Weather Jr Official Publication Of The Summer Session .ati Editorial For Improvements On The Campus Continued Cool; Showers __ VOL. LI. No. 42 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN TUESDAY, AUGUST 19, 1941 Z-323 IPRICE FIVE CENTS I i F. D. R. Signs Bills Cutting Draft Age, Extending Period President Empowered To Keep Draftees For 18 Months; 28-Year-Olds Exempt WASHINGTON, Aug. 18.-(P)-The Army's top draft age was officially lowered to 28 today and at the same time the way was cleared for an order extending the service periods of the army's rank and file by 18 months. With swift strokes of his pen President Roosevelt signed into law two measures revising the draft age and affegting the lives of millions of young men. The first granted mandatory deferment from the draft to men who were 28 years old last July 1. Registrants whose 28th birthday falls after that date will be liable for induction up until the following Juy 1 when they, too, will receive automatic mandatory deferment. The second, source of prolonged controversy in Congress and approved by only one vote in the House, gives Mr. Roosevelt authority to keep' se- lectees, National Guardsmen, Reserv- Formal Dinner ists and enlisted men in service for as much as 18 months beyond the W ill Be Served period for which they weetinducted It as elivedanexeutie ode extending the service of these -men, Thursday with some possible exceptions, would be issued by Mr. Roosevelt soon. La* A eStd t Permits Swift Expansion The service extension measure also To Be Guests In Union will permit a swift expansion of the For Farewell Banquet Army should the danger of war be- come more imminent or actual hos- A formal farewell dinner honoring tilities involve this country. It elim- the students of the Latin-American i'nated the previous limit of 900,000 Summer School will be held at 7 p.m. on the number of trainees who may' Thursday in the Union for the stu- be in service at any one time. dents from Ecuador, Chile and Vene- Officials estimated that' approxi- zuela who have been studying in mately 8,000,000 men received as- that group here this summer. surance of deferment from the draft Invitations have been sent to the (unless the United States gets into University Regents, President Alex- war, when, presumably,. the draft ander G. Ruthven, deans of the var'i- age would be increased) by the Pres- ous colleges and to "faculty members ident's approval of the bill deferring who have directed or aided members 28-year-old registrants. of the group in their work during Possible Early Return the' session. . In addition, there a~e about 130,- A program will follow the dinner 000 men already in the Army, who with Dr. Louis A. Hopkins, Director were 28 beforethey ;wereminducted, of the Summer Session, speaking, as for whom they legislation offers a well as representatives of each Latin- prospect of possible early return to American country represented. A gift private life. The measur authorizes will be presented the University by the Secretar of War to release such the students with Prof. J. Raleigh men from active duty "as soon as Nelson, director of the International practicable" if this will not! disrupt Center, making the acceptance the Army or its training. Gen. George speech. Certificates will be given C. Marshall, the Army chief of staff, each Latin-American, student by assured Congress that the "War De- Dean of Students Joseph A. Bursley. partment would send such men home Prof. Hayward Keniston, chairman of as early as possible and said the the romance languages department, Army already was releasing about will be toastmaster. 2,000 "hardship" cases every month. There will be no automatic releases. Each man eligible for release must 1 1le ' To Tally apply for it, and the cases will be considered individually.A Only those who were 28 at the time they were inducted are eligible for release, and their induction must Negotiable instruments will be the have been prior to last July 1. topic of a discussion led by Prof. * Ralph Aigler of the law school for Planes Hit Red Retreat; Nazis Near Leningrad- DNEPROPETRVSK ®BALTA o ' - Re TRASPOL ANKOLAEV . MELITPOL ODESSA RSON ~~ CETATEA A^~~A C R I M E A - --- SEVATO-O O 100 4r MiLES lcSe Berikn said Red forces were encircled at Odessa and Nikolaev (A), with a Black Sea evacuation perhaps in the offing. Germany claimed Russian units were cut off west of the Dnieper bend (B) and that the Red Army would attempt to set up a defense (C) along the east bank of the Dnieper. * * * i Gel-man Claims: BERLIN, Aug. 18.-(A')-The Ger- man Air Force was declared tonight to have put the whole of the Dneiper River bend under heavy and unend- ing assault to break up the Red re- treat across that wide stream and thus prevent it being converted into the effective defense line it might be- I come. Heavy German raids also were said to have made extremely difficult any attempt by Russian troops to escape by sea from the encircled port of Odessa. DNB reported six Russian transport vessels aggregating 15,000 tons were disabled in; a raid on Odessa 'Harbor. The agency said also a Rus- sian cruiser and a torpedo boat were heavily damaged. In the field the Soviet Armies of the Southern Ukraine were officially described by the German High Com- mand as defeated and in flight which in some areas was "like a rout." German bombs beat heavily, said front reports, on the great industrial area of 1Dnieperopetrovsk, which lies but 80 miles northeast of the cap- tured town of Krivoi Rog. DNB said German panzer units had occupied one small town in the Dneiper bend Sunday; capturing or destroying 100 trucks and "the entire provisioning, supplies and facilities for one division" as well as taking 500 prisoners. In the Black Sea port of Nikolayev, whose occupation by the Germans (Continued on Page 4) Finnish Columns Near Leningrad HELSINKI, Aug. 18.-(A)-Finnish forces, storming down the west shore of Lake Ladoga toward Leningrad and a projected union with Germans driving upon the city from the south, have captured Kurkijoki, lake town 95 miles north of the Soviet Baltic center, the High Command an- nounced tonight. Several other unspecified points have been captured, the communique said, adding that encircled Red Army units were trying desperately but .without success to break through the tightening Finnish vise. In the Kurkijoki sector alone two Soviet divisions were smashed. Soviet Admssions: MOSCOW, Tuesday, Aug. 19.--(P) -Red Army defenders, hard-put at both ends of their bending western front, have abandoned the town of Kingisepp on the northern wing, put- ting the Germans within 75 miles of Leningrad, the Russians announced officially early ,today. Kingisepp is southwest of the former capital of the Czars and northeast of Lake Peipus, just inside the province of Leningrad from the Estonian frontier. The Soviet Information Bureau said the town was given up after a bitter fight. It reported similar heavy fighting raging elsewhere along the entire sprawling front. This retreat before Leningrad, the Soviet Union's second city, came within a day of the official an- nouncement of the abandonment of Nikolaev, big Black Sea naval and grain port and Krivoi Rog, iron cen- ter in the Ukraine on the southern front.0 In the Baltic Sea the Russians re- ported the sinking of a German sub- (Continued on Page 3) Many Killed, Liner Gutted In Pier Fire Paniuco, Cargo Destroyed By Brooklyn Waterfront Blaze; $1,500,000 Lost Sabotage Is Hinted In New York Fire NEW YORK, Ag. 18.-G )-A five- alarm Brooklyn waterfront fire, ac- companied by shattering explosions, killed at least five men today, in- jured several score others, and de- stroyed the 3,570-ton Cuba Mail Line cargo ship Panuco with its $600,000 cargo and the 875-foot long pier where it was docked. The New York Dock Company, owner of the destroyed pier, said its reports indicated nine persons were killed and Coast Guard officials said they would not be Surprised if that were true. Damage Set High Total damage was estimated unof- ficially at $1,500,000. Many longshoremen, who were un- loading the Panuco's highly-inflam- mable cargo, leaped or were thrown into New York Bay. Twenty-five were fished from the water. Four of the dead were taken from the water, and the body of a fifth man was seen aboard the Panco which, cut adrift, zigzagged down Buttermilk Channel and finally was beached on the Red Hook Flats, a mile and a half away. Drifted Into The Bay Men dangled from ropes along the ship's side as it drifted into the bay and dropped when rescue craft ap- proached. Police launches brought in 28 of the 45 crew members. There were unconfirmed reports some members of the crew and some stevedores were trapped in the hold. One stevedore, Joe Wilde, said "a lot of men were trapped below decks. I don't see how they could have got- ten out." Sabotage Is Investigated Agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the police depart- ment's bomb and sabotage squad and the District Attorney's Office investi- gated the possibility of sabotage. The tongues of flame-"streaks of lightning" one observer called them- shot out so quickly that officials were uncertain whether the blaze started in the ship, which a line official val- ued or $500,000, or on the pier, which was valued at $480,000. The 24-year-old freighter, with a general cargo including quicksilver, cord, hemp, lead and copper, arrived yesterday from Mexico. Unloading was under way when tle fire started at 10:40 a.m. (EST).. RAF Raiders Strike At Northern France LONDON, Aug. 18.-WP)- RAF bombers and fighters ranging over the Channel and northern France today sank three German patrol boats off the Dutch coast, blasted industrial targets at Lille and strafed Nazi troops and an airdrome in Brit- tany, the Air Ministry announced tonight. These big-scale assaults were fol- lowed up tonight with an attack by layer upon layer .of RAF raiders against other German-held bases in France. The night attackers re- turned home an hour after swinging out across the Channel. Nippon Charges Washington Is Inciting Russia In Far Eastern War Theatre (By The Associated Press) TOKYO, Tuesday, Aug. 19.-A new grave strain on already tense Japanese-American relations over United States aid to Soviet Russia was reflected in the press today after an hours-long conference between U.S. Ambassador Joseph C. Grew and Foreign Minister Teijiro Toyoda on the explosive situation. With a million Red Army troops reported reliably to be mobilized on the Siberian frontier (where Far Eastern advices say Japan likewise has formidable forces), the newspaper Kokumin bluntly declared: "As for reports that the United States and Britain will demand certain assurances from the Soviet regarding pressure on Japan as a condition for their aid to the Soviet against Germany in connection with the coming * * * Moscow conference, Japan considers U.S. Relations With Japanese Are At Stake Grew's Report Is Expected To Throw Some Light On Pacific Problems WASHINGTON, Aug. 18.-(P)- The immediate outlook in the tense relations of the United States and Japan was believed here tonight to, hinge 'on the outcome of long diplo- matic conversations held in Tokyo today. Ambassador Joseph C. Grew's re- port on his talk with the Japanese Foreign Minister Teijiro Toyoda, was expected to throw light dn at least some of the vital problems in the Pacific. One point which grew was believed to have discussed with the Foreign Minister was Japan's refusal to per- mit the S. S. President Coolidge to call at a Japanese port and pick up more than 100 private American citizens who wish to leave the country. It had been intended to send the President Coolidge from Shanghai for the evac- uation. Secretary of State Hull said the Japanese have not yet given a satis- factory explanation for the action. Hull conferred this afternoon with the Thailand Minister, R. Pramoj, presumably in connection with recent indications that Japan might seek to extend its military expansion pro-. gram into that country bordering on British Malaya. - Although he declined to discuss his talk with Secretary Hull, Minister Pramoj recalled to newsmen that his Government had expressed a desire to remain on friendly terms with all countries and a determination to de- fend the nation against any attack. Viscount Halifax, the British Am- bassador, also called at the State De- partment for a, farewell visit before leaving in a few days for London. He said he expected to return here in September. Sao Paulo Plane Overdue RIO DE, JANEIRO, Aug. 1.-(A)- PanAmerican Airways of Brazil an- nounced tonight one of its planes due at Sao Paulo this afternoon was missing with a crew of four and nine passengers, including Prof. Philip C. Jessup of New York, internationally- known lawyer and lecturer. Russia Has Real Chance, Congressmen Are Told WASHINGTON, Aug. 18.-(A)-Af- tr a 90-minute conference with President Roosevelt, Congressional leaders reported today they hadi gained the impression Russia has a real chance of holding but indefin- itely against the Nazi military ma- chine and that Russian resistance probably will forestall any German attempt to invade Great Britain this year. While asking pot to be quoted by name, one of those present said the President appeared to be cheerful and confident following his recent conversations at sea with Prime Min- ister Churchill. Democratic leader Barkley of the Senate told reporters the Chief Exec- utive gave the Congressional group the full picture of his talks with Churchill and discussed the advisa- bility of an additional appropriation for the lease-lend program. Senator Connally (Dem.-Texas), chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee and another of the con- sferees, said he did not believe the Chief Executive had made any com- mitments to Churchill "which in any way would alter our position toward the war; I do not believe we are' any closer to actual involvement." Dr. Trow Will ,Deliver Guidance Lecture Today Dr. William Clark Trow of the School of Education will deliver a talk at 4 p.m. today on "Socio-Psy- ohA1nrir,1 Tnfluence in Guidnce. " Confer At Tokyo U. S. Ambassador, Japanese Minister the legal round table of the Latin- American Summer Session at their meeting at 2 p.m. today in Hutchins Hall. Thursday the group will hear Prof. Laylin K. James of the law school on corporations at 2 p.m. in Hutchins Hall. The women of the Latin-American Summer Session of the International Center will meet at 2 p.m. today at Couzens Hall for their Red Cross round table with fractures the topic of the day. At 8 p.m. Wednesday the medical round table will meet at the Inter- national Center to hear Dr. H. Mar- vin Pollard of the medical school speak on the gastroscope. His talk will be illustrated with slides and a discussion period will follow. British Nation To Get Report By Churchill (By The Associated Press) London,, Aug. 19-Prime Minister Churchill was reported reliably today to have called a meeting of the War Cabinet for a first hand account of his secret discussions with President Roosevelt. He was speeding to London on a special train after his arrival in Eng- land on the Battleship Price of Wales. Several members of the War Cabinet prepared to greet him at the station and accompany him to 10 Downing Street for the cabinet session. Arrangements were being made for Churchill to broadcast to the nation at the earliest opportunity. Brenden Bracken, Minister of Information, met the Prime Minister at the port to discuss plans for the speech. It was thought possible that, along with many other subjects, his ad- dress would deal with the possibility of Soviet Russia's planning some strong move in Iran (Persia) to halt alleged German infiltration on that route to India. As to his unprecedented trip to sea, it was revealed the Prime Minister [ad inspected British and American troops in Iceland on his way. Mr. Roosevelt visited the Prince of Wales only once-Sunday, Aug. 10. He went aboard for religious services and joined with the Prime Minister in singing "Land of Hope and Glory" and "Onward Christian Soldiers." Hopkins Loses Fedora, Finds Churchill's Fits it injurious to the safety of her em- pire and cannot remain unconcerned fob her own defense. "If the Americans and British ad- here to the Japan encirclement front in the name of aid to the Soviet, Britain, the United States and the Soviet will be charged with responsi- bility for whatever situation may arise in the future." Chugai asserted that "if the United States fails to find any proper route to the Soviet except Vladivostok it will have an inevitable influence on the Far Eastern situation. Even if British-American supplies fail actu- ally to reach the Soviet the fact cannot be overlooked that it has at least the effect of reinforcing.Soviet troops in the Far East. May Influence Axis Yomiuri said the Moscow confer- ence may have great bearing on the Rome-Berlin-Tokyo Axis in view of the American program for maximum aid to Moscow. A navy spokesman said at a press conference that in addition to the big army forces in Siberia, the Rus- sians had 100 submarines and 110 speedboats at Vladivostok. The conference of Grew and the foreign minister coincided with two long meetings between Eugene H. Dooman, counselor of the United States Embassy, and Japanese Vice Foreign Minister Eigi Amau. It came as the Japan Times and Advertiser, foreign office mouthpiece, described the Churchill-Roosevelt peace aimsmdeclarations and their subsequent message to Joseph Stalin as an attempt to break down the United States neutrality act and in- cite Russia against Japan. Assailed By 'Press The entire Japanese press assailed Russian-British-United States col- laboration and displayed reports Chi- nese Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek would visit .Moscow. The influential newspaper Nichi Nichi said that "if the Anglo-Ameri- cans are dead set against Japan's course, Japan has no other way than to break through obstacles by her own power." The foreign office was known to be studying closely the Washington State Department's announcement Saturday that Japan had refused to permit 100 Americans to leave the country on the liner President Cool- idge. ;(Secretary of State Hull said in Washington that Japan had thus far given no satisfactory explana- tion for the refusal.) Permits Are Required A government order yesterday that aliens hereafter must obtain police authorization to leave the country complicated the situation. Previously they had been required merely to notify the police. Japanese said their position had not been presented clearly by the Washington st'atement and offered several unofficial explanations for refusal to grant the President Cool- idge clearance papers if the 100 Americans were on board. One was that Japan would not want United States opinion stirred up by such publicity as attended the arrival of the liner Washington at New York July 13, 1940, with 2,000 refugees from Europe. It was not known whether Giw requested the conference or whether he was summoned by Toyoda, but Grew was believed to be acting on instructions from Washington. Among the Japanese press state- ments was a report by the Domei Agency that Chiang Kai-shek's gov- ernment was planning to establish 14 air bases with British and Ameri- can aid. Domei also reported from Hongkong that 5,000 American trucks had arrived at Rangoon for service on Cehina's Burma ,nnoa , ,_ \. r } ;. y.; M k.... #. t : ..;. x P: 1 I + ..' r ' . ': ! ". c _.. r :a ,z 't 'Good Neighbors At School': Ecuadorean Writer Advocates, Greater Exchange Of Students To Offset Axis Move Into Dakar: Direct U.S. Warplane Ferries To Africa Proposed F.D.R. Regular exchanges of students be- tween the United States and the Latin American countries is one of the strongest guaranties for hemi- sphere solidarity, according to Senor Miguel Albornoz, columnist for El Comericio, prominent Quito newspa- per. Senor Albornoz, who is attinding the Latin American summer school here, indicated that a great deal of misunderstanding exists between the republics of this hemisphere. "Too many Americans believe that we of Latin America are an uncivil- ized peoples," he said. "We are often .asklrd if we ha.ve automnhiles a.nd those of North America, Senor Al- bornoz observed. Only by living in a country for sev- eral months can one really under- stand that country, he continued. "We have learned much in our stay here in the United States, and each of us shall return to South America as an ambassador of good will," ac- cording to Senor Albornoz. But that is not sufficient, he cau- tioned. To foster a better relation- ship, the United States must send more students to the southern repub- lics under student exchange fellow- ships. Nor will this be difficult, he nmintedouat. for livine is much chean- WASHINGTON, Aug. 18.-(A)-In a far-reaching step to offset any Ger- man move to, French Dakar and to strengthen British forces in the Mid- dle East, President Roosevelt an-' nounced plans today to ferry Ameri- can war planes to West Africa and on to the Middle East front. The White House announcement, which quickly followed the Presi- dent's return from his historic sea conferences with Prime Minister Winston Churchill, described the new service as 'an important step to speed delivery of planes direct to the Middle East." t However, it was considered impor- tant also for its effect in neutralizing LONDON, Aug. 18.-(IP)-The mys- tery of what happened to the un- shapely fedora Harry Hopkins wore to London was as deep as ever to- night, but some light was shed on how he happened to get a sartorially superior replacement initialed W.S.C. The old hat vanished somewhere .d~ ~-,., fh mni rhil n TInrlr , c The White House said, the ferry sys- tem and a companion transport serv- ice would "provide direct and speedy delivery of aircraft from the 'arsenal of democracy' to a critical point in the front against aggression." Pan-American will ferry the planes fron the United States to West Africa and thence to the Middle East, also establishing an air transport service fromaWest Africa to the Midde East. It plans to arrange a similar trans- port service to West Africa. "Planes owned by the United States government will be used by Pan- American," the announcement said, "and they will be operated by Ameri- can nersonnel The route is so ar- { i