claribel Baird, the production is being giveni in conjunction with the School ofL Music, the University Symphony Orchestra and the Department oft Physical Education for Women. The plot deals with the efforts of the Duke of Plaza-Toro and his wife. to find the heir to the Kingdom of Barataria to whom their daughter was betrothed in infancy. Through a mistake in identity, there is un- certainty as to which of two gon- doliers, Marco and Guiseppe, is the missing king. At first the gondoliers decide to rule jointly but 14ter a nurse appears to solve the mystery. Cast in the leading roles are Sam# Durrance, Jr., and Maurice Gerow,1 who play the two gondoliers, while Vernon B. Kellett and Stepheney Doranchak portray the Duke and Duchess of Plaza-Toro. James Wolfe is in charge of the music, Elizabeth Whitney is dance director, Alexander1 Wyckoff and Robert Mellencamp are in charge of the scenery and EvelynI Cohen and Emma Hirsch are thea costumieres.E New Eastern Oil Pipeline Construction Announced WASHINGTON, Aug. 11.-((I'))- Plans for the longest pipeline in the world, to pump crude oil 1,820 miles Maurice Evans And Quiz Kids Featured In Oratorical Series W. N. Brigance Opens Annual Speech Meet German Drive Advances On Kiev; Moscow Rushes Cavalry Into Battle Line Discusses In Aly Spea Public Address rican History; iks On Debating THE QUIZ KIDS ........will the faculty be stumped? * * * * Sinclair Lewis, Anne McCormick, Lawrence Thaw, Quentin Reynolds, Hugh Gibson, John Craig Listed Maurice Evans, world-renowned torial staff, Mrs. McCormick will Shakespearean actor, will open the annual University of Michigan Ora- torical Association series on October 10 with a dramatic recital on "Shake- speare in the News." The series this year will present a program including distinguished personalities in the fields of drama, literature, journalism, diplomacy, world travel and entertainment. Mr. Evans, who will visit Ann Arbor immediately prior to the opening of "Macbeth" in New York, is making a limited number of personal appear- ances throighout the country, and is contributing the proceeds of his lec- tures to British relief. His perform- ance here will be comprised of inter- pretations of famous Shakespearean characters that he has portrayed on the stage. Anne O'Hare McCormick, the only woman ever to receive a Pulitzer Prize' for work as a foreign corre- spondent, will give the second lecture of the series, on November 13. A member of the New York Times edi- School Group Will Present, Mystery Play Cyril Campion's mystery, "Ladies In Waiting," will be presented by the speech department's Secondary School Theatre under the direction of Nancy Bowman at 8:30 p.m. to- day in the Pattengill Auditorium of Ann Arbor High School. Leading roles in the popular mys- tery, which was presented here in the spring drama season, will be played by Claire Cook, Mildred Burleson and Jessie Church. Miss Cook will appear as Una Verity, Miss Burleson as Lady Spate and Miss Church as Pamela Dark. Others in the production include Virginia Connell as Janet Farner, Betty Jayne as Maud, Beulah Bur- gess as Dora Lester, Madeleine Rupp as Phil Blakeeney, Dorothy Ness as Pat Blakeney and Betty Bartlett as Mrs.. Dawson. Assisting Miss Bowman as techni- cal director is Jack E. Bender. June Madison is costumiere. The Second- ary School Theatre is designed to give students experience in produc- ing plays adapted for high school use under conditions found in the aver- age high school. Today's production closes its summer season. e speak on "After the War, What?" November 24 will bring a departure from the usual run of Oratorical Association programs, when the pop- ular stars of radio, the Quiz Kids, will come to Ann Arbor. The Quiz Kids have issued a challenge to five promi- nent faculty men to match wits with them in Hill Auditorium. A debate on "Can It Happen Here" will be presented December 2, with (Continued on Page 3) Credit Control -Is Authorized In FDR Order Banks, Stores And Finance Companies Are Affected By President's Decision WASHINGTON, Aug. 11.--(P)-In a far-reaching step that brought the effects of the defense program close home to the ordinary man, President Roosevelt today set up a system of control for the huge installment credit business carried on through the nat4on's banks, stores and per- sonal finance companies. He issued an executive order di- recting the Federal Reserve Board to use a World War statute and its criminal penalties to curb install- ment credit used for the purchase of 'consumers' durable goods.' Although not affecting the man who can afford to pay cash, the order covered merchandise and small loan business involving $10,000,000,000 of credit. Some types of those credits may be exempted, however. The President said the regulation was intended to discourage consum- Sers from buying many things. The aim is to conserve the materials that go into automobiles and washing ma- chines, for instance, and also to curb inflationary tendencies. Chairman Marriner S. Eccles of the Federal Reserve Board, said con- sumers' durable goods meant "auto- mobiles, washing machines, refriger- ators, ironers, vacuum cleaners and many other goods." He declined to say, until detailed regulations are prepared, just what other things are included. He explainede it may be several days until the regulations are issued, and in the meantime consum- ers can still buy on whatever terms business men are willing to sell. Strother And McGill Will Lecture Today Following registration and the ad- dress of welcome by Dr. Louis A. Hopkins yesterday morning, the sec- ond annual Speech Conference, spon- sored by the department of speech of the University, Prof. W. Norwood Brigance, chairman of the depart- ment of speech at Wabash College opened the afternoon's program with a talk "The Place of Public Address in American Historr." As opposed to the usual approach to American public address, which has always concerned itself with elo- quence and oratory, Professor Brig- ance undertook to show that this view does not encompass the entire realm of speech, and that a broader outlook is necessary to a full picture. Chief Driving Force Public address, said Professor Brig- ance, was the chief driving force of the shaping of the democratic insti- tutions of colonial 'America. And this force can be broken down into two divisions, the church lecture and the town meeting. Tracing the development of public speaking, Professor Brigance pointed out that the unknown lecturers, the circuit riders and the group conver- sations were more responsible for shaping public opinion than the great orators of the day. Since so many people of the nineteenth century could neither read nor write (beyond the Bible and their signature) public discussion was the only effective me- dium of expression. Rose From Bottom Using the Civil War as an example, Professor Brigance :declared that the war arose "from the bottom Up" with group meetings and public dis- cussion carrying more weight than the great speeches -in Congress. And even in the twentieth century, he concluded, the population is not book-minded. New forms of pub- lic speaking have been developed (Continued on Page 3) Policy Talk To, Be Given By Bid well Foreign Studies Director To Discuss Hemisphere Defense In Lecture "Self-Containment and Hemisphere Defense" will be the topic of Percy W. Bidwell, director of studies of the Council of Foreign Relations in New York City for his lecture at 4:15 p.m. today in the Lecture Hall of the Rackham School for the Graduate Study Program in Public Policy in a World at War. Taking his A.B. degree at Yale University in 1910 andhis Ph.D. Nazis Claim Gains AN 1SM In Southern Sector v014 MOSCOW IOLENS i ROSLAVIL KIEV cOv ®MA DNEPROPETROVSK v ODESSA Slack M _Sea CRIMEA + Berlin reported successes against the Russians near Smolensk and farther south along a 1,200-mile front. At Roslavl (1), 60 miles south- east of Smolensk, the Germans said an encircled Red unit was wiped out. Farther south, Berlin claimed the capture (2) of Korosten and Bel Tserkov and an advance (arrow) along the Dnieper River toward Dnepropetrovsk, while at Uman (3), Nazi spokesmen said 25 Red divi- sions were wiped out. Soviet sources ignored German claims, reported success of their own at unspecified points and indicated an unchanging battle line. Japan On Total Economic War Footing; Minister Warns Tokyo (By The Associated Press) c QJapanese diplomat given such aI TOKIO, Aug. 11.-Japan put itself on a full economic war footing today under the General Mobilizing Act while its returning minister to Wash- ington bluntly counseled his people that "the United States is prepared and determined to meet the worst eventualities." The diplomat, Kaname Wakasugi, at Los Angeles on his way home to confer on the "delicate issue" of Thailand, gave a trans-Pacific tele- phone interview which pictured the United States and Japan as each un- willing to "start anything", but stressed American preparedness un- der a "definitely-changed" attitude toward Japan. Complete Control In Tokyo By deciding today to invoke in full the provisions of the General Mobili- zation Act the Konoye government took full regulatory charge to Jap- anese economic life. Typical of the controls to be set up were those over the stock exchange and marine transport. The Wakasugi interview, promi- nently published in the Tokyo news- paper, Chugai, saying Japanese- American relations were deteriorat- ing and that only two steps remained before a possible break: A complete embargo and severance of consular relations. The last would be a likely prelude to a diplomatic break. Never before had Chugai spoken so pessimistically; seldom before had a sharp delineation of Japanese-Ameri- can relations. Statement To Tokyo The Wakashigi statements read as though he were advising the Konoye government against any rash action. Parts of it suggested an appeal for Japanese-American rapprochement. (Continued on Page 4) Australians Meet; Crisis Is Foreseen (By The Associated Press) MELBOURNE, Australia, Aug. 11. -Australia's cabinet met in emer- gency session in an atmosphere of crisis today, after ministerial con- sultations with the heads of the armed services, and Prime Minister Menzies solemnly declared great de- cisions "will have to be taken." These decisions, he made clear, had to do with "the security of the Empire and the things it stands for --"and specifically with the security of Britain's Pacific base of Singapore. In all this, he added, not only Aus- tralia had a great interest, "but also the United States, the Netherlands East Indies and all other countries similarly placed." The problems that had to be met by his government, the Prime Minis- ter added, were "such as to call for the calmest and clearest judgment." Nazi Columns Move On Paved Roads In Ukraine Sector Moscow Acts r To Halt Push BERLIN, Tuesday, Aug. 12.-P)- German troops now are advancing on "well-paved broad highways lead- ing straight to Kiev" Ukraine capi- tal, while others are striking south- ward toward the Black Sea port of Odessa, German news dispatches said today. Southern Ukraine highways were said to be jammed with retreating Russians-blasted steadily by waves of German planes. How far the Germans were from these objectives was not revealed, but Berlin announced capture of Korosten, 80 miles northwest of Kiev, several days ago, and the troops also have been attacking south of Kiev in the neighborhood of Bel Tserkov. A reported break-through south of Uman, midway between Kiev and Odessa, put the Germans in a posi- tion to swing south toward Odessa, while the next most logical goal to the east was Dnepropetrovsk, Red industrial center still 200 miles from Uman. One German dispatch from the front said rail connections in the southern Ukraine area were broken, with seven trains damaged, derailed or burned. Several Russian troop- ships along the lower Bug River were said to have been heavily damaged. Germans reported 23 Russian planes downed in air fights in the Ukraine and only one German plane lost. Intensity of the fighting, they said, was evident in DNB dispatches that 4,000 Russians were buried at one highway intersection. At one place 54 tanks and 300 trucks were re- ported demolished by planes, with 'most of the occupants dying in their vehicles." Among prisoners brought into Ger- man camps in the Ukraine were two corps commanders and two division commanders, DNB said. While the German High Command (Continued on Page 3) Soviet Cavalry Rushed Into Southern Battle (By The Associated Press) MOSCOW, Tuesday, Aug. 12.-So- viet cavalrymen were reported today to be racing en masse to block the Nazi drive on the Ukraine front, where the Russian communique said fighting continued unchecked. The communique mentioned as centers of fighting the same areas the Red Army had named in previous announcements: Solsti, on the Len- ingrad front; Smolensk, on the cen- tral front, and Bel Tserkov and Uman in the Ukraine. A town of 44,000, more than half Jews, Uman is situated on the east- ern slope of the Avratin Hills between Kiev and Odessa. It is known in Russian history as the scene of the "Uman slaughter" of 1768 in which the town was razed and 18,000 in- habitants were slain to put down an uprising. A front line dispatch to Pravda reported, the cavalry movement to the UkIraine front and said that when mouted forces reach the fight- ing area they dismount and engage the Germans as infantry. Commanded by moustached Mar- shal Semeon Budyenny, the father of the Red cavalry, the horsemen dash to the hottest sectors and then counter-attack with rifles, bayonets, grenades, machine guns and mine throwers, Pravda said. The cavalry formations were de- scribed as "flying infantry." One force was credited with reaching in 18 hours a town which was three days away for infantry, then rout- ing a German unit after a two-hour battle. At another village the flying in- fantry was said to have wiped out nearly an entire German motorized battalion in street fighting. Camouflaged to escape enemy avia- tion and using forest trails, the cav- alrymen were reported striking 'Cycle Of Medieval Mystery Plays': Story Of Creation And History Of Stage To Be Presented Here Hall Addresses Policy Group: War Is Race Between Waning Nazi Morale And Armament By BILL BAKER "The Cycle of Six Medieval Mys- tery Plays" to be presented by the Departnient of Speech and the School of Music at 8:30 p.m. Sunday in Hill Auditorium will present not only the story of the Creation, and Christianity, but also trace the his- tory of the Medieval English stage. In presenting something he be- lieves never has been done before, Di- rector Hugh Norton has chosen six examples of the mystery play as given in Medieval England, and has Tickets for the Mystery Cycle may be obtained free of charge at the Summer Session Office, the Department of Speech, the School of Music, the Michigan League dacI k_ a+ +hat h v xffice of the at the tomb of Jesus on Easter Morn- ing. The second play is "The Creation," telling of the creation of Adam and Eve, their instructions from God, their fall from Grace and their ex- pulsion from Paradise. The play ends with the prophesy by the Holy Spirit of redemption through Christ. The remaining four plays portray moments in this redemption. "The Betraying, of Christ," written in 1468, shows Jesus raying on the Mount of Olives and his betrayal by Judas. "The Trial of Jesus" shows the trial before the high priests, the denial of Jesus by Peter, and the trial before Pilate and Herod. It ends with the scene of Mary Magdalene bringing the news to Mary. "The Resurrection" shows Jesus arising from the tomb, the lamenta- BIDWELL... ..on defense there in 1915, Mr. Bidwell was in- structor of economics at Yale from 1915 to 1918 and assistant professor until 1921. From 1921 to 1922 he was engaged in research in the history of American agriculture, and from 1922 to 1925 he was economist for the U.S. Tariff Commission in Wash- ington. In 1925 Mr. Bidwell was assigned to foreign service with headquarters; at Brussels, Belgium, and in 1927 he By HARRY M. KELSEY A race between the material re- armament of the democracies and the waning spiritual strength or morale of Nazi Germany was the phrase applied to the present war in his lecture yesterday for the Grad- uate Study Program in Public Policy in a World at War by H. Duncan Hall, formerly of the League of Na- tions Secretariat. "The excessive use of mass psy- chology of hypnosis and hatred and aggression and the inability to use the natural reservoirs of mind and conscience which can exist only in free men is likely to prove the undo- ing of the aggressive regimes," Mr. Hall serted. Free intelligence and sudden panic when their leader fails them than in a democracy." The democracies, Mr. Hall stated, "are strong because their system is based on mind and conscience. They have overcome the strategem that sought to undo their strength by psy- chological war. They have overcome the psychological weaknesses that nearly destroyed them. They have almost now accomplished a produc- tion miracle, doing in two years what totalitarian Germany did in six. Now broadly speaking time only, no new political or administrative or eco- nomic magic but time alone, can complete their material armament." "If democracy is now fighting for ifz life xxr 2h if. anlFn+ n l 1