Weather 1gil : i a a t Partly Cloudy Official Publication Of The Summer Session VOL. I. No. 12 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JULY 15, 1941 Z-323 ongressional Hartshorne Says World War I Firemen Open Kiev Capture Imn Gave Germany Its Opportunity AnnualCollege Fall Of Austria-Hungary and population than any of the'other a To Seek Draft Paved Way To Reich national units east or west. Any fur-Today er K S A Europe thr increase in the area of Ger- t1Domination In Erp many on the east would inevitably Editorial Strengthening Our Propaganda Methods PRICE FIVE CENTS 0 linent; Ivance I 1 Amenlments Selective Service Terms Would Be Extended More Than One Year Barkley Predicts Favorable Action WASHINGTON, July 14.-('P)- Congressional leaders decided at a conference with President Roosevelt today to press for immediate enact- ment of legislation to hold selectees, national guardsmen and reservists in service for more than one year. The decision was made despite some earlier doubts in Administra- tion quarters on Capitol Hill that Congress would be willing to take the step. After the White House conference, however, Senator Barkley of . Ken- tucky, majority leader, predicted to reporters that when Congress "gets the facts and realizes its responsi- bility it will react favorably." Speak- er Rayburn (Dem.-Tex.) of the House had said last week he doubted the proposal could win approval from Congress at present. Hearings To Start Thursday Chairman Reynolds (Dem.-N.C.) announced that the Senate military committee would hold hearings on' the legislation starting Thursday. He added, however, that he was still op- posed to the bill as an individual' member. Arguments in support of the legis- lation were submitted to the Presi-; dent's congressional lieutenants by, Gen. George C. Marshall, Chief of; Staff, who has recommended that all men now in the Army be kept in service beyond their scheduled peri- ods of duty. Barkley said he was convinced that the action was needed to pre- vent the Army from "disintegrating because of- the withdrawal of large numbers of trained soldiers." Leaders made it clear that the immedate program did not include anotb er recommendation by General Marshall that an existing restriction against use of selectees outside the Western Hemisphere be removed. Three Approaches The majority leader said there were three possible approaches that might bemade to the questionyof keeping the troops in service, any one of which might be chosen. Congress might, he explained amend the act directly to provide for keeping the men in service; it could declare a state of national emergency which would permit keeping the troops on duty, or the law could be amended to put the selectees on the same basis as reserve officers, so that they could be called for active duty after their regular training periods had ended. Scott To Give Niagara FaRs Lecture Today Special Illustrated Speech Today To Be Presented In Natural Science Professor Irving D. Scott of the University's geology department, will present a special lecture on the geo- logical features of Niagara Falls and the vicinity at 4 p.m. today in Natu- ral Science Auditorium for the bene- fit of those students making the fourth University excursion to Niag- ara Falls. Reservations for this trip must be made before 5 p.m. tomorrow in Room 1213 Angell Hall. The ex- penses for the tour will be approxi- mately $19.00, including round trip transportation, hotel accommoda- tions, conveyance about the Falls and vicinity; a trip to the Maid of the Mist, a visit to the Cave of the Winds and ari allowance for incidentals. The party will leave Ann Arbor 3 p.m. Friday and go by special bus to Detroit. There, they will board a D&C steamer, leaving at 5:30 p.m. for Buffalo, where they will arrive at 8:30 a.m. Saturday morning. At Buffalo, the group will be met by a special bus which will take them to the Falls and around the Gorge on By HARRY M. KELSEY The World War of 1914-18 was sig-' nificant chiefly in opening up for Germany the possibility of 'domina- tion. over all the smaller5 national areas of easternhEurope, Prof. Rich- ard Hartshorne of the University of Wisconsin declared yesterday. Professor Hartshorne spoke in the lecture series sponsored by the Grad- uate Study Program in Public Policy in a World at War. His subject was "The World's Geographical-Political Pattern." The possibility of German domina- tion was brought about through the destruction of her ally, Austria-Hun- gary, Professor Hartshorne pointed out, the immediate result being the prevention of threat of Austro-Hun- garian domination of all southeast- ern Europe. The most critical weakness of southestern Europe in recent years, Professor Hartshorne explained, has been the exposed position of most of the smaller states to the overwhelm- ingly larger German unit, but the fact that it may now lie suffering destruction does not prove that the structure was inevitablS destined to collapse. It shows only that the struc- ture lacked the military power to withstand direct attack from Ger- many following the withdrawal of counter-pressure from its other neigh- bor, Russia, and the general aband- onment of a larger system of collec- tive security, the lecturer asserted. The major threat to the security of eastern and western Europe is the same, Professor Hartshorne main- tained: the central German national area of much greater productive size Royall Tyler's The Contrast' To Open Here increase its potential danger to the national states on the west, he said. "Hence the paradox insufficiently understood in France and England," Professor Hartshoren noted, "that the stability of western Europe de- pended upon the national security of states that were otherwise of such little concern tothem as Austria, Czechoslovakia and Poland." Prof. Hartshorne warned against the acceptance of a solution in the form of the Nazi concept ofth e Leb- ensraum. "The world in general," he stated, "cannot be expected to accept a proposal that the previous organization of half a continent be overthrown by force for the sake of a so-called "new order" for which no plan has been offered." RAF Searches Seas For Nazi Ships, Planes 22,500 Reich Tons Sunk; Nine Aircraft Bagged, British Report Discloses (By The Associated Press) LONDON, July 14.-The RAF went hunting today for German shipping and German planes, found both and, to tabulate the British reports, scored hits on five ships totaling 22,500 tons and shot down nine aircraft. A tenth German plane, the second bmber of the day, was credited to anti-aircraft defenses along the Scot- tish east coast. The other bomber was destroyed by fighters off the coast of Wales, said the official re- port. The RAF made morning raids on the German-held French ports of Cherbourg and Le Havre, rail yards at Hazebrouck, near St.,Omer, and in the afternoon big Blenheims of the bomber command, searching for North Sea shipping, attacked a small convoy off the Dutch Frisian iselands, the Air Ministry said. Three direct hits were scored on one vessel of 6,000 tons, another of 3,000 tons was hit astern and an escort vessel of 1,500 tons was struck amidships, the communique said. A fighter which tried to break up the attack was shot down into the sea, it was said, and all the Blenheims came home unharmed. The morning attack on Gherbourg was estly, for the British acknowl- edged the loss of two bombers and four fighters. Faculty Wives To Give Luncheon Tomorrow Demonstration, Evolution Will Highlight Program Of Four-Day Meeting Fisher To Deliver Welcome Address Professional and volunteer firemen throughout the state will convene here today for the four-day program of the Thirteenth Michigan Fire Col- lege. Featuring a program of fire-pre- vention demonstrations and talks by various authorities on fire control, the Fire College will center its activities' at the W.K. Kellogg Foundation In- stitute. Opening messages of greeting will be given at 10 a.m. today in the Kel- logg Auditorium by Dr. C. A. Fisher, director of the extension service, sponsors of the meeting here. Other Lectures Other lectures scheduled this morn- ing are: "Why Are We Here," by Burr Taylor, Western Actuarial Bureau, Chicago; "Cooperation with the State Fire Marshal," Capt. Laurence A. Lyon, superintendent .uniform divi- sion, Michigan State Police; "Train- ing of Firemen," J. W. Parry, state supervisor of Public Service train- ing, State Board of Control for Vo- cational Education, and "Safety in Delivery of Petroleum Products," F. Ronald McLean, manager of the safe- ty and insurance department of the Socony Vacuum Oil Co., Detroit. Demonstration To Be Held A series of fire fighting technique demonstrations will be presented to the rear of the Kellogg Building at 1 p.m. "Fire From the Sky," a lecture demonstration will be given by L R. Thrune, safety engineer of the Dow Chemical Co. at 4 pin. A discussion period will be open to visting firemen from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. today. Competitive demonstrations in fire- fighting techniques will be featured every day from 1 to 3 p.m. The nine On Moscow, Leniga Emeny Will Give Lecture Today On Natural Resource Control Prof. Brooks Emeny of Western Reserve University will speak at 4:15 p.m. today in the Lecture Hall of M the Rackham School on "The Dis- tribution and Control of Natural Re- sources." ' Professor Emeny's talk is the sec- ond of this week's lectures of the Graduate Study Program in Public .. Policy in a World at War. The theme of the week is "The United States in the World Today." Taking his A.B. at Princeton in 1924 and his Ph.D. at Yule in 1934, Professor Emeny has studied at the Sorbonne in Paris, the London School of Economics, the Kansular Akademie I at Vienna and the University of Ma- j drid. He was an instructor of gov- ernment at Yale from 1927 to 1931, and since 1935 has taught interna- tional relations at Western Reserve. BROOKS EMENY Director of the Cleveland Foreign Affairs Council, Professor Emeny is mite Conference in 1936 and the Vir also chairman of the Cleveland bu- reau of the National Policy Corn.- ginia Beach Conference in 1939. mittee, of which he is treasurer. He Professor Emeny is the author o was the American delegate of the In- "The Strategy of Raw Materials-- stitute of Pacific Relations to the Study of America in Peace and War' Tokyo Conference in 1935, the Yose- and with Frank H Simonds has writ f A Repertory Players To Comedy Tomorrow; Will Play Leading Give Moll Role Royall Tyler's "The Contrast," which is known as the first American play to be produced by a professional American company, will open a four- day run at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. The comedy is a satire on typical American customs and those which are modeled on the British. Cast in the leading part of Jona- than, waiter to Colonel Manly, is James Moll, who will portray the original "stage Yankee" roll. Wil- liam Altman will play the part of Dimple, a polished and traveled American, and Robert Rittenour will be seen as Colonel Manly. Betty Gallagher and Ellie Ter- retta will play Letitia and Charlotte, two women who are in love with Dimple, while Lillian Canon will take the part of Maria, the girl who is engaged to Dimple. Van Rough, Maria's father, will be acted by E. S. Cortright; Frank Jones will be seen as Jessamy, man- servant to Dimple; Genevieve Ed- wards will be cast as Jenny, Maria's servant, and Mary C. Palmer will be Betty, Charlotte's maid. Strollers on the Mall are Paul Blackburn, Roger Reed, Veitch Pur- dom, Harriet Cooper, Claire Cook, Naomi Greifer, Theo Turnbull, Doro- thy Hanson, Jack Ulanoff, Merle Webb, Ellen Jones and Jane Elliott. Cooperating with the Faculty Women's Club, the Summer Session will give a luncheon at 12:30 p.m. tomorrow in the League for the bene- fit of visiting women on the faculty and wives of visiting and local fac- ulty members. Receiving guests will be Mrs. A. E. White, president of the club; Mrs. Louis A. Hopkins and Dean Byrl F. Bacher., The luncheon is an innovation this year, previous Summer Session ad- ministrations having given teas for the faculty wives. Reservations for this Summer Ses- sion event, which is complimentary, may be made by calling Miss Ethel McCormick, social adviser at the League. M~usic School Faculty Offers Concert Today Four members of the School of Music faculty and the Summer Ses- sion Chamber Orchestra under the direction of Eric DeLamarter will join to present a concert at 8:30 p.m. to- day in Hill Auditorium. Opening the program will be Mozart's "Symphonic Concertante" which will be presented by the Or- chestra, George Uoinar, violinist, and Prof. Wassily Besekirsky, violinist. Prof. Palmer Christian, organist, will play "Concerto in D" by Vivaldi-Bach and Bach's "Passacaglia and Fugue in C minor" while pianist William Beller will offer three compositions by Debussy and two by Ravel. Members of the Summer Session *Chamber Orchestra are as follows: First violin: Lee Crook, Helen Car- los, Michael Franko, Henry Wenzel, Carl Senob and Paul Hansen. Second violin: Frances Ayres, Clarence A. Odmark, Clara Florance, Leighton Landes, Edward Katz and Edward Yrkkola. Viola : Cornelius Gall, Kenneth Holland, Mildred Thomas and Evelyn Dumont. Violoncello : Joseph Childs,' Carl G. Werner and Charlotte Lewis. Oboes: Stephen Matyi and Noah Knepper. Bass: J. Quinn Lotspeich and Lewis Pankaskie. Horns: Joseph White and Marvin Howe. Initial Broadcast Of Summier' Today Today "Aluminum" launches the Summer Session schedule of the Michigan University of the Air, as the radio class of Prof. Waldo Abbot dramatizes this subject. The initial broadcast, as the summer series, will be carried by Detroit Station WJR, -44 A .A t - - A+ k2. &,i .. - .Cft,..,.... - Second Speech In 'Job Series' Will Be Today Dr Purdom Will Deliver Speech On Personality In Rackham Lecture Hall "Undesirable Personality Traits," second in a series of three lecturesl sponsored by the Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational Informa- tion, will be presented at 7 p.m. to- day in the Rackham Lecture Hall. Dr. T. Luther Purdom, director of the Bureau, announced that the pro- gram of the lecture will consist of first, a discussion of habits dis- tasteful to employers and second, three demonstrations illustrating his points. The demonstrations will show why people do not get jobs because they dress like young girls, when they are past that age; because the appli- cants try to tell the employer how to run his business when applying, and because some applicants are too pas- sive, not asserting themselves in any way. The lectures are given under the general heading, "Why People Do Not Get Jobs." Next week's talk, to be given at the same time, will deal with the subject, "Why People Do Not Hold Jobs." Dr. Purdom emphasized the fact that these lectures are not meant to show how to get a job, but rather how to apply for one, and keep it after it has been' secured. ten "The Great Powers in World Poli- tics" and "The Price/of Peace." He is a frequent contributor of articles to journals. A Member of the Board of Directors of Oberlin College since 1936, Pro- fessor Emeny belongs to the Cleve- land Chamber of Commerce, the American Academy of Political and Social Science, the American Geo- graphical Society, the National For- eign Trade Council, the American Society for Metals and the Academy of Political Science. Auto Accident Victim Dies Larrazabal Passes Away In Hospital Sunday Felipe O. Larrazabal, 27-year-old naval architecture student from Caracas, Venezuela, died in Univer- sity Hospital early Sunday morning from injuries sustained in an auto- mobile accident Thursday night. Larrazabal suffered a severely frac- tured skull when the car he was driv- ing collided head-on with one driven by Ted Barnard of Detroit. Barnard and two occupants of the Larrazabal car, Luis Padrino of Caracas, and Juan B. Lamarch of Truiji, Domini- can Republic, both delegates to the New Education Conference, escaped with minor injuries. Services will be held at 9 a.m. to- morrow in St. Mary's Catholic Stu- dent Chapel. The body will lie in state at the Muehlig chapel. Rosary will be recited there at 8 p.m. today. The body will be shipped to Vene- Quela for burial. 3reak-Through Operations Continue On schedule, High Command Claims Nazi U-Boats Sink Two Russian Ships BERLIN, July 14.-(P)-Kiev is nder such pressure by air and land hat word of its capture is expected ny time, German tanks on the Mos- ,ow side of the Stalin Line are jab- ing toward the Russian capital, and eningrad is caught in a German- innish vise, informed Germans de- lared tonight. This was their broad outline of the var against Russia, at the end of the second day of its fourth week. These reas-Leningrad in the north, Mos- ow in the Center, and Kiev in the south-constitute the main front. German Report The German High Command, in mother of its uncommunicative noods, said simply that "break- through operations" against the Stalin Line continued on schedule, hat Finnish forces had opened a wo -point attack on Leningrad's iorthern flank and that two Russian patrol boats had been sunk by Ger- nan submarines. One break-through was said to Eave been at Opachka, midway be- tween Polotsk and Pskov and acear the Latvian frontier. Finnish forces under Field Marshal Baron Gustav Mannerheim were said o be moving down on Leningrad-on both sides of Lake Ladoga where Finland's frontier lies about 75 miles from the Russian industrial center and war base. Official News Such was the sum of the most official news on the campaign. Au- thorized spokesmen and DNB, offi- cial news agency, filled in other de ails, saying that German, Hungarian nd Rumanian forces were hammer- ing at the gates of Kiev, gateway to the Ukraine's richest industrial and farming areas. Mannerheim's Finns were repre- sented as a sort of hammer striking down on a Leningrad held on the anvil of German Panzer forces ad- vancing in the area east of Lake Peipus. St. Petersburg Berlin newspaper reverted to the old Czarist name of St. Petersburg for Leningrad, so named for the founder of the Communist state, Nikolai Lenin. It is the German conviction that Communist as a world political force is receiving its death blow at the hands of the Ger- man army and Germans here there- fore started erasing Communist terminology. Heavy equipment which the Rus- sians were dragging out of the hot, central section east of Minsk was subjected to aerial bombardment. Group Cooperation Gives Experience, IBeauinont 'Asserts "Today pupils acquire experience in cooperating with each other towards a common goal," Prof. Henry Beaumont of the University of Ken- tucky said before the educators in the Univesity High School Auditor- ium yesterday. "They soon discover that the best interests of all requires a considera- tion for the needs of each individual in the group," he said, and that each child must put forth his best effort if the results are to be what he wants. This interest in common enterprise serves. as a powerful motivation and makes it possible for the modern teacher to dispense with the older forms of discipline." "Those forms were necessary at a time-when the pupils were not aware of their relations to the group and were compelled to engage in activi- ties frequently unrelated to their in- terests and needs," Professor Beau- mont said. Excursion To Visit Rouge Tomorrow Students registered for the third Last Contingent Of Students From Latin America Arrive The final contingent of 48 studentstInternational Center will hold a tea Seventh Conference On Religion Will Be Held Here Next Week Forum discussions and lecturestference luncheons, to be held at 12:15 for the Latin-American Summer School which wiHl make its headquar- ters at the International Center will arrive here from New York late to- day. Accompanying the group will be Dean of Students Joseph Bursley who met the students in New York. Seven are from Chile and 41 from Ecuador. Composed of young professional men and women, some of whom have already attained international recog- nition, the Latin-American Summer Session is under the direction of Prof. .. Raleigh Nelson. Director of for the Latin-Americans and all oth- ers interested. Thursday evening they will attend the performance of "The Contrast" as part of their Eng- lish language training. Friday the group will be the guest of Henry Ford in a specially con- ducted tour through the Ford plant at River Rouge and Greenfield Vil- lage. Special English classes provided by the International Center's language service will begin immediately on the arrival of the Latin-American stu- dents. Tn charge of the Latin-American open to the public, and attendance of visiting =clergymen at seven classes will highlight the seventh Conference on Religion, to be held July 20-27 on the campus. Purpose of this parley is to offer to members of the Summer Session an introduction to certain religious issues of the day and to acquaint them with a few recognized leaders in religious thought. All students are invited to take part in the for- ums and to hear the lectures, all of which will take place July 22, 23 and 24. Ministers from the entire state have been invited to this conference, which will stress especially the topic, "A p.m. each of the three days, in the Michigan Union, and afternoon lec- tures have been planned, with noted speakers scheduled to consider the present world situation. Featured speaker at the conference will be Dr. Basil Mathews, professor of Christian world relations at Bos- ton University, who will lecture at 4:15 p.m., July 24 in the Rackham Lecture Hall on "Christianity In a World at War." Educator, editor and author, Dr. Mathews was prepared at Oxford. Classes which will be open to the visiting clergymen, through the cour- tesy of the Summer Session, are those