THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, JULY; ., 1954 ________________________________________________________________________________ I ]RESIDI Amer vided a fir which has tion in alm hind the Ix Since t policy ha Communi the Unite A glarin ample was retary of C approved i Editorials are writte, and represe NIGH ENT TRUMAN'S decision to send tacking the United States policy for being too can aid and men to Korea pro- firm towards Russia; while at the same time, m, positive, but long overdue stand Secretary of State Byrnes at a conference in bolstered the United States' posi- Paris was calling for a firmer stand against nost all countries except those be- Russia. At Byrnes' threat to resign and pub- ron Curtain. lic pressure Truman accepted Wallace's re- he end of the war our foreign yignation and affirmed his support of d been one of evasion. The anti- st countries did not know where Since then, bit by bit and painfully d States stood, slowly, the administration has gradually ig and unfortunately typical ex- developed a foreign policy. Our present in September( 1946, when Sec- one, now over a week old, is what this commerce Wallace made a speech, country and the world needs. It has shown, mn advance by the President, at- everyone at long last that we shall stand firm against Russian aggression. We will, not continue to let small countries be de- published in The Michigan Daily voured by the Russians without a struggle., n by members of The Daily staff The President is to be commended for a ent the views of the writers only. formulation of foreign policy committed tf stopping Russian aggression. It has been T EDITOR: NANCY BYLAN needed for a long time. -John Foley ON THE Washington Merry-Go-Round WITH DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON-Considering the fact that they are members of opposite political parties and once rival candidates for the presidency, General MacArthur and Presi- dent Truman have coordinated gn the Kor- ean crisis exceptionally well. In fact, they get along better than some of MacArthur's fellow generals in the Pentagon building, whom Doug sometimes treats with high- handed disdain. Two historic telecommunication conver- sations were held between MacArthur and the White House in the first stages of the Korean war. The first was the night be- fore Truman issued his world-shaking an- nouncement that American forces would Intervene. The second was four days later when MacArthur gave an extremely gloomy picture of the Korean military rout and asked for permission to land ground troops. In his first conversation with the: White House, MacArthur was full of optimism, and informed Truman that he could "guarantee" success whether Russia intervened in Korea or not. In his second conversation held just after MacArthur had flown to Korea, he was quite pessimistic; in fact, much more so than the official communiques issued in Tokyo. It was in this conversation that MacArthur was given complete authority - including the use of ground forces and the right to bomb North Korea - in order to win the war as quickly as possible. f * N* PENTAGON CRISIS AS GRIM-FACED military leaders waited gravely for the latest news from embat- tled Korea, a dismayed screech echoed down the corridors of the Pentagon Building. The Weekend In Town ENTS OF INTEREST around campus. DRAMA THE CORN IS GREEN, first play in the speech department's summer series, with Claribel Baird, Jim Bob Stephenson, and Doris Medina. At 8 p.m. today through Sat- urday in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. See review on this page. DISCUSSION CONTEMPORARY ARTS AND SOCIETY. A panel discussion on "Communication in the Arts" will be carried on by Prof. John Ciardi, of Harvard, Prof. Ross Lee Finney of the music school, Prof. Edward W. Ran- nells, of the University of Kentucky, and Prof. Charles L. Stevenson of the philosophy department, at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow in Rack- ham Lecture Hall. * * * THE BULL RING, a weekly informal gath- ering open to all faculty members and grad- uate students meets Friday evenings for beer and talk at 111 West Huron St. MOVIES THE TITAN, Robert Flaherty's film about Michelangelo, will be shown at 7 p.m. and 9 p.m. tomorrow and Saturday in Architecture Auditorium. * * * THE WINSLOW BOY, movie version of the play which won the New York Drama Critics Award, with Robert Donat. Tomor- row and Saturday at the Michigan. * * * BARRICADE, advertised as a tale of "one woman in a love-starved wilderness," star-. ring Ruth Roman. Tomorrow through Sun- day at the State. EXHIBITS MODERN AMERICAN PAINTING of the post-war period is on view at the Rackham Galleries, which are open weekdays from 2 pin. to 5 p.m. and from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. and closed Sundays. _ __ _ _ A moment later, a girl rushed out of an office, shouting mournfully: "Rosen just hit a homer with the bases loaded!" This was the play by which Cleveland defeated Washington that day. * * * THOMAS L. STOKES: Elections WASHINGTON - The Korean crisis has caused a sudden and perceptible change in our domestic political situation by shifting emphasis from domestic to international issues, which may have its effect on the Congressional campaign and the November elections. International crises have a unifying impulse, tend to diminish carping politi- cal criticism, and focus public attention sharply and dramatically on the Presi- dent, whoever he may be, and it must be remembered that, as well as being Presi- dent and commander-in-chief, he also is leader of a political party. The current crisis is no exception in those respects. President Truman has won widespread support for his prompt and courageous ac- tion to protect our national security and save the United Nations. * * * THE UNIFYING EFFECT of the crisis is observedimtwo interesting reactions, among others: 1-The quick action by Congress to put through an adequate draft bill and the $1,225,000,000 arms aid bill, with a melting away of opposition to both measures- about which there had been considerable difference of opinion and a reluctance to hurry until the North Korean Army slash- ed its way across the 38th parallel. 2-The chorus of criticism that engulfed Senator Taft of Ohio when finally, after 24 hours, he gave grudging and conditional acquiescence, approving what the President had done, but insisting that Mr. Truman should have secured approval from Congress in advance and demanding the resignation of Secretary of State Dean Acheson. It was obvious that this attitude did not take well, especially since it was in decided contrast to the prompt high praise, with no strings attached, by such outstanding Republican leaders as Herbert Hoover and * Governor Dewey. He seemed to be trying desperately to keep alive by his attack on Secretary Acheson the issue that his wing of the party, along with some others, has been making. This re- volves about our past Chinese and Far East- ern policy, upon which Republicans have been concentrating their fire, and the Sena- tor Joe McCarthy Communists-in-the-State Department campaign, to which Senator Taft and the party's leadership in the Sen- ate have given their blessing. PAST INTERNATIONAL crises are any precedent, such things are likely now to lose their potency politically and to sink into comparative obscurity under impact of the new crisis and its immediate demanr) for which our policy has been readjusted. Mr. Hoover indicated this by saying, in effect, that we should let bygones be by- gones. The cry of "socialism," too, may lose its force against Truman proposals and legis- lative objectives, for those also are likel to become overshadowed by what is happen- ing on the Korean front and elsewhere abroad.. (Copyright 1950, by United Feature Syndicate, Inci "Forward!" F-PT h -.._ t .ic . 1.0~f ,<< Wnf_ F r ; . \ ,, .. _ ,. .... , _. <... Qs 95b INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Mediation on Korea By J. M. ROBERTS, JR. AP Foreign Affairs Analyst MEDIATION BETWEEN the United States and Russia on the Kor. ean situation, as suggested by India, is obviously impossible. Yugoslavia first proposed mediation in Korea instead of the UN Security Council's original cease-fire order. India seconded the idea at the same time she agreed to go along on the resolution for armed intervention, and followed through by offering to mediate herself between the U.S. and Russia. But, in the first place, Russia would have to abandon her pretense of non-responsibility in Korea if she accepted such an offer. In the second place, if mediation between the U.S. and Russia on Korea were possible, it would follow that it would be possible to apply it to the whole cold war situation-another obvious impossibility. * * * !' ~t3-AE4,4r~4 ..r I DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN a FRANK GRAHAM'S FRIENDS HE POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT is in- vestigating the anti-Negro organizations that mailed inflammatory racial propagan- da from New York designed to defeat liberal Senator Frank Graham of North Carolina. Graham himself, however, doesn't want any post-election investigation - not even by Senator Gillette's Senate Campaign Committee, which is interested in the re- ported $1,000,000 spent by Yankee Repub- licans and Dixiecrats. What really hurts Graham is the fact that the mill-workers and other poorer peo- ple, whose caise he has always championed turned their back on him on election day. Apparently they listened to the most vicious racial propaganda since the Civil War days - tons of literature circulated by Alabama Klansmen, anti-Graham prop- aganda mailed out under the franking privileges of Congressman Gwinn of New York (the friend of General Eisenhower); and the poisoned-pen diatribes of America Firster John T. Flynn inserted in the Con- gressional Record by Maine's Senator Owen Brewster. Apparently the poorer people, whom Gra- ham had always championed, listened and believed. For 63,000 of them who had voted for him in the first primary stayed away from the polls in the second. KOREAN WAR CAPSULES TRUMAN'S CABINET LUNCH-President Truman held an important lunch with his cabinet last week at which he expressed very frank fears about the current situation - especially what Korea might do to the American economy. He was particularly worried about inflation and expressed the hope that no panic-buying or hoarding of scarce materials should take place among industry or consumers. Truman has ordered the National Security Resources Board togo all-out in planning what must be done im- mediately if it looks like Korea would devel- op into a World War. BRITAIN WAKES UP-Up to last week end the British Foreign Office was putting heavy pressure on France and Egypt to agree to seat the Chinese Communists in the United Nations. Bevin thought this would bring Russia back into the UN and help compose the world's differences. How- ever, the British Foreign Office is now ex- pected to abandon its efforts, and with- drew recognition from Communist China altogether. *I * * BOGGED DOWN IN CHINA-Some of America's top diplomats are secretly fearful that the real motive behind the Communist attack on Korea is Moscow's hope to involve the United States in a military campaign against the Chinese Communists ... Moscow is reported to believe that a war between the U.S. and China would last forj generations, would sap America's strength to the point where we could not resist Rus- sian advances in other parts of the world. This was one reason Chiang Kai-Shek's offer to send troops to South Korea was promptly vetoed. NO MORE DETROITS-By the end of this year, the government will start a limit- ed dispersal of industry. Within a few months, the location of every new factory will be determined by the federal govern- ment in an attempt to relieve the dangerous overconcentration of America's industrial burgh. In other words, population under the 1960 census will not depend on such factors might in such cities as Detroit and Pitts- as markets, labor supply and raw materials; but on the atomic bomb. (Copyright, 1950, by the Bell Syndicate, Inc.) Principle IF, ON A FULL and final review, my life * I DRAMA T IS DIFFICULT to perceive the motives of the Department of Speech in its choice of "The Corn Is Green," by the English playwright, Emlyn Williams, as the first offering of the summer season, at the Ly- dia Mendelssohn Theater. Though the individual performances were more than adequate, the sentimental vehicle moved slowly, exhibiting a remark- able lack of dramatic intensity. There was little sympathy with the con- flict of Miss Moffat, a quietly crusading woman who has relegated her middle-aged talents to educating a group of impoverish- ed children in a mining community. In her prize student, Morgan Evans, play- ed by Jim Bob Stephenson, Miss Moffat (Claribel Baird) envisions a savior of the exploited miners. Her belief in his capacities was difficult to defend, the only basis be- ing a short sentence in a written exercise he has submitted early in the educational endeavor. Mrs. Baird exhibited refreshing charm in the opening passages but failed to maintain an enthusiastic pace, resulting in the inabil- ity of the audience to accept her as a com- pletely sympathetic character. For this reason, her struggle to educate Evans and have him admitted to Oxford is almost meaningless to the onlooker. The triumph can best be described as bathetic; the play's sluggishness and failure to im- press is the result of weak drama. The attempt in the third act to establish sympathy for Miss Moffat and Evans is un- bearably sentimental; in spite of the efforts of the pair to cope with the writing. Warren Pickett, as the bombastic Squire, Doris Medina, as the cockney wench whose only interest is in the "finer" things of life, and Bernice ' Daniel, as Mrs. Watty, the i (Continued from Page 2) Exhibitions General Library, main lobby cases. Contemporary literature and art (June 26-July 26). Museum of Archaeology. From Tombs and Towns of Ancient Egypt. Museums Building. Rotunda exhibit, American Indian stimu- lants. Exhibition halls, "Trees Past and Present." Fridays, 7:00- 9:00 p.m. Law Library. History of Law School (basement); sclassics for collectors (reading room). Michigan Historical Collections. 160 Rackham Building. A Century of Commencements. Clements Library. One Hundred Michigan Rarities (June 26-July 5). Museum of Art, Alumni Memor- ial Hall: Modern Graphic Art; Oriental Ceramics; through July 30; weekdays 9-5, Sundays 2-5. The public is invited. Events Today Classical Studies, Coffee hour, Thursday, July 6, at 4:00 p.m., in the West Conference Room of the Rackham Building. Students in the Department, and others inter- ested in the Classics, are invited to attend. The French Club will meet Thursday, July 6, at 8 p.m. in the West Conference Room, 3rd floor, of the Rackham Building. Caus- erie, songs, games. All students and faculty members interested are cordially invited to join the club. No fees. Deutsches Haus, 1101 Church Street, will hold open house on Thursday, July 6, from 7:30 un- til 10 p.m. There will be games and singing, and refreshments will be served. Everyone is cordially invited. String Teaching Conference, on Thursday, July 6, Hussey Room, Michigan League. Program: 9 a.m., Forum "Live demonstration in solving the instrumental problems of string group activity." 11:00, Concert by the University of Michigan Stanley Quartet. 2:00, Forum "How can our string de- partment best serve the needs' of music and the string teachers of Michigan?" Gilbert Ross, Oliver del, and audience. Phi Delta Kappa meeting on Thursday, July 6. 6 to 8 p.m. at Michigan Union. Purpose: Busi- ness and pleasure. Go through the Cafeteria Line at the MichiP. gan Union and take your tray to the Faculty Dining Room. University Community Center Willow Village. Thurs., July 6, 8 p.m., Ceramics. Play, presented by the Depart-1 ment of Speech. "The Corn Is Green" by "Emlyn Williams.8:00 p.m., Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. University of Michigan Sailing Club: Business meeting, Thursday, 7:30 p.m., 311 West Engine. Every- one welcome. Coming Events University Museums: The Pro- gram of the University Museums on next Friday evening, July 7, is entitled "Mammalian Survival." The featured exhibits in the Mu- seums Building will be open to the public from 7 to 9 p.m. Moving pictures entitled "Realm of the Wild" will be shown at 7:30 p.m. in Kellogg Auditorium in the Den- tal Building. A special exhibit entitled "The Coal Flora of Michigan" is on rdisplay in the Rotunda of the Museums Building. Visitors' Night, Department of Astronomy: Friday, July 7, at 8:30 to 10 p.m., Angell Hall. The stu- dent observatory, fifth floor, will be open for observation of Saturn and Mars with the telescopes. If the sky is not clear, the visitors' night will be cancelled. Children must be accompanied by adults. Reception for foreign students, auspices of the International Center. 7:30-12:00 p.m., Rackham Assembly Hall and Terrace. Fri- day, July 7. Play, presented by the Depart- ment of Speech. "The Corn Is Green" by Emlyn Williams. 8:00 p.m., Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. Friday, July 7. Contemporary Arts and Society Program. Panel discussion: Pro- fessors Ciardi (Harvard Univer- sity), Ross Finney (University of Michigan), Edward W.iRannells (University of Kentucky), Charles Stevenson (University of Michi- gan). 4:15 p.m., Rackham Lecture Hall. Friday, July 7. Jobs Needed THE CENSUS Bureau reports that about 1,750,000 persons were added to the working force between May and early June, bringing the total number em- ployed almost up to the record level of July, 1948. At the same time, however, unemployment, which had been steadily declining since February, turned upward again, rising to 3,384,000 as com- pared with 3,057,000 in May. The increase in number of unemploy- ed was, to be sure, smaller than anticipated, and is said to be due entirely to the influx of school- age persons into the labor mar- ket, unemployment among adult workers having registered a fur- ther decline. Nevertheless the record emphasizes the difficulty of providing sufficient jobs to ab- sorb a rapidly growing labor force even under favorable conditions, with agricultural employment ap- proaching its seasonal peak and industrial activity at high and, rising levels. -The Washington Post CONTINUED dependence upon relief induces a spiritual and moral disintegrationfundamental- ly destructive to the national fi- bre. To dole out relief in this way is to administer a narcotic, a subtle destroyer of the human spirit.3 INSTEAD OF A DESIRE to accept mediation, Russia appears more interested now, following direct allied military intervention, in get- ting out of the whole thing with some face left. This is strongly sug- gested by Gromyko's statement Monday night, emphasizing Russia's non-interventionist policy and comparing the right of the Koreans to settle their country's status among themselves with the American civil war. As a matter of fact, India seems to have cooled off on the mediation idea within a few hours of its publication. Her UN re- presentative agrees that "the time is not ripe." But India does continue to cite the beneficial results of negotiations between the prime ministers of India and Pakistan in the Kashmir matter as an example of the possibilities of high level conferences. Stalin and Truman are obviously in the Indians' mind. Instead of mediation and the like, attention at Lake Success is cen- tered on implementation of the Korean intervention program. The Security Council is expected to meet within 48 hours to clarify General MacArthur's status in the allied program, probably to designate him as the UN commander over and above his duties as allied high com- mander in the area. Use of the UN flag beside the national banners of the participating allies is expected to follow. ** * * INDICATIONS ARE that the United States wants someone else to carry the resolutions ball on these matters, to get somewhat away from the appearance that the Security Council is acting as a rubber stamp for American policy in Korea. Gromyko tried to make a lot out of this UN-U.S. parallel, accusing the Council of permitting itself to be used as a puppet, gr words to that effect. What Gromyko doesn't say, although he couldn't have stayed -at Lake Success as long as he did without knowing it, is that instead of "using" the Council, the U.S. and the other members have been forced into an identity of interest. And the force which resulted in fusion comes from Gromyko and his friends. ** * i Korea War Background By Drew Pearson and the Associated Press BASICALLY, STALIN, like the Czar, yearns to dominate North Asia -later Southeast Asia. The chief roadblock in his path is Japan, where an American occupation has made some slight progress in spreading democracy among Japan's impressionable people. A Japanese democracy, challenging a Communist Asia, is the last thing Stalin wants. Also, domination of Japan would make the island stepping-stones down the east flank of Asia-Formosa, the Philippines, Indonesia- fall like ripe plums into the Kremlin's lap. In fact, the highly industrialized, energetic Japanese people could be the easiest of all to convert to Communism, could help greatly in converting the rest of Asia. That is why the Korean spearhead, pointed at Japan, just about 100 miles across the Straits of Fusan, is so important to Moscow. Korea itself is not important economically. It is a pov- erty stricken, eroded country which will cost money to support. It is mostly mountains, interspersed by narrow valleys and dotted with muddy rice paddies. The rainy season, now on, combines with the terrain to hamper military operations both on the ground and in the air. These factors affect the invading Communists about as much as they do the defending South- - eriers and the newly-arived Americans. The Uijongbu Valley, down which the surprise Northern in- vasion, thrust to Seoul, is about the best spot in the country for the use of tanks, and that is where the Communists used them successfully against a foe who had none. Deeper south, the country becomes more rugged and the difficulties of operating tanks in- crease. Most Korean streams can be forded during the dry winters but in the rainy season are torrents that must be bridged. . * * * POLITICALLY and strategical- ly, Korea is the first essential step in dominating Japan. Psy- chologically, the Japanese have beenaaccustomedntoathinkinreof Korea, and Japan as one area. Economically, the Japanese need Korea as a market. Strategically, it is only a hop across the narrow Fusan Straits, and in the old days ferry boats crossed from the mainland of Korea to Japan two or three times a day. That is why President Tru- man's decision to use the arm- ed forces of the United States in Korea is so momentous. And that is why Stalin is not likely to take this American blocking move lying down. An"f Fifty-Ninth Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Philip Dawson......Managing Editor MarvinrEpstein........Sports Editor Pat Brownson........ Women's Editor Business Staff Roger Wellington... sBusiness Manager Walter Shapero. .. Assoc. Business Mgr. 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 nil matter. Subscription during regular school year by carrier. $5.00, by mail, $6.00. That months for the is why the next six are going to be crucial American people. -Franklin D. Roosevelt f BARNABY As you should know, Mr. Friendly, the state is giving up its plan to b,,;d ,,hiahav wes ,fwn AF Now, as to my plans for a chain of deluxe hostelries along the SnIwr " ru, rr.ii,, I in' nand I know a fine, civiC-minded man like you will be grateful fn fh noartniy s, v City Hall Pool and Social Club-Yeah? ii