PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1953 __________________________________________ I I Cooling Of f In Trieste By J. M. ROBERTS JR. Associated Press News Analyst rHE TRIESTE situation, fanned to the ig- nition point by the Anglo-American an- nouncement on plans to withdraw from their occupation zone, has gotten so hot that all sides now seem determined to cool it off... Italy, especially, which showed signs for several days of sticking doggedly to the Anglo-American plan to give her Zone A, including the port city, has now begun to talk again about the prospects of further negotiation. The foreign ministers of France, Britain and the United States, conferring in Lon- don, are intent on working out something that will remove the Yugoslav threat to fight if the Italians attempt to put their troops in. The first hope of the original move, over and above the fact that it was designed to get Italy's approval of the European De- fense Community, was to bring the Italians and Yugoslavs face to face with the necessi- ty of a practical agreement which the Big Two hoped would make permanent the pres- ent temporary zonal boundary. The actual result was to create a situation which if carried through would place Ital- ian and Yugoslav troops face to face in a highly explosive atmosphere. It is now very likely that this move will bedelayed, if not entirely abandoned, in favor of renewed negotiations between Belgrade and Rome, or a four- or five- power conference to attempt an agreed settlement. There is a feeling in some quarters that a settlement might be reached if the big powers were to formally repudiate their 1948 policy of giving all of Trieste territory back to Italy, coupled with a promise by Italy that, in return for Zone A, she would com- pletely renounce her claims on Zone B. The trouble with that is that both the Yugoslav and Italian governments, having stirred up the animals of public opinion at home, are now in the position of having, the animals turn on them if they show any signs of compromise. It seemed more likely that Tito's sugges- tioh for a general conference of the most closely involved powers would be accepted, in the hope that, even if it could not pro72 duce a definitive settlement, it at least would give the two parties, a chance to cool off. At any rate, the possibility that a clash j between Italy and Yugoslavia would set off a general war made everyone under-k stand that "face" has become a minor mat-j ter in the dispute. The Allies, and everyone else, will just have to cut their cloth to fit the case, re- gardless of who is embarrassed. Claire BootheLuce, ambassador to Rome, has been both credited with and accused of producing the Trieste idea originally. Wheth- er that is true, no one person will get credit or blame for it in the long run. It was handled at top levels in the State Depart- ment amid a secrecy unusual even for those soundproof walls. CURRENT MOVIES] At the Orpheuin . . . BELLISSIMIA, with Anna Magnani BELLISSIMA'S real value as a film lies not in the plot or technical construction, but rather in the performance of Italy's out- standing actress, Anna Magnani. As the as- sertive mother whose hopes are projected into her child's life, Miss Magnani undertakes to portray all the various emotional patterns that entei' into the complex structure of the family unit. The story revolves around a mother's desire to see her daughter achieve fame and fortune in the movies. Through an old American trick of a movie contest opportunity raises its ugly head. During the life of the contest the mother finds that the world is not quite as interested in her child as she thinks they should be. The real meaning of life and its realization in the child comes through at the end, leading to a rather melodramatic ending which makes its point too crudely. Miss Magnani occupys the screen almost every moment during which time she com- pletely dominates the action. She is alter- nately the violently passionate female de- fending her brood from its enemies and then the gentle wife and mother. Almost animal- like in her intense desire to secure fame and fortune for her child, she argues, con- joles, screams, and rages at obstacles put in her way by unsympathetic outsiders. Through all this emotion shines the eternal image of the mother whose life finds fulfilment in her young. Tina Apicella, who plays- Maria., the daughter, is the only one able to direct any attention from Miss Magnani's per- formance. Her naturalness is refreshing, and forms a point of stability in a picture as violent as this one. She seems destined, however, to fade away due to the Italian's propensity to use a performer for only one picture. As a general impression, one might say that but for the two fine acting performances, this movie is quite trivial and unworthy of MAT T E R OF F ACT _ . . LettePJ to e fi . By JOSEPH ALSOP SEOUL--The airfield is not Kimpo now, where Sam Jaskilka's little band of weary Marines reached the high ground above the airstrip as dusk was falling and marched through the sunset to the bivouac by the redoubt, where the attack came in the night. But Seoul City Airport as they call it, is across the river just as Kimpo was. The sandy bluffs are there along the river too where the lumbering train of troop-laden ducks stalled for a nervous hour. The Han is the same shallow, silt- laden streami that the ducks seemed to take an eternity to cross, while the Ma- rines speculated on what sort of opposi- tion the outfit would meet on the other side, and Jaskilka quietly talked about what his country meant to him. But now there is a bridge and one rolls easily across in a friend's car, observing the speed limit of the M.P.'s. The last time, after the river was crossed, there were long days in the hills above the city, with the Marines grimly fighting their way forward through the enemy defenses. And after that there was the city in flames, and the triumphal entry of Douglas Mac- Arthur and Syngman Rhee, and the cere- mony of celebration, with MacArthur-mag- niloquent yet somehow so stirring, in the grand hall of the hideous, half-ruined cap- ital, where the smoke stink leaked through the broken roof and a couple of North Ko- rean corpses had only been half tucked out of sight by the entrance. But now there are squalid suburbs. and then the brisk, busy, almost idotically cheer- ful new city of Seoul which is enjoying the peace while it lasts. The contrast between then and now is not inspiring. Then, at any rate, the Amer- icans in Korea and in a considerable meas- ure their government in Washington were showing a courage that made one proud. But now the drama of Seoul is a comedy- the American government anxiously shuf- fling its feet and making appeasing ges- tures, before the embarassing, the really too upsetting, the half lunatic but still altogether too convincing displays of the courage. of Syngman Rhee. The situation here after the truce can be simply if unpalatably summarized. The truce has settled nothing. And there is not a single inhabitant of Seoul who has thought about the matter for more than five min- utes who expects the political conference to settle anything either, if it occurs at all. North of the line, the enemy is strength- ening his position and desperately work- ing to rebuild the North Korean army, from what manpower in that depopulat- ed land, no one can tell. South of the line, we have withdrawn to defensive po- sitions, and the buildup of the ROK army continues at high speed and at great expense. On the truce line, mean- while, the prisoners we fought for are in obvious jeopardy. Here in South Korea the best rice harvest in decades is gleaming golden in the paddy fields, and the hope of the harvest and the almost equally golden hope of American aid serve as it were to guild the ruins that are South Korea. With $1,000,000,000 of aid promised, the Korean government, whose strong suit is not economics, is a bit like a kid in a toy store. But this country has al- most no resources except people, -rice arid scenery, and the Mutual Security Admin- istrator has a tough job ahead. - UCH IS the small talk, so to speak, of the current situation. The grand item of discussiornthe irrepressible King Charles head of every conversation in Seoul, can be summed up in one question. What will Syng- man Rhee do? As to what the old man can do, there is no need for argument. He has his army, which he absolutely controls. The smart young commanders of the ROK divisions do not want to renew the attack on the enemy, but they will do so if ordered to, in the opinion of all competent authori- ties here. They have been put on short sup- ply rations by the Americans, just in case, but they have plenty of ammunition and fuel for the initial move. That is all Rhee cares about if he means what he says. The old man can breach the truce, can start the war again, if he so decides. As to what Rhee will decide, in the al- most certain event that the political con- ference does not give him what he wants, literally no one seems to have the faintest notion. In Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor and Am- bassador Ellis Briggs the American govern- ment has two representatives here who are a credit to the U.S. But these two experi- enced and judicious men seem to be just as puzzled as everyone else. Briggs and Taylor, it can be said on good authority, have formally wiarned Washington that although the outcome is doubtful, we must be ready for Rihee to renew the war, and we must have our policy prepared in advance for the crisis this will produce. In iresponse the Washington authorities have somewhat frantically ordered Mutual Securi- ty Administrator Wood to pour out his blessings with a lavish hand, in the hope that a sense of the comforts of peace will make the South Koreans peaceable. iCopyrigbt, 1953. New York Herald Tribune. Inc.) A Correction . . . World Series To the Editor: HE ISSUE of October 15 car- erid the statement "the Dean of Women invited Student Legis- lature to submit the names of stu- dents to sit on the University sub- committee on Regents - Alumni scholarships." My authority con- sisted in extending an invitation coming from that subcommittee, of which I am one member. -Deborah Bacon Dean of Women * * * Nonsense . . . To the Editor: NUMEROUS invitations from the Young Republicans and Young Democrats have appeared in the Letters column during the last few weeks. They all carry the same theme-join our club and save the world from total disastef. This is nonsense. With political apathy at its peak on this campus. the YR's and YD's have difficilty enough saving themselves from to- tal disaster, let alone the rest of the world. One of the major ac- complishments these clubs can claim is self-perpetuation. However, campus politiciansj often feel dejected by their inca- pacity to influence national and campus issues. "Why have club meetings at all?" they ask. They fail to see thevother needawhich the clubs can very adequately fill -the need for self-expression. They should realize that half the pleasure comes from learning political "truths" and half comes -from telling these "truths" to oth- ers. Political clubs bring together students who have discovered the "right" way. and gives each, mem- ber an opportunity to show oth- ers how his own views are "right" while their views are "wrong." This satisfies everyone because, whether or not anyone else has been convinced, each member feels he has at least given the oth- ers a chance to learn the "truth."c Although discussion among its members remains the only real; accomplishment of political clubs, it may yet be necessary that mem- bers imagine their clubs can ac- complish political objectives of far-reaching significance. Politi-r cians consider it somewhat degrad-e ing to admit they attend clubc meetings just to have an audience for their views. They would rath- er believe their own attendance is required by "a devotion to the gen-_ eral welfare." What they believec is really irrelevant. Imagination merely masks their true objective1 behind a glorified ideal. -Bernie Backhaut Todd Jones, . . To the Editor IHE DEATH of Todd Jones in an automobile accident has come as a great blow to all of us. Aside from his work in business, he was active for years in the church. community projects, thec Civic Theater, and over the radio. Most recently he appeared as an actor on "They Fought Alone," a - series produced by the University1 station under a grant from the Ford Foundation. He gave his talents freely and generously to 1 -N) ii - - - - '" -,, ' , - ' " ,, . - a-'a volves the definite act of combin- Speech Departments ing for a purpose which is speci- fied. Before these defendents can Purpose . .. be convicted, they must be found To the Editors: to have done such an act. s it not possible that the Sp -Gene Alkema Department's purpose in its James I. Beatty quired assemblies is simply to eech s re- o ac- Sober Saul-. To the Editor: quaint its students with a number of the types of oratory currently practised in the United States? -Robina Quale ....,. On TE 'oncerning the last paragraph, recently brought to the atten- Billy (rfthtm . . . tion of your humble servant, of To the Editor: that piece which treated of ad- It is too bad that there was any ministrative matters in our faintly ill-feeling about the speech de- Saint-Simonian. assembly. I am partment's lecturer, Billy Graham. taking the opportunity to elucidate I believe that for a man with such your suggestive lines on deposed a vital message burning within magistrate Davis, and to further Jhim, he was exceedingly composed define the ontological recesses of in Wednesday's talk. Therefore, this somewhat indelicate excipio I don't see how anyone, Christian excipiendis of yours. The truth be- or non-Christian could possibly be dg th'at dMr.Davis was neither offended by anything he said. In "forced" to "drop off SL", nor, a democracy such as we are pri- having chosen to sever all political vileged to live, there is little pres- ties, did he eventually do so "be- sure put on us to listen to topics cause of lack of attendance at or opinions to which we do not meetings"-old and tired. this ven- care to listen. In a case such as erable commentator to Verdi, Sar- Billy Graham. I earnestly believe danapalus and pre-Sumerian Tro- this is too bad, as he could show glodytiques, retires from the public so many how they might find cultivation of succes de scandale, great peace and love than they willingly, to resume his ancestral ever could have imagined existed. seat at Lake Como. because, in his Yes, Dr. Graham is a dangerous own words. "Forensis palls, inwit speaker in that under many cir- is cheap, gentlemen, and I am cunstances he is able to open for hunting." We wish him well, men's hearts and minds to salva-, sober soul of defiance and con- tion and God. It is dangerous for viction. people who are afraid to believe Andiamo! on the basis of faith, but must -Cona -l 1.('enner have scientific proof for their be- lief. Dangerous to them ' because Illegicity *.*. he has a. great to influence men. I personally wish there were To the Editor: some pill or shot we could give people so they would take the ad- egardin the editorial, "Oratory vice of Billy Graham and others Lives On" which appeared in like him. Since God gave us a The Daily Thursday, Oct. 15, it free will this will not happen. can only be said that the tragedy When, however, He has sent a per- of ignorance was clearly demon- son like Dr. Graham into the world strated. The one mistake which with this urgent message, it is Dr. Graham made was apparently unfortunate that we can not be- his supposition that everyone there lieve and have faith rather than possessed some degree of intelli- criticize and have doubt. gence and logic. That so little can -Janet Smith be known about history and the * * * I am not a zealous disciple of Christ, Mohammed, Abraham, Confucius, Ghandi, Gautama Bud- dha, or anyone else. I consider it a great opportunity to hear an ad- vocate of any of these tell me why theirs is the way to truth and light, and I hope to gain enriching thoughts from each philosophy, However, I have more confidence in my own intellectual integrity than to fear that several talks on Christianity will blind me to all other theologies any more than familiarity with Marxian doc- trines will turn me to a fanatic Communist. I am not afraid of ideas be they drawn from soap- box demonstrators, radio propa- gandists, or literary philosophers. I am afraid for the University, for America, and for freedom if we close our shelves, our auditoriums, and our minds to any idea. As for the speech department requiring attendance at Dr. Gra- ham's address, it was obviously interested in having students ob- serve the delivery technique of one of today's foremost orators (regardless of subject matter). I'm sorry the professor's faith in a student's intellectual freedom was not sustained. -Wendy Coerper Christian Principles . . Letter to the Editor: A soft, tender voice, and the right chosen words said to a pros- pective bride still carry tremendous impact. This example, which is re-iter- ated over and over again by thous- ands of young romeos, shows that logic need not enter into a declara- tion of love. The article written by Phyllis Lipsky and Pat Roelofs in the Daily for Oct. 15, 1953, causes me to wonder if they understand what Billy Graham said in his address to University students. When dealing with personal faith just as personal love, rea- son and logic play a very small part. The seemingly simple so- lution stated by Billy Graham is not simple at all. It calls for per- sonal faith in Jesus Christ as the Saviour from personal sin. To admit sin and human iniquity and then to live a Christian Life is not an easy thing to do for a person raised in this scientific era. Nevertheless I would like to a's our "critics" to explain or show the "false analogies and generali- zations without factual backing" of -which they speak. Also I would ask our "critics" to give us rea- sons why they believe that this "oratorical power" of Christian principles is "dangerous and de- ceptive???". -John Hyma Jr. Grad. * * * Spiritual renaissance . To the Editor: believe S. Laikin will find that the reason students were requir- ed to hear Billy Graham was not because he is a notable Christian, but because he is one of the na- tion's most potent orators. Those students like S. Laikin that are not Christians should bear in mind that the "Spiritual Renaissance" that Dr. Graham called for would include an awak- ening of other faiths. -N. R. Williamsen, Jr. V14e t Clt Y ; tI' s 'ith 0DR1W I'AISON fi ---"+ - ------ + SPRINGFIELD, Mo-Back in 1948 the farmI belt thought it had won, once and for all, the battle of government storage forI grain. And one reason farmers today are so sore at the Republicans is that this year they've had to fight the storage battle all over again. It was in 1948 that a Republican-controll- ed Congress passed a provision whereby the Agriculture Department was not "permit- ted to "own, lease or acquire" storage for grain. As a result private grain elevatorsI either hoisted rates or depressed the grain prices they offered farmers, following which an angry farm belt showed what it; thought of the Republicans by re-electing Harry Truman. Last June midwest farmers, who had voted so enthusiastically for Eisenhower,. woke up with a shock to find that the man they elected wasn't with them re- garding grain storage after all. The shock came at a Des Moines meeting of farm leaders on June 3, when Undersecretary of Agriculture True D. Morse announced there would be no more government stor- age.' "If the government must resort to buying bins and putting them up to store corn," said the Undersecretary of Agriculture, "we will have to look at them in the future as monuments to the failure of free enterprise." That afternoon the pro - Eisenhower, staunchly Republican Des Moines register came out with headlines: "U.S. to quit stor- ing grain." Simultaneously there was a hor- rendous cry from farm leaders. Later that day Undersecretary Morse went back before the same meeting and denied his own statement. Even though the state- ment was in the written text of his speech, he denied making it. "I've heard plenty of official denials," re- marked Jim R. Russell, farm editor of the Des Moines Register, "But that's the first time I've ever heard a man deny his own statement before the same crowd to whom he made the statement." * *' * * -GRAIN PRICES DROP- THE QUICKNESS of Morse's denial in- dicates the wrath of farmer sentiment on this touchy question of storage. ! the arid southwest, with special permission from Secretary Benson. Meanwhile also, Senator Murray of Montana was demand- in that corn-storage bins be diverted to Montana to talie care of its expected 113,- 000,000-bushel wheat crop. Finally and perhaps most important. the effect of inadequate storage was to depress the price of wheat faster and more disas- trously than at any time in three years. For thet first time since 1950 wheat dropped the full 10-cent limit allowed by the board of trade in one day. "Inadequacy of storage space for the large new crop." was the reason given by the journal of commerce on June 16. * * *; * -WHY FARMERS NEED STORAGE- HE REASON why farmers attach so much importance to grain storage is quite sim- ple. To the city dweller the question of grain elevator space or corn cribs would seem ei- ther one for free enterprise or else academ- ic. But the farmer cannot get the benefit of government price supports unless he is able to store his grain. And when he goes to the private grain elevator, its manager can sometimes charge him whatever he wants. For instance, the government support price of wheat last summer was around $2.20 a bushel, and theoretically the government would pay any farmer that amount for his wheat. But actually many farmers got around $1.60 or $1.70 a bushel. In other words they sometimes took a loss of 80 cents a bushel- because they couldn't store their wheat. For, first, they had to get it stored be- fore the government would pay the price support; and second, many private elevator operators, knowing the farmer is in a tight pinch, squeezed him. The operator knows the farmer can't take his wheat or corn anyplace else, knows that the eleva- tor operators have all the storage space sewed up. So he pays the farmer what the traffic will bear-regardless of the sup- port price. Sometimes two elevator operators get to- gether and buy up each other's space with- out actually using it. So, when the farmer tries to get-a place for his grain, both op- - -.- .. , t, innumerable activities. Although downfall of nations; about the: not directly connected with the menace of Communism; and even University, his influence on stu- less of Christianity is indeed ap- dents and faculty and his friend- palling. Somewhat appalling also, ship with them was profound. He but very reasonably to be expected had great creative talents and was is that such ignorance would ex- a warm friend. pose its inability to differentiate -E. G. Burrows, sincerity, wisdom and reality from Program Director, WUOM emotion, illogicity and absurdity. * * -Lewis F. Finkel Scored .. To the Editor:f 11lAllIT I1'I PJ Intolerance .. . To the Editor: Miss Laikin's comments on Dr. Graham's sermon were an in- teresting example of the very in- tolerance he so vehemently op- poses. Intolerance is the result of poor understanding, fear, and a closed mind. A I it 11I I UrIPIA1 I've been wondering whether it's you or I who should be credited with the neatest trick of the week. According to the Daily of October I)IIL fImUIiii bULJJIINI 4 r The Daily Official Bulletin is an game. Fresh Air Camp. Return Sunday 14, I "scored" the Senate resolu- ;j official publication of the University p~m. Call reservations to Unv. Ext. it-orhYa tions (for which I had voted) "as of Michigan for which the Michigan 2851. All foreign and American students Six!y-Fouth Year a gain . . . " Daily assumes no editorial responsi- welcome. Edited and managed by students of -Prof. Theodore M. Newcomb bility. Publication in it is construc- HFn n____ the University of Michigan under the- t . ive notice to all members of the Hillel Foundation activities for the authority of the Board in Control of University. Notices should be sent in week end: Student Publications. Conspiracy , .TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 2552 Sat., Oct. 17-9 am.. Community Administration Building before 3 p.m. vices; 4-6 p.m., Football open house Ed i Sta To the Editor: the day preceding publication (before followed by a Havdalah service.Hayinoriaan d 11 a.m. on Saturday). I Sun., Oct. 18-5 p.m., Hillel Chorus HryLn ..... aaigEio In a letter of October 14, Mike meets; 6 p.m., Supper Club; 8 p.m., IZFA Eric vetter .,,......... City Editor Sharpe wrote, "Six communists .LX O R 17, 1953 movie; 8:30 p.m., Game night. Virginia Voss....... Editorial Director in Detroit are not charged with Vlunker's Hour, sponsored by theie Wlr. ssoc City ditor Dunkr'sHou, sonsi~e bytheAlice B3. Silver.. Assoc. Editorial Director doing anything nor even teaching I otices Newman Club, will be held in the Fa- Diane Decker._......Associate Editor or advocating anything. They are Late permission for women students ther Richard Center today after the Helene Simon........Associate Editor charged with conspiracy to teach who atter sthe Chew st we l- football game. Coee andoghnus Ivan Kaye............Sports Editor chared ithconpiray t tech whoattnde th CheterBowes ec-will be served and everyone is wel- Paul Greenberg.... Assoc. Sports Editor and advocate." ture on Thurs., Oct. 15, will be no lat- come to attend. Marilyn Campbell...Women's Editor That is a fallacy. There is a er than 10:50 p.m. Kathy Zeisler.. Assoc. Women's Editor substantive ci-ime involved, the Roger Williams Guild. Open House Don Campbell.....Head Photographer cm f n ri otcesat the Guild House following the foot- crime of conspiracy."Conspiracy.isic ball game. Cider and doughnuts. a combination or an agreementta. , Bring your friends. Business Staf between two or more pel'sons for' Geometry Seminar, RMon., Oct. 19, 7 a rn orfins hmsTegr Bsns aae ewenwo rmrepsnsorp.m., 3001 Angell Hall. There will be Thomas Treeger. .....Business Manager accomplishing an unlawful end, ofa discussion of "Straight Line as an C in g Events William Kaufman Advertising Manager a lawful end by unlawful means." Element of Three-Space." icEuinCOHarlean Hankin..Ass . Business Mgr. Black's Law Dictionary, p. 383, 4th Music Education Club, Tues., Oct. 20, WilliamSeiden......Finance Manager ed.. 1951. The Mathematics Orientation Semi- 7:15 to 8:30, Michigan Union Rooms 3 James Sharp.... Circulation Manager -nar will meet Mon., Oct. 19, at 3 p.m. R&S. Student group of Music Educators Persons charged with the sub- in 3001 Angell Hal.t Mr. Joseph Manogue National Conference. Miss Hood will stantive crime of conspiracy are will speak on "A Student Views Analv- tell about her trip to Europe. Refresh- Telephone 23-24-I charged with having done some- sis: The Case of One and Several Com- ments. +hing- thir p 'haroPr4 -with h a_ plex Variables."- I /