PAGE TWO TIDE MICHIGAN DAILY c FSTDAY, 'JULY 21, 195 THE MICHIGAN DAILY ____________________________________________________ I __________________________________________________________________________________ I FRIDA _, JULY ...,.. Administrattion Error V KOREA had been a Pearl Harbor attack, the United States would have lost the war before it was ready to fight. The Secretary of Defense said that if the Russians attack- ed at four, the United States would be ready at five. Instead of only one hour elapsing, two weeks have elapsed. Still the United States is not ready. And it wasn't mighty Russia that attacked. It was insignificant North Korea. There is something vitally wrong in our Defense Department. According to Rear Admiral Roscoe Hillenkoetter, chief of the Central Intelligence Agency, W'Ashington had been warned in a report dated June 20 that the Communists were mobilizing forces along the 38th parallel and were capable of attack at any time. He added that it was virtually impossible to set the exact date for attack. Nevertheless, we should have been ready for that attack. Such disregard for our intelligence reports is inexcusable. Ever since the unification fight in Con- gress, proper leadership has been lacking in the Department of Defense. Johnson said "Peace through strength must be our goal." And he was right, but he doesn't follow this policy. By practicing false eco- nlony measures, he has endangered the safety of the nation. At the beginning of the fight in Korea news reports said that the Americans were crying for proper equipment. For a week some had to fight tanks with carbines. And then they had to get within fifteen yards of the tanks before they could inflict damage. If this were not enough, American men and equipment have been thrown into the Ko- rean fight to be devoured bit by bit by the North Korean war machine. This false economy wasn't limited to the Defense Department. Congress in this ses- sion passed a bill authorizing a 58 group air force. President Truman saw fit to pigeon hole this bill by providing funds for a 48 group air force. Now at this time of crisis we are having to use private planes to send supplies to Korea. The administration has violated the wish- es of Congress to the detriment of the coun- try's welfare. When Congress passes a law, the President should carry out its wishes. Truman chose to disregard Congress. In addition . to the cutting of the air force against the wish of Congress, less than $500 out of the $60 million voted Korea by Con- gress had been sent to Korea before the present conflagration. Whether this is un- constitutional is a matter for lawyers to decide, but the President should not be able to disregard the laws passed by the elected representatives of the people. The President states that we are not at war. Then in the next breath he asks for wartime measures and ten billion dollars for defense. Obviously he is right some- where-we are at war. Harold Ickes once said that war is the result of stupid statesmanship. And for once he was right. This administration had been allowing Communism to spread rampant throughout the world without doing much to stop it. The United States should have had a working foreign policy, before now. The tactics of the Russians have been ap- parent since the end of the second world war. But only now has the administration acted. Because of the lack of a foreign policy we are now involved in a war with Korea. The United States up to now has followed the policy of letting the Communists take over small countries. The Communists be- lieving that the United States would contin- ue to follow this policy attacked in Korea. It is very probable to believe that if they had known that the United States would send forces to Korea they would not have fought in 'Korea. They had good reason to believe this after we had withdrawn all our forces from there. Our stand in Korea was the only one to take. However, the United States should have taken it five years ago. At that time we were better prepared. These past five years have seen small countries one by one being devoured by the Russians. If we had taken this stand then, these na- tions would have been free today and those Americans lying on Korean battle fields would be alive. Fortunately, Korea is not another Pearl Harbor. The war might have been over be- fore we were ready to fight. Let us hope that the administration can learn from the Korean situation. even though it failed to learn from Pearl Harbor. The very existence of this country may be dependent on it. -John Foley Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: PETER HOTTON THOMAS L. STOKES: Super-Patriots & Hoarders "This Is An Emergency. We Must Raise Prices At Once" WASHINGTON - Wars-even rumors of wars-arouse the greedy instinct in some human beings. Our present situation is no exception. Again there are the signs familiar to any- one who has watched the necessary prepara- tions for our national defense from a front seat here before-here where the necessary steps must be taken to curb the greedy in- stinct. The old characters bob up once more across our nation. ** * THERE ARE the "hoarders" who rush out to stock up and thereby cause shortages, which begins a vicious circle of inflation. And there are those greedy purveyors of goods who exploit the psychology this cre- ated to jack up prices, and make a quick profit for themselves - while young men are dying. Fortunately, the Senate Banking Com- mittee is now moving to investigate the wave of price increases that have occurrect already since the North Korean invasion. * ** * NOW WE HEAR AGAIN, as before, the mock earnest cry of a sort of super- patriot among those opposed to social and welfare proposals and expenditures, who rise up to exploit the war psychology for their own selfish purposes. Wrapping themselves in the flag, they piously demand a cut in what they call "unnecessary expenditures" for our domes- tic economy. They don't say so, but they mean those things that government has come to do to promote the welfare of our people. They shout bombastically for entire concentration on military expenditures. It is their aim, under the convenient cloakI of national defense, to stop, or slow down, some of the programs we have adopted in the general public interest. The technique is to starve them out, that is, to deprive these functions of necessary appropriations and running expenses. WE'RE GOING TO NEED plenty for our military, no doubt about that, and we'll get it without the help of the super-patri( t; here described. That will be needed on the firing line in Korea, or wherever, and to bol- ster our position all over the world. But, there is a firing line here at home, too. It must remain strong. We are engaged, on the Korean front, and all over the world, in a fight for demo- cracy. To us, democracy has come to mean the welfare, as well as the freedom, of people, our people and people elsewhere. We have spelled that out, and in big let- ters, for the rest of the world to see, and for the benefit of other free nations in our ECA program and our Point Four program, which are corollaries in the economic and social welfare field of our military aid to other nations. They go hand in hand in the long pull, a balanced program. S * * IN THE LAST FEW YEARS we have streng- thened our democracy here at home by many measures well-known to all, too nu- merous to list, to improve the livin'g condi- tions of our people through better housing, better health, opportunities for jobs at good pay, protection in employment and security for oldv age, development of natural re- sources, including our great river basins, which provide facilities for better living as well as opportunities for new employment for a growing population. They reinforce the freedoms for which we fight, for they have freed us from the worries and cares that weaken other peo- ple to give up their freedoms. We have something to protect, a more full and rounded way of life than any where else ' in the world. These are established functions of gov- ernment. They must be expanded gradually, in our democratic way, rather than curtailed, for we need a balanced program here at home to keep ours a dynamic democracy, an ideal not only for ourselves, but for those whom -we would enlist on our side in the world-wide struggle. (Copyright 1950, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) Itti t1~PROFITEER & w p _______<.___{_____________n~ L KINDS ,r '" Q,~h ~ WA ,6,i o w = DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN IDRIAMA WILLIAM SAROYAN, at some nebulous time in his life, arrived at a set of three rules, the first of which is important: "Do not pay any attention to the rules other people make . . . They make them for their own protection, and to hell with them." "The Time of Your Life," staged by the Department of Speech at the Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre, is a tribute to that rule - the play is an unusual creation. However, the author, if he was writing for production, made a serious error: he assumed that the play-goer would recognize his complete mes- sage, much of which appears in the stage directions or, if you will, his running com- mentary, from the actual performance: one cannot appreciate the full import of Saro- yan's work unless he reads the play. One other criticism before dealing with the finished product as viewed at Mendel- ssohn: the almost indiscriminate cutting of dialogue has been painful in the past but now it has reached a new acme of distaste. There is no doubt left in the onlooker's mind that Kitty Duval is a prostitute, yet the very powerful and character-revealing lines she speaks to Blick in the final act were massacred - apparently to conform to the supposed conservative tastes of an Ann Arbor aulience. As written, Kitty defiantly snaps at Blick, "I'm a whore, you son of a witch. You know what kind of work I do. And I know what kind of work you do." However, since the production did not at- tempt to completely purify Kitty and re- store that which has been unceremoniously plucked in the hidden past, only limited, though indignant, criticism can be register- ed. The production was not good, even if we were able to accept the Saroyan point of view, stated eloquently in the preface: "In the time of your life, live - so that in that wondrous time you shall not add to the mi- sery and sorrows of the world, but shall smile to the infinite delight and mystery of it." A flock of characters attempted to live for the audience in the play which tells of life's beauty; unfortunately ,for the most part, they failed. The reviewer could not help ex- tending sympathy to several of the bizarre humanitarians - they found it impossible to cope with the rhetoric of an unusual Paci- fic Street honky-tonk. Notable in this reference was Elsie Man- delspiegel, played by Dolly Allen; her lines were almost ridiculous as they were spoken, and were completely absurd in light of her final suggestion that she and Dudley, one of the characters guilty of gross over-acting, shack up for the evening to forget the ills of the world, to "dream that the world is beautiful." Ted Heusel, who took the lead role of Joe, a champagne-drinking philosopher who must discover all in life, except per- haps the experience of dancing, was un- fortunately poor, though he showed re- markable improvement in the third act. Chief criticism is to be attached to his in- tonations - in the first two acts, the re- viewer was reginded of the Great Emanci- pator of "Abe Lincoln in Illinois," a role very successfully handled by Heusel over a year ago. But "The Time of Your Life," or Nick's Pacific Street Restaurant, Saloon and Entertainment Palace, was not the place for the sprawling speech of Sherwood's "Good Old Abe" as he bids farewell to his Springfield friends at the play's conclusion. Larry Johnson sporadically tried too hard but was, on the whole, convincing as Nick, the bartender, and Irving Deutsch was im- pressive, in his own reiterative way, as the Arab. A literary historian once said of the au- thor: "His buoyant improvisatory humor and his gospel of uncritical love expressed our desire to remain optimistic on a volcano, be- nign in the midst of evil, and self-assured in the midst of disheartening uncertainties. Saroyan's failure to enjoy any real success after 1942 coincided with the American peo- ple's - but not Saroyan's - realization of the immediate seriousness of the struggle against 'the Axis powers." It could very well be that, in light of current events, and the threatening ex- plosion of a world bursting at the seams, Saroyan cannot be accepted today. However, even commanding ourselves to accept his dogma, the acting in the current production did nothing to maintain the beachhead begrudgingly granted to the au- thor. --B. Sheldon Browne DREW PEARSON: Washington Merry-Go-Round CAPITOL NEWS CAPSULES NO MORE POLITICKING - President Trman has now junked plans for a whistle- stop campaign this fall. He was scheduled to go to California, stopping to help various Democratic candidates en route, but the war crisis has changed everything. The Presi- dent will now stay close to Washington, will make almost no trips unless the war situa- tion vastly improves. *x * TRUMAN'S PUBLIC RELATIONS, White House advisers admit privately that the President's public relations are extremely bad. Some neonle blame this onp ress sec- Publication in The Daily Official Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Notices for the Bulletin should be sent in typewritten form to the Office of the Summer Session, Boom 3510 Admin- istration Building, by 3:00 p.m. on the day preceding publication (11:00 a.m. Saturdays). FRIDAY, JULY 20, 1950 VOL. LX, No. 19-S Notices The Hercules Powder Company of Wilmington, Delaware will be interviewing students who will have either a B.S. or M.S. degree in Chemistry or Chemical Engi- neering and also those with a B.S. degree in Mechanical Engineering at the Bureau of Appointments on July 25 and the morning of July 26. Please call the Bureau of Ap- pointments, Ext. 371, for appoint- ments. The Bureau of Appointments has had a personnel request from the Los Angeles Laboratories, Inc. They are interested in young men, who are interested in pharmaceu- tical sales. Candidates may be graduates or undergraduates and the positions may be part-time or full-time. For further information call at the Bureau of Appoint- ments, 3528 Administration Build- ing. Lectures Contemporary Arts and Society: The lecture by German Arcinie- gas, scheduled for today, has been postponed to Monday, July 31, in the Rackham Amphitheater, at 8 p.m. Concerts Stanley Quartet, Gilbert Ross and Emil Raab, Violinists, Paul Doktor, Violist, and Oliver Edel, Cellist, will be heard in the second concert of the summer series at 8:30 Tuesday evening, July 25, in the Rackham Lecture Hall. It will include Mozart's Divertimento in E-flat major, K.563, for violin, vi- ola, and cello; Quartet No. 8 by Quincy Porter, and Beethoven's Quartet in E minor, Op. 59, No. 2. The general public is invited. Summer Session Band Concert, with guest conductors from the conducting class of William D. Re- velli, 8:30 Monday evening, July 24, in Hill Auditorium. The pro- gram is presented in conjunction with the Second Annual Band Conductors Workshop, but will be open to the general public as well as those attending the conference. Among the composers whose works will be heard are Rimsky-Korsa- kov, Bach, Goldman, Sibelius, and Khachaturian. Exhibitions General Library, main lobby cases. Contemporary literature and art (June 26-July 26). Rackham Galleries: "Contem- porary Visual Arts" and "Ameri- can Painting Since the War," July 3-22. Museum of Archaeology. From Tombs and Towns of Ancient Egypt. Museums Building. R o t unda exhibit, Fossil Flora of the Mi- chigan Coal Basin. Exhibition halls, "Some Indian Cultures of North and South America." Law Library. History of Law School (basement); classics for collectors (reading room). Michigan Historical Collections. 160 Rackham Building. Tourists in Michigan, yesterday and today. Museum of Art. Oriental cera- mics (June 26-August 18). Mo- dern graphic art (July 2-30). Clements Library. American Colonial Culture. (July 5-August 1). Events Today Lane Hall Coffee Hour: 4:30- 6 p.m. All students welcome. Mathematics Movie: The movie "The Origin of Mathematics" will be shown at 10 on Friday, July 21, in 3017 A.H. for students in Math- ematics 184 and any others inter- ested. The subject of the University Museums' program for Friday eve- ning, July 21, will be "Some In- dian Cultures of North and South America." Short moving pictures entitled "Peru Highlands of the Andes," and "Source of the Ama- zon" will be shown in Kellogg Au- ditorium at 7:30 p.m. Related ex- hibits will be on display at the Museums' Building from 7 to 9 p.m. The Inter Arts Union presents its Summer Student Arts Festival: Program will feature: "Designs in Brass" by Leslie Bassett, directed by Prof. Wm. D. Revelli; Four Songs by Robert Cogan; Leslie Eit- zen, soprano, Digby Bell, accom- panist, lyrics byaWlm. Blake, Ste- phen Spender, James Joyce, Tho- mas Campion; poetry reading by John Sargent; Quintet in C Minor for Piano and Strings by Dean Neurenberger; Panel Discussion on Student Poetry, Prof. Frank Hunt- ley, moderator. Friday, -July 21, 8 p.m. Rackham Assembly Hall. The public is invited. Visitors' Night, Department of Astronomy-Friday, July 21, 8:30 to 10 p.m., Angell Hall. The Stu- dent Observatory, fifth floor, will be open for observation of the Moon. If the sky is not clear, the visitors' night will be canceled. Children must be accompanied by adults. Coming Events Russian Circle Meeting, Monday, July 24th, 7 o'clock at the Interna- tional Center. Program: Movies, singing and refreshments. All who are interested are welcome. 'Remedies' T HE CURE FOR hangover de- pends upon where you are. Among the "remedies:" Australia, passion fruit nec- tar with a dash of bitters and red nectar. Brazil, black coffee, rum and cream thoroughly mixed. Canada, pea soup. Czechoslovakia, hot potato dum- plings. Cuba, fresh sliced pineapple. Denmark, egg. France. absinthe. Showdown with Russia By J. M. ROBERTS, JR. AP Foreign Affairs Analyst JUST ONE MORE Communist outbreak such as that in Korea will raise the question of whether the West should seek an immediate showdown with Russia. Korea has provided a surprising revelation of how much Western effort can be sucked in by such relatively small actions. THE ADDITIONAL TROUBLE that might be caused by Communist moves in Indo-China, the Balkans, or elsewhere, already causes peope to wonder what happens if Russia is able to sit back with her military strength intact while American and allied forces are scattered all over the lot against the satellites. There have been all sorts of reports from the Balkans in the last few days. International commercial circles in New York have been full of rumors about troop movements and even invasions. The United Nations Igalkan committee has issued a direct warning of possible trouble.' Some of the reports have settled on Yugo- slavia and some on Greece as the possible victims of Bulgarian, Rumanian and Hungarian aggression. Greece is just as much of a U.S. responsibility as Korea. Similar reports have concerned Iran. Russia has no satellite army to do the job there, although she might attempt an internal coup through Kurdish and other dissident elements. V Chinese Communist activities on the Indo-China border have led some inside observers to calculate that the greatest danger of the mo- ment lies in that area. They include Burma, already torn by civil war. * * * * PRESIDENT TRUMAN makes it clear that the United States in- tends to develop ample power to handle the little wars as well as to meet whatever timetable Russia has for herself. That she does have a war plan is now rather widely accepted. The American program, the President confidently expects, will be paralleled by a greater allied preparedness and pooling of strength. Part of this is expected to be worked out at a meeting of the North Atlantic Council in London next week. Russia is not to be permitted to consolidate her hold on more satellite flanks. She may think her effort to do so will scatter the allied defense. But America knows its football too well; the well-recognized job is to:take care of these end runs while still developing the reserve strength to meet any power play which the Kremlin may plan to send through the middle. If tl double job proves too galling, the time will have arisen for the allies to consider an offensive. This might involve a complete break with the Soviet world, blockades, ultimatums, the sponsoring of active underground movements in the satellites and, ultimately, war. Armns Production By MAX BOYD WASHINGTON-(k)-President Truman's call for $10 billion in new defense funds will mean more guns, tanks and planes rolling fas- ter off war production lines. But modern weapons take time to build, particularly planes. The aircraft industry's association estimates, for example, that it would take 34 months after an unlimited go-ahead order to achieve a production rate of 50,000 planes a year. That is 10 months longer than in World War II. The answer: Today's planes are much more complicated. .* * * * DEFENSE OFFICIALS say that even with the proposed huge new expenditures, it will take several years to attain mass production of all weapons in a modern arsenal. However, more money for overtime and extra shifts is expected to speed up deliveries of some existing orders. The Navy has already authorized its shipyards to work overtime as much as necessary to meet the needs of the fleet. This step should cut the time required to take ships out of the laid-up "moth-ball" fleet. It also may reduce the year and a half to two years previously scheduled for the modernization of 27,000-ton Essex type carriers. Overtime or extra shifts also may bring about a limited early in- crease in plane production. ONE OF THE WEAPONS marked for increased production as fast as possible is the Army's new 3.5-inch rocket launcher, credited with knocking out eight Communist tanks in its first battle test in Korea. It is a small and simple weapon. However, the history of this r 7 4 r very weapon drives home once more the lesson learned painful- ly in the last war: that modern arms cannot be bought off the shelf like groceries. Experimental work on this su- per-bazooka began about the time the last war ended. The rocket launcher was finally approved as a standard Army weapon in 1948, but more engineering was required to make it suitable for mass pro- duction. When the fighting in Korea be- gan, antArmy spokesman said yes- terday the new launcher was in production but not yet in the hands of troops. After American GI's began battling the Korean Communists, first stocks of the new weapons were flown to them. Enormously complex weapons like the 'B-36 intercontinental bomber require even more time from conception to quantity pro- duction. The design of the B-36 was initiated in October, 1941, but it was not until August, 1946, that the huge bomber made its first flight. A decision as to how much mon- ey the Army will put into future tank production appears likely to wait on the outcome of further tests in Korea of the "super-ba- zooka" and other new anti-tank weapons. The Army now has about 6,000 light and medium tanks it con- siders combat worthy, compared with Russia's estimated 40,000 medium and heavy tanks of all types. I 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 Peter Hotton.............City Editor Marvin Epstein........Sports Editor Pat Brownson.......Women'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 mail matter. Subscription during regular school year by carrier, $5.00, by mail, $6.00. , CII NIEM\A At Architecture Aud... . YOUNG MR. LINCOLN, with Henry "almanac" murder trial, early in Lincoln's career as a lawyer. Director John Ford's, skill is apparent in the courtroom scenes, BAR NABY1 Yotr Fairy Godfather's I n+.a:ra. : , ..:;.,. ,t.. (Friendly, thi; is O'Malley, i # a. ..p .., ..rt . ,,.,.nn :.. a [Isuspected as much. And You mean r'd get a nn lha L.. ,,,J.nor,.J n II