JR THE MICHIGAN DAILY II I Iel-Intimiation T EWITHDRAWAL of the Hopwood' win- ner "War Sky" from the Inter-Arts Un- ion Festival is an example of the fear and narrow self-preservation that can result from the current vogue of thought control. Though the withdrawal is an internal situation to be decided solely by the mem- bers of IAU, the manner in which they made their decision and the final reasons they gave for the cancellation are too sig- nificant to be ignored. The cancellation was blamed on a breach >f faith with IAU by the author in releas- ing unauthorized "publicity of a political na- ture" concerning his play. This, IAU claimed was not in keeping with its objectives: the ;resentation of student works solely on the basis'of artistic interest and excellence. The so-called unauthorized publicity oc- curred when the play's author and an actor discussed its pacifist theme outside of the IAU inner circle. To. the Inter Arts this was a violation of Editorials published in The Michigan Daily~ are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: BOB VAUGHN some inviolable rule that they invoked be- cause of the content material of the play. They were obviously afraid that if this in- formation became general knowledge they would be called a pacifist organization and subsequently a Communist front. Their fear became evident in their at- tempt to keep the play and the cancellation out of the public's reach. The story of their decision was not released by them but rather was intended to be kept another IAU secret. However; the fear of public reaction to this particular play is not well founded. Genera- tion previously printed the work and neith- er the magazine nor the University received public condemnation. As long as Inter-Arts remains behind the insipid excuse of "breach of promise" it must be assumed that pressure, either external or internal, was applied to force the cancellation. Where the pressure came from, can only be conjectured. The Uni- versity, though calling the play controver- sial, cleared it for production. By cancelling the performance and excus- ing itself on such meager grounds, the IAU has lost the individuality that was its main asset. An organization that should have been unconcerned over the stigma of name-calling and politics has bowed to a fear of expected public opinion. Leonard Greenbaum Should We Arm Spain? A T LAST, after five wasted years there is an American ambassador in Madrid. Now the question is how much longer it will take our government to recognize the mili- tary importance of the Spanish peninsula. All over the world we are expanding our air bases so that, in the event- of Russian aggression, our air force can strike quickly and. hard at the Soviet war machine. We have recently opened another big air field in England. We are building a new base on on the island of Cyprus. We are streng- thening our installations in North Africa and throughout the Middle East. And we are working constantly to improve our bases on Okinawa and other Pacific islands. Yet we are not arming Spain. It is impossible to find a reason for not arming Spain consistent with our foreign policy. The objectof that policy is to use every possible means at our command to defend ourselves. Defense is our reason for supporting Tito's Yugoslavia. Even though his government, is a copy of Stalin's, we have kept his army alive with American food this winter. We help him, not because of his form of govern- ment but because his army is Europe's best. Our Seventh Fleet is protecting Formosa from invasion by the Chinese Communists. The reason for this is not American support of the corruptness in the Nationalist re- gime. We defend Formosa because it is in a strategic position in the defense of our own Pacific back door. Our government is considering rearming Japan and Geimany. We are not anxious to put guns back in the hands of the enemies we have so recently defeated. But Japanese industry and manpower are essential to the defense of the Pacific area. German indus- try and manpower are essential to the de- fense of Western Europe. For our own defense we are aiding anti- Russian nations all over the world. We are helping these nations for their strategic value, not supporting governments with whose policies we do not agree. For this reason we must arm Spain regardless of its government's fascist nature. At the present time we do not have enough divisions in Western Europe to stop Stalin if he decides to attack. If communist armies oerrun Europe and our bases there are lost, we will have lost our only means of striking back-air power. It is this threat which makes it imperative for us to build bases for our air force in every strategic area of the world. Strategically, Spain is ideally situated for air force installations. Spain is the only part of Western Europe which can be held with the troops now there. The rugged Pyrenees mountain chain is the only natural barrier in Western Europe defensible without a large land army. While we are going through the lengthy process of rearming and sending troops to the rest of Western Europe, we must arm the existing Spanish troops. With modern American weapons and vehicles, a well armed, highly mobile Spanish army could defend the Pyrenees almost indefinitely against land forces. Meanwhile our air force, based in Spain and protected by Spaniards, could deliver the bombs to the aggressor. If our defense is to be realistic and our foreign policy consistent, our government must recognize Spain as a vital military as- set. -Bruce Cohan. Con ..., THAT THESE ARE hysterical times no one needs to reiterate. But an appalling ef- fect of this democracy's hysteria is a kind of super-analytical approach to the global crisis in a conscious attempt to bury our own confusion in a welter of expedient argu- ments. In the case of Spain, the result has been the bland prostitution of Western ideals for the solace of military pseudo-rationalization. The Colonel Blimps of this cold war have developed a blind spot to what they regard as clumsy encumbrances but which less dog- matic thinkers feel are the indispensable principles of the free world. Into this breach in their visual field the Blimps hurl lumps of geography, history, strategy and frequent apology in a furious effort to be "logical," "objective" but above all, dispassionate. When that type of thought pattern be- gins to creep down to the college level then it is time to wonder and to examine the specific assertions of its holders. These usually run to redundant references to Ti- to, Formosa, air bases, manpower and those rugged standbys, the Pyrenees. But tacticians citing these perennials manage to miss at least one very pertinent consideration inherent in each of them. Any comparison of Tito's position in Yu- goslavia to that of Francisco Franco's in Spain breaks down upon the introduction of an overriding consideration: if we do not aid Tito, Tito will fall and his country will return to Soviet domination; if we do not aid Franco, Spain will remain just where she is untIl there are more reasonable argu- ments to justify Western action on either side of the problem. The analogy to the Korean War and our "protection" of Formosa is equally faulty. Our neutralization of the island, and its purpose of safeguarding the sup- ply lines of the "UN's operation in that area, destroy the validity of any compari- son. Air bases-a commodity which it seems we shall not lack if present projects in Europe, Africa and Asia progress-would admittedly be a fine thing to have in strategic spots. But is Spain one of them? What worthwhile target can we blast from the Iberian penin- sula that we cannot hit equally well from bases in Atlantic Pact nations or from our burgeoning African and near eastern fields? Perhaps France. This brings us to a point which Franco- philes overlook with a completeness born either of ignorance or a painful awareness of a yawning in their rational awning. The French, Italians, Belgians and Dutch can arrive at only one conclusion if we build bases in Spain-those bases will be our means of destroying their countries when we pull out on them. To establish such bases, knowing the consequences for Western Europe's morale and will to resist the Soviets, would be idiocy. The prospect of an addition to our Atlan- tic Pact land forces which Franco dangles before our eyes is an understandably pleas- ant one. But the efficacy of the fighting men of a nation which maintains thousands in permanent imprisonment is questionable. If Franco finds such measures necessary to maintain himself the logical assumption is that his grip on Spanish loyalties is shaky. In fact Madrid observers for almost all per- iodicals report that had developments in this country not seemed to be favoring Franco, he would now be either dead or exiled. Ah-but those Pyrenees! They seem a good, solid argument if their ever was one, but their validity as a factor to be consider- ed in this case is debatable. For they are passable and have been passed by almost ev- ery land-bound conqueror ever to roam the battlefields of Europe. But these same people who would aid Spain -stress that airpower will keynote future conflicts. In an air war no moun- DORIS FLEESON: 1ipartisan Prob lems WASHINGTON-The report that Sen. Ar- thur Vandenberg is losing ground in his fight for life coincides with a low ebb in the fortunes of the'bipartisan foreign pol- icy to which his name imperishably at- taches. Those who believe in that policy have always praised Mr. Vandenberg; now, with the Michigan Senator's" condition worsening, they are tremendously con- cerned over finding a successor who can reforge his policy for the battles that lie ahead. No obvious choice presents itself. Senator Lodge is too young, his seniors will not follow him. Most GOP seniors of stature did not wholly share the Vandenberg views. Envy among the Democrats has con- tributed to widening the gap between the White house and Republican Senators who might have been induced to make the fight. Yet a clear Republican call for a new bipartisan foreign policy has come from the Senate. True, Senator Duff of Pennsylvania is a freshman; he has literally taken a back seat in the chamber for two months and has yet to make his maiden speech there. But when he speaks up outside Washing- ton, as he does with increasing frequency, it is clear that the Republicans will shortly find themselves with a Paul Douglas of their own on their hands. Senator Duff does not put that gloss upon the passing show that a party's interest presumably demands or people are supposed to prefer. The details don't fret him; as with Senator Vandenberg, his interest is for the central fact-we are at war in Korea, the national emergency is real. ENATOR DUFF demanded in Philadel- phia this week that the foreign policy of the United States be put back on a bi- partisan basis so we can avert all-out war with Russia if possible or if not, win it. For the benefit of President Truman the Pennsylvania Senator said that any impartial observer knew that many Am- ericans mistrust the foreign policy of the United States. For all hands he said one person and one party couldn't put togeth- ''er a fully accredited foreign policy. For his own colleagues, he had the emphatic message that it was a tremendous disser- vice to arouse distrust of our military lea- ders. "We are not prepared-we can only be safe if we are prepared for the worst," Sen- ator Duff declared. ** * THIS IS SPARTAN gospel which most po- liticians are resisting as Congress drags along with major legislation stalled. Sena- tor Taft's further challenge to the current drift is plain talk. "America was aroused to the necessity of military preparation by the sudden and unprovoked outbreak of the war in Korea," he said. "But, strangely enough, the longer the Korean war lasts, the more conclusively it proves that Russia is willing to risk World War III rather than reach a peaceful end to the war in Korea. "The fact that we are taking the situ- ation in Korea so casually proves beyond doubt that as a nation we have tempor- arily lost contact with the hopes and fears and aspirations of our boys in the battle line and with the threat they are there to meet. Senator Duff has a table-stakes person- ality, about as different from the genius of Senator Vandenberg for accommodation as could be imagined, but he also serves who forces people to face the facts. (copyright, 1951, by the Bell syndicate, Inc.) The Capitol Hill Military Academy AYETTE, AN TEE f WE R0TRPEPOS'. VC FILL YOU SEE WHENM( fE M 1. WE PROPOSE To CONj(S OF TiE RYES TALK R our APPROVES, ALOti4Gi Tis LiIl l k Y IF (T TAKES /E'VE .JS' ALL SUMMER TFGU+E { - 4 ette4 TO THE EDITOR The Daily welcomes communications from its readers on matters of general interest, and will publish all letters which are signed by the writer and in good taste. Letters exceeding 300 words in length, defamatory or libelous letters, and letters which for any reason are not in good taste will be condensed, edited or withheld ,from publication at the discretion of the editors. .1 ON THE Washington Merry-Go-Round with DREW PEA RSON (Ed. Note: Drew Pearson is on a flying tour of Europe and the Middle East; surveying the world situation.) ROME.-The inside fact about the new armament program just voted by the Italian parliament is that it was put across only after some heroic backstage wire-pulling which few people, even those in official life, know about. The behind-the-scenes story illustrates what terrific uphill obstacles the United States faces in both rearming Europe and inspiring internal reforms over here. The rearmament move really began when foreign minister Count Carlo Sforza, a great friend of the United States, became worried about the bad press Italy was getting in the United States and asked some of his American newspaper friends about it. Their reply was "Don't you realize that American boys are dying in Korea, that we all face possible war with Russia, yet Italy is doing nothing about it? The American people are getting tired of protecting the rest of the world." Rearmament was not in Sforza's bailiwick. Furthermore, it was not in the bailiwick of certain Americans connected with the Marshall Plan who talked to Sforza about rearmament. Both were on delicate ground because he risked offending Italian generals; Marshall Plan officials because they risked offending U.S. Ambassador James Dunn, who, follows the old-fashioned diplomatic theory that you must not jog the elbow of foreign governments regarding domestic -policies and he was reluctant to crack down on the snail-like pace of Italian re- armament. However, Sforza finally came up with a 26-page rearmament plan which was so confidential that it was given to ECA officials in the Rome railroad station by Sforza's deputy, so they wouldn't be seen together. The ECA officials sent back word that the proposed plan chiefly called for more expenditures by the already overburdened American taxpayer and that any real Italian rearmament plan must also provide for Italian sacrifices. More conferences fol- lowed, out of which was finally evolved the $400,000,000 arms bill okayed by the Italian Parliament last week. MONEY WASTED BY ARMY THE NEW Italian arms bill can bring about a complete end of com- munism here, provided Italy is able to get all-too-scarce steel, alu- minum and copper from the United States., For the new program should reactivate the northern automobile and tank factories, which have been virtually idle since the war, and wipe out Italian unem- ployment-the chief cause of Communism. However, the inside fact is a lot of money will also be wasted under Italian arnment. The army, for instance, still maintains huge farmts, theoretically for breeding cavalry horses. Though the cavalry has long since passed from use, the army clique refuses to relinquish its vast landed estates and Minister of Defense Randolfo Pacciardi, a devotee of David Dubinsky and the International Ladies Garment Workers, hasn't dared to buck the military hierarchy to bring about needed economies. In fact, Pacciardi has quietly ap- pealed to American military advisers to pressure him for these econo- mies. This illustrates in Italian bureaucracy something which would make Senator Byrd faint. Commerce Minister Ivan Matteo Lon- bardo, commenting privately on this bureaucracy, once remarked "I have 13 stenographers. If I could fire all but three of them I could get some work done, but with 13 they just get in each other's way." This bureaucracy has piled up so many government servants that 86 per cent of the social insurance paid in by the workers goes to pay for government administration. Repeatedly, since the war, the work- ers have had their premium payments for social security raised but not once have their insurance benefits been raised. The increase goes to pay bureaucrats' salaries. (Copyright, 1951, by the Bell Syndicate, Inc.) McGee Case .. . To the Editor: TO THE DAILY editors I wish to express my heartfelt gratitude for their interest in the Willie Mc- Gee case. I have felt that in writ- ing their columns each has written with nothing but the noblest as- pirations, always bearing in mind the great responsibility of the press in upholding all that is just and true. The editors have not striven for sensational effect for its own sake. They have written as their con- sciences have dictated, I am sure. It is not for us to condemn their consciences for subordinating the injustice of the McGee case to the danger of agreeing on any point with the so-called subversive groups in this country. We must oppose the subversives on every issue. That is the only rational thing to do if we hope to retain our democracy. In no event must we permit ourselves to become emotionally stirred by pity, the sense of right, or the love for mankind when greater things are at stake. I must confess that I have per- mitted my interest in the McGee case to be motivated largely by my pity for a man unjustly treated. (I have even considered the absurd idea of prayer.) Now I realize my folly and shall henceforth look to such persons as Cal Samra, Roma Lipsky, Bob Keith and Ron Watts for the guidance I need in doing what is right. I'm sure that Rosalie McGee too is most grateful to the above- mentioned editors for their ob- jectivity and sincerity in helping her to save her husband. -Francis R. Dixon, '52. himself with more than one musi- cian friend when he attends amcon- cert. Perhaps then his sentiments could de directed toward more re- liable and constructive criticism. In any case, musicians of the sta- ture and caliber of a Heifetz are few in number, and we shall con- tin-e to feel that it is a rare privi- lege to hear this fine artist. -Wendell Nelson, Grad. School of Music. Heifetz Review . 0 0 fleif etz Review . * 0 r HOTEL UNIVERSE, by Philip Barry. Presented by the Arts Theater Club at 2092 East Washington. The second of the Arts Theater Club's series of theater-in-the-round experiments began its two-week run last night and, while it did fare so well as the group's ear- lier "Respectable Prostitute," it seemed to me as much a case of the play as of the players. "Hotel Universe" is a talky, heavily-in- flected piece of drama. It involves a num- - ber of familiar types: the world-weary, introspective, and very, very brittle people of Fitzgerald and Hemingway's "lost gen- eration." At thirty they are suffering from a vicious ennui which causes them, for the major part of the play, to ask each other such questions as "how can anyone believe he matters any?," and to wonder about "the location of Man in the Uni- verse." Superimposed upon this is a layer of ro- mantic fantasy worthy of another Barry (or Barrie): the "chance-to-do-it-all-over-. again" device-"Dear Brutus" turned into psycho-drama, but with surprisingly few variations. Everything hangs upon the proper mix- ture of these two elements. There is the building of a mood, a temper, rather than the construction of a situation: the sort of ,-, ni+ aidpn1n v i+wi +n tthe intimae-v of To the Editor: MUSICAL criticism in The Daily reached a new low with the pitifully inadequate review of the recent Heifetz concert. Mr. Gross seems totally incapable of recog- nizing great music when he hears it. Heifetz is one of those rare musical geniuses who carefully molds and shapes every musical phrase that he plays. Making mu- sic is his foremost concern. Mere virtuosity alone hasn't given Heifetz the continued success and popularity that he's had in this country ever since his New York debut at Carnegie Hall in 1917. His pure tone and fine musical inter- pretation have been aci:1aimed by musicians and critics all over the world. Artur Nikisch, former on- ductor of the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra, stated without reserva- ti-n that the violin playing of Hei- fetz was the greatest he'd ever heard. "Armed with a score," Mr. Gross asserts that Heifetz distorts Bee- thoven's tempo indication. It's dif- ficult to find proof of such a state- ment unless Mr. Gross was also armed x th a metronome. We sug- gest that Mr. Gross forget about the score and listen with undivided attenton tc the music. Such ill - chosen phrases as "straight-forward Beethoven" and "Debussy's ice-cold Sonate" are meaningless without a definition of terms. Mr.. Gross ought to surround To the Editor: ACCORDING TO music hyper- critic Harvey Gross, he has troubles. That was very much in evidence in his reviews of the Budapest String Quartet several weeks ago. But on Wednesday evening Har- vey came to the Heifetz concert 'ai red with a score" of the Keutzer Sonata. Unfortunately, it dlc n't do him a darned bit of good! One-fourth of his space was de- voted to the matter of playing ie- peats in the first and third move- ments. As it happens, these repeats in the Kreutzer are almost never played by any artist. From repeats, Harvey turned to tempo. Alas! The scoundre'l Heifetz had modified the Beethoven tempo markings of Adagio and Presto Referring to my score of the Kreutzer this morning (Thursday), I found that there are only twelve measures in the body of the first movement and eight in the Finale marked "Adagio." Heifetz, of course, does not play in strict metronomic tempo. Neither do Toscanini, Schnabel, Szigetti, and Koussevitsky. Nor would Beetho- ven, were he alive today 'I I could continue writing about the "Gross" inadequacies of last night's review, but rather I would like to offer as constructive cri- tii ;m what Harvey should have emphasized. Heietz's technique was superb. And in most lyrical passages h4s tone was truly glorious, altriough at several times it seemed some- what harsh. This was espenial y noticeable in the Kreutzer. In addition, Heifetz night have been legitimately criticized for having played the first movement of the sonata too fast-so fast that the music was hai'd to com- prehend. When there is a Cincinnati S1.mlfeny concert with a shat .o v program and brassy playing, one should rot be afraid to kn act down. But a critic should never waste space on trivia at the ex- pense of missing the main points. --Dave Belin. * * * . Function of Art . . JOY TO the world! We have our own cause celebre. Now that Justice Black has stayed , McGee's demise we can look to a little matter right here on campus; i.e. the Inter-Arts Un- ion's ban on Rosenberg's play. The reasons the IAU gives are too obviously baseless for much of an attack. But just when have play producers started to surpress publicity of any kind? The motivation for this ban seems buried in the myriad com- mittees of the IAU and University, but essentially they arise from i t r r s i 1 f a i one cause; the play is possibly subversive. The main objection along this line is that the play is anti-war and that it would bring into open the conflict of campus between the Patriots and those without draft deferments. There, I said it! It's in the open. The IAU in the name of art has shut its gates upon this conflict. But "art" is only meaningful when expressive. And to cut off a part of expression because of its political ramifications is to travel the road of the Ivory Tower and diletantism. Even more important than the fate of the IAU is the attitude that brought this play into dis- pute. If we have freedom it must be the freedom of others to ex- press opinion we hate or else it's meaningless. I personally disagree with the politics Rosenberg's play points to, but I believe that ev- eryone should have an opportun- ity to hear both sides so that they can decide for themselves. This involves another problem; that of sponsorship. One can tol- erate a divergent opinion so long as it isn't bothersome, but it takes something else to sponsor that op- inion in order to see that it gets a hearing. That something else the University didn't have in the Phillips case, nor the IAU in this. Maybe that something else is courage. No doubt, in practical effect, this' letter will be ineffective. Or- ganizations are notorious when it comes to defending their positions rather than re-examing them. But next to doing wrong, silence is most despicable. -Eliot S. Gerber Summation . . To the Editor, Frankly it takes the editors of the Daily so many issues and so many columns to express the sim- ple will of the college community that one may well end up missing the forest for the trees. If you continue in such puffed-up over- elaboration and bloated discur- siveness, you will merely convince people that Thomas Wolfe is the saint in your shrine. Without injustice, I can sum up in a phrase everything you and practically all the students have had to say for the last three weeks: "A stay of doom for Willie and Bobby and instant -death for Harvey." Trenton Smith z x1 4 Sixty-First Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Jim Brown.............Managing Editor Paul Brentlinger.........City Editor Roma Lipsky ........ Editorial Director Dave Thomas............Feature Editor Janet Watts............Associate Editor Nancy Byan............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'A Bob Daniels.......Business Manager Walter Shapero Assoc. Business Manager Paul Schaible.....Advertising Manager Bob Mersereau......Finance Manager Bob Miller.... ,....Circulation Manager Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for 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 Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan as second-class mail r' matter. Subscription during regular school year: by carrier, $6.00; by mail, $7.00. *' The Battle Rages DUCK! The battle is on. A man has drawn a bow across some gut, another man has recorded his reaction to the resilting sounds. and vet another has BARNABY 4i It's not that they're not But tthink just plain white sheets are tu4mm~dby Tbo son 17by14t4, Ilj I r ,I.l I