U$n THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, JULY 20, 1947 ... I Fifty-Seventh Year r J V.. l Edited and managed by students of the Uni- versity of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Managing Editors ... John Campbell, Clyde Recht Associate Editor .................... Eunice Mintz Sports Editor ..................... Archie Parsons Business Staff general Manager.................Edwin Schneider Advertising Manager..........William Rohrbacli Circulation Manager.................Melvin Tick MATTER OF FACT: International Brigade By JOSEPH and STEWAhT ALSOP FTER HIS SPEECH at the Governors' conference, Secretary of State George C. Marshall planned to get a day of well- earned rest with a fishing-rod. while his aide, Charles E. Bohlen, continued the task of briefing the Governors on the grim facts of the world situation. But almost in the instant of his arrival at Salt Lake City, Marshall received word that the Interna- BO--KS Kingsblood Royal, by Sinclair dom House, N.Y., 1947. Lewis, Ran- Telephone 23-24-1 Meber of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to be use for re-publication of all news dispatches ,"edited to it or otherwise credited in this news- aper. All rights of republication of all other .natters herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michi- geMn as second class mail matter. Subscription during the regular school year by Farrier, $5.00, by mail, $6.00. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1946-47 -ditorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: MALCOLM WRIGHT Anti-Lynch ECAUSE SO MANY campus rallies per- form no greater function than that of blowing off steam on various issues, we are refreshed when an opportunity to actually influence the issue at hand is offered along with the speeches and the handclapping. That violence in the South concerns also the North is indicated by the block of votes Southern Congressmen wield on every piece of national legislation that passes through Congress. Maintained in office by various percentages of the electorate in their dis- tricts - while the bulk of Negroes are kept away from the polls by threats or force, or both - these legislators have cast the de- cidilig votes on one ill after another. Louis Burnham, executive secretary of the Southern Negro Youth Congress, speaking at the Union, July 2, gave a glimpse of the political power the South- ern people might wield if the terrorism that supplements franchise barriers in the South can be wiped out. In the last Georg- Ian election, he said, a new total of 100,- 00 Negro votes gave impetus to a new over-all total.of one million votes in that state. Political gains since 1944, he said, include 150,600 registered Negro voters in Texas, 25,000 Negro votes in Arkansas, and organization of the Progressive Democrat- ic Party in South Carolina - which led the battle against exclusion of Negroes from the polls in that state. The post-war surge in Southern violence, designed to further strain Negro-white re- lations and cut short this political awaken- ing is directed in particular against Negro veterans, who lost some of their pre-war inhibitions during their army travels, Burn- ham said. The Columbia, Tenn., episode, for instance, was touched off when a Negro vet slapped a white store proprietor through a plate glass window after the latter had abused his mother, he said. The vets are being shown that platitudes espoused in the War Against Fascism are not to be taken too seriously, Burnham explained. Actual anti-lynch activity can obviously be conducted only where lynchings are taking place. The Southern Negro Youth Congress, composed of 9,000 southern Ne- gir'es and whites, with headquarters in Birmingham, Ala, is in the forefront of this struggle. It needs money in order to step up the tempo of its activity. Our most effective 'contribution toward stop- ping lynching - and raising the political integrity of the nation - will be our en- couragement of such work. The refreshing nature of the Anti-Lynch campaign, to be held in Ann Arbor Wednes- day, lies in the privilege it offers us of ac- tually influencing the lynch situation. Funds collected in tag sales will be given to the *SNYC. The size of our contdibutions will indicate the magnitude of our aspiration for a greater democracy. -Malcolm Wright LLINOIS REPUBLICANS have revealed a magnificent capacity for alarm. So they have seen to it .that a young editor named James Dodd no longer thunders at the Southern Ilhnoi University campus from the weekly Egyptian. The dangerous Mr. Dodd had permitted criticism of the Green Administration in the Centralia disaster. Certain statesmen of the state took faculty members aside and complained that Editor Dodd was mixing in politics. They should know. It wasn't a campus editor who made political lugsters out of safety inspectors and let Mine No. 5 blow up. THIS NOVEL IS, of course, a best-seller; but not enough people are reading it. Every American who can read should read it, and everyone who cannot read should have it read to him. I'll annoy the profes- sional critics and "authorities" on the race question by saying that "Kingsblood Royal" is perhaps one of the most powerful novels ever written by a white person about Ne- groes. The plot is simple and, as Mr. Lewis' crit- ics have gleefully pointed out, somewhat artificial and mechanical. Let the critics rave. Sinclair Lewis was not trying to write great literature; he was writing a social doc- ument; and he makes his characters do whatever gets the message across best. , Young Neil Kingsblood, a veteran, has returned to Grand Republic, his small mid- western hometown, and resumed his posi- tion in the solid American middle class. He is happily married, and has a lovable small daughter. It is a foregone conclu- sion that he will some day become one of the executives in the bank in which he works. Neil is very much a reflector of his society. He takes the superiority of his race for granted, and is a strong believer in the virtues of the middle class and all classes above it. Things are going well on that fine day when his. father tells him that the Kings- bloods of Grand Republic are the right- ful heirs to the throne of England. But when Neil traces the family line, his fortunes are dramatically reversed. He finds that Xavier Pic, his great-great-great grandfather, is a full-blooded Negro. What Mr. Lewis makes Neil do with this startling piece of information has been the subject of many critical jibes. Neil is driven to publicly announcing his race - against the better judgment of half the critics in America. The kind, sweet, friendly, smug midwest- ern families are outraged that one near them should dare turn into a Negro. They rebuke Neil for being silly enough to have a distant relative who was African, and invoke the old restrictive covenant. It has been wisely writ- ten on profound legal parchment that "non- country club races" shall not dwell among the mighty. Then Neil loses his job. At this point, Sinclair Lewis lays bare the cruel facts of job discrimination: Kingsblood tramping the snow-covered streets and being denied jobs because of his race. Kingsblood worrying about a wife and child in a society which apparently does not care whether they eat or starve. Kingsblood, symbol of an entire minority, aware that from his despair must arise a dignity that will enable him to surmount the wretchedness heaped upon him by society. Kingsblood, victim of man's in- humanity to man, forced to endure the insults of those whose world he once shared. He finally finds work far be- neath his ability. The story reaches its climax when Neil's neighbors, unable to buy his home, resort to the time-tested mob rule to force him out. The Kingsbloods and a few friends fight, and lose. (This is mindful of Detroit's famous Sweet case of some years ago.) The story ends with Neil and his wife Vestal being taken to jail for starting trouble. In this book you will find little of the trenchant satire of "Babbitt," still less of the universal implications of "Arrowsmith." It is not the work of Lewis the Master Crafts- man; it is the work of Lewis the Angry Man, spokesman of that seemingly small minority of white Americans who will not come to terms with racial inequality. However, many of the characters rank with the best Lewis has created. Vestal, the proud wife who slowly accepts the fact that her husband is a Negro and prepares to die with him for their human rights, is compar- able with Arrowsmith's wife. Most of the Negro characters are remarkably realistic, Lewis has brought to fiction something few American writers have offered. The intelligent Negro fighting for his people. The Negro nurse, the chemist, the min- ister, all are characters about whom most white people know nothing. It is no won- der that many critics say, "The novel does not ring true." Mr. Lewis has obviously made friends with Negroes of all types. (He is a good friend of Walter White, executive secretary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People). He has put American Negroes on trial. His verdict: They are like all other Americans, except for the dif- ferences caused by their living under con- tional brigade - the Communist fore legion assembled by the Kremlin fort capture of Greece - was at last repor crossing the Greek border in force. And he made his speech, and flew back all t night to Washington. When telegrams anouncing dangers ov seas racall cabinet members from vacatio even from very brief vacation, it begins be disagreebaly reminiscent of past ti which the whole world has hoped would recur. The worst of it is that this ech not inaccurate. Conceivably, to be sure, the crisis m be over before these words are print It is possible that in the present fighl ing at Yanina, the Greek army may p manently break the International brigad strength. It is also possible that the du ous Greek Government may have exagg ated a mere reconnaissance into a maj assault on their border. But whatever outcome, the Greek crisis has already h one critically important result in Was ington. It has brought into the open, f the first time, serious discussion amo high officials of the use of force. The question debated has been whet the United States will accept in Greece a verse rather worse than the British suffe at Munich, or will employ its full powers, cluding force if need be, to prevent this verse. As to the nature of the Greek situation self, it is relatively simple. The Commun led Greek guerrillas have long been no ished, succored and directed from across border. Their use has been in the territo of the Soviet Union's Balkan puppets, Ju slavia, Albania and Bulgaria. The guerr movement by itself, however, has been weak to realize the ultimate goal oft Kremlin - the capture of Greece as whole. Reinforcements therefore began be assembled some time ago, in the form an International brigade recruited am the Communist parties of Europe ont pattern of the International brigade Spain. As we first revealed in this sp rather recently, the brigade has gathe along the borders of the three Balkan p pet states. It is now estimated to num approximately 4,000. For the Kremlin, the decision to s the brigade into action has long beenr cognized as the decision to declare ov hostilities against the wretched semblance international order built up since thee of the war. That decision has now app ently been taken. American members oft United Nations Balkan Commission st have been able partly to confirm the cla of the Athens government Two Ameri observers have actually watched help co ing to the guerrillas from across the Jugos border, at the critical conclusion of a h all-day battle. In the eyes of Washington, meanwhi' there is much more to the Greek pro lem than the mere dropping of the G string in the long strip tease by whi the Kremlin has revealed its real wor purposes. (The brassiere went only a fe days earlier, when Czechoslovakia w brutally forbidden to join the Paris tal on the Marshall plan.) In the eyes of Washington, in fact,t American future is at stake, as it was w the Greek-Turkey aid plan was launch If Greece is allowed to go, Turkey will f low. The ensuing chain reaction will c tinue irresistibly, until all the Middle E and most probably all of Western Eur have become involved in the general c lapse. The weak points are too obvious mention. Italy, like Turkey, cannot surv with a puppet Greece for neighbor. Brit and France are totally dependent ont Middle Eastern oil which the capture Greece must eventually place under Kren control. And if this chain reaction occ the Soviet Union will attain such swol predominance that this country in turn have to make the appeasers' choice - tween knuckling under in our turn or be driven to fight it out. Under the circumstances, it is inconce able that the American policy makersv remain passive in the face of the dan in Greece. If the attack on Greece devel further the United Nations will be as] as a matter of course to intervene. Ift Soviets have not by then backed down, th will certainly veto UN action in the Secu Council. (Copyright, 1947, New York Herald Tribune) C ONFUSION in Washington? Oh, noth more than usual. Senator Taft, who s killing the OPA would promptly red prices, now says the new labor law willi duce strikes; one day after the Taft-Ha ley Act to solve labor problems was pass Representative (there-ought-to-be-a-la Hartley urged enactment of another la with the fuel crisis turning on how mu coal there is above ground, it develops t for the first time in 20 years the Bureau Mines has discontinued compiling stat tics on soft-coal supplies,- because oft GOP economy drive; and President T man, having declared the Taft-Hartley1 "unworkable" is now entrusted with try to make it work. Confusion in Washington? Nothingi usual. -The New Republic sig IPDA ILY 4 ign - - the Publication in The Daily Officiai ted Bulletin is constructive notice to all SO members of the University. Notices 50 for the Bulletin should be sent in hat typewritten form to the office of the Summer Session, Room 1213 Angell ~er- Hall, by 3:00 p.m. on the day pre- n- edin publication (11:00 a.m. Sat- n~-- urdays). to ales SUNDAY, JULY 20, 1947 not VOL. LVII, No. 19S Notices ay Those veterans in Law School ~d .- - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - it- I'd Rather Be Right: e's ri- roganc or By SAMUEL GRAFTON its WE AMERICANS are developing ad a certain big, offhand way h- of disposing of much of the rest or of the world which I think we ng had better watch. I give a sa- ple of this kind of arrogant dia- logue, common enough: her "There are only two important re- powers in the world, America and red Russia." in- One murmurs, in reply, that re- Britain, which doesn't exist ac- cording to this formula, held it- the Nazis off alone for a year ist- while we armed. "Yes, but shes been taking it ur- for eight years and she's tired." the Actually, one recalls, she has ries been taking it for a thousand go- years, but it is hard to convince illa one who is quite determined to too wash a country off the map. the Another variation, by Speng- a ler out of Daniel Boone, goes as to follows: 'of The east is done; the west is *of the coming region; the Pacific is ng the new Mediterranean." the One points out that Europe has in a much greater population than ace she had a century ago, at the red height of her power. "Yes," is the answer, "but the ber Orient is becoming industrialized." One replies that Europe al- .nd ready is industrialized. Does the speaker imply that coun- re- tries are important only when ert they are beginning to be indus- of trialized, and that they die when end they reach the goal? What ar- horrid implications for our own the America! aff One is answered with a low ims growl and a statistic about how can many iceboxes the Chinese could use if they used iceboxes. )m- Then there is General Robert lav E. Wood, board chairman of rid, Sears, Roebuck & Co., who told a Congressicgnal committee the le, other day that "Western Eur- b- ope is finished." He gave it as G- his firm opinion that the West- ch ern European economy could not ld be rescued. The record does not disclose whether he flicked the w ash from a cigar after making as the remark, but it is a gesture ks that would have gone rather well with the statement. the "The only solution," said hen General Wood, "is for 10,000,- ed. 000 to 15,000,000,Britons, and ie. 10,000,000 to 15,000,000 Ger- mans, Belgians and Dutch to on- emigrate." The General said ast he favored some "charity," but ope that lending money to western ol- Europe was like pouring it down to a "rathole." ive And then, suddenly, one takes a ain fresh look at the "rathole." From the Western Europe, strangely enough, of are coming some of the bestmo- din tion pictures being made in our in day, fresh, warm, alive. There urs, is a literary ferment in Paris, at len least, producing works which will make much of American writing be- seem to stand at the earnest col- ing lege level, puffy and insecure. Belgium, the Netherlands and iv- Luxembourg have suddently es- will tablished a customs union, crack- ing through the borders and pre- ger judices of centuries. One notes, ops too, that Western Europe, more ked than any other place in the the world, is today trying to reach hey an accord between the claims of rity the planned economy and the claims of democracy, and is doing it without bloodshed, and under a fair set of rules; it stands right ing on the firing line, face to face with reality, yet, somehow, keeps paid the decencies alive. uce And suddenly one has the feel- re- ing that one of the reasons we rt- keep murmuring that Western ;ed, Europe is dead is that we don't 1w) like some of these realities, and would like to avert our eyes from ;ch them, and wavethe whole thing uh into non-existence. hat Perhaps "Western Europe is 1 of dead" is only the postwar form tis- of the old isolationist slogan: the "Europe is not important." Aft- ru- er all, General Wood was an iso- Act lationist before the war. Some- ing thing is dead, sure enough, but it isn't Western Europe; it is an old argument struggling to find in- new forms in which to dress it- self. (Copyright 1947, New York Post Corp.) ing between Monday, July 21 and Wednesday, July 23. Robert S. Waldrop, Director Veterans Service Bureau August 1947 graduates in Me- chanical or Chemical Engineering; Graduate students in Physics and Chemistry: Mr. C. W. McConnell of The Linde Air Products Com- pany, Tonawanda, N.Y., will in- terview men in the above fields, on Thursday, July 24, in Room 218 West Engineering Building. Students interested may sign the interview schedule posted on the bulletin board at room 221 West Engineering Bldg., or call Miss Tag, extension 635. Graduate Students in English: ThehPreliminary Examinations for the Doctorate in English will be given according to the follow- ing schedule: American Litera- ture, July 23; English Literature 1700-1900 July 26; English Liter- ature 1500-1700, July 30; The Be- ginnings to 1500, August 2. The Examinations will be given in 3217 Angell Hall from 9:00 a m. to 12:00. College of Literature, Science and the Arts, Schools of Educa- tion, Forestry, and Public Health: Students who received marks of I X, or "no report" at the close of their last semester or summer sessions of attendance will receive a grade of E in the course or courses unless this work is made up by July 23. Students wishing an extension of time beyond this date in order to make up this work should file a petition ad- dressed to the appropriate official in their school with Room 44 U.H. where it will be transmitted. Edward G. Groesbeck, Assistant Registrar Deadline for Veterans' Book and supply Requisitions. August 22, 1947 has been set as the dead- line for the approval of Veterans' Book and Supply Requisitions for the Summer Session-1947. Re- quisitions will be accepted by the book stores through August 23,] 1947. La Sociedad flispanica will pre- sent the fourth program of the summer Session on Wednesday, July 23 at 8 p.m. in the East Conference Room of the Rack- ham Building. Professor En- rique Anderson-Imbert, formerly with the University of Tucuman, Argentina, and now with the Ro- mance Languages Department of the University of Michigan will speak on "Introduccion a la Lit- eratura Hisponoamericana." La Sociedad Hispanica meets every Tuesday and Wednesday for informal conversation at 3:30 p.m. and every Thursday at 4 p.m. for tea in the International Center. The Modern Poetry Club, open to all interested in discussing modern poetry, will meet Tues- day at 8 p.m. in room 3217 An- gell Hall. Negro poets and their works will be the topic. The Classical Coffee Hour will be held Tuesday, July 22, at 4:00 p.m. in the West Conference Room of the Rackham Building. All students interested in Greek and Latin Classics are cordially in- vited to attend. Prof. Blake will talk on "Why Cicero Took Greek." The Russian Circle will meet at 5:30 p.m., Monday at the Inter- national Center. From there it will go to the Island for a picnic. Members and their guests are in- vited. Be sure to sign up. The Christian Science Organi- zation will hold its regular Tues- day meeting at 7:30 p.m., July 15, in the upper room of Lane Hall. All students, faculty members, and alumni are cordially invited.I Michigan Christian Fellowship' will hold its Sunday afternoon meeting at 4:30, Lane Hall. La p'tite causette meets every Tuesday and Wednesday at 3:30 in the Grill Room of the Michi- gan League and at 4:00 on Thurs- days at the International Center. All students interested in informal French conversation are cordially invited to join the group. The French Club will hold its fifth meeting on Thursday, July 24, at 8 p.m. in the second floor Terrace Room of the Michigan Union. Prof. Paul M. Spurlin, of the Romance Language Depart- ment, will speak informally on: "Une collection de bonnes gaffes en francais." Group singing, re- Sir Bernard Pares, formerly Di- rector of Slavonic Studies at the University of London, will speak on "Russia and the Peace," Mon- day, July 21. 4:10 p.m., Rackham Amphitheatre. Public invited. Dr. David N. Rowe, Director of Eastern Asiatic and Russian Stud- ies and Associate Professor of In- ternational Relations, Yale Uni- versity, will lecture on "American Policy toward China," Monday, July 21, at 8:10 p.m., Rackham Amphitheatre. This is a lecture in the Summer Lecture Series, "The United States in World Af- fairs." The public is invited. Dr. James M. Landis, Chair- man of the Civil Aeronautics Board, will lecture on "American Interests in the Asiatic Near East," Thursday, July 24, at 8:10 p.m., Rackham Lecture Hall. This is a lecture in the Summer Lec- ture Series, "The United States in World Affairs." The public is in- vited. Atcademic Notices Differential Geometry Seminar: Tuesday, July 22, 3 p.m., 3001 Angell Hall. Mr. C. M. Fowler will speak on "Characteristic Spaces Associated with a Curve." Concerts For those interested in classi- cal music, record concerts are held every afternoon from 3:00-5:00 p.m. and every evening from 7:00- 9:00 p.m. and 5:00-7:00 on Sun- day in the concourse of the Mich- igan League. Requests will be played and everyone is welcome. Organ Recital: Robert Baker, Guest Lecturer in Organ, will be heard in a program in Hill Audi- torium at 8:30 Tuesday evening, July 22. Organist at the First Presbyterian Church of Brooklyn, Mr. Baker is in Ann Arbor as a member of the Summer Session faculty of the School of Music. For his recital he has planned a program of works by Handel, Vi- valdi, Rinck, Bach, Liszt, Andries- sen, Bingham. Langlais, Jongen. and the first performance of Ber- ceuse, by Robert Crandell, a form- er School of Music faculty mem- ber. The public is cordially invited. Student Recital: Carolyn Street Austin, Mezzo-soprano, will be heard in a recital at 8:30 Wed- nesday evening, July 23, in - the Rackham Assembly Hall, as par- tial fulfillment of the require- ments for the degree of Master of Music. Mrs. Austin is a pupil of Arthur Hackett. Her program will inclule compositions by Schu- bert, Joaquin Nin, Chausson, and a group of English songs, and will be open to the general public, Exhibitions Photographs of Summer Fungi of Michigan, Rotunda Museums Building. July and August. The Museum of Art: Exhibi- tion of Prints-Vanguard Group, Ann Arbor Art Association Col- lection, and from the Permanent Collection. July 1-28. Alumni Memorial Hall, daily, except Mon- day, 10-12 and 2-5; Sundays, 2-5. The public is cordially invited. Museum of Archaeology. Cur- rent Exhibit, "Life in a Roman Town in Egypt from 30 B.C. to 400 A.D."- Tuesday through Fri- day, 9-12, 2-5; Saturday, 9-12; Friday evening, 7:30-9:30; Sun- day 3-5. Coming Events The Inter-Racial Association is sponsoring the motion picture, "Wuthering Heights," at Hill Au- ditorium, Sunday, July 20, at 8 p.m. and Monday, July 21, at 8 p.m. Dr. Yuen-li Liang will hold the second of four conferences on the United Nations, Tuesday, July 22, at 3:10 p.m., East Conference Room, Rackham Building. These conferences are part of the Sum- mer Lecture Series, "The United States in World Affairs." Dr. Robin A. Humphreys will hold the second of four confer- ences on Latin America, Wednes- day, July 23, at 4:10 p.m., East Conference Room, R a c k h a m Building. These conferences are part of the Summer Lecture Ser- ies, "The United States in World Affairs." OFFICIAL BULLETIN who are completing their Summer { freshments, games All students Session training at the close of interested are cordially invited, the .5% weeks session, please re- port to the Veterans Administra- tion, Room 100A Rackham Build- Lectures ON WORLD AFFAIRS: - New Plan. By EDGAR ANSEL MOWRER THE NEW AMERICAN plan "ties Germany to the Marshall plan to rebuild Europe." It also -if accepted internationally - will tie Europe to a rebuilt Ger- many. The plan states specifically that "the level of industry eventually agreed upon for Germany should not permanently limit Ger- many's industrial capacity." If t h i s slightly ambiguous phrase means anything, it is that, outside strictly armament factor- ies, German industry will be per- mitted to grow as large as it can. The new report calls this "the general fulfillment of the principles of the Potsdam Agree- ment regarding reparation and industrial disarmament." A strange argument! the Potsdam Agreement was based upon recognition that Germany had enclaved its neighbors not only by threatening and con- quering them with arms but also by dominating them with its over-size industrial capaclty based on Ruhr coal. The Mor- genthau Plan, Directive JSC 1067 of 1945 and the Potsdam Agreement, planned to elimin- ate both dangers. The new American plan re- linquishes any attempt to prevent a new growth of the overweening industrial capacity that enslaved Europe. Once the new American plan comes into operation, the world will have nothing but the con- tinued presence of foreign arm- ies of occupation on German soil to protect it from a third Ger- man assault. Once they are With- drawn, the Germans will rebuild their ancient power with a speed that will astonish the world. A re-built Germany would cbnsti- tute at least as great a menace as the Soviet Union. It might even become a Soviet ally at the price of being allowed to destroy Poland and Czechoslavakia. There is nothing in Soviet history that proves the Kremlin-men would refrain from any such shift it appeared to be in their interest. Distant control could prevent the building of new German in- dustries. Distant control of al- ready rebuilt giant industries will, be futile-as the Germans proved after World War I when they went ahead and rebuilt their in- dustrial and military apparatus under the very noses of the Al- lies. The newspapers state that the new Plan is really nothing More thAn a bringing together of the "innovations" that have been gradually put into practice by the American occupying author- ities. This is an astonishing ad- mission. When in recent months peo- ple like myself have protested against General Clay's "depar- tures" from JSC 1067 and the Potsdam Agreement, we have been accused of inventing things. Actually these "departures" were explained to me a couple . of months ago by an American who had much to do with our German set-up as follows:, "A change in emphasis has to be made in the face of actual con- ditions because the directive was not altogether r'ealistic or work- able." Now this "change of em- phasis" receives its official en- dorsement. Real grievances? Kept the peace? Germany after World War I was permitted to get away with murder. Mr. White has not spent as much time in Germany as his self-confidence would imply. But Americans who are not convinced by the whole tragic development be- tween the two wars that pres- ent-day Germans must be watched and shackled for the world's good are obtuse to ar- gument. Is there then no safe way of both hobbling and utilizing Ger- many? Of course there is. The French have indicated it twenty times. It consists in putting the Ruhr Valley industrial area un- der special regime until Germany can be certified for good behav- ior. Without control over this "powerhouse of Europe," The Ger- mans cannot dominate Europe militarily or economically. It may be hoped that the six- teen countries now called to form- ulate a common scheme for Eur- ope's rehabilitation will tell the Americans, politely but firmly, that the only condition upon which Germany can be allowed to recover is that the Ruhr be placed under their common con- trol. (Copyright 1947, Press Alliance, Inc.) will hold the second of four con- ferences on European affairs, Thursday, July 24, at 3:10 p.m., East Conference Room, Rackham Building. These conferences are part of the Summer Lecture Ser- ies, "The United States in World Affairs." University Community Center Willow Run Village Calendar of Events i 4 : I '1 A i Professor Gottfried S. Delatour IBAINAY ... I I ,Z " fl.Wh~ a i,- cht #Irr,,r-.f, Bob's coinq to the cave. il