PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY T'iJE;S Dt3 i, 4A)e 1Z, 1953 1 Possible Peace and the GOP FINAL SETTLEMENT of the peace talks in Korea may well be the political wind- fall 'the Eisenhower administration needs if it is to maintain or increase its precarious hold on Congress in the 1954 Congressional elections. With a one seat margin in the Senate and seven legislators to spare in the House it would seem to require some- thing less than a miracle to continue the Republican lease on Congress. A number of facts and figures of the ef- fect of a possible truce in Korea should be pointed up. Item: With a peace settlement in Ko- rea, or even a truce, the administration could automatically pare abort two bil- lion dollars from its military budget. Total annual expenditures in Korea to- day; are about five billion including the cost of feeding, arming and maintaining our army and the South Koreans. Of this sum two billion represents ammunition costs. It becomes rather obvious that a saving of this size in defense spending would enable the treasury to balance the budget, while at the same time vote- conscioqus legislators could strip away the administration's only argument agjinst tax cuts in the immediate future. Item: The end of a shooting war in Korea would undoubtedly have a very significant impact on the minds of the American peo- ple. Disgusted with a seemingly futile war and decidedly opposed to sending any more of their sons to Korea, the voters would very likely act decisively in favor of the party that makes the peace. Item: In listing his suggested campaign strategy for winning the 1954 Congression- al elections, Senator Robert Taft last month said that the attack must be focused on the blunders of the late Truman administra- tion. Certainly peace would add stinging emphasis to that attack, as one of the chief sore points of the Democratic 'regime was its inability to end the stalemate in Korea. The peace would tend to obscure the blunders of the GOP in getting its legis- lative ptogram underway in the transi- tion of administrations, while on the other hand the failures of the Truman administration would appear in sharpest relief. Should the peace come between now and the elections of 1954. a strongly Republican Congress for the next two years will be pretty much of a certainty and the long standing rule of American politics dooming the party in power to losses between the presidential races will be thwarted. --Gene Hartwig International Week EVERY SECTOR and every culture of the world is represented by the 900 foreign students who have come to Ann Arbor for the same purposes that bring Michigan and New York residents here. This week being International Week af- fords an appropriate opportunity for ev- ery foreign and American student on cam- pus to realize just how much he has, or might have, benefited from a year's pre- sence in a community as truly interna- tional as the University. While opportunities to mingle with for- eign or American students, as the case may be, are manifold throughout the year, there is a special abundance of them this week. Wednesday night Student Legislature will bring India's ambassador to the United States to the campus' doorstep, via an ad- dress at Rackham. On exhibit throughout the week is a col- lection of paintings by a Korean student. Thursday's customary open house at the International Center is scheduled in anoth- er effort to broaden student horizons. Ann Arbor itself is attempting to give foreign students a taste of community life through a series of dinners at churches, civic clubs and homes. Support for activities student organiza- tions sponsor this week, however, is not enough. The current international obli- vion can't be improved without a wide- spread individual effort on the part of every concerned student, foreign or other- wise, to deviate from his entrenched and restricted path. Such a seemingly idealistic goal as all- encompassing international understanding is closer to reality than most students think. Opportunities for closer relationships exist in every corner of campus life. "Imperson- al" classes, residence halls, student organi- zations and social activities are all affluent with an untapped mixture of cultures. The International Center features an especially concentrated variety of people and their backgrounds, yet it is seldom visited by any but a few habitues. "Cultural advantages" need not be the trite phrase it now is. Although nobody can predict spectacular results from seven days of emphatically international relationships, the University may foresee an immediate future in which its cosmopolitan atmosphere. could contribute generously to the campus experiences of every student. --Jane Howard ra .. e B 0teri to tie 6d[q0 Investigations of the Press-- In Argentina THE VIRTUAL exclusion from the news- papers of Argentina of dispatches from all three major United States news services is a revealing illustration of what happens to freedom of the press under a dictatorial government. Especially Interesting is the way in which Argentine top-man Juan Peron pushed dispatches of the Associated Press, United Press, International News Service and even those of the New York Times off the pages of his nation's already ser- vile press. Peron requested his rubber-stamp Con- gress to start an investigation of foreign news agencies. 'He accused the agencies of conducting an organized campaign to de- fame, him abroad and of taking orders from the United States State Department. The Argentine Congress ordered the in- vestigation Saturday, and the pro-adminis- tration Buenos Aires press cooperated by making United States agency releases con- spicuously absent. Also Saturday night, the Peron govern- ment took its first direct action against the U.S. wire services when the Ministry of Communication ordered the United Press to stop distributing news to papers outside of Buenos Aires. That Peron should continue to tighten his control of the press is not surprising. Saturday's actions are but the latest of a long series of attempts to insure that only ,one side of the news is presented. This sort of thing is necessary in a . dictatorship. And for the same reasons that Peron fears a free press, we in the United States must strive to prevent any tendencies toward the kind of press con- trol Peron finds expedient. It should especially be noted that threats to real freedom of reporting in our country are now also coming from Congressional investigators with power to ruin the repu- tation of newspaper editors who refuse to be "co-operative." -Jon Sobeloff D RAMA MATTER OF FACT By JOSEPH and STEWART ALSOP WASHINGTON - 'The Administration's new defense policy is not going over very well. The claim that less defense will make us stronger has aroused a certain in- terest in the new General Motors Miracle Model--Will it be a longer car with a shorter wheel base, a narrower car with more room for the family, a car with half the horsepower and twice the speed and pick-up? But there is sure to be a bitter row before Congress consents to such steps as tossing the 143 group Air Force program into the wastebasket. None the less, Congressional critics ought to begin by acknowledging the real difficulties of the task inherited by Sec- retary of Defense Wilson and Under-Sec- retary Kyes. There were worse things wrong with the Truman defense program than superfluity and extravagance. Messrs. Wilson and Kyes should be generous enough to -admit that some waste is a usual feature of any great and rapid rearmament effort. But they may justly complain that we have been buying'a World War II defense program in a revolutionized world situation. The Soviet atomic bomb has existed since' September, 1949. The 'explosion of the So- viet atomic bomb in Siberia and the aggres- sion in Korea were the two stimuli that produced American rearmament. Yet it is fair to say that the Joint Chiefs of Staff have never adjusted their planning to the new and central fact of the world stra- tegic situation-the rapid accumulation of a defective Soviet stock pile of atomic wea- pons. The ground forces have spent untold millions to develop an atomic cannon that could hardly cross any existing bridge in the world, and an atomic shell that ex- pends fissionable material as though it were cheaper than TNT. But the ground force plans offer no answer to the vul- nerability to air-atomic attack of the West European ports, on which the whole NATO supply kystem depends. The Navj has spent billions on carrier task forces, with the primary aim of shar- ing the Air Force's mission of atomic at- tack on the enemy. But the Navy has no known answer to the vulnerability of these carrier task forces to underwater atomic These failures were tacitly admitted in the last major National Security Council policy paper of the Truman regime, NSC- 141. This was, in effect, a disillusioned re-examination of the effects of the So- viet atomic bomb and other new weapons on the American world position. As dis- closed in this space, NSC-141 called for greater American effort to fill the widen- ing gaps in our defenses, and especially to fill the air defense gap. NSC-141 might also have directed the Joint Chiefs to cease their practice of making a maxi- mum play with American new weapons, without making any serious allowance to- ward new weapons in Soviet hands. On these grounds, then, the angriest com- plaints were justified, both of President Truman's defense leadership and of the working of the Joint Chief's planning sys- tem. No such complaints have been heard, however. And this is upsetting, since the reason seems to be that the emphasis on the gaps in our defenses would undermine the present policy as well, as displaying the failures of the past. Over a fairly .long period, great savings can certainly be achieved by cutting out waste, although cutting out defense waste without impairing national strength is as painful and time-consuming as reducing physical fat by honest exercise and calorie- counting. By the same token, great savings can almost certainly be accomplished too, by re-studying force requirements in the light of the new weapons. But these kinds of true saving must go hand in hand with great increases in cer- tain categories of expenditure, in order to fill the widening gaps in the American de- fenses. No such increases are as yet re- quested. Indeed the heaviest slash of all, a meat axe chop of $5,000,000,000 is in the Air Force program. Yet the most urgent needs are for a truly effective American air defense and an American strategic air arm strengthened to stake home through the improved Soviet air defense. The wiser men in the Administration offer an excuse that may well be legiti- mate, for the time, being. These men say that first priority iust be given to "get- ting control" of the defense problem- to establishing sounder managerial &rac- THE CONSTANT WIFE, presented by the Drama Season, starring Katharine Cornell THE FEMINIST PLAY and the drawing room comedy, are not much with us any more, largely perhaps because they became the staple of an era that seemed to have nothing more momentous to worry about than vague social proprieties and keeping it gay, keeping it crisp. As the type sunk into a disrepute among the playwrights, an eventually the pro- ducers, the stars that had been developed in that general atmosphere found them- selves at a loss for new roles which suited their talents. Some of the leading ladies compromised with the new drama; others faded away. A few, like Katharine Cornell, the star of the opening production in this year's drama season, returned chiefly to the classic repetoire, and continued to score by dint of tremendous personal tal- ent. In the current revival of "The Constant Wife," by Somerset Maugham, Miss Cor- nell demonstrates once more what was fa- shionable on Broadway back in 1927. Because her tremendous versatility has been tried by such a number of roles since this kind of thing was in style, it is altogether pleasing to find that drawing room comedy, even the aggressively feminine sort, can be As en- tertaining as Miss Cornell makes the current production. For sheer efficiency of effort, warm consistency of tone, and almost per- feet timing, she is supreme. The plot of the show (and plot is very im- portant to well-made comedy) revolves around the "constant wife" of a prosper- ous Harley Street Doctor, who discovers her husband philandering with her best friend. Because she is a modern woman, one does not expect her poise overe to be seriously threatened. The manner in which she takes her revenge, however, is another matter; and it is a compliment to Miss Cornell's perform- ance that the calculating brutajity of it never deprives her of the sympathy of the masculine members of her audience. Other members of the cast, all of the original company now completing a na- tional tour, include Robert Flemyng and John Emery as the husband and lover, respecitvely. Flemyng keeps his role agree- ably light and remains the protesting pawn at the end. John Emery is slightly stuffy, but manages the worst' lines in the play with some grace. The rest of the perform- ers are expect, if professionally arch, par-- ticularly in the too brittle first act in which Miss Cornell is long in arriving on- stage. The staging by Guthrie McClintic and set by Donald Oenslager bear the mark of thor- ough experience. The director has kept his cast in ton form for the Ann Arbor opening. 'Palestinitis' .. . To the Editor: IN MR. AWADA'S letter on "Pal- estinitis," several questions were raised which we would like to ans- wer. Is the Jewish people a race or a religion? Actually it is neither. It is a group whose characteristics cannot be compared to any other group in the world, and therefore cannot be classified. It is not a race as it has no racial features. The Jewish people has representa- tives in all races-Mongoloid, Ne- groid, and Caucasian. Nor is it merely a religion; for unlike other religions, it has not only religious customs, but a language, a land, and a rich secular culture over 4000 years old. Today, the state of Israel is the spiritual center for Jewish people all over the world (as Rome is to Catholic people). But as a nation, Israel is founded neither on religious nor racial principles. It is a democratic na- tion, run by both Arab and Jew. Mr. Awada speaks of Jewish "persecution;" of Jews driving Arabs from their homes. But let us examine the facts. The Jews stole no land; they evicted no one. In 1882 the first Jewish settlers came to a barren, almost unin- habited land; the most fertile parts were malaria-infested. Most of the land was owned by absentee Arabs, a few of whom hired peas- ants to cultivate it primitively. The Jews paid dearly for every piece of land they bought, in- cluding the swamps. In time they were successful, and began to teach their Arab neighbors some of their modern methods. This is what the absentee owners feared; this might lead to the end of the feudal system in Israel and then spread to the rest of the Arab world. So they incited riots and mistrust between Jew and Arab. On the very day that the British Mandate expired in 1948, the sur- rounding Arab states began clos- ing in on Israel. These Arabs is- sued warning to the Israeli Arabs that unless they left their homes and joined the Arab ranks, they would be killed with the Jews. The Jews, however, asked the Arabs to remain. They were pro- mised protection and full citizen- ship in the new state. Still most of them fled. Even when the fighting had ceased, the Arabs were invited to return to their homes-but few did. They chose to play the role of "homeless, evicted" people and seek UN sym- pathy. As for the Arabs who re- mained, they are now first class citizens, enjoy voting .privileges, have seats in parliament, and help form government policies. This, Mr. Awada, is how Israel's Jews have been "persecuting" the Arabs. -Jo and Dick Sanders * * . Clean & Obscene..-. To the Editor: LOOK WITH great misgiving upon County Prosecutor Ed- mond DeVine's attempt to separ- ate 'the clean from the obscene' in newstand literature and I sug- gest that he is acting in abroga- tion of the time-honored doctrine supporting the separation of Church and State, in that this elected official is confusing a di- vine function with a De Vine func- tion. The rationale in support of this censorship is that it will prevent MINORS from being exposed to morally detrimental literature. Unfortunately, the law overlooks the fact that by removing these books from sale, it is also 'pro- tecting' adults who are ostensibly mature enough to be permitted to exercise their judgments inde- pendent of a County Censor Board. The County's position seems hy- pocritical at best, in that it pro- scribes the sale of books from newsstands because they are deem- ed obscene, while allowing these same books to be circulated at the University's General Library- which caters to many students stil in their minority .. . Or is the Ann Arbor Police Department contem- plating a directive to the Univer- sity as the next step in its anti- vice campaign? -Conrad Fazoo and wife, Bertha * * * * To McCarthy To The Editor: THIS IS A NOTE to McCarthy Up until recently I had tiought that one should have a critical attitude on political ques- tions. Now I see my mistake quite clearly. How if we are to be criti- cal could we come to the conclu- sion that everything is for the best? We might begin to wonder whether your efforts and those of ourv c ollegu, "Professor C', political economic and intellectuals tyranny over the people by av handful of corrupt self seekingc despots, previous habits of demo-t cratic and scientific thought be- come detrimental to this Greatv Aim, it becomes imperative thatc all previous systems of values bec ruthlessly trampled down. i Therefore it follows that while under a democracy informers and people who bear false testimony in order to obtain a political con- viction may be looked down uponr by the general body, quite the op- posite considerations hold under conditions of tyranny (as far asj ,the rulers are concerned). Hence I would like to call to your attention the works of a rather "obscure" author, Thomas Jefferson. His ideas expressed in the Declaration of Independence1 are beginning to have a dangerous circulation at home and abroad.t Upon painstaking investigation I have found that the great major- ity of these ideas are in directc conflidt with the Political Morality for which you have dedicated the1 last measure of your devotion. This man's works if investigated thoroughly will undoubtedly go a1 long way in exposing subversive influences nationally and inter-I nationally.i --Robert Schor1 * * Mind & Mus~c ... To the Editor: MR. CHARLES H. Risdee (Grad.t Ed.) has, like Gridley, firedI the shot for Dewey. Let no teacherI presume to draw from his own ex- perience conclusions which thei I DAILY OFFICI (Continued from page 2) Wisdom of the Mind" (illustrated), Dr. CRobert Gesell, Professor of Physiology and Chairman of the Department of Physiology. Announcement of the Henry Russe) Award will be made at this time. 1Lackham Amphitheater, Tues., May 12, 4:15 p.m. University Lecture, auspices of the Department of Geology, "Mapping Meth- ods of Today," Gerald F. FitzGerald, Chief Topographic Engineer, United States Geological Survey, 4:15 p.m., Tues., May 12, 2054 Natural Science Building. University Lecture. Dr. Carlos Cueto. Dean of the School of Education, St. Mark's University, Lima, Peru, and Vis- iting Professor of Education, Teach- ers' College, Columbia University, will give the second of his lectures Tues., May 12, 4:15 p.m., Auditorium A, An- tgell Hall. His subject will be "A Cor- parison Between Education in Latin America and in the United States." University Lecture, auspices of the Department of English, "Literature and Society," Basil Willey, King Edward VII Professor of English Literature. Pem- broke College, Cambridge University, England, wed., May 13, 4:15 p.m., Au- ditorium A, Angell Hall. Academic Notices Doctoral Examination for Thomas ' Mitchell Sawyer, Jr., Speech; thesis: "Shift of Attitude Following Persua- asion as Related to Estimate of Majority Attitude," Tues., May 12, 3219 Angell - Hall, 9 a.m Chairman, W. M. Sattler. e Doctoral Examination for William - Henry Louisell, Physics; thesis: "An Experimental Measurement of the Gyromagnetic Ratio of the Free Elec- r tron." Tues., May 12, 2038 Randall e Laboratory, at 1:30 p.m. Chairman: R. r W. Pidd. space cadets of the academic world have not approved in their dynamic groups, conferences, and testing programs. Surely no one who had read with care McFlitch and Thrilby's Studies in the Correlation, of So- cial Adjustment, Leadership Qual- ities, and Gross Income with the Retention of Certain Phrases from "Maud Muller" Memorized in the Sixth Grade by Selected Students of Crabtree County, Oklahoma, 1938, would ever again think "the mind a muscle." -E. Whan B~ook Lists . . To the Editor: NOW, WITHOUT bothering to define terms, all or most com- munities insist on some sort of "obscene literature" statute. Un- til basic attitudes have changed, which takes a long time, those who want to guard against the purges of book purists must relate their activies to the limits of current public opinion. They can, for example, work to see that the contents of any book black lists are made public. In all honesty to voters, govern- ment officials must do their part in enforcing existing obscenity laws. But they need not shroud their activities with such secrecy. Perhaps dealers would become our censors if they were not pre- sented with lists of items subject to prosecution. Rather than risk trial, they might tend to with- hold books which list-compilers would never consider. The real sore spot in the list making policy lies in the secrecy A BULLETIN] Study of the Dynamometer Strength of Adult Males Ages 30 to 79," wed., May 13, East Council Room, Rackham Build- ing, at 2 p.m. Chairman, P. A. Hun- sicker. Doctoral Examination for Patarasp Rustomji Sethna, Engineering Mechan- ics; thesis: "Steady State Motion of 1 and 2 Degrees of Freedom Systems with a Non-Linear Restoring Force," Wed., May 13, 411-A West Engineering Build- ing, at 4 p.m. Chairman, Jesse Ormon- droyd. Doctoral Examination for Rev. May- nard James Brennan, English; thesis: "Organic Unity: The Principle and its Application in the Criticism of Cole- ridge," Wed., May 13, 2601 Haven Hall, at 7:30 p.m. Chairman, C. D. Thorpe. A UNESCO Lecture. The public is in- vited to hear a lecture by Professor Rob- ert C. Angell on the topic "The UNESCO Approach to International Problem Solving." This is one of a series of lec- tures in the course "Social Forces in Our Changing World," offered by the University Extension Service. Tuesday evening, May 12, 7:30. Auditorium C. of Angell Hall. Engineering Mechanics Seminar. Pro- fessor W. W. Hagerty will speak "On the Decay of Secondary Motion in a Round Pipe," at 3:30 p.m. on Wednesday, May 13, in 101 West Engineering Building. Seminar in Complex Variables will meet Tues., May 12, at 7 p.m. in 247 West Engineering. Dr. E. L. Griffin Jr. will continue his talk on "Riemann Surfaces." Seminar in Mathematical Statistics will meet Tues., May 12, 2:00-4:00 in 3217 Angell Hall. Mr. Samuel Knox will speak. Part II Actuarial Ciass, Tues., May 12, 2:10 p.m., 3201 Angell Hall. Three-hour comprehensive examination. r _ _ -- IY SIG:- i .'. '4f IrZICAJ t ETE fI _ I i A~ O tlNls3 'I i6 WM1J!{!I l6Y0+1 f?' Are dealers to judge for the whole community? And when they do feel a book has been er- roniously listed, will they always be willing to take the case to court? In point of fast, past events show that these salesmen are often too easily intimidated. Somehow the Daily managed to peek through this secrecy and found some surprising items on Ann Arbor's list. Laurels to The Daily for its effort, but the effort should not have been necessary. If we do have such lists, they should always be made public. Then any willing and interested citizen could bring any or all listed items to a jury trial. -Howard Wolfe, '54 Books & Readers. To the Editor: THE RIGHT to avail ourselves of the million odd volumes in our University libraries is a privil- ege not shared by many other educational institutions of com- parable size. However we have come o take this for granted sometimes, and have failed to ack- nowledge an accompanying obli- gation-to treat these books as they were intended, the property of the educational community. Many of us neglect the fact that the books are important instru- ments of research and scholarsrip and we subject them to mutilation not practised by the most irre- sponsible school child. In' order to ensure future dona- tions and financial appropriations, we must prove our ability to pre- serve our present library stock. The temptation to include our own marginal notes, underlinings and illustrations to works long famous before our time is a selfish in- dulgence, and does not speak well, for the members of a state univer- sity founded on every democratic principle. -Barbara Fairberg * * * International Campus.. To the Editors: should like to thank Miss Myers and Miss Voss for Thursday's declaration of the vital importance to Americans of a greater under- standing of the peoples with whom we share this ever-shrinking globe. Studies in languages, history, and political science are, it 'is true, of great value in building interna- tional knowledge and good will but an even better means to un- derstand the people of the rest of the world is, quite simply, to be- come acquainted with some of them. We on this campus are par- ticularly fortunate in1 having al- most nine hundred of the future educational, cultural, industrial, and political leaders of the world studying here. They have come to learn. In return, they offer us an opportunity, second in value only to travel and residence abroad, of learning to know them, and from them their people; an opportunity of discovering through friendship the ways of thought, the problems, the dreams that move them and their homelands. Are we neglecting this chance? -Robina Quale L .4 .1 "You Wouldn't Criticize Me, Would You, Pal?" 'J '4 "v officials have used to hide the contents of their lists. Apparent- ly only dealers and certain gov- ernment men may know what books are on the black list. If the public is kept in the dark, how can it protect itself from the zeal of purists? 4 4.' b i _ Sixty-Third Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Crawford Young.......Managing Editor Barnes Connable..........City Editor Cal Samra. .......... .Editorial Director Zander Hollander........Feature Editor Sid Klaus ....,...Associate City Editor Harland Brltz......... Associate Editor Donna Hendleman...AssociateEditor Ed Whipple.............. Sports Editor John Jenke......Associate Sports Editor Dick Sewell. Associate Sports Editor Lorraine Butler......... Women's Editor Mary Jane Mills, Assoc. Women's Editor Don Campbell.: :...Chief Photographer Business Staff Al Green............Business Manager Milt Goetz.........Advertising Manager Diane Johnston....Assoc. Business.Mgr. Judy Loehnberg.,.... Finance Manager