PAGE TWO THt 1VIIMil-AN TfAmY , Sri TTTRnA V. lrTTI'.V it 16th THE rMTCHWwaaa riN Li1AT QTTD1v ..70 A. VW~T dX1I A C T C U'1j T7W~'qA ataiu utsz dULx 5, 1Z)5V t T.1 IUMYA L. NI J Difficulties in Korea ,' "White Is Black. Black Is White. Night Is Day--" C IINIEMA WASHINGTON-Early reverses in the Ko- rean war, though they might have been expected from the sudden blitzkrieg inva- sign by North Korean Communists have, nevertheless, come as a sobering suprise to our people who knew little of the situation in that far-off outpost. Somehow, we as a people, never expect re- verses, despite our experience in the early stages of the Pacific war against Japan, but look for an immediate turn of the tide once we step in and, when that does not happen, begin to look for scapegoats while tightening our belts for the longer haul. That seems to be the psychological sit- uation just at the moment. It is natural to look for scapegoats, and it is necessary to locate mistakes and miscal- culations so our course can be properly set. But, this is to be a long haul. It won't be quick. It won't be easy. The American people might as well know that now. They should be told frankly by those in authority. * * * INTIMATIONS THAT this is to be done in the July 4 speech here of John Foster Dulles, consultant to Secretary of State Acheson, who returned a few days ago from Korea and the Far East. He warned that the task we are undertaking "is not a light one, and before it is finished we shall, all of us have to pay a price," some with lives and the rest of us perhaps in sacrifices of an eco- nomic nature-a cut in our "economic in- delgences," as he put it. This diagnosis is expected to be elabor- ated upon in the near future by President Truman, probably in a message to Con- gress, in which the Korean assignment, undertaken in co-operation with the Uni- ted Nations and its needs, will be explained in more detail. Much more of a military force will be required for the mission than has thus far been publicly announced Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: PAUL MARX and, because of our commitments in other parts of the world, it likely will be neces- sary to draw from reserves, and through increased enlistments, maybe also the draft, from our manpower here at home, for both the Army and Navy. Additional appropriations may also be necessary. The financial situation was hint- ed at by Secretary of Treasury John W. Sny- der when, appearing on the tax bill that has passed the House, and now is before the Senate Finance Committee, he withheld final judgment on the reductions contem- plated because of the Korean emergency. It may not be the time to cut taxes. AN INDICATION of some of the thinking in Congress on economic aid to Korea- before the Communist attack-came when ECA aides testified before the Senate Ap- propriations Committee in mid-June. They were grilled at length about why our gov- ernment should extend aid to the Korean government for properties and functions now nationalized by the South Korean Re- public under its constitution. Senator Ferguson who was for the aid, nevertheless protested that "we are aiding nationalization all over the world instead of private enterprise," while Senator Robert- son asked "if we are pouring money down a rat hole in Korea, and stimulating social- ism or some other alien form of government, or are we stemming the tide of Communism in Korea, and is it worth it?" The reply was that there is little private capital in Korea for investment, or out- side capital willing to risk investment, and that it is wisest for our government to deal with the government there rather than take a chance with local private in- terests that might not be responsible. The problem was put very distinctly by E. A. J. Johnson, ECA director of the Korean pro- gram, thus: "you have two choices: either to do that (the present program) or to let the Communists take South Korea." Korea is not a simple problem. But the solution for the immediate dilemma caused by the Communist attack has been simpli- fied. The immediate job is a military one, and everything must be concentrated on that. (Copyright 1950, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) '5 ON THE Washington Merry-Go -Round WITH DREW PEARSON THE TITAN. The life and work of Michelangelo. Edited by Robert Flaherty, with narration by Fredric March. THE TITAN is the most impressive o what amounts to a new genre in film making: the life of an artist told in term of his art. It is to be immediately dis- tinguished from, on the one hand, the rathe technical study of technique and tradition the best recent example of which was th( short on Rubens shown here some month ago, and, on the other hand, the fictional- ized Hollywood-type biography with, inevi- tably, Cornell Wilde. It is the plain purpose of the present film to get across some feeling about Mi- chelangelo as a part of his times. To this end the editors have intercut with con- siderable ingenuity shots of the sculptor's own work with the contempora-ry produc- tions of lesser men in all fields, and have happily abstained from the temptation of presenting a tweniteth-century idea of what Renaissance Italy must have been. The narration which binds the whole thing together is likewise distinguished for the same sort of reticence. There is, in brief, an air of lettin Michelangelo and the period handle most of the story -an attitude which is welcome enough in this era of souped-up history. One of the most obvious manifestations of this impulse to record without revising is the fact that no living human appears in the film - only the impossibly virile be- ings of Michelangelo himself. There is not, moreover, much of the technical gloss to which you and I, dear reader, have become accustomed in our documentaries. The cam- era moves little, and never over great dis- tances; lighting is often surprisingly flat and unimaginative; and special effects are few and simple. A great deal of this kind of primitiveness is due, of course, to the fact that the filming was done some ten or fif- teen years ago and under conditions which were and still are difficult. The present edition of what was origi- nally a much longer production gets its pace and direction primarily from crisp cutting and a busy sound track; the camera never stays long at one shot, and the narration moves with it. There is an infrequent use of background dialogue and sound which produces the uncanny feeling that there are living people about; that although you never catch up with them you are where they have just been and that you see what they have just wrought. The Titan is, for these several reasons, well worth your time. It has photographic inadequacies which I do not think will bother you, and its virtues are multiple. Above all, it is a picture about Michelan- gelo's work, a fact which serves more than anything else to compensate for whatever mechanical crudities and to give the thing the size and power it has. The Art Cinema League and the Inter- Arts Union offer along with The Titan a short University-produced film in color about painting for the fun of it. I have not seen it, but they tell me it's a good one. -W. J. Hampton Another Lin FOLLOWERS OF baseball's intricacies have become worried of late about the plight of the poor pitchers. What with the strike zone's being whittled and balks' being called every hour on the hour and the baseball's having enough rabbit in it to grow ears, the pitchers are in a bad way. The hitters, to put it bluntly, are murdering them. Some folks even have got around to talk about reviving the spitball just to even things a little. Well, we've no answer for the problem. We have, though, just come across evi- dence that it isn't a purely national one. And on the hunch that there's something to that saying that misery loves company, we pass it on. England's Manchester Guardian was dis- cussing the recent Test cricket matches, and it went on at length about the wicket that was used. Then querulously it con- cluded: "If a fast bowler is not to be allowed to make a ball rear up near the bats- man's head, we might as well stop trying to find fast bowlers to send to Australia in the autumn. Why is it always the bats- man who is to be casseted? Is cricket to degenerate into a sort of superior round- ers?" We don't understand all the technicalities, but we get the general idea: The batters are getting all the best of it, and the pitchers are getting their lumps. Chalk up another thing beyond a mu- tually misunderstood language that binds us to that tight little isle across the sea. -St. Louis Star-Times r 2jj 9--) , .. 4 . 1"....., S _ y a _ , y ;ti . Y-: ='- rt '. i J r , s - S.: 4 . n f $4 < ' " s YA ' r+ ti6.oc c, i ro -w MNsw+ r.+r ,., 1 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN li I,, I I JI WASHINGTON-Eisenhower got his come- uppance from sardonic Admiral William D. Leahy at a recent White House meeting. Wlhen Ike greeted Leahy, who was Chief -of Staff to President Roosevelt in World War II, the Admiral looked Eisenhower over carefully and replied: "Hello, professor." Ike shook his head vigorously. "Well," Admiral Leahy commented, "I can't call you 'Mr. President'-yet." Ike flushed and changed the subject. * ~* * - DRIBLET TO KOREA - THERE'S BEEN a lot of talk as to why only a driblet of aid was sent to Korea- $200,000-when Congress voted $10,500,000 more than a year ago. Republican Senators Homer Ferguson of Michigan and William Knowland of Calif- ornia have been raising cain about this. There were two inside reasons for this shocking neglect. One was a wrong guess by military intelligence, the other was a standoff attitude by General MacArthur. Part of this story came out at a closed- door meeting of the Senate Appropriations Committee, but not all. 1-The National Security Council, on ad- vice of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, also Mac- Arthur's SCAP headquarters, also Central Intelligence, all specified that Korea's prob- lem was "internal security." Attack by an enemy army was ruled "possible but not probable." This meant that Korean aid, un- der a Joint Chiefs of Staff directive, was limited mainly to replacement parts for the $110,000,000 in military equipment left be- hind by U.S. occupation troops, and small arms. Actually the "internal security" program was effective and 5,000 guerrillas had been knocked off in recent months. 2--Aid to Korea was put in a low priority by the Security Council behind arms for Western Europe, Greece and Turkey. It was not until Ambassador John Muccio returned to Washington this spring and pleaded des- perately for speed that haste was ordered. 3-The able and conscientious military aid coordinator, Maj. Gen. L. L. Lemnitzer, tried to persuade General MacArthur to release materiel from his stocks in Japan for im- mediate shipment to Korea. General Lem- nitzer argued this would save from two to four weeks time. But General MacArthur said he could not afford to release the re- quested supplies. - CONGRESS TAKES TIME - AS A RESULT of all this, less than $200,000 of supplies had left U.S. ports by June 26th. 4-Congress itself was in no hurry to push .. to 'Z yi i i M Nom.'. J INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Communists & Formosa By J. M. ROBERTS, JR. AP Foreign Affairs Analyst THE CHINESE COMMUNISTS say they are determined to take For- mosa regardless of American naval intervention-but it is notice- able that they don't say when. The Peiping message to Secretary-General Trygve Lie of the United Nations looks more like a boast for home consumption than a threat of immediate action. UNITED STATES military authorities won't worry about it a whole lot. They are confident they have plenty of naval and air power handy to meet any move the Communists might be foolish enough to make in that direction. The announcement of Peiping's position, however, could have military meaning not directly connected with Formosa. They might hope to cteate a scare about the island while they go ahead with plans for other areas. They've got some business to tend to in Indo-China and Tibet which they might consider far less dangerous. And they might begin throwing troops into Korea when and if American forces seem about to turn the North Korean tide. Incidentally, such a turning now seems even farther off than it did in the first flush of announcement that General MacArthur and his occupation divisions in Japan were going to war. * * * * IT'S GOING TO take a lot more stuff than anyone may have antici- pated to win the Korean war. It may take months instead of days to even get a real start. Jet planes, flying low because of bad weather, with resultant heavy fuel consumption as compared with the altitudes for which they were designed, are not proving up as the real answer to tactical ground support needs. And it may be two months before there is any really decent weather for any types. In the meantime, the Chinese Communist situation presents the allies with political as well as military forebodings. In order to insure that war potentials will not reach them for possible use against her, the United States is moving to shut off ship- ments. But Britain declines to cooperate, especially with regard to"oil. Britain has recognized the Peiping regime in an effort to maintain her commercial interests in China. She claims oil shipments only sup- ply civilian needs and therefore are not a potential military danger. But at this distance it seems that if the Communists are relieved of meeting Chinese civilian needs their military position is just that much enhanced. THE CHINESE NATIONALISTS on Formosa are also complaining about it, saying the U.S. demand that they drop their blockade and raids on the mainland now permits the British to supply their enemies and so build them up for the time of showdown which Chiang insists will come.' In addition to the possibility of Korean intervention, the Com- munists are believed to be working feverishly for a shot at Indo-China. That, more than the Korean situation, may be responsible for new restrictions on the shipment of oil to Hong Kong and Macao, British and Portuguese ports from which reshipment to China is easy. Export licenses for shipments of American oil to these points have been held up and may not be resumed, and other materials are reported on the blacklist. The U.S. doesn't want to have to fight its own products which the Chinese might relay to Korea, or 'to Indo-China, either. Knowland was author of a defeated amendment to cut $300,000,000. Other crit- ics are Ohio's Senators Bricker and Taft, who voted against aid along with 22 other senators. Sen. George Malone, who attacked Ad- ministration incompetence on aid to Korea, not only voted against the bill, but said on the Senate floor: "the whole present pro- posal is a waste of money." * * * TOP GOP CANDIDATES - More and more Republican leaders are watching Gov- ernors Warren of California and Duff of Pennsylvania as the best Republican bets for 1952 - for one simple reason. They are two Republicans who know how to win Democratic votes. * * * URANIUM AT SOUTH POLE-U.S. Am- bassador Kirk has cabled from Moscow that 14 Russian ships are leaving for the South Pole to stake out a claim for Russia. Real reason of the trip is to locate uranium. Back in 1930 under a Republican administration, Maryland's Senator Tydings, a Democrat, introduced a resolution urging that the U.S.A. claim the Antarctic on the basis of Admiral Byrd's expedition. The State De- partment, however, never moved. * * * BYRD'S NONESSENTIALS - Senator Byrd of Virginia, chairman of the Senate Committee on Nonessential Expenditures, is now investigating mail pay rates. The only trouble is, the same investigation has just been completed by the Senate Post Office Committee. Yet exactly the same witnesses are being called by Byrd and the same facts dug up - despite the fact that the purp:se of Senator Byrd's committee is to stop dup- lication in order to save the taxpayers' money. Maybe the Committee on Nones- sential Expenditures should investigate it- self to see whether it is making a nonessen- tial expenditure. * * * Frank Hogan, the N.Y. district attorney who jailed gambler Frank Erickson, is being talked of as a Democratic candidate for governor. (Copyright, 1950, by the Bell Syndicate, Inc.) Publication in The Daily Official Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of therUniversity. Notices for the Bulletin should be sent in typewritten form to the Office of the Summer Session, Room 3510 Admin- istration Building, by 3:00 p.m. on the day preceding publication (11:00 a.m. Saturdays). SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1950 VOL. LX, No. 9-S Notices Notice to all new registrant with the Bureau of Appointments There will be a meeting hel Monday, July 10, at 4:00 o'cloc in Room 231 Angell Hall for th purpose of giving information re garding registration with the Bur- eau and answering questions re- garding the filling out of th blanks. Also anyone who was un- able to attend the previous meet- ing may obtain the registratio material at this time. People desiring positions for September should register at this time and should return the ma- terial promptly. This applies to both those interested in teaching and non-teaching positions. Registration blanks which were given out at the time of the meet- ing last week are to be returned to the office of the Bureau, 3528 Ad- ministration Building and are NOT to be returned at the time of this meeting. Concerts for 1950-51. The Uni- versity Musical Society announ- ces that orders for season tickets for the Choral Union Series and for the Extra Concert Series for 1950-51, are being accepted and filed in sequence, at the offices of the University Musical Society in Burton Memorial Tower. Choral Union Series (10 con- certs): Helen Traubel, Obt. 5; Boston Symphony, Oct. 22; Cleve- land Orchestra, Nov. 5; Solomon, pianist, Nov. 20; Polytech Chorus of Finland, Nov. 28; Royal Phil- harmonic, Sir Thomas Beecham, conductor, Dec. 3; Erica Morini, Jan. 11; Horowitz, Jan. 19; Chi- cago Symphony, March 4; and Heifetz, March 14. Extra Concert Series (5 con- certs): Lauritz Melchior, Oct. 10; Boston Symphony, Oct. 25; Myra Hess, Nov. 14; the original Don Cossacks, Jan. 15; and the Cin- cinnati Symphony, Feb. 20. The language examination for M.A. candidates in history will be given Friday, July 14 at 4 p.m., in Rm. 1209 Angell Hall. Those wishing to take the ex- amination should indicate that fact to the History Department ,secretary, Rm. 100A, Rackham Building, by Wednesday, July 12. Concerts Faculty Recital. Elizabeth Green, Assistant Professor of Music Ed- ucation in the School of Music, will appear in a violin recital at 8:30 Monday evening, July 10, in the Rackham Assembly Hall. Her program will include composi- tions by Fiocco, Glazounow, Mo- zart, Joaquin Nin, Paganini, Kroll, and York Bowen, and will be open to the public. Miss Green will be accompanied by Helen Titus, As- sistant Professor of Piano. Stanley Quartet, Gilbert Ross and Emil Raab, violinist, Paul Doktor, violist, and Oliver Edel, cellist, will be heard in its first program of the summer series at 8:30 Tuesday evening, July 11, i the Rackham Lecture Hall. Th program, including works by Bee- thoven, Mozart, and Ross Lee Fin- ney, will be open to the genera public without charge. Exhibitions General Library, main lobby cases. Contemporary literatur and art (June 26-July 26). Museum of Archaeology. Fro d Tombs and Towns of Ancient k Egypt. Museums Building. Rotunda - exhibit, American Indian stimu- - lants. Exhibition halls, "Trees e Past and Present." Fridays, 7:00- - 9:00 p.m. n Law Library. History of Law School (basement); classics for r collectors (reading room). - Michigan Historical Collections. 160 Rackham Building. Tourists in Michigan, yesterday and today. 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 School Vocal Music Conference, L Saturday, Michigan League Ball- room. Program: 8:30, The Effec- tive School Music Teacher, How to Train Him, William Knuth, San Francisco State College. 9, Demon- stration Rehearsal (The Audience is the Choir), Maynard Klein, Uni- versity of Michigan. 10, The Mu- sical Show as a School Project, Sadie Rafferty, Northwestern Un- iversity. 11, New Horizons in Mu- sic Education - A unified School and Civic Program. Orien Dalley, University of Michigan. 1:30, A Balanced Music Curriculum in the High School, Sadie Rafferty. 2:30, The Junior High School General Music Class, Marguerite Hood, President, M.E.N.C., 3, A Demon- stration of Elementary Piano Class Teaching, Lois Anderson, Univer- sity of Michigan. 3:30, Forum, "The Foundation - Music in the Elementary School," Sadie Raffer- ty, Roxy Cowin, Marguerite Hood, Lois Anderson. Saturday Luncheon Discussion Group: Lane Hall, 12:15 p.m. Mr. Harold Sullivan will present a summary on the Youth for Under- standing program. Graduate Outing Club: Meet 2 p.m., northwest corner of Rack- ham building for swimming. Elec- tion of officers. All members own- ing cars please bring same. U. of M. Hostel Club: Sun., July 9 and Wed., July 12: Swimming in late afternoon and evening. Departure times: 4:00, 5:30, and 6:00. Transportation will be pro-< vided for all who sign up on bul- letin board in Lane Hall lobby by Tuesday at 6 p.m. Meeting to dis- cuss plans for the summer will be held at the lake. New members especially welcome. "The Corn Is Green," Emlyn William's prize-winning play will ' Inside Story' WASHINGTON---(P)The "inside story" behind President Truman's historic decision in the Korean war crisis has come out with offi- cials emphasizing these points: 1-In a solemn talk with his top diplomatic-defense leaders, the President insisted.that the United States had to "draw the line" against Communism somewhere. 2-The President said the United States would "lose face" with democratic nations everywhere if it failed to stand behind the little South Korea Republic it sponsored. As Secretary of Defense Johnson and Secretary of State Acheson recalled events, the decisions in ev- ery case were actually made and laid down by Mr. Truman himself. Other officials said the President made a decision to move against Communist forces in the Far East before he arrived in Washington as from an interrupted weekend in Missouri. Mr. Truman's insistence on forceful action-even at the cal- culated risk of war-was such a well-guarded secret that even some- of his closest associates were in the dark. -Li - MR. TRUMAN himself gave no inkling that he intended to move until after his return to Washington. But one of his remarks was that the Communist tactics in the Far East could no longer be ignored. There was agreement, from the President all the way down, that the United States coud use force and stay within the resolution adopted by the United Nations Se- curity Council asking member na- tions to 'render every assistance" in enforcing its order to termi- nate firing in Korea. have its last performance tonight at the Lydia Mendelssohn The- atre at 8 p.m. Tickets are on sale at the box office, open from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Coming Events B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation, 1429 Hill Street. Open House for all students. Sunday evening, 7:30-10:30 Dancing, refreshments. 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 Marvin~ Epstein ......... Sports Editor Pat Brownson........Wonn's Editor Business Staff Roger Wellington....Business 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 ma matter. Subscription during regular school year by carrier, $5.00, by mail $600; 4 I CJ,4 s' I7 MOVIES At The Michigan ..,. "The Winslow Boy" with Robert Donat, Sir Cedric Hardwicke, Margaret Leighton. THE STORY OF "The Winslow Boy" con- ,.r.r h r h nr :r.Y i , . : humanism of this picture gives it a realis- tic quality. The sentimental scenes are carefully measured; emphasis is placed on restraint rather than on melodramatic interpretations. William's prize-winning play will 7:30-10:30. Dancing, refreshments. year by carrier, $5.00. by mail, $8.00. BARNABY Where'd you get the tip, Friendly? Who \f . i know lots of O'Malleys. What ward's this one from? HE wouldn't go off half-cocked. He's going to mend ofruna Is Mr.Friendly going to lend the non aM r'Mnhsrll - A cast of well-matched actors makes the I