UN Korea Top t WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1950 771G IAL U LLETIN AM americans. have been bitter toward Upitesd satio~ns members who have not re'the largely. American United Nations m-M it Korea. .Tbb teling. Is natural; but the lack of m4ihutioiic is just as natural for the p~gr UJN members. ,elaiu1P.. the Netherlands, the Philippines, 407, 4cua dor and Pakistan realize that 'a mist" be protected and that it is the ro- fob to :do so, They also realize, how- Or' tt*t the United States, Great Britain th 1 0oviet nion are the. only nations 'the orlzatiori strong enough to spare !~ for use. in other parts of the world. CreW Britain is: saving most of her g#th for posible. warfare in Western v~e and for the defense of her own coo- w, bu the U.S. could and did offer many _s We are fighting the UN's war be-1 up ;Iv, were the only nation 'able to meet p gt+par quicklY and strongly. Thp° position of the "uncooperative" torjals . ushed in The Michigan Daily r wrilku ~by members of The Daily staff d reprtsen't. the views of the writers only. 2I~ T " ~ DITOR: BOB KEITH countries is smlrto Y~ compassionateperef recently given by . . aVenT he discussed 1his ?iTio. Kviuv n he cannot affor"d t po.k this reason "he rei e;t ec UN members to sion.r" wI Those few worde,. "cannota '; yoke Russia"epestev n the decisions ofInkT: .I Norway, and other weak ls ic countries have weak are. 1u Marshall Plan aid arf sl lyL than their less fortunaer iife~ ertheless all these natosh-.p : ped and poorly trainedarn' '1 Il fromn pane 2) The majority osNic br ing a biggers pan assL they voted to a :o t:i - ja forces to fight a:usazstlie But they chose tolavthi l a little less protected sotatthuP clearly show its desire to of the wor dtwthtore V took a step which seems smal r to the one we have been oedttk it made them importantaisin(l against Russian imnperial. z ThusOct. 12,1 4111 ng ,il Hall. ear: First met- -~:ToI :3 uer it'L (M-t)d,; in '~ 'y Smoland sa metin one arc. ~l , at.14 in tini u~ee{2021 en ci "bserva- u eofRecord- i.o ov'e byStu- 7:15 .. Schola GI :Tea and ~ s o, :305:3?0 p.m. e oe)m, Lane )'.Tpic : Romans, 'Y:Do D'op In 4Pnm...'Wesley Pre-Med Society: Open meet- ing, 7:30 p.m., 140,0 Chem. Bldg. Speakers: Dr. Withaker and Wea- therhill. Scciedad Hispanica:> First meet- ing of the year. Reports by stu- dents who received Sociedad's scholarships to University of Mex- ico summer school, with movies aend colored slides. Outline of ac- tivities' program for year. 8 p.m., Hussey Room, League. Coming Events U. of M. Sailing Club : Business meeting for old and new members, 7:30 pam., Thurs., Oct. 12, 311 W. Engineering Bldg. Polonia Club: Meeting, Thurs., Oct. 12, 7:30 p.m., International Center. Students of Polish descent and those interested in Polish Culture invited. Kappa Al~pha Psi: Smoker, Fri., Oct. 13, Room 3R, Union, 7:30 p.m. Football movies, 8 p.m. International Center. Weekly Tea for foreign students and American friends, 4:30-6 p.m. 1'Thurs., Oct. 12. Toscanini A ft ix'',,, ILW ,It days have passed since the MNc- 'gym I 'it-Communist bill became a of the land, but the American people jready been given a striking example k61' thi. bill infringes dangerously on rii civil -liberties. *4 amayu age, the Italian conductor, wo Twaea, was facing the prospect 4oot 'ent 'to Ellis Island as an alien ,s *Ss boat docked ,in New York's har- zO RMiwOfl why the Immigration and 1li~aion partment took this action eor ofWf provision in the Internal urt (XcC*rran) Act that bars, admis- i*t, this country of anyone who has 1 at *l7 time a member of or "affiliated" the Nazi or Facist party. ktdrtu~rstely, Toscanini falls under the 4$ti *xxof this blanket law. Still an on vctisen ,though he has resided in vo mtry .3 the most of 25 years, he K$ 4 Vm4olini for 'ashort time before the dictator came to power i 0 .' fore, according to the lavw, hI Department is legally jutife to intern the famous condcto. .The law requires neitherth 1 tion Department or the coutto . of the fact that TIoscan ii wsc 2 Italy for refusing to play theFai after he bitterly opposed the Ms gime; that Toscanini refused to oW& the Nazis in the thirties; thathedc the Facist movement in Italy,,afterm ithe2;tht hii: try in 1925 as a political refu a;ae since then he has constantlyusd r: ii cal genius to advance the eceat in Europe as well as in the Uie The narrow and stictinerre il the law that the Imigainlh 'a was forced to take,anthtdni;t conductor re-admission int otiscr is an insult and a severeInutc te this 3-year-old musician. Th7f' tf suich a thing can happen iB oly a ._ pke of how this law can, and ill bz used. Alpha Phi Omega: Regular - - ---meeting, Thurs., Oct. 12, 7 p.m., 'ci Metng, 4:15j Unicn. Members will receive in- if: I.formation concerning the Smoker. ci Ieateni>y AllI Journalism Department 'Picnic: xc ' cevtet teve Fri., Oct. 13, 5:15 p.m. Everyone nL. no' Ar- invited. Va,'f OB--GAL. 3 sue M3 t~li~smas met- Graduate Student Council: I'V-, P letoM.Meeting, Thurs., Oct. 12, West ci, i wille thiit Lecture Room, Rackham, 7:30 p. I girls ,int !Ued im. Beaeon Association : Meeting, _ ~ League, Thurs., Oct. 12, 7:45 pim, '$t paer Pof . 1.Willcox; , ..C Rifle Subject: "'The Present Anglo- a:hnce for. American Entente." Common- 0 at. Io p _:Ioue x- wealth and British Students and 'a' ccl.other interested persons invited. <4crP~A of Art Print Library. There are still 4's if ~0 t it LAS TIME we heard Lauritz Mel- ,,06rwos in. 1938; since then the old ~nr has received many nicks in. his atesta lned many a grievous wound. v~aice hast coarsened and deepened, and t0~e, range, and flexibility. For real VVsbnsip he has, substituted a set of vaudeville" tricks-changing from I44an. to' English in the middle of a amt ormakting liberal use of the heartful slb. His program was planned on *a cross between a rummage sale ands wolealedress house. *M fist group was a set of Scandanavian l , af sowing the influence of Brahms a 10Uac Strauss, and all dull. The PQ% of tteet was. that these four songs wr~ectively, in Norwegian, Finnish, dsand Danish; and were obviously as vehicles for Mr. Melchior's linguis- ;6!osity rather than for any intrinsic w Mw hintU of his old prowess could be' x~& tho Wagner group: Lohengrin's Nv. and Winterstuerme from Die Wal- we" asmply and eloquently sung; less #t ecsyrwere the Pride Song from Meis- and The Steersman's Song from :. 1Dudtchmaantoo much schmalz e, oweerit is impossible to sing gip'e44war horses straight. Xr 7elohior's style is hardly suited to 1 Nutetiea of Lieder singing, and Sehu- r lchamanun group had neither warmth "tlht sense of intimaey expected of the lam/ I' we I inger. In Schubert's Doppel- the; diction was poor: Mr. Mel- shieaar.5ananavian ah's for Gelman t 6% n der Atlas the mausical line was litiet' li- MIelchior sustaining the # 'b.yond their proper values. weer U),r. Melchior's selections, Mr. e Ropth.,Performed on the piano, among Ohr things, Lizt's transcription of the I~tod from' Tristan und Isolde, and his Vryamornt of Ravel's Bolero. The ex- "FinceofU bearing the Bolero played on pt-is not unlike being trepanned without -Harvey Gross I*Ur of the harm that is done in this ~' - Q4e to people .who want to feel impor- )'7zy on't mean to do harm - but the AMdoes not Interest them. Or heyr do not see it, 'or they justify it 7lp Ue they are absorbed in the endless Tothink wellof ;themselves. It is true that the facts dealig ih o canini will furnish extenuatine icua n and sufficient public pressre whiPauv be exerted to allow him toenr ciax try. But many other lesser-knwn ait:a publicized people now ire thiscuty trying to enter it, face por i-ecir or internment because of thesrcIn tation that can be used against them i defenseless condition. If the nation's congressmen hawi ,_ been more honest about rotcile of speech and thought in thscuty" should have followed the xmpeci1 tain, where Parliament rcen;y r1 ''_ pass a similar proposed anti-sbeao ket law, choosing to deal wt ahm dual case as the problem cm p Instead, most of our congesenc- have the guts to return to terhm aa tory for reelection and report tothira1 ors that they would not yield o r ep, hysteria that demanded the M~ai As a result of their. _t ;, .ei country need only vwit 2 oe .'aI see the beginning of thel ny(i- can be committed unr teThena a curity Act. On October 2,tex' thirty cdays after the passagebill foreth are up, and all suspctedand --nns' versives must have Ten. egser_.I that day, the Justice Depr, en gin its roundup andlga roe° against those people in politi alcshadecyubjec gation. The Toscanini case is onlyce mI.'a ing that the.United States isabutt .' one of the blackest pages inteck American civil liberties.Wecx l that when Congress re Convne nIet, ber 27, public opinion wil,-1a' s ficient pressure so as to b;tgxc form of this bill that svr' our traditional rights, MarineCrsV RDEP. GORDON IL.Mcoo'h has offered for sale totl'i' the letter he received( as Truman that stirred ut: et. regard to the Marine Cor. Ic table act, designed tokepaxac that has been settledasmc s settled and that should gv x~ important business. Rep. McDonoughprn 4 give the proceedsfrm 'e A II Marine Corps Leagesoh-a cused of profiteerin' pronI^a money goes. But, Ikal tITe tives he is up for reeee..i ; ing attention to* his br Tief k r attention, he can be u _ e i cxl. ~n:-t iwill be heldI 'a n Fll'con,7 p.m. n Soetc ofMechani- a" as Anul moker, p~Y1. coi 3-CUnion. Mr. T; n ° 'ic-pesident Re- 1~, , il pekon "Your 7 Al enineeingstudents xho Caib: usiness and I~~~ 1c a :? p.m., League. ?. t 'm pprPeninsula , .~ isor CUb) will meet in,, 3 Angll (Hall. If inter- * I i .minnglease attend. -''" afei feld work is to be 1 'id ay he participants in "icaXi:8 p.m., Rackharn e.e Dr. James Moffett ci n "The Great Lakes ioFisheries." Public in- ''UU AtsChorale: Regular 'ci 1 7 pn., Lane Hall. All t be ) neeled to be present. ci c- an arcoach because he a riara thsoynar. Mr. Chris- -~-'i hile :Frnk Leahy as a ge' materthe other day, 3~~i s c;t e that Frank's a aeel a icknglast Saturday ci.icc-, hi (i"dcate that Leahy asi, to Ralph Chris- 'amis o tke heloss like a oatterethe matter, and a.~~~ -'' .xt onie and the 'a' ei ~e rstof the season. a ata god team and a e ' ". ;ndunlssI miss my 'a '1"_be Champions of The ~ae a in his ear! w.ugn Mossner '52 7' "[MN aountof care or 'n o~ t'O~lrO s ncessary for ux-ixat lltims.A ship '<' I let i ustaleand will -A th'rSehopenhauer. ;, . A'7R.to know too V~~~~ na >c o uch. People 'I' en he one though they cit ~in caled upon to mciax-eiestofollow the -_amul Butler. some prints available for rental in 510 Administration Building. We will be open on Thurs., Oct. '12, 2 to 5 p.m. Those who have- already rented one, may take; another print at this time. Rostelers: Meeting, 7:30 p.m. Thurs., Oct. 12, League. Slides of AYH group in New Hampshire and Maine last summer. Young Democrats: Meeting, Thurs., Oct. 12, 7:30 p.m., Union. Election of Vice president and campaign strategy plans will be made. University Marketing Club pre- sents Mr. Henry L. Schmutz, Di- rector of Sales Education, Kelvi- nator Division, Nash-Kelvinator Corp., who will speak on "The Training of Salesmen," Thurs., Oct. 12, 7:30 p.m., 130 Business Administration. Open to the pub- lic. Fifty-Ninth Year Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staf f Jim Brown......... Managing Editor Paul Brentlinger ......City Editor Roma Lipsk~y.......Editorial Director Dave Thomas ,.,.~:..... Feature Editor Janet Watts .. ..... Associate Editor Nancy Bylan ........ Associate Editor James Gregory ...... Associate Editor Bill. Connolly......Sports Editor Bob Sandell .. Associate. Sports Editor, Bill Brenton . Associate Sports Editor Barbara Jans ........ Women's Editor Pat Brownson Associate Women's Editor Business Staff Bob Daniels .......Businiess Manager Walter Shapero Assoc. Business Manager Paul Schaible .... Advertising Manager Bob Mersereau ...... Finance Manager Carl Breitkreitz .. Circulation Manager 'Tele phone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press. isexclusIvely. entitled to the use foyr republication of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited to this newspaper. All rights of republication of all other matters herein are also reserved. Entered at the Past Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan. as second-class mail mater Subscription during regular sokool v ear: by carrier, $6.00; by mail, $7.00. 1. 1:- y~.etEaeS AndIl ci iconeprob";lem- I'd rush in myself, but ! have an urgent business meeting, to do with Fairy God fathers Day. Can't keep these big press