11. 1958 THE MICHIGAN DAILY TENSION HIGH IN DIVIDED CITY: Crisis Raises Sceptre of Berlin Blockade . cl tl U tf CI oC al i i 1# ti By HANS NEVERBOURG Associated Press Newsfeatures Writer unfavorable exchange rate and an BERLIN - This is the only undeniably sharp increase in the ~ity on earth where you can see East German standard of living. iton artwhee ouncane. ee The refugee exodus is a drain wo worlds at one glance. on the manpower-short East Ger- On one side, the bright lights of man economy, which is losing he Western sector contrast with sntists, educatorscdoctors and he silhouettes of tall modernistic technicians every day. ulldings at nightfall. The close contact with the free, On the other, the dimly-lit east- prosperous West, practically frus- in part of the city, the capital tratesayCmmns teps f Communist East Germany t tsany. Communist attempts ShChaem ergedtastaGeymally for an all-embracing indoctrina- vhich has emerged as a key ally tion of the people. \ Af the Soviet tUnion.tinothpel. West Berlin, the show window Unemployment High )f the Western way of life, has Even the fact that West Berlin een a painful thorn to the Com- has 60,000 jobless-the result of nunists for many years its isolated situation-fails to con- Soviet Russia's newest gambit vince most East Berliners of the Sovet ussa' neestgamitalleged advantages of commun- gainst the West raises once more he specter of 1948's Berlin block- ism. de. The Russians then shut off Berlin is the proclaimed capital 3erlin by blocking road, rail and of the East German Democratic anal traffic through East Ger- Republic. But the fact that two- thirds of the 3.6 million Berliners Three Air Corridors live in the western sector does not help to boost the prestige of the To reach West Berlin, the West Communist Regime. lad three air corridors. American The Communists claim West nd British aircraft used these Berlin is a giant center of Allied orridors to deliver 2,300,000 tons intelligence operations directed )f civilian and military supplies against the Soviet bloc. They say luring the blockade which began this is one of the chief reasons une 24, 1948, and ended May 12, for the Russian campaign to get X949. the Allies out of the city's Western Premier Nikita Khrushchev has sector. roposed that Berlin be declared Struggle Coming to Head "free city," inside East Germany, The battle for control of Berlin, vith Western miltary units with- which has been going on practi- Lrawn. He says East Germany cally since the end of World War rould not obstruct non-military II, seems headed into a decisive raffic with the West.phse He claims Russia will put this The West is pledged to defend Ian into effect after six months its freedom and most West Ber- vhatever the reaction of the West, liners believe the. Russians would )ut that he is willing to talk about not risk war by a takeover of the with the Western nations from Allied sectors. But the 100,000 ow until next spring. East Germans already in the West West Adamant Berlin and many of their 18 inil- Western spokesmen have in- , lion countrymen still living under isted they will never consent to the Communist regime still have1 ny agreement which would put gnawing fears that they may1 he West Berliners at the mercy eventually be trapped behind thet f Communist East Germany, Iron Curtain. That is the outline of the cold, . The root of the present troublel npersonal high-level argument stems from the fact that all Allied ver Berlin. Here are some of the wartime plans were based on the1 uman, personal elements which assumptionthat Berlin would re- ulse beneath the diplomatic con- main the capital of all Germany est. and that there would be no divi- Nowhere in the world have Iron sion of the country. r1 lurtain residents such close con- Allies Occupied Berlin act with the West. And nowhere Wartime agreements made Ber- n the world is it as easy to escape lin the seat of the Allied Control Frssbl7ea'eliVT.'a t.k 'erlin Vey ' ..1 0rva~r 447torBerldn ll_ S CD.rlizr APc wsfctures= s rM 1.7rhh .7c'& cr7' zeon A2 . 177diO iz A eseaue 'U' Botanist Makes State Plant Study Edward G. Voss, research asso- ciate at the University Herbarium, and various assistants have, for the past two years, been collecting specimens for use in a manual on Michigan plants. Voss estimates that he has cov- ered some 22,000 miles in Michi- gan, the equivalent of almost once around the world, collecting speci- mens of fauna: from each of the state's 83 counties. The research, which began in 1956, is supported by a five-year grant of $60,000 from the Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studies Research Fund, The aim of the project is to compile an illustrated manual of all species of Michigan flora, including dis- tribution maps and identification keys. There are about 2,000 dif- ferent species of plants in Michi- gan, Voss said, In addition to the work of col- lection, the field work has pro- vided "a broad familiarity with field conditions in all parts of the state . . . obtaining the largest number of significant records in the limited time available," he said. At present, Voss has gathered 5,600 numbered collections, 3,000 of which were collected last sum- mer. In all, some 6,00 specimens of Michigan flora have been mounted at the Herbarium during the past two years, and approxi- mately 10,200, including some pre- viously mounted specimens, have been classified in the collection. There are still about 8,000 speci- mens set for mounting, he said. For the remaining time on the project, Voss will be writing origi- nal keys to the already-collected flora, and coordinating the infor- mation now on hand. Assistance in the study as been provided by several organizations, Voss said, and innumerable ama- teur botanists have aided with the work of collection. A good deal of the work has been done in areas of the state which are rather poorly known botanically, such as Hillsdale, Ogemaw, Kalkaska, Me- costa, Lake and Missaukee Coun- ties. In certain other counties, Voss has been able to draw on previ- ously gathered information. The better known counties in the state include Wayne, Oakland, Macomb, St. Clair, Kalamazoo, Kent, Emmet, Cheboygan, Hough- ton and Keeweenaw, he said. Aid has also been enlisted from several specialists in certain gen- era where there is difficulty in identification, Voss said. r 1 1! ,! y! 1' 1 3 1 t t s i t r t t Prof. Anders( Japanese She Although centralized control of schools by the government has re- turned in part to Japan, Prof. Ronald Anderson of the educatior school said many of the educa- tional reforms which were intro- duced under the American occu- pationeof the country have beer retained. Most dramatic of the reforms which remain in Japan is co-edu- cation at all levels, he said, "Others are the six-three-three school ladder, the extension of compulsory educaiton from six tC nine years and the introductior of a measure of democratic or- ganization and atmosphere tc school administration and super- vision and the classrooms." Three Main Periods There have been three majoi periods in the development of modern education in Japan. The first of these, from 1868 to 1937, was the creation and development of a universal education system dedicated entirely to the purposes of the state. The second period from 1937 tc 1945, consisted of the molding of on Discusses ool System «. this system to serve the purposes of war. During the third period, 194 to 1952, there was the democrati- zation of the system under the Occupation, and since 1952 there has been an attempt to adjust the democratic objectives to the tra- ditional, he said. Worked in Japan Prior to World War II. Prof. An- derson worked in Japan as an English teacher, and during the occupation he served as a regional civil education officer. Having ob- served the schools in Japan at these periods, he said he was in- terested on his return there in 1957 to see how the great social revolution which had occurred since the war was faring. "In the post-treaty period," he said, "democratic education has been modified but not replaced. Its essential goals have been inte- grated into Japanese thought and practice." The practices which have sur- vived, he added, are those which met the needs of the people and gained support of pressure groups. Lists Democratic Goals "The democratic goals guaran- teed by the new Constitution and basic education laws which have been welcomed by the people in- clude: 1) suiting education to the needs of youth; 2) providing equal educational opportunity for all to develop their ability to capacity and 3) academic freedom. "American-inspired reforms ap- pealed to sizeable blocks of inter- ested groups in Japan including: 1) the teacher corps, now organ- ized into a large and influential teachers' union; 2) the organized student groups; 3) women's groups in general and 4) labor unions and the Socialist Party. "These groups, whose politics range from liberal to left, have adopted the reforms of the occu- pation as their own," Prof. Ander- son said. I J i 1 Symposim To Be Held A symposium on "India's Foreign Policy" will be held at 8 p.m. today in the third floor Con- ference Room of the Union. Participants in the symposium will be Solomon Quaynor, '59, Ghana; Pacifico Albano Castro, Grad., Philippines; Ahmed Belk- hodja, Grad., Tunisia; Louis Greiss, Grad., United Arab Repub- lic; Beverly Pooley, Grad., United Kingdom; Roger A. Needham, United States and Shiv Dayal, Grad., India. Prof. Robert Crane of the his- tory department will be the mod- erator. _ t:.:::::. :.... Council which was to administer the defeated country divided into occupation zones between the four wartime allies, Britain, France, Russia and the United States. That Berlin, the jointly occu- pied capital of Germany, hap- pened to be in the center of the Soviet zone did not bother many in this time of vodka-flowing Al- lied-Russian friendship parties: Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower turned down a suggestion by Field Marshall Bernard Law Montgom- ery to capture Berlin in a "knife- cut' 'offensive from the West, maintaining that destruction of the Nazi armed forces and war potential in the industrial parts of central Germany was more im- portant than a mere prestige booster. From historical records pub- lished by the United States gov- ernment it appears that President Harry S. Truman was among the first to give some .thought to the isolation of Berlin 110 miles be- hind the Soviet zone border. Wrote Letter to Stalin In June 1945, at a time when United States troops were still deep in what is now East Ger- many, he wrote a letter to Stalin saying he would make their with- drawal to th eagreed zonal boun- dary dependent on satisfactory agreements giving access by rail, road and air to American forces in Berlin. Stalin, in his reply, raised no objections and gave assurances that everything would go accord- ing to four-power agreements. Subsequently, the Russians agreed to give the Western Allies three air corridors to Berlin and also permit use of the 110-mile high- way and rail link between West Germany and West Berlin. Until late in 1946, Allied-Rus- sian cooperation in Berlin was. marked by relative smoothness. Elections Defeated Communists Then, the first free elections in the city dealt a resounding blow to the Soviet-supported Commun- ists. The Russians immediately dropped their smiles. Haggling started in the Allied Control Council that soon reached proportions causing the Allies to decide to go ahead with their plans for economic rehabilitation of their zones of occupation in West Germany. When a London six-Power Con- ference finally even suggested that the Western zones should be merged into a federation, the Rus- sians stepped out of the Allied Control Council. This marked the beginning of the division of Ger- many. from Communist rule-by a nuvo' cent subway ride. The result is a daily average of 300 persons registering as refugees in West Berlin. More than 100,000 former East German residents have made new lives in the West- ern sectors. Thousands of East Germans cross into the Western sectors every day to buy and smuggle home shoes, chocolate or textiles, and other goods. If you go for quality, many things are still cheaper in the West despite an .Prof. Fisher To Give Talk Prof. Ralph T. Fisher. of the history department at the Univer- sity of Illinois will speak on "So- viet Youth" at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow in Aud. A, Angell Hall. The talk is sponsored by the committee on Russian Studies and the History department. I z is , .".r11 - . r ' ~ .or thse ..- i6 k I ROBES PETTI-COATS BED-JACKETS GLOVES PAJAMAS MITTENS GOWNS HANDBAGS HOSIERY COLOGNE HOSIERY CASES BILLFOLDS SLIPPERS LIGHTERS MUKLUKS KEY CASES SILK SCARVES WOOL JEWELRY SCARVES DRESSES COATS SWEATERS SUITS SKIRTS RAINWEAR APRONS BLOUSES SLACKS Slim, flattering slacks that are tailored to make the most of you. We have a selection of solids, plaids, checks, and stripes in washable flannels and doeskin. Sizes 10-16 ... priced from $10.95 to $14.95 11 LINEN TOWELS BOUTIQUE ITEMS JEWEL CASES JEWEL BOXES PERFUME STOLES TRAVEL ACCESSORIES BERMUDAS BELTS HANKIES BLAZERS ++ -r}-. r' 11 w UMBRELLAS 1I II IIf f : ; , 2 11 11 0 I 9 ^nrkf ^.,i^ A-- e) _n^ r*_t e - I.-I L- -'it%