, JULY 15, 1941 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Feudin' Irons To Be Oiled Up For Rival Hops Navy Officials Deny Reports Of U.S. Clash With Nazis League Weekend To Highlight Dixie Doodle Affairs Yankee, Themes Alabama mammies and damyanks, co'nels from Kaintuck and well, m'- dear, just everybody will be out Fri- day and Saturday all togged out for a weekend of competition on the en- tertainment side, when the tradition- al "Dixie Doodle" and "Yankee Doo- dle" rivalry will run rife in the League Ballroom. First of the two hops will pay hom- age to the Gray, with a numbah of so'thn gals plannin' to swell that re- nowned so'th hospitality to the far north and get everyone acquainted for what promises to be a grand eve- nin'.. There is more planned than that, however, for the garden will be the scene, from 7:30 to 9 p.m., of a water- melon cut. Dar. T. Luther Purdom, director of the University :Bureau of Appointments and Occupational In- formation, will perform the slicing. Free watermelon will be distribut- ed among students from Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Dela- ware, Florida, Georgia, Kansas, Ken- tucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Mary- land, New Mexico, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennes- see, Texas, Virginia and West Vir- ginia. Melodies from below the Mason- Dixon Line will be swung by Clark McClgllan and his orchestra from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. -in keeping with the chosen theme. Saturday's dance will-reverse the procedure with the Blue taking hon- ors,. and both northerners and south- erners are urged to be at the two dances, so each side can strive to out- do the other in putting on a really good entertainment. U Of M. Students Awarded Degrees At Air West Point A degree from the "West Point of the Air" will be added to academic backgrounds of seven former Univer- sity of Michigan students on July 12 as they successfully complete their basic flying training at Randolph Field, Texas. They are: James W. Blose, Sharps- ville, Pa., '37-'41; Bill Buckingham, Detroit, '38; Hamlet Cominole, Glov- ersville, N.Y., '38-'40; William H. Jones-Burdick, Casper, Wyo., '39-'39, M.A., and '39-40; John H. Haigh, Chicago, Ill., '41, B.S.E., swimming All-American college team 3 years, Beta Theta Pi; Rex K. Latham, Al- ton, Ill., '37-'40, A.B., Psi Upsilon; Richard L. Taylor, Syracuse, N.Y., '38-'40, Chi Psi. This class of pilots-to-be entered the enormous south Texas basic train- ing school on May 2 after having com- pleted 10 weeks of primary training. 'The Childhood Of Gorky', 'Chapayev' Are Chosen For Special Series Two Russian films will be present- ed in a special series by the Art Cienma League, one Thursday and the other a week from Thursday. "The Childhood of Maxim Gorky" will be shown at 8:15 p.m. Thursday in the Lecture Hall of the Rackham School. The following week "Cha- payev" will be shown. Tickets for this series of two are on sale at the League, the Union and Wahr's book store. Starring Alyosa Lyarsky as Gorky, "The Childhood of Maxim Gorky" is directed by Mark Donskoi and por- trays the early years of Russia's great writer. "Chapayev" tells of the Bol- shevik leader who rose from the rank of common soldier in the Czar's army to become commander of the Red armies of the east. Tickets for.the Art Cinema League's main series, which opened Sunday with "Peg of Old Drury" and has yet to offer "The Baker's Wife," "The Cobbler of Koepenick" and "Crime and Punishment" may still be ob- tained at the League, the Union and Wahr's book store. Secretary of the Navy Frank Knox (center, seated) and Admiral harold R. Stark (behind Knox), chief of naval operations, were reported to have denied that the American Navy had clashed with German forces. They testified in Washington before the Senate Naval Committee. With them as they glanced over a resolu- tion calling-for an-investigation are Chairman David I. Walsh (left, seated) (Dem.-Mass.), and Sen. Hiram W. Johnson (right, seated) (Rep.-Calif.). Standing, Sen. Ralph O. Brewster (left) (Rep.-Me.) and Sen. J. J. Davis (right) (Rep.-Pa.) 1 s OA ... I E _ _ a. P ; laIus~te n'S fI Students See I SPOURRI II I i$c. & ACCORDING to the Moscow radio, Field Marshal Hermann W. Goer- ing, No. 2 Nazi, is now engaged in cooling his heels at some dirty old concentration camp. Frankly, we were very surprised to see Uncle Her- mann's number come up-we always had the idea that he was here to stay. * * * We feel very sorry for Uncle Her- mann and we're sure that all of the Germans do too. No doubt he will get a warm reception at the concen- tration camp-something like the one the boys gave Al Capone at Alcatraz. * * * -UT' ,hey had to get rid of one Nazi leader, it might just as well have been Uncle Hermann. He's the only German big-wig that would look good on the chopping block with an apple in his mouth. Maybe his execution'-will serve-as a substitute for Christmas dinner in Berlin this winter. * * * It seems that Heinrich Himmler, who usually holds down sixth place on the Nazi hit parade, is now ang- ling for a promotion. Poor Heinrich, he doesn't know when he's well off or maybe he's never heard about what happened to those other guys who got pretty close to der Feuhrer. BEING A GERMAN big shot right now seems almost as bad as be- ing in an important commissar or something in Russia. And it's even worse if you happen to like that cheap red herring they serve around the Siberian salt mines. What got us really mad though was that Hitler called Goering a coward. That's not fair, you know, -Uncle Hermann has an Iron Cross and Adolf knows what cour- age it takes to win one of those. He should, he's got a half dozen himself. * * * That British-Soviet pact which was signed Saturday has been greetd with great joy in official circles both in London and Moscow. But we can remember a time when Joe Stalin's followers and Mr. Churchill's Clive- den set- were horrified at Eden and Litvinov for suggesting the same thing. . * * * HICH ALL GOES to prove that it's better to live in a democracy; at least the world knows that An- thony Eden is safe in a mansion somewhere living as befits his sta- tion. Which in turn reminds us that Goering .was eating pretty well too until he talked back to teacher. ;Rome was a bit jubilant yester- day after the report was received that-a British detachment in North Africa had been put to flight. These days even the capture of three bushels of sand seems welcome news to the Black Shirts. Rumor has it that two of the best known theologians in the country are in grave danger of losing their religi- ous titles. Reason: the language which "Deacon" Bill McKechnie and,. "Parson" Del Baker have been using to describe the activities of their re- spective teams recently has not been exactly devout. * * * , WE DON'T BLAME the boys for changing character, however. At- tendance in Cincinnati and Detroit has fallen off considerably and even the 56,000 fans who attended the All- Star game were afraid that it would turn into a revival meeting at any time. * * * Ineidently, only 4,000 people turned out to see a recent night game in St. Louis between the Browns and Indians. The total revenue, according to our figures, will hardly pay for candlelight let alone electricity. There's a move on now to sell fireflies to all Mis- sourians who are sadists enough to enjoy watching the Brownies massacred in the moonlight. Wild, Wooly' West Of Today By JOHN ANFEROTH, Jr. (Special to The Daily) JACKSON, Wyo.-The first week at Camp Davis for the engineers and geologists was very quiet, except for the thundering of hoofs at night, but over the weekend the boys got their first taste of the old west. They started to Jackson intending to paint the town red. When they arrived it was almost too red for them to handle. After their first walk around the Square they wan- dered leisurely into a bar to be greet- ed by two roulette wheels, two dice tables, a, vingt-et-un game, a bird cage, a poker game and dudes. (Camp Davisites are natives, not dudes.) The boys had to try their luck. Sunday morning the Camp was much wiser, understanding why crime doesn't pay. Sunday evening a dusty, sore lot of geologists arrived at camp. It was not hoofs that they heard that night, but the gentle sawing of logs. Monday camp went into full swing, with the engineers hanging onto their skyhooks making transit stadia sur- veys of the mountains and the geolo- gists off to the mountains to see what old mother nature did long before they were hatched. Pretzel Benders Beat Physics Tean Opening the Intramural National League season at Ferry Field yester- day, the Pretzel Benders slanted out a total of 17 hits behind the pitching of Mike Chiapetta to swamp the Physics squad, 18 to 4. Merritt hurled for the losers. Individual batting stars were Rosen and Richardson, each of whom belted two singles and a triple. Other teams in the newly formed league are the Faculty, Dark Horses, Cicero's Pugs and Ox Lodge. "British Labor and World War II" will be the topic of a talk to be given at 4:15 p.m. Sunday in the Rackham Lecture Hall by Mrs. Robert Fraser, former Labor member of the London County Council. Mrs. Fraser, who will talk in Ann Arbor under the auspices of the Com- mittee to Defend America by Aiding the Allies, is a graduate of the Lon- don School of Economics, and wife of Robert Fraser, now a member of the Ministry of Information. In 1931 she was defeated as a Labor candidate for the British House of Commons, and in 1934 became the first Labor Party member to receive a majority in London when she was elected to the County Council. Mrs. Fraser served nine months as air raid warden in London before coming to America with her young daughter. Ii ___ ... 9 PLrn -s m- Ti71l ..er ectzcon. 1t odern TUES. & WED. s Iowa 1jjiLoj JEST SILNVE wi nn I I I r M Dr. Blatz Discusses Learning By PAUL CHRISTMANN O "Learning is the basis of all guid- ance, and consequence is the basis of learning. The only way we can judge the consequence is by four char- acteristics: immediacy, inevitability, graduality, and invariability," thus could Dr. William Blatz, Professor of Child Psychology, at the University of Toronto, and Director of the In- stitute of Child Study be quoted in a talk delivered yesterday before the Guidance Workshop. "With very little formal training a child soon develops consistancy in his relation with the physical world. That is, as the child learns that in performing certain acts in the physi- cal world the results are immediate, inevitable, graduated, and invariable, he learns to conform, and to conform consistently.' However, as the child grows older the social world becomes more and more important, but here he finds the rules are arbitrary, not fixed as in the social world. There- fore we as adults in dealing with children must release them from the compulsion to disobey." Dr. Blatz pointed out that if the Oconsequence of any social act results in isolation the isolation should be: immediate, inevitable, graduated and invariable. The individual that is isolated should determine the gradu- ation. That is to say that when he is willing to conform to the group mores he thereby terminates his iso- lation. "Every teacher," said Dr. Blatz, "is obligated to make every pupil feel that school is such a pleasant experi- ence that the child would rather be in school than any other place dur- ing those hours in which school is- in session. Following the talk Dr. Blatz was asked a number of questions by mem- bers of the Workshop. Answers were given by a number of interesting and sometimes humorous illustrations. L Secret Agent X9 The G-Man Throws A Monkey Wrench By Robert Stor Patricia Morison - Billie Burke John Loder - Dame May-Whitty Edmund Gwenn - Reginald Denny- Billy Gilbert V LOOK, ANSL! SOMEONE 1 5TANOING AT THE OPEN DOOR Or THE BA66AGE COMPARTMENT., HOW CAN WE 60P OFF "THE PLANE WITH lM THERE? WEEKDAYS 2--4-7---9 P. M IkL , l i