rzCTE T=,., . = - -, A 4ITN'7MV TX-nrMVS> i 11 .': 1'_____________l Y_.._____________11.________________Y116________ _ D. ... \11, Y.U J L$ . 'U.YJA. ~ ti A tt,°1 - .RC i" f'~li. Ad, i International Ruhr L W HILE THE U.S. complains about the Russians setting up their own regime in Eastern Europe, it looks like the Amer- ican government is all set to back a revital- ized German industrial machine-without the support of the French. This sounds very much like the action of the Allies after the first World War, when, after a few years of pseudo-con- trol, Germany was allowed to go its own happy way toward another war. France has seen this once, and does not want it to happen again. The fear of a strong Germany is deeper in the French consciousness than any fear of a possible war with Russia. The Germans were in Paris in 1870, in the suburbs in 1914 and in control of the capitol again in 1940. Understandably, the French are getting tired of all these tourists without passports. But there are other reasons besides those of the French, which are the result of fear. Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. The plan for an internationalized Ruhr would remove once and for all the German war potential and would aid in the recon- struction of Europe. There can be no reconstruction of Eu- rope without the steel of the Ruhr. Under international control, steel would flow from the biggest industrial area in Eu- rope, to the needy countries on the basis of need. International control would be perfectly complimentary to the Marshall Plan. The crushing of the German cartels and the de-nazification of the plant owners would work far better under an impartial international control than if the Germans themselves were allowed to run their own affairs. In our rush to build up a war poten- tial against the threat of the Soviet, we may be moving too quickly. We can not afford to lose the support of the other occupying powers-France, nor that of neighboring countries like Belgium, Hol- land and Luxembourg who also have felt the threat of German militarism. The split between the East and West must not spread until it isolates the U.S. from the European continent and returns us to our status of the early 20's. -Al Blumrosen, Don McNeil. NIGHT EDITOR: LEON JAROFF ^ I IT SO HAPPENS... C (lear Headedness Bridge ...tthe police, related how he found his machine and then said: HE UNION'S second floor was pretty "Incidentally, I'm from The Daily, any- hectic Wednesday night as the crowd thing going on tonight?" watched the Hare Proportional Represen- "Yes, a bicycle was reported stolen and tation System at work. now has been found by a bumble-headed Comments flew fast and furious around University student."p the drinking fountain: "Bloc voting brought "Thank you and goodnight," murmured him in"; "I've got 75 votes from first plac- Scoop. ers, but I'm expecting 200 on the second * ^* count"; "If he had only campaigned in the quad . . . Then, just on the tail of "But why= didn't COMMENT of an elderly lady after the you trade second place votes with him," a recent lecture by the Very Reverend voice piped up: "If she had only finessed Dr. Hewlett Johnson, Dean of Canterbury: the queen .. ." "Just what my Methodist minister has It seems there was a bridge tournament been saying all the time'" going on next door. s e i Arise Ye Masses ... Making the News,. .. THE COMMUNISTS, it appears, have be- OUR EAGER reporters seem more intent gun classroom infiltration. on creating news rather than writing it. As .an indication thereof, we will men- Witness the aspiring journalist who for- tion the continued absence of a philosophy got he left his bicycle at the league and professor as the clock approached the quar- reported to the police that it had been ter hour mark. At fifteen minutes after, stolen. On the way home, he mentally re- rightists began to debate the pros and cons traced his activities of the day, remem- of bolting in true democratic fashion. bered he had walked to class from the A Local Avowed Communist then took the league and of course on returning to the floor, denounced the "scabs," and called for women's building found it sitting there as mass action. he had left it. A revolution was achieved, and at sixteen On reaching home, he promptly phoned after, the room was empty. MATTER OF FACT: Straw to Grasp MATTER OF FACT: Little Peeiliar By SAMUEL GRAFTON ED HURRIED through the crowded com- muters' train, looking for a seat by the window. Why it was important to have such a seat he did not know, for he almost never looked out. But it was one of the things about being a commuter that you tried for a seat by the window, a small personal triumph in a mechanized world, He didn't quite make it, because Martin. reached out, grabbed his arm,. and pulled him down into the empty space beside him- self. "Hi, Martin," said Ed, to his old oppon- ent. He was, as a matter of fact, rather glad to see Martin. He had seen him only once since the election, and so there was still unfinished business between them. Ed waited. He knew it would come up. "Well, Ed," said Martin. "How do you feel, since the election? Pretty cocky?" "I feel all right," said Ed. "But I didn't gethurt. The question is how do you feel?" "As a matter of fact," said Martin, "I feel rather peculiar about the whole thing." Ed was struck by something odd in Martin's voice. This wasn't just the rou- tine needling he was used to from the other man. "How do you mean, you feel peculiar?" he asked. k 'k * "Well," said Martin, "I don't really know quite what I mean. But there's our little town. It went for Truman. And yet no- body in the town talked Truman to me, all summer and fall. What were they doing all that time, kidding me?" "I don't get you," said Ed. "Somebody piled up that vote for the Democrats," said Martin. "Who was it? The people who work for me? They never said anything, and they laughed at all my jokes about Truman. Or maybe it was those storekeepers. They kept agreeing with everything I said all during the campaign. Then they must have gone out and voted the other way" "So what?" said Ed. "It's peculiar, that's all," said Martin. "It's like an underground. I don't under- stand the town these days. It's as if there's something strange loose in it. It doesn't add up any more." Ed waited for more of Martin's worry to spill itself out, for he felt that it was a real worry. "You pick up the papers now," said Martin, "and you read suddenly about a big new plan for national health insur- ance. We licked all that kind of stuff, in fair debate, with Roosevelt, and here it is, back again, fresh as paint. I tell you its peculiar, Ed. It's as i, there's some strange new disease come over everybody. They smile with you, they seem to agree with you, and when it comes to a show- down they want all these crazy new things. It's as if they hadn't heard a word you'd said." "I don't thing it's peculiar to want better health services," said Ed mildly. N A' "It's deeper than that," said Martin om- inously. "I don't feel as if I can talk to them any more. I walk down the street, and I know everybody's name, and I thought I knew all about them. But that Truman vote must have come from some- where. It's a peculiar thing, Ed, when you can't figure your own place, the place you live in." Ed felt there were several things he could say, but he held them, waiting. Then Martin said, laughing, laughing rather loudly, protecting himself by mak- ing it a joke: "Do you thing I'm the one who's peculiar, Ed?" (Copyright, 1948, New York Post Corporation) Go Tolerance A GREAT MANY Americans have been priding themselves on their tolerance ... tolerance of the Negro, tolerance of the Jew, tolerance of any minority. Yet few of these same people have ever stopped to realize just what tolerance does mean. Webster has called it "The disposition to allow beliefs." Therefore, tolerance carries the unmis- takeable connotation of condescension. And certainly, condescension is no virtue. It might be wise for some of us to forget about tolerance. If we are truly demo- cratic, there is no need for it. Why kid otrselves? In reality, tolerance is little better than intolerance. The average college student has what can be correctly termed a tolerant atti- tude toward minorities. There are few who actually shun the Negro. In fact, thousands of students at this University signed petitions protesting the refusal of all but three local barber shops to serve Negroes. The situation is, however, para- doxical. For while they signed these peti- tions, they were simultaneously barring Negroes from membership in their fra- ternities and sororities. This was toler- ance. Few of us have actually stopped to con- sider just why we are tolerant. Admittedly, B 4 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN By JOSEPH and STEWART ALSOP WASHINGTON.-It is just possible that a last desperate attempt to find a settle- ment of the ever more threatening Berlin crisis will be made by the Western powers. What is being discussed is a proposal that all four powers, including the Soviets, leave Berlin, and that a neutral commission ap- pointed by the United Nations be substi- tuted as the governing authority. It is by no means certain, or even likely, that such a radical new approach to the Berlin question will be adopted. Yet the following facts are interesting. The idea has been proposed to, and considered by, French Foreign Minister Robert Schuman. It has not been adopted as official French policy, but it has been informally proposed to top British officials by a ranking French diplomat. Moreover, policy makers of the State De- partment have independently conceived and considered the same idea as, at a maximum, a way out of the Berlin impasse, and, at a minimum, a method of seizing the initiative in the Berlin crisis. And it can be stated on excellent authority that certain influential American policy makers enthusiastically fa- vor some such move. The reason for this rather frantic search for a new approach to the Berlin crisis is perfectly simple. Dr. Juan Bramuglia's com- mittee of currency experts will no doubt now go through the motions of trying to find an agreed method of introducing the Soviet mark into Berlin as a basis of settlement. But an agreement on currency can no longer form a basis of settlement. Indeed, the fact might as well be faced that there is obvi- ously no real possibility of any effective four-power settlement at all. A settlement, whether on currency or on any other issue, clearly requires an agreed, joint four-power control of the city, as optimistically envisaged at Potsdam. Four- power control of course broke down in all but name a long time ago, because of end- less Russian obstruction. The Russians have now thrown away the last pretense of four-power control by refusing to allow "WaltA Mhl~ ite, ve Seen 'These.~kr B~ef ore 1Toc) Letters to the Editor In these circumstances, the temptation for the Russians to renew their tactics of bully- ing and intimidation would be all but irre- sistible. Any manufactured incident could be used as a pretext for again closing the Berlin supply lines, which would have the immediate result of starving the city into submission. In short, the motive of the French proposal is obviously to achieve what the French have always wanted-a way to retire from the Berlin impasse "with head high," and without any loss of face. On the other hand, if the plan were offered, and rejected by Moscow, Soviet policy would be left without a leg to stand on. If the Russians agreed to the plan, a simultaneous withdrawal from Austria might also be arranged, thus solving an- other, almost forgotten but extremely acute problem. And the danger of a Rus- sian attack on Berlin's independence might be considerably reduced by Anglo- Franco-American guarantees that any in- vasion of Berlin or re-establishment of the blockade would be regarded as a casus belli. There would always be doubt, nonethe- less, whether these guarantees would be lived up to. The new proposal, in truth, is a measure of the pessimism of the Western policy makers. Even two months ago, such a plan would not have been seriously con- sidered, either in Washington or London. Now it is being seriously discussed because there is no other way out of the Berlin impasse except to continue the air lift in- definitely or to send an ultimatum to Mos- cow, with attendant heavy risk of immediate war. In the end, continuation of the air lift will probably be the course chosen. If it is costly in money to us, its political cost to the Soviet Union is almost incalculable. But the fact will still remain that the best in- formed, most responsible officials on both sides of the Atlantic are intensely gloomy about the world outlook. (Copyright, 1948, New York Herald Tribune, Inc.) AT Tl 7 n . r .-7 (Continued from Page 2) tra: Serge Koussevitzky, Conduc- tor, will give the sixth concert in the Choral Union Series Monday, Dec. 6, 8:30 p.m., Hill Auditorium. Dr. Koussevitzky has arranged the following program for his Ann Arbor concert: Symphony for Strings-Honeg- ger: Two "Gymnopedies"-Satie; Scythian Suite, "Ala and Loh"-- Prokofieff; Syirpony No. 1 m C minor -Brahms. Exhibitions Phi Sigma Photographic Ex- hibit of Biological Subjects. West Gallery, Rackham Building. De- cember 1 through 8. Special showing of kodachrome slides Dec. 6, 8 p.m., Rackham Amphitheatre. Public invited. Museum of Art: America-the Index of American Design, and Ancient Peruvian Textiles, Alumni Memorial Hall, through Dec. 28; weekdays 9-5, Sundays 2-5 p.m. The public is invited. Events Today Delta Sigma Pi, Professional Business Fraternity: Formal Initi- ation, 1 p.m., Michigan Union. The Inter-Guild Council will meet at 2:30 p.m., Lane Hall. Some members of the United World Fed- eralists will be present to explain their plan for world organization. The Gilbert and Sullivan So- ciety will hold full dress rehearsals for all chorus members and prin- cipals at 7:15 p.m., Sun., Dec. 5, and Mon., Dec. 6, Pattengill Au- ditorium. Evangelical and Reformed Stu- dent Guild: Meet at the home of Rev. Walter S. Press, 432 S. Fourth Ave., 5:30 p.m. Cost Supper. A Chinese student will speak on 'Christianity in China.' Ann Arbor Friends: Church meeting, 11 a.m.. Lane Hall. Roger Williams Guild-dinner, fellowship and program at Guild House, 6:00 p.m. Rev. Loucks will speak on "Our Baptist Heritage." Michigan Christian Fellowship presents Dr. Norton Sterett, Stu- dent Foreign Mission Fellowship of I.V.C.F., on the subject, "How Shall They Hear," 4:30 p.m., Lane Hall Basement. Refreshments. Westminster Guild: Meet for supper, 5:30 p.m. Exchange pro- gram with Canterbury Guild. Topic: 'The Episcopal Church." Lutheran Student Association: Meet at 5:30 p.m., Zion Lutheran Parish Hall. Rev. Henry Yoder' will speak on "The Church Calen- dar." Choir Rehearsal, 4:30 p.m. Unitarian Student Group: Meet at 6:30 p.m., Unitarian Church. Speaker: Prof. George Kish on the subject, "Behind the Iron Cur- tain." Wesleyan Guild: Supper, 5:30 p.m., followed by movie on Casta- near Project in Puerto Rico with Howard and Jo Wolf as guest speakers. Boxes for overseas will be packed following the meeting. Congregational-Disciples Guild: Meet for 6 p.m. supper at Memo- rial Christian Church instead of Congregational Church. "Hail the King," a dramatic production written and produced by the Guild, will be presented. Art Cinema League presents "Forrebique" and "Paris on the Seine," 8:30 p.m., Hill Auditorium. Proceeds to Hillel Foundation. U.W.F.: Informal discussion group in the Rehearsal Room, Michigan League, Sun., 7:30 p.m. Everybody welcome. Coming Events Tryouts for the Annual French Play: 3-5:15 p.m., Tues., and Thn's., of this week, Rm. 408, Romance Language Bldg. Any stu- dent with some knowledge of the French language may try out. Sociedad Hispanica: Social hour, 4 to 5 p.m., Mon., Dec. 6, In- tenational Center. Graduate History Club Coffee Hour: 4-5 p.m., Mon., Dec. 6, Clements Library. All faculty and graduate students cordially in- vited. Club 730: Members will meet at 7 p.m., December 6, in the club- rooms at 730 Haven St. The pri- mary business will be discussing our return to Vaughan House next semester. The World Federalists Execu- tive Council meeting, 4:15 p.m., Mon., Michigan Union. Written commlittee reports requested. Meeting open to general member- ship. Student Peace Fellowship, 7:30 p.m., Mon., Lane Hall. Easy Chair Group meets at 7:30 p.m., Mon., Lane Hall. Hiawatha Club: Meeting at the League, 7:30 p.m., Mon., Dec. 6. All Upper Peninsula students are urged to attend. Sociedad HIispanica: Dios se lo pague," a Mexican film starring Arturo de Cordova, will be pre- sented at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre on Mon., and Tues., Dec. 6 and 7, 8:30 p.m. Members pay tax only on presentation of mem- bership cards at the box office. University of Michigan Dames Bowling Group meets the first and third Monday each month. Mrs. Robert Love of Pittsfield, Phone 25-8071 is Chairman. The group meets at 7:45 p.m., Womens' Ath- letic Bldg. The next meeting is on Dec. 6. Michigan Actuarial Club will hold a meeting in Rm. 35 Angell Hall, 3:15 p.m., Tues., Dec. 7. Mov- ing pictures will be shown. All in- terested are cordially invited. Pershing Rifles: Meeting, not in uniform, 7 p.m., Tues., Dec. 7, R.O.T.C. Rifle Range. Pledges may draw uniforms now. All fees must be paid. Coed Folk and Square Dancing will meet at 7:15 p.m., Tues., Dec. 7, W.A. Bldg. All those in the Christmas program should attend. Science Research Club: The De- cember meeting will be held in the Rackham Amphitheatre; 7:30 p.m. on Tues., Dec. 7. Program: "The Internal Structure of Granitic Pegmatites," E. William Heinrich, Department of Mineralogy; "Re- The Daily accords its readers the privilege of submitting letters for publication in this column. Subject to space limitations, the general pol- icy is to publish in the order in which they are received all letters bearing the writer's signature and address. Letters exceeding 300 words, repeti- tions letters and letters of a defama- tory character or such letters which for any other reason are not in good taste will not be published. Te editors reserve the privilege of con- densing letters. * s * Only Pity To the Editor: ATTENTION Mr. Rock! I can feel nothing but pity for a confused, frustrated indivi- dual like yourself. Your letter concerning the revival of school spirit was misleading and irra- tional and your sarcasm was mis- directed and definitely not funny. -Diek Fleischman. Origins To the Editor: YOUR ARTICLE on the Cook Lctures in one of last week's issues states: "Pragmatism, as voiced by William James and John Dewey is 'Distinctly Amer- ican; Prof. Perry asserted, in con- trast to earlier philosophies-Pur- itanism, transcendentalism, post- ,Kantian idealism." The impres- sion from this selected quotation would be that Puritanism is not American in character. Actually, Prof. Perry simply was referring to origins and as such Puritan- ism, transcendentalism and post- Kantian idealism were of course European in their inception in contrast to American born Prag- matism. Prof. Perry's book Puri- tanism and Democracy echoes V. L. Parrington's statement that "the two most characteristic qualities of the American temper are Puritanism and optimism." -inley Hooper. Lust Straw To the Editor: AM WORRYING so much about League's decreasing ca- pacity of generosity: the prefer- ential semi-permeability of the second as well as the change of the site and 'quality of the paper napkin in the cafeteria. Are both temporary or some- thing else will happen next? -Bacon Ke. What Value To the Editor: IF THE THURSDAY night meet- ing of the AVC is typical of the dissension that exists within the group on the local and na- tional levels, then of what value is such an organization to the veteran? How can prospective members, after sitting in on such a farce, feel that their interests and problems will have unified backing when there are several factions in the group that are discordant and inconsistent in their aims? To the outside visitors who sat in on the evening, the affair 'proved to be an amusing comedy. On the one side, the players took their cue from J. Parnell Thomas. On the other side, as one of the members remarked, dictatorial methods of the present Czecho- slovakian regime were used to conduct the procedure. If there were any members present who had a contribution to make to- ward the good of the organiza- tion, they were lost in the ex- treme parliamentary bickering that the two major factions en- gaged in to obstruct the prog- ress of each other and of the meeting. Is it a wonder why the national membership of AVC has cent Advances in North American Archeology," Albert C. Spaulding, Museum of Anthropology; Initia- tion of new members. I.Z.F.A. Study Group 7:45 p.m., Tues., Dec. 7, Michigan Union, Rm. 3A. University of Michigan Dames Handicraft Group will meet at the home of Mrs. Harry Geitgey, 2010, Frieze St., Dec. 7, 8 p.m. Project for the evening will be Norwegian weaving on huck .toweling. Assist- ing hostesses will be Mrs. C. V. Carter, Mrs. William Felts, and Mrs. Warren Pi'itchard. Transpor- tation chairman is Mrs. H. R. Se- crest, Phone 2-3810. Are Cinema League presents "Que Dios Se 1o Pague," 8:30 p.m., Tues., and Wed., Lydia Mendels- sohn Theatre. Proceeds to Socie- dad Hispanica. All seats reserved, phone 6300. tumbled down so terrifically in the last three years? There are still many veterans who desire to affiliate themselves with an organization that is one in purpose, that has a coherent, constructive, and consistent pol- icy. AVC's local chapter is doing a splendid job of instilling hesi- tation, doubt, and complete ne- gation of veterans organizations in the minds of possible members. Keep up the good work! -Stephen M. Velkoff. A sham ed To the Editor: F JEFFERSON, Lincoln, and Holmes were alive today they would be ashamed. They would be ashamed of the direction that American political thought is tak- ing, away from the principles for which they fought courageously. They would be ashamed of the trial of the twelve Communists --an outright attack on the American ideal of free speech and thought. The twelve Communists are not charged (as many would believe) with any overt act to overthrow the government. They are not be- ing indicted on the possibility that they are even conspiring to overthrow the government.'The charge against them is merely that they have organized a polit- ical party that believes in the theories of Marxism-Leninism. What is really on trial then is the right to hold a certain idea. If the communists are convict- ed, free speech and unimpaired thought will be convicted with them. Freedom of thought and speech assumes the right to hold any idea no matter how contrary it is to the principles underlying our government. In fact, what is freedom of speech when it means that you can only talk for some- thing and not against it? Its real test is when it canhold up iii the face of an overwhelming majority opposition. There are those, however, who would say that sometimes free speech and thought have to be limited because certain ideas that are expressed are dangerous. They are afraid that the "gullible" American mind will succumb to demagogues with lofty promises. Suchipeople are not democrats. A basic assumption of democracy is the ability of the people to choose what form of government they want and need. A limiting of free speech and thought, no matter how small, denies this ability. With the conviction of the Communists the American belief in free speech and thought would be lost. The trial is aimed at more than the Communists. It is aimed at our democratic way of life. Americanism, not Communism, is in the prisoner's box. -Joe Savin And Others. Fifty-Ninth Year - -N Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control od Student Publications. Editorial Staff Harriett Friedman ...Managing Editor Dick Maloy...............City Editot Naomi Stern .........Editorial Director Allegra Pasqualetti ....Associate Editor Arthur Higbee.......Associate Editoe Murray Grant.......... Sports Editoi Bud Weidenthal ..Associate Sports Ed. Bev Bussey ......Sports Feature Writer Audrey Buttery........Women's Editoi Bess Hayes ..................Librarian Business Staff Richard Halt......Business Manager Jean Leonard ....Advertising Manager William Culman .....Finance Manager Cole Christian ....Circulation Manager 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 o= otherwise credited to this newspaper. All rights of republication of all othet matters herein are also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ans Arbor, Michigan, as second-Class mall matter. Subscription during the regulat school year by carrier, $5.00. by malt, $6.00. BARNABk Swami! Mr. Merrie disappeared! POUF-- No! It's stilltin the brazier! Wait; oc- Wait, Gus! can find a rational explanation- I