, I w- PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1954 U I MATTR O FACT- By STEWART ALSOP AVIV-If orthodox economic theory is accepted as a guide, the dearest wish of the Arab enemies of the state of Israel seems about to be realized. This wish is, of course, the economic collapse and subsequent disin- tegration of the Israeli state. For, by any reasonable definition, Israel is flat broke and getting broker all the time. Israel's platoons of brilliant economists Fflood the inquiring visitor in statistics. But one very simple fact will serve to illustrate the real nature of Israel's situ- ation. This country is now importing at least five times the value of what it ex- ports, which is like a family spending its income several times over. If this yawning gap were not somehow made up, Israel's standard of living would, in the words of one high official here, "sink to, and probably below, the general Middle Eastern standard of living." In other words, Israel's population, predominantly of Euro- pean origin, would be forced to live at the level, say, of Egypt's miserable fellahin. As things stand, it is little short of miracu- lous that the economy of the state of Israel, as artificial as a hydroponic garden, contin- ues to function at all. Israel is a country about the size of Sicily, but with a much smaller arable land area. On this area it must somehow support three crowded cities, many large towns, and a population accus- tomed generally to a high living standard. INTERPRETING THE NEWS: WNewa Moves By J. M. ROBERTS, JR. Associated Press News Analyst THANKSGIVING DAY brought two im- portant developments in the progress of Allied defense against Communist expan- sion. One was the general agreement on a buffer zone in Korea which produced the hope-which was only that and not by any means a foregone conclusion-that there might be a cease-fire this year. The other was the general agreement in Paris on the end of the Allied occupation statute in Germany, which it was hoped would bring West Germany into the Euro- pean defense program this year. Major conditions remained in both cases. n Korea the matters of policing the truce and prisoners exchanges still had to be set- tled, and the real Coemunist. intent still was not known. Germany still had to make official the military relationship implied by Chan- cellor Adenauer's approval of the terms of the new contractural relationship which, in the absence of German unity and of Russian participation, amounts to an in- terim peace treaty. The new agreement, which virtually re- stores national sovereignty insofar as West- ern Germany is concerned, does not go into effect until Germany starts supplying troops for General Eisenhower's European Army. A cease fire in Korea would end the necessity for American concentration on that theater and permit a more general spreading of armament. Korea will still require large amounts of material and troops, but would cease to be an active rat hole. It would be a static position, and the buildup could go to Europe. Final settlement of Germany's position would give the Allies a concrete rather than a speculative base on which to estimate the resources and possibilities at its command. Editorials printed In The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writer only. This must be noted in all reprints. NIGHT EDITOR: CRAWFORD YOUNG It is a country totally cut off from all its neighboring states. And it is, above all, a country which has doubled its total Jewish population in about four years, and which must still absorb somehow 10,000 or so new immigrants every month. ,, * * UNDER THE BUSTLING, fiercely energetic surface of Israeli life, the economic strains which this set of circumstances im- poses on this country are instantly visible. Although the internal legal rate for the Is- raeli pound is still artificially maintained at $2.80, the free rate abroad has slithered to less than 70 cents. This is the external symp- tom of a galloping inflation which has had the inevitable internal consequences. The rationing and price control system, in theory more severe than Britain has ever known, is showing signs of coming apart at the seams. Much of the time the sugar and meat rations, tiny as they are, are sheer myth. Inevitably, the black mar- ket is taking over, if only because most Israeli must deal on the black market in order to Feed their families. As prices rise, labor becomes restive, and left-wing labor movements threaten the government with hunger marches..° The attempt to absorb some 700,000 immi- grants into a new and tiny country has had, of course, social as well as economic conse- quences. Most of the new immigrants some from the Arab states, and aside from a mix- ed and distant racial origin these people have little more in common with European Jews than, say, Patagonians have with Ore- gonians. The Israeli leaders, admitting the existence of severe social tensions within the new state, put their trust in the second generation. YET FOR THE present, in such circum- stances, it is little wonder that the Arabs talk hopefully of the coming collapse of the state of Israel. Even so, one prediction can be made with confidence. Israel will not collapse. Israel is here to stay. Partly this prediction can be made be- cause of the drive, energy, and sturdy health of the Israelis themselves, which belie all the grim statistics. Partly it is because the Jewish community in the United States will undoubtedly continue to make up a large part of the economic slack, to the tune of an astonishing $70,- 000,000 a year. And partly it is because the American government will undoubted- ly also continue to take up the rest of the slack. Given a continued Israeli policy of un- restricted Jewish immigration, the best ex- perts here estimate that the American gov- ernment's share is likely to come to about $100,000,000 a year for a good many years. Leave aside the fact that the American gov- ernment made possible this experiment in the first place, or that it is so moving and impressive an experiment in so many ways. To continue this subsidy is in the plain Am- erican interest The economic collapse of the state of Israel would usher in a period of total chaos in the Middle East. It would in- vite, either the violent expansion of the state of Israel as an expression of econo- mic desperation, or a renewed Arab attack on the enfeebled Israeli nation. Either would be fatal to Western interests. It is thus in the essential American interest to make it both certain and obvious to all concerned that the state of Israel is here to stay. Yet when this is said, something else must also be said. American policy in this area has been influenced by twin illusions. One is the illusion that Arab hostility to Israel is wholly irrational and without depth. The other is the illusion that this tiny state precisely balances in strategic importance the whole vast vital land mass of the Arab and Moslem worlds. In the inflamed and irra- tional Middle East, as everywhere else, the precondition of a rational policy is the get- ting rid of illusions. (Copyright, 1951, New York Herald Tribune, Inc.) DORIS FLEESON: Revenue Investigation WASHINGTON-Nov. 21-The suggestion is being heard here that the King Sub- committee of the House has performed the needed surgery on the Internal Revenue Bureau and has the patient well on the road to recovery. It is therefore argued that Representative King should now be looking forward to closing his fruitful inquiry and concentrating on the legislative remedies that have suggested themselves. Important among these is the proposal that has won President Truman's sup-j port to remove collectors of Internal Re-{ venue from the political-patronage cate- gory and put them under Civil Service. Not the least achievement of Sen. Estes Kefauver in his crime investigation was that he managed to close it out at a high point in public interest, turn his own attention to legislation to cope with the problems raised, and still escape any accusation that he only wanted to take the heat off the administra tion. It was a feat of timing that increased the confidence of his supporters in the Ke- fauver political acumen. For many reasons it will not be easy for Representative King to perform a compar- able feat. He is dealing with the most sensi- tive agency in government and the next presidential campaign is already under way. At best he can expect a partisan uproar and he will need to be very sure that he has done all that is required if he is to win the ensuing battle for public confidence. His party and President are not helping him very much. The President is privately sarcastic about the Congress which he says in- vestigates so much and legislates so little. So far he has snubbed all opportunities to claim credit for his own party for housecleaning nor has he done anything really constructive to further it. Cabinet members touched by the King inquiry have been equally obtuse. There can be no question about Treasury Secretary Snyder's personal honesty and devotion to Harry Truman, yet it is in his department that the tax scandals multiplied while he ignored all warnings. It is even more astonishing that Attorney General McGrath. who has proved his poli- tical skill in his own state which he virtual- ly controls, should be temporizing with the situation. now that his tax division is under fire. The Attorney General hopes to go to the Supreme Court bench. More than any other person, except the President if he runs again, McGrath has a stake in the present proceedings. The irony of it is that because of his Supreme Court ambitions, McGr;;Jh chose not to take a strong line at the Justice Department but to rock along with the or- ganization left by his predecessor, Tom Clark. Now Justice Clark is safely on the court while his friends, such as Theron Caudle, ousted by the President from the tax division, threaten McGrath's ambi- tions. On the highest level. the government's work has never been better done. Solicitor General Perlman has run up a record of vic- tory in the courts rarely if ever equaled in the Department's history. But down the line, weakness appears-and, as at the White House, it gets a protection that injures and overshadows the important work being done. (Copyright, 1951, by Tne Bell Snydicate, Inc.) Ii The Voice Is The Voice Of Peace But The Hands Are The Hands Of Aggression ,,, t + " :v7 om- '" ti" ,'"r . r !Q XetteP4 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 t Z i e : ti t: I t r. r s e c C i 1 E C E X J f t t 'i t ,f ON THE Washington Merry-Go-Round with DREW PEARLSON1 ' WASHINGTON-Exhuberant George Bender, the Ohio Congressman,1 popped the question to General Eisenhower during a two and one-half hour relaxed chat with the General in Paris. Bender, a rootin'-tootin' Taft supporter, looked Ike in the eye and said with a grin: "General, is you or aint you, and how?" General Eisenhower's eyes twinkled but he made no direct reply. Instead he emphasized to Bender and three other visiting Congress- men the great importance of his job in Europe. It was vital to the safety of mankind to rearm' Europe, the General said, nomatter what individual sacrifices were involved. Young Dick Bolling, the clean-cut Kansas City Democrat, sug- gested in hal!-humorous vein: "General, if you do run for President, I am sure you will be much happier on the Democratic ticket." Eisenh-nger did not answer that one either, but Rep. Leon Gavin, Pennsylvania Republican, did, and in no uncertain terms. "The Republican Party is the only party of free enterprise," he said loudly and firmly. "The Democrats are all socialists and you would not get along with them." At another point in the conversation, Congressman Bender asked Ike: "What about that Arthur Krock story in the New York Times saying you and President Truman talked politics?" This was the only time during the visit that the General ap- peared upset or irritated. "There was not a word of truth to the story," he said indignantly and with great firmness. He added that he could not igderstand why a reputable newsman would fall for "such a phony." NOTE-Flying to Key West the other day, President Truman sat down in the compartment of the Presidential plane where his staff was working and point by point went over his luncheon conversation with General Eisenhower. He repeated that at no time had they dis cussed politics. -TWO PRESIDENTS- H ERE -S THE inside story as to why President Truman coldly brush- ed aside French President Auriol's proposal for a new Big Four meeting. Mr. Truman flatly turned down Auriol's idea after receiving an urgent cable from Secretary of State Acheson in Paris, stating that President Auriol had made the Big Four proposal without the approval of French Foerign Minister Schuman or of the French Cabinet. Furthermore, President Auriol, according to Acheson's cable, had tersely refused to eliminate the Big Four meeting idea from his speech even though U.S. Ambassador Jessup pleaded with him that the Rus- sians would interpret it as a sign of weakness. Acheson therefore ad- vised the President to rebuff the entire proposal, which was done. -DEFECTIVE TANK TURRETS- LAST MONTH the Army refused to accept a single Medium (M-47) tank from its own Detroit Arsenal. The Arsenal produced more than a hundred of the new tanks but the Army was so strict with its own arsenal that not a single one pass- ed inspection. In each case the Army complained that the turrets on the tanks failed to meet specifications. Requirements for the tank demand that the tank cannon be able to swing onto a target wihin six seconds-and remain on he target automatically while the tank con- tinues to move in any direction. While the rejected tanks could do this complex mechanical job, it took most of them nine or ten seconds instead of the required six. Specialists from all over the country are now being called in to try to perfect the tanks traversing gear to meet Army demands. Mean- while, the Detroit Arsenal will continue to turn out the faulty tanks on the practical theory that modifications can be made later when the vital three-second problem is licked. Meanwhile, the dispute over the three seconds will probably be settled by a mock tank battle at Fort Knox. NOTE-Our new light tank, the M-41, is having the same trouble with its turret mechanism. * * *. * -WORSE THAN BERLIN- AMERICAN PILOTS have been running into worse flak over the tiny Korean village of Sananju than they encountered over Berlin during World War II. Reason for the intense antiaircraft fire is that the Communists are trying to build three air strips near Sananju. If these are com- uleted, the Communists will move their MIG-15 fighters across the Yalu River for the first time in the entire Korean war and thus be closer to the front. In fact, this will put them in a position to hammer our front lines, whereas hitherto they have only fought defensively, Or, in case of a truce and a freeze on arms going into Korea, the Communists would have their air force already inside Korea. Our planes are paying a terrific cost to keep these fields knocked out, but so far the MIGS still have to stay on the otherside of the Yalu. *~ ** * * ' -WASHINGTON PIPELINE- PRICE BOSS Mike Di Salle will soon announce higher ceiling prices for practically all'clothing. The new prices, however, won't mean a further squeeze on family budgets since most clothing is already sell- The Flag Again.. .. To the Editor: R ECENTLY, THERE have been a number of letters concern- ing the displaying of the Confed- erate Flag. I do not think the ques- tion is Northern interference in Southern affairs. Nor do I think the question is one of Southern patriotism. It is important to remember that the Confederate Flag is a symbol not of chivalry or progress but rather of the most degrading in- stitution of all times-the physical enslavement of man by man. It cannot be said that matters have changed so radically since the Civil War that the whole question is merely one of historical interest. As a matter of fact, although slav- ery has been abolished, the Negro people have remained oppressed. Can we turn a deaf ear to the ev- eryday indignities of a whole peo- ple? Can we forget that we have just recently faced the disgrace- ful case of the Cicero riot? At pre- sent, Dr. Dubois, a Negro and one of America's foremost scholars is being prosecuted on the grounds of being subversive, i.e. advocat- ing peace. Examples of extreme in- dignities to the Negro people in the South and in the North can be enumerated indefinitely. The Confederate Flag has never represented the aspirations of the Negro people in the South or for that matter of the great majority of democratically minded white Southerners. So let us not display symbols of human slavery. The wounds still run too deep. -Robert Schor * * * Ann Arbor Trial .. . To the Editor: T SEEMS to me that critics like Robert Bickham miss tl boat when, in reference to the Ann Ar- bor Trial, they wise crack about malevolent society and wave free- will in our faces. Maybe if they talked with some of Bill Morey's friends or Vith any of his con- temporaries, they might see what is so disturbing about this case. These young peoile can't see that Morey did anything so terribly wrong. They say he would )ever have done it without the beer. These youngsters aren't going to go out and commit murder, but isn't something wrong here? Isn't their whole attitude wrong? To look on this case in isola- tion, to suppose that it represents a blight which, when removed, saves everyone from contamina- tion, is to. be guilty of the great- est self-deception. It is an atti- tude sometimes found among pseudo-intellectuals who resent the suggestion that any outside factor or situation may have had any real influence on their own choices and decisions. But society was not blameless 1h Morey's case. And I think this was specifically pointed out in an edi- torial in the Ann Arbor News. This does not mean that society is to blame for everything, that it de- termines everything. This seems to be the point overlooked by Bick- ham in his criticism of Wiegand's editorial. The very fact that Wie- gand wrote the editorial should certainly make it clear that he thought something could be done, and something should be done. -Marlin Demlinger Sorority Bias..*. To the Editor: DESPITE the fact that I usually remain aloof even from con- sideration of the momentous prob- lems and events which are analyz- ed for us in The Daily I could not help but become incensed at the mammoth rationalization in Tues- day's Daily Panhel Bias Program. In the little thought I have giver this problem (and it probably de- serves less) I have always felt that the presence of bias clauses in sorority and fraternity constitu- tions were the concern of the sor- orities and fraternities involved themselves and that they had the right to determine their member- ship by any method they desired But Miss Cherniak's editorial i, such an example of evident hypo- crisy, I must protest. The state- ment, "In the first place Panhe: is not finally admitting the pre- sence of bias clauses in some loca: sorority constitutions. This seem,, improbable since the presence of the possibility of such clauses wa discovered only recently," must ap- pear to even the most casual ob- server as a travesty on the truth Miss Cherniak undoubtedly, if she expects that one to be believed, ap- praises her readers, at the most, as idiots. After reading this editorial I have become convinced that the sororities should retain their bias clauses. At least these clauses, if nothing else, will protect a certain number of young ladies each year from contracting the disease of 'occupational hypocrisy' w h i c h seems to be standard equipment for most sorority gals. -Bernard Abrams * * * Korean Letter .. . To the Editor: WE ARE IN the Marine Corps and have been on the line for about thirty days. We are now in reserve. Everything is as fine as could be except for the fact that we are not receiving any mail. Our ages are between the years of twenty and twenty-two and our interests are varied. We would appreciate all letters. Will you please help us out by putting this letter or a brief condensation of it in your college paper. . Our addresses are all the same as the following except for respec- tive names and serial numbers. Anglico, First Sig. Bn. (1-S NGF) First Marine Division F.M.F. Pac c/o F.P.O. San Francisco, Calif. Thanking you very much, we are, -Pfc. Ray Popovich 1176718 -Pfc. Roderick K. Moore 1185299 -Pfc. Ferdie 3. Orgeron 1182327 -Pct. Hulen V. Owens 1161507 -Pfc. Dick Ohnemus 1194511 -Pfc. Orlando Johnson 1155238 * * .* Thank You .. . To the Editor: AS ONE OF the many foreign students who have been invit- ed to Thanksgiving dinner, I would like to express my appreciation to the Ann Arbor residents and members of the faculty who gen- erously extended these invitations. They have opened their homes and their hearts to a group that on 'this day would be lonely and homesick. Mrs. Mead of the International Center stated that the respons was so great that even though al tke foreign students have received and accepted invitations, her tele- phone was still ringing with more requests. Though we hardly knew what significanbe of Thanksgiving was, we foreign students now know that it is a day of warm friend- ship and good food-a day for giv- ing thanks for the year's blessings. Another significance of this holi- day which is exceptional in Ann Arbor is the development of Inter- national understanding. " -Naeem Gul Rtahore, Vice-President International Students Association S Sixty-Second Year DRiAMA 3 "T7 9 a s s a' a a7 7 a7 c a 777 7 77* 777~ T 7 7 v c v m 7 a 7 ~ CIINIEMA =P 3 4 A _ Architecture A uditorium At The Orpheum . . . IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT with Claudette Colbert and Clark Gable; direct- ed by Frank Capra. BACK WHEN unemployment was a prob- lem, when most people had never heard of Hitler and only the Koreans had heard of Korea, Frank Capra made a movie that almost swept all the newly-created Academy Awards and nearly wrecked the undershirt business. At a time when an heiress' engagement vas headline news, Capra's treatment of the tory of a runaway rich girl who falls in ove with a newspaper man seeking a job- aving scoop by helping her into the arms of her would-be groom was an enormous opular and crtical success. Gagle wore no ndershirt; the whole underwear business lmost went bankrupt. Colbert wore bangs; ,eauty parlors across the nation started cutting locks in a fad that lasted a couple of years-practically an eternity for wo- men's fashions. FOUR IN A JEEP, with Viveca Lindfors and Ralph Meeker. ALTHOUGH this movie was produced by a Swiss Film Company, it is obvious from the slant that it takes, that it was Hollywood that produced the money. Typical of the film's stand is its portrayal of what four years has done to U.S.-Russian relations. In a flashback we are shown the drunken joy and abandon of the Russian and American as they meet on the battle- field of the German war, contrasted with the coldness which the same Russian greets the friendly puppylike greeting of the Amer- ican a few years later. Actually though, it's a pretty good movie about a four-nation patrol group in Vien- na, Austria, hampered by mechanical ster- eotyping and a pretty bad performance from Ralph Meeker as an American sol- dier. The four in a jeep are members of the military police; a little broad-minded At Lydia Mendel ssohn . THREE One-Act Plays: Santa Claus, by e. e. cummings; The Case of the Crushed Petunias, by Tennessee Williams; Passion, Poison and Petrifaction, by George Bernard Shaw. Presented by the Speech Department at the Lydia Mendelssorn Theatre. "GBS saved the evening," I said to her as we ambled out of the theatre. "I was sur- prised to find myself laughing after the first two deadheads." "But they weren't deadhead plays," she said. "It was the way they did them-took all the sparkle out of 'em." "I don't mean the Shaw was a better play-Santa Claus is a good modern mor- ality, and the Petunias might be a better play than it seems. I mean the Shaw was the only one really in their scope. They can do a good job on a burlesque, but fan- tasy and expressionism were a little above their heads tonight. The first two plays were too tough for their talents." "Yes, wasn't the speech bad? The Speech Department is keeping up its reputation-- for poor speech. Don't they teach them how to project their voices?" "It's hard to tell what they teach them. The range is so great. "It was a lot better in the Shaw. Stan Challis was wonderful as Adolphus, and so was John Dennis as George-but in the other plays the acting and the speech went from mediocre to ham. Santa Claus and Death in the cummings sounded as if they were at a high school elocution contest. "The sets were all very well done, though, weren't they?" "Yes, that was the nicest part of the eve- ning. But wasn't the dancing in Santa Claus out of place? Sometimes I wish Agnes Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board of Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Chuck Elliott .........Managing Editor Bob Keith ...............City Editor Leonard Greenbaum, Editorial Director Vern Emerson .........Feature Editor Rich Thomas ..........Associate Editor Ron Watts ,...........Associate Editor Bob Vaughn ..........Associate Editor Ted Papes,...............Sports Editor George Flint ... Associate Sports Editor Jim Parker ... Associate Sports Editor Jan James ............Women's Editor Jo Ketelhut, Associate Women's Editor Business Staff Bob Miller ..........Business Manager Gene Kuthy, Assoc. Business Manager Charles Cuson ... Advertising Manager Sally Fish..........Finance Manager Stu Ward..........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. .;q ing below present ceiling prices. (Copyright, 1951, by The I Bell Syndicate, Inc.) BARNABY Odd, all this difficulty gaining entry to your j These, er, people you / say you maintain in / your residence seem Ju,/i\ I i 'I r May I offer a suggestion for overcoming the resistance of your door? ...Wag your fail. Vibrations. But perhaps your short-wave length won't do it. On my planet we have evolved