THE MICHIGAN DAILY FM AY, APRIL 27, 1951 .. . Ab Defense DORIS FLEESON: "Want To Vote Against Isolationism In My Country?" GOV. WILLIAMS, Prof. Rensis Likert, and atomic scientist Ralph Lapp exhausted 1 hour of precious ABC time last Tuesday wrangling over how to improve civilian fense against the atomic bomb. They proceeded on the assumption that oreign bombers can penetrate our domes- ic defenses and that consequently we must ucus our attention on saving as many of ur citizens as possible once a Bomb has een dropped. They agreed that a broader, more effec- e plan of civil defense must be instituted. effect, they also agreed that a plan for e evacuation of our cities is necessary; that Secretary of Civil Defense be appointed to e President's Cabinet; that each state pro- le for medical aid, fire fighting, emer- ncy communication, trained research, and ssemination of information on the A- omb. Prof. Likert defended the dispersal plan, lich would spread out a city's industries id houses. Williams said that civil defense iould be raised to an equal rank with the ilitary ... and so on. Although the arguments for civil de- ense were convincing, this Town Meeting's esembled a boy scout symposium on first id. The speakers' emphasis on first aid mea- res was unfortunate and left us wondering tiether our lives were safe, even in the nfines of dear old Ann Arbor Town. Some- ing seemed to be missing. Certainly, a operly-organized civil defense program one couldn't be the answer to the A-Bomb 'oblem. One question-addressed to Lapp-touched lefly the real crux of the problem: "Are ir radar screens adequate?" To this, Lapp initted the common fact that there are itorials published in The Michigan Daily e written by members of The Daily staff d represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: RON WATTS The weekendI many discrepancies in our present radar screen. He estimated that 70 per cent of an enemy's, bombers could slip through un- d ected. Here was the heart of the problem. But the speakers didn't grasp it and flitted again, to bickering over civil defense. Actually The Town Meeting resembled the naive directions of the official U.S. Govern- ment report, "Survival Under Atomic At- tack." In that report, we are led to believe that if we assiduously follow certain direc- tions, we might get away with nothing more than' blisters. Thus, when alerted of approaching Rus- sian planes, among other things, we are to slip on a full-length, loose-fitting, light-. colored outfit, clap on a hat, close windows and doors, shut off our oil burners, pick up a flashlight and a Geiger Counter, grab a copy of Liebmann's "Peace of Mind," dive into the cellar, crawl along side a wall, bury our faces in our arms, and wait... . This type of planning might reduce the num- ber of casualties after an atomic raid, but our main effort should be directed toward keeping enemy bombers out of American ter- ritory. Our only real defense, then, is a powerful airforce and an extensive radar set-u . At present, both are admittedly de- ficient. They must be enlarged and strength- ened to the point that enemy bombers can be detected and met before they are able to unload their destructive Bombs. -Cal Samra. - I music IL In Town EvENTS THAT ARE MORE INTEREST- ING ,THAN OTHER EVENTS IN ANN ARBOR THIS WEEKEND: DANCES BIG SCOOP is one of two dances of Frosh Weekend. Sponsored by the Blue team of freshmen women, the dance's theme is news- papers, or perhaps the frenzied excitement and glamor that the public supposes is con- nected with newspapers. At the League to- night, with Ted Smith's orchestra. * * * MAKE MINE MOCASSIN is the Maize team's offering, with an Indian (ugh and teepee type Indian) theme. Tomorrow night at the League, also with Smith's orchestra. UNION DANCE, as usual, tomorrow night, at the Union. UNION SUNDAY NIGHT ENTERTAIN- MENT, dancing, card playing, etc., 7:30 to 10:30 p.m. Sunday. DRAMA MISTER BOLFRY, a comedy by the con- temporary, British playwright James Bridle, opens tonight at the Arts Theatre Club, the latest in their current series. The play con- cerns the struggle between a minister, his niece, with the Devil taking a hand in mat- ters. At the Club's theatre, 209/2 E. Wash- ington St. * * * BILL OF ONE-ACTERS, featuring an ori- ginal work by a grad student, J. D. Jackson, "Century," and three other works by Shakes- peare, Noel Coward, and Percy.and Denham. ("Ladies in Retirement.") ° Today and to- morrow, 8 p.m., Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. MOVIES YOU'RE IN THE NAVY NOW, (reviewed in some publications as U.S.S. Teakettle), is generally considered one of the year's fun- niest comedies. It concerns the tribulations of Gary Cooper and his crew who have to man a ship with an experimental type of engine that is, to say the least, undepend- able. Saturday and Sunday at the Michigan. GREEN FOR DANGER, a mystery with a zany detective, said to be pretty good stuff, at the Architecture Auditorium today and tomorrow, 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. THE SWORD OF MONTE CRISTO, with George Montgomery, is based on the Dumas story. In supercinecolor. At the State today and tomorrow. * * * I CAN GET IT FOR YOU WHOLESALE, with Susan Hayward and Dan Dailey, is an, adaptation from the Jerome Weidman novel about the garment industry. Sunday at the State. LIGHTNING STRIKES TWICE stars Ruth "She's-All-Woman!", Roman, may be seen at the Michigan today. *From adver- tisement. h V "4'1'1 V% 1 .",L l f1 %* IN A CORDIAL PERFORMANCE marked by technical proficiency and genuine musical feeling, the Collegicum Musicum presented some seldom-heard Bach ensemble music last night. The overflow crowd was regaled with a firm execution of the majestic intricacies of Bach, an execution doubtless achieved through long hours of practice and one which was well up to professional stand- ards. In the Sonata 3, the group was particular- ly good in contrasting the melancholy solem- nity of the largo and dignity of the andante with the wonderful humor and vibrancy of the two allegro movements. The harpsichord, an instrument which; has unfortunately been shoved into near obscur- ity by later instrumental developments, hap- pily received its proper respect in much of last night's music. Ricerara 6, a six-part fugue in which the half-dozen players showed skillful handling of the interplay among the instruments cli- maxed the program and was a fine conclu- sion to the evening. But the general excellence of the. per- formance was somewhat scuttled by poor arranging which placed an audience of more than two hundred in a, Rackham Hall room which comfortably seats just above half that number. Music cannot help but lose some of its flavor when the audience is sardined into a vastly overcrowded and over humid room. Someone opened some windows during inter- mission and the second half of the program was improved for many. Despite this, how- -ever, the ensemble rose above its environ- ment and again pointed up the need for more satisfactory concert facilities on this campus. -Roma Lipsky Dave Thomas A FOURTH BILL of One-Act Plays, presented by the speech department, opened last night at Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre and will be presented again at 8 p.m. today. A detailed review will appear in to- morrow's Daily. Sen. Moody WASHINGTON - Vice-President Barkley tacitly gave permission to the press galleries to break the rules and applaud when one of their own, Blair Moody, was sworn in as Senator of the United States. They took advantage of that tolerance; the handsome young successor to Arthur H. Vandenberg is liked for his friendliness, ad- mired for his hard work. It is a safe bet that 99 per cent of Moody's . former colleagues envy him. They, too, have been watching Senators and are perfectly certain that anything Senators do the correspondents could do better. Incidentally, no Senator who has been liberated by the voters or retired from the Senate has ever made the journey upstairs to the press galleries and scooped the corres- pondents. That-may be another precedent Senator Moody will break. His friends hope the Michigan voters will want his services permanently, since that is his wish. It has occurred to them, however, that if said voters don't and Moody returns to the fold, they will have to be on their toes because former Senators enjoy the privilege of the floor at all times. Ordinary corres- pondents are not allowed on the floor or in the cloakrooms while the Senate is in ses- sion; they may go in after adjournment and nab their quarry if they. can. * * * TT IS WIDELY anticipated that Senator Moody will appear in still another role next year-floor manager at the Democratic National Convention for a favorite-son can- didate for President, an in-earnest candidate for Vice-President. Gov. G. Mennen Williams, who appoint- ed Moody, is young, attractive and from a pivotal state. These are ideal qualifica- tions for a Veep, especially if the head of the ticket is an older man and not a Governor, specifications that almost cer- tainly will fit the 1952 Democratic nomi- nee. It must have occurred to Governor Wil- liams when he chose Moody that he was also answering some of the criticisms made of himself. He is alleged to be too liberal along the lines of Americans for Democratic Ac- tion. But he rejected their candidate who was for a long time regarded as the leading Pos- sibility. He is alleged to be a sort of stooge for such hard-headed labor leaders as Walter Reuther, this view pictures him as the rich and well-bred type, but strictly show win- dow for the CIO. But Walter Reuther is ob- jecting that he wanted the labor Mayor of Grand Rapids, nor was a courtesy offer of the place made to Reuther which had also been forecast. SENATOR MOODY could do that conven- tion job well. He is famously energetic and his acquaintance is vast. The women delegates could also be ex- pected to warm up to his dimples. Up to now, Capitol guides have reported that the lady gallerygoers more often ask who Senator Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr., Massa- chusetts Republican, is, than any other Senator. They are already saying that they thing the Democrats have a dream prince in Senator Moody who could conceivably nose out Lodge. Senator Lodge, incident- ally, is an ex-newspaperman too. Senator Moody is a liberal. Many of his colleagues would have guessed he was a lib- eral Republican. This may be because he was naturally very close to the Michigan Senators who were so important to his De- troit paper and they were Republicans. (Copyright, 1951, by the Bell Syndicate, Inc.) COP. m, r 'ldtcYlfI i ... +__ S ** ss') wAC*.JEth.J p0? t ON TlE 1~ashington Merry-Go-Round with DEWPEARSON '' '--. ~ =nwmwo WASHINGTON-When the Senate Armed Services Committee starts sorting out all the memos and telecom mssages exchanged be- tween the Pentagon and General MacArthur the public may become more confused than ever about who is right in the big debate. For several documents and memos prepared during various phases of the Korean campaign-if set aside from the others- could be used to prove almost any point. Furthermore, it was once a paradoxical fact that Secretary of State Acheson was much closer to General MacArthur's position re China than the Joint Chiefs of Staff. The wolf pack that always howls at Acheson's heels has been claiming he was responsible for Mac- Arthur's ouster. However, the record shows first that this was not the case; second, that following MacArthur's disastrous retreat from North Korea in early December, Acheson favored severe punitive meas- ures against China as an aggressor nation. It was the Joint Chiefs of Staff at that time which vigorously disagreed both with Acheson and MacArthur. In fact, they favor- ed pulling out of Korea altogether. * However, despite individual and sometimes confusing differences of opinion inside the Pentagon there appears to be no occasion when the Joint Chiefs of Staff actually went on record in favor of Mac- Arthur's proposals to bomb Chinese bases and use Chiang Kai-Shek's troops. * * * * - MAC ARTHUR'S PROPOSALS -- N ORDER TO GET as clear a picture as possible regarding the working of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and their policy toward Mac- Arthur, here is a breakdown on how the Joint Chiefs reacted to vari- ous of MacArthur's proposals: Bombing Chinese Bases-The nearest the Joint Chiefs ever came to okaying MacArthur's proposed bombing of Chinese bases was on Feb. 28. Just before that date, MacArthur had sent a long report on enemy air strength now capable of 65D sorties daily. He reported cer- tain strength building up in certain areas and in effect asked permis- sion to bomb these bases. Replying on Feb. 28, the Joint Chiefs gave MacArthur a set of five alternatives to counter the Chinese moves. Since these would be of value to the enemy, they cannot be described here. But in each of the five alternatives, MacArthur was instructed to take no action on the Chinese side of the Yalu River without reporting back to the Joint Chiefs for further instructions. Naval Blockade-Another question at issue in the Korean war has been a naval blockade of Chinese ports. On this, there was agreement. Both the Joint Chiefs and the State Department okayed a naval block- ade but it was vetoed by our allies in the United Nations. This was one of the proposals for which Secretary Acheson fought hardest when Prime Minister Attlee visited Washington. However, Attlee flatly re- fused to approve any naval blockade of China. . Hot Pursuit-Another point of agreement between MacArthur and the Joint Chiefs was the right of American planes to pursue Com- munist planes beyond the Chinese border when engaged in a running battle. This did not include the bombing of Chinese bases. Though the Joint Chiefs agreed to this, either the State Department or the national security council disapproved-I have not been able to ascer- tain which. Chiank Kai-Shek's Troops-This is the issue which MacArthur emphasized in his letter to ex-Speaker Joe Martin, the letter which culminated in MacArthur's dismissal. However, use of Chiang's troops never has been seriously considered by the Joint Chiefs. Different Personalities-Those close to the Joint Chiefs of Staff point out that they are composed of four different men of varying ages and personalities. Gen. Joe Collins, for instance, Chief of Staff of the army, was a Lieutenant when MacArthur was a General. When Collins went to Tokyo he was technically MacArthur's superior, though he always addressed MacArthur as "General" while MacArthur called him "Joe." Collins is the member of the Joint Chiefs who has agreed with Mac- Arthur more than anyone else. He has expressed the private belief that Russia would not intervene if we bombed China, and is reported to have expressed oral agreement with MacArthur on various points during conferences in Tokyo. Bradley has said privately that if he were in MacArthur's shoes he would probably feel as he does. But, as Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, he cannot agree, since he has to consider the entire world and how best to parcel out our limited strength. The last thing Bradley wants, he has made it clear, is to get suck- ed into a war on the Chinese mainland. Note-Pentagon observers believe MacArthur may have some of the tentative directives which are sent to different theatre command- ers in advance for their comment. These do not become approved di- rectives, however, until the Joint Chiefs have all the comment, can study them in the light of the over-all picture and then issue them of- ficially. There is a big differene between the studies of the Joint Chiefs and their final approved directives. (Copyright, 1951, by the Bell Syndicate, Inc.) r ;;: . ' . a.a XetteA6 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. I 1 i a Calling a Spade ... To the Editor:f THE WIDESPREAD belief that football at the University of Michigan is more of a business than a sport was strongly rein- forced by a report made by the Board in Control of IntercollegiateI Athletics published in part in last Sunday's Daily. According to the report, "If we should have one or two seasons in which our football team was not t among the leaders in the confer-t ence and in the country (and it would be folly to assume that this1 will not happen) we would inevit- ably be faced with a sharp reduc- tion in revenue."t The Board also emphasized that1 the gate receipts from football games provide the principal finan- cial support for the entire physicall education program at many uni- versities. Here is a suggestion which will enable our football team to con- tinue as one of the nation's lead- ing gridiron corporations thus keeping up gate receipts and con- tinuing to suppdrt our fine ath- letic program: Why not call a1 spade a spade and obtain a fran- chise in the National Professional Football League for the Ann Ar-7 bor Wolverines? The team would continue to be owned and operat- ed by the University of Michigan, as are many other things in Ann Arbor, and we could wholehearted- ly set upon the pursuit of football players without having to worry about such trivial matters as the sanity codes which J. Edgar Hoov-l er recently classed as hypocritical. In this manner, the vast resourc- es of the University of Michigan plus the vast resourcesof its alum-' ni could legitimately be used to make sure that Michigan has a top notch football team every year, and that our fine athletic pro- gram will be continued. But it is obvious that when the Board in Control of Intercolle- giate Athletics recently called tele- vision a "sleeping giant," they ob- viously meant a "growing giant," a giant that may some day replace one of the greatest monsters of them all, big time college football. -E. S. Sader * * * Willie McGee...-; To the Editor: ON MAY 8, Willie McGee is scheduled to die for the sev- enth time in the last six years. During this time, the case has evoked even international protest against this expression of "de- mocracy," and yet the Supreme Court refuses to hear the case. To the fifteen million American Negroes this is an insult. Negroes are fighting in Korea while their families back hoie are engaged in the fight against political, eco- i nomic and legal abuses. In reviewingathercase of Mr. ,cGee, it is apparent that the state of Mississippi had intended to make his cruel treatment a warning for all Negroes, and a symbol that Jim-Crow as an in- stitution is supreme in the South. The White supremacists had in- tended to intimidate the Negro people, but instead, their policy provoked world-wide protest. Some have questioned the work of the McGee Committee as being too demonstrative in its methods, saying that the Negro question in this country is of a moral char- acter, and that you can't force people's minds to change over night. Nearly one-hundred years have elapsed since the Emancipa- tion Proclamation. How long does it take to change a prejudiced mind?0 When the institution of slavery was first begun in this country, were the Negroes made slaves be- cause they were considered an in- ferior people, or was it because their cheap labor provided a high- ly profitable business for southern plantation owners? The South fought the Civil War for the right of continuing this brutal commer- cial utilization. The idea of racial inferiority was only a superficial explanation which served to con- ceal the real reason behind Negro economic exploitation. This same excuse is still being used to hide this same economic abuse. Even some Negroes believe it, but how long can you fool the people? It's too late to save the Martins- ville Seven and the hundreds of other Negro martyrs who have been lynched, whether legally or illegally. But you can save Willie McGee by writing to President Truman or Fielding Wright asking for a new trial. -Valerie Cowen '54 Myron Wahls '54 Co-chairmen of the McGee Committee Old Ironclad . . To the Editor: AFTER READING in last Sun- day's Daily that a local chap- ter of American Patriots for Rais- ing the Monitor was being organ- ized on the campus, I decided that I wanted to do'something to help. Not knowing exactly what it would be, I wrestled with the problem be- tween spasms of emotionalism. At last I came up with this little bit which I hope will aid in converting others. Long Live the .American Patriots for Raising the Monitor! OLD IRONCLAD Ay, leave her ,shattered hulk to rust! Long has she rocked below, And many a fish has swum to see The grandma of the "Mo"; Above her plies, the coastal tramp And plops the dinghy's oar;- The Yankee Cheese Box ,on a Raft Shall rout the Reb no more. Her gun revolved in turrent round, And warned the Southern foe That ne'er a band of selfish men Our Union could o'erthrow; No more her ironclad deck shall boast The strength to make men free;- Sixth Naval District brass have scorned The scourge of Slavery! Oh better that her rusted shell Should rest beneath the wave; If 'naval hearts have turned to lead, Then leave her to her grave! Let flounder man her silent gun, Let squid now grasp her wheel; For men, once bold, have lost their nerve, And only ships are steel! -Pete Hall '53 A coach speaking at a meeting of the Pacific Coast Intercollegiate Athletic Conference advised his colleagues: "We've got to do some- thing about these athletic problems or we're all going to be sun, hgh- er than a kite." We are reminded of the old saying about how a fel- low could learn some things on the football field that he could never learn in the classroom-about mix- ing metaphors, for instance. -St. Louis Post-Dispatch. 4 t. ;tI I- CJ~RRE N' MOVIE i Architecture Auditorium * GREEN FOR DANGER with Alstair Sim, Trevor Howard and Leo Genn. THE ENGLI§H seem to have a special knack for whipping together good acting, a certain quality of understatement, sus- pense and good story and turning out sensible whodunits on what appears to be a shoe- string budget. Often as not they are quite literate and exciting and this unpretentious item is no exception. The action concerns the rather tangled relationships of four or five people in a hospital during the V-2 bombardment of London. When what looks suspiciously like murder occurs the Yard sends down one of its inspectors whose methods, as it turns out, are somewhat unorthodox. The usual false leads are quickly disposed of and the investigation proceeds in a leisurely manner but with an undertone of urgency and death The identity of the murderer is not too hard to deduce; the real pleasure is watching the adroit un- raveling of the web of motive by the sur- At The Michigan . . . LIGHTNING STRIKES TWICE, with Ruth Roman, Richard Todd, and Mercedes McCambridge. THE PERS6NALITIES of the principals involved help out this one a little, but not much, and, on the whole, it cannot be regarded as any more than a particularly implausible murder mystery in which little occurs that is very interesting and even less that is mysterious. The Brothers Warner, masters of the tried-and-true, have done the old one here about the man who may have killed his former wife, and presumably has the same malicious intentions toward the new one, who is, of course the heroine. Hitchcock and Joan Fontaine have won Oscars for this type of agony, but nothing new on the sub- ject has been learned in the intervening years and a great deal seems to have been forgotten. Ruth Roman gets herself up as a formid- able candidate for First Lady of the Pot- boilers on this performance. She is much better than her material. Richar Todd follows his direction well, glaring and grin- ning on cue. Mercedes McCambridge intro- 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 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 BrownsoA Associate women's Editor Business Staff Bob Daniels........Business Manager waiter Shapero Assoc. Business Manager Paul Schaible .....Advertising Manager Sally Fish ............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 matter. Subscription during regular school year: by carrier, $6.00; by mail, $7.00. ,' BARNABY 6 r. 1- - - I- - -P. - I - W~~Neyp Neassoe You-you impossibility! You N preposteroushallucination Albert, dismiss this Now hold ; rowdy menace from J