PA W Tr~tO' THE MICHIGAN DAILY I I - ---- The Warm War THERE HAVEN'T BEEN any screaming headlines about it, but the "Cold War" is unofficially over. Taking its place is an even more unofficial' "Warm War" which will give way to a "Hot War" unless positive steps are taken soon. Determining what to do to end the "Warm War" which now cen- ters around Berlin is the difficult and press- ing problem. Only by examining the day-by-day facts cf the Russian squeeze on Berlin, which began almost simultaneously with Con,- gressional passage of ERP, April 2, can the answer to the "Warm War" riddle be dis- covered. March 31-The Russians restricted the Western Allies' Trail and highway supply lines to Berlin, explaining the action as a hunt for spies and "illegal" shipments of Berlin industrial equipment to the Western occupation zone. They began in- specting all rail and highway passenger and freight trains moving from the city. The U.S. and British held their ground and flew in supplies. April 7-Russia refused to recognize the British air corridor t6 the city. April 14-Mongol troops and Stalin tanks arrived in city. April 20-The British announced that all inland water transportation, including food shipments, between the main British zone and Berlin had been stopped. . May 5-Russia tightened restrictions on mailing of food and precious metals from Berlin. June 14-Russia held up 140 carloads of coal bound from the British zone to Berlin Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: CRAIG WILSON and closed the Elbe River bridge on the main Berlin-Helmstedt highway for "re- pairs." June 18-Russia banned all passenger traffic (except by air) from the west to Berlin to keep Reichsmarks, due to be discarded as currency, from entering So- viet-held territory. June 24-Russia banned all shipments to Berlin and cut electric power 50%, to west- ern sectors of the city explaining the action as due to "technical difficulties." Gen. Clay admitted the possibility of a withdrawal. June 29-Marshall Sokolovsky saw too much extra food being flown into the city by too many planes-and publicly regretted the "necessity" of blockades. July 13-Russians said planes flying food into city were making "disorderly flights." Each time a restriction has been imposed it has been for some reason other than pushing the Western Powers out of Berlin. Clever, yet very obvious! INow the "Warm War" stage is on. Sixty B-29's and 75 jet fighters recently flew to England for transfer to the Continent for "Training." Russia said her YAK fighters and other planes would "train" ,in the Berlin air corridor. A clash is ex- ceedingly possible. The Russian plan seems to be to gain control of all of Germany by ousting the Western powers or actually provoking the U.S. into starting a war. Apparently the Soviets are challenging us to push ami armed column along the closed autobahn to the beleaguered city. They could then say that the United States began the war. And unfortunately, the world would have to b( lieve them. The only course to follow is to stay in Berlin, at any cost, refuse to start a "Hot War" and make it clear that if a war is started by the Russians, we are prepared to finish it. --Craig H. Wilson. MATTER OF FACT: Fear in the Kremlin By JOSEPH and STEWART ALSOP WASHINGTON-It is too soon to say that the great imposing structure of Soviet power in Europe has really begun to crack. Yet as the secret reports drift in from Eu- rope, the evidence mounts daily that the rulers in the Kremlin are desperately afraid that the structure which they have so painfully erected will one day come crash- ing about their heads. This fear is clearly reflected in the frantic manner in which the screws are being tightened wherever the Kremlin has the power to tighten them. A case in point is Czechoslovakia. There the first victim of an impending purge is General Svoboda, always regarded as one of the Kremlin's most willing tools. Sent to Moscow by the government-in-exile during the war, he transformed the Czech army into a Kremlin instrumentality. He was re- warded after the Moscow-engineered coup last winter with the Ministry of Defense in the new cabinet. But somewhere along the line he must have blundered-perhaps he did not deal harshlJy enough with the anti-Russian demonstrators during the recent Sokol celebrations. At any rate, he is now on a "protracted leave .of absence," and he is "not available for correspondence." It is considered exceedingly doubtful that his leave of absence will soon end. Yet the unfortunate Svoboda is only the first and smallest of the Czech Communis fish to be caught in the Moscow net. Re- ports from sources heretofore completely reliable indicate that a full-scale purge of Czech Communist leaders has been ordered by Moscow, to take place within the next six weeks. Tough Communist President Klement Gottwald is reported to be a marked man. So are Foreign Minister Vlado Klem- entis and Premier Anton Zapotocki. Gottwald, Klementis and Zapotocki have been good Communists and obedient ser- vants of the Kremlin. But they have been politicians, and as politicians must, have been guilty of appealing to the national feeling of the Czech electorate. They have been known as "moderates," tainted with Western ideas-Klementis has even been known to make jokes. The terror which they have imposed since they seized power with Moscow's help has been a moderate, almost a polite, terror. Clearly, this purge, like others which are getting under way in other satellite coun- tries, is motivated by fear in the Kremlin -fear that the cancer of Tito may spread. Indeed, the fear has already been justified, for the cancer has already spread. Tito's defection has threatened the guer- rilla movement in Greece, heretofore sup- plied largely by Yugoslavia, with collapse. Greek guerrilla leader Markos has already secretly approached the Athens government with a truce proposal aird has been sharply rebuked by Cominform emissary Zachariades for his pains. The exact status of Markos is not known, but there is no doubt that al- ready Tito's defection has made the Amer- ican job in Greece much easier. A similar split has occurred in crucial Trieste, with a pro- and anti-Tito group at daggers drawn. Before Italian Communist leader Pal- miro Togliatti was shot, measures were taken to make sure that the Tito cancer did not also spread to Italy. In a scene which closely paralleled the disciplining of Maurice Thorez, first reported in this space, Togliatti was brought to heel. Early this month at a secret meeting of the top Italian Communist leadership, and in the presence of Russian and Polish emissaries, Togliatti was accused of "na- tionalism," and a number of subsidiary sins, including "bad reporting" and "over- confidence." He was charged with having failed to predict the Communist electoral failure to the Kremlin and with being himself responsible for that failure. Togliatti's confession of sins, like that of Thorez, was grovelling. Indeed, it was so grovelling that some of his followers, pre- sumably disgusted with the exhibition, loudly booed his speech. Togliatti severely rebuked them, asserting that his public submission was an admirable example of "Marxist dem- ocratic auto-criticism." * Thus, all over Europe, the servants of the Kremlin are feeling the sting of the Krem- lin's lash. Among experienced observers, there is no longer any doubt that the frantic steps which the Kremlin is taking to insure the continued obedience of its servants are simply a measure of the Kremlin's fear. Although this fear undoubtedly exists in Moscow, it provides no reason for complac- ency in the West. For again and again in history, fear within a dictatorship has led to desperate external adventures. And the rulers of the Kremlin must now be wholly aware that their ruthless blockade of Berlin. involves the risk of the unimaginable catas- trophe of war. (Copyright, 1948, New York Herald Tribune, Inc) I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: Four Parties By SAMUEL GRAFTON IT LOOKS AS IF we are heading, at least for the moment, into a rough kind of four-party system. On the far right we have the dissident Southerners, who take the conservative posi- tion in domestic and foreign affairs, and oppose the civil liberties program. Of the four parties now shaping up, this is the only one which has a sectional base. To put it another way, this is the only one which can never have anything but a sectional base, for the reason that the anti-civil liberties position is too much freight for any national party to carry. The great story of the Democratic con- vention is that it showed no major party will again try to lug this load. The dissident Southerners were horrified at Philadelphia, not because they found that the majority differed with them--they've known that for a long time-but because they found that the majority no longer could afford to deal with them, or play ball with them. What they discovered at Philadelphia was that their position is unhistoric, that it no longer even affords them trading opportunities. And what was heard at the states' rights' convention in Birmingham was not the first note of something new, but the last gasp of something very old. For the Southern dissidents cannot hope to grow along normal lines of development, as a party; the only power they can hope to obtain is some form of veto. They exercised such a veto for years within the Democratic party through. the old rule requiring the two- thirds vote for Presidential nomina- tions; they found another veto in their hold on committee chairmanships in Congress; they hope they have still another in the filibuster; and they feel they have a fourth in their presumed power to hold back elec- toral votes from Truman, and keep any can- didate from getting a majority, thus throw- ing the election into the House of Repre- sentatives. The second of our parties is the Repub- lican, which is also conservative on home and foreign affairs, but does not oppose the civil liberties program. It cnnot. Un- like the southern conservatives, the Re- publicans still think in terms of a national futiure, they still dream of becoming and remaining the majority party. Since no major party, as shown above, will again try to carry the load of an anti-civil liberties position, talk of the Republicans winning the South, or of the South turn- ing delightedly to the Republicans, is rather futile; the dissident Southerners feel the same puzzled, historic sense of re- jection at Republican hands as at Demo- cratic. Yet the Republicans do agree profoundly with the conservative Southerners on most domestic and foreign issues, and they are almost as states-rightsy on questions of fed- eral control of economic trends. But it is not easy for a conservative party to win majorities in an advanced western industrial nation, and the Republicans find themselves obliged, as election day approaches, to look away from their voting partners in the bi- partisan conservative bloc, and to make little liberal noises. And while the Republican position is not quite as unhistorical as that of the Southern dissidents, there is something of that flavor in the way they are compelled to back away from their friends, to talk their own ideas down, to sound, sometimes, like the very liberals they detest. For this reason, strains have been showing up in the Republican party, not as sharp as those which divide the Democrats, but not superficial, either. And where the Southern dissidents are compelled to search for ingenious veto" metlods, the Republicans are compelled to seeld gloomily for minor issues, and for issues that really aim at no bull's eye, such as "time for a change of faces," "efficiency in government," etc. , We come now to the Northern and West- ern wing of the Democratic party. This grouping is, as of now, the Democratic Farty, in capitals, because it wrote the plat- form at the recent convention, even if it did not quite name the candidates. It is a party which agrees with the Republicans and the dissident Southerners on most tthough not all) questions of foreign policy and disagrees with them on most (though not all) questions of domestic policy. It is an anti-socialist party of mild, slow, liberal reform, the kind of party which has been most badly damaged and hurt in our post- war world; it has almost disappeared, for example, in Britain, except insofar as the pieces have been picked up by the Conserva- tive Party. It is a strange and disquieting thought that the troubles of the New Deal wing of the Democratic party may reflect a global trend and may not be entirely local, or due altogether to accidental factors. This party moves in an empirical, not a doctrinaire, way toward a goal of social progress without fundamental change. Such a party probably must, in practice, become" a party of emergency, a party of opportunity. It is not so far to the left that independent voters, or even conservative ones, are afraid' to join it in a time of crisis; but its appeal is so diffuse and mixed that they are not afraid to leave it, either, when the crisis has passed. In fact, it sometimes leaves it- self; uneasily aware that its shifting sup-q port comes from a number of quarters on the political horizon, it can sometimes go rapidly rightward for a period, as, recent1,, unmirTirla,Tn Ruiih moods, it tri._ vain-. Ann Arbor News Censorship REGARDLESS of what may be the merits of Attorney Gen- eral Eugene F. Black's accusations of corruption in the state Repub- lican leadership, it is impossible to see any justification for the news blackout imposed by him. Angered by a Detroit newspaper editorial commenting on Black's accusations and suggesting strongly that he "put up or shut- up," the attorney general yester- day made an announcement that no further news would be forth- coming concerning the activities of the public office he occupies. I have been ordered this morning (by the Detroit paper) to shut up," said the attorney general. "Such an order of course applies to the entire staff of the attorney general's office. Accordingly, and since we al- ways are anxious to please, it is requested that no member of the staff talk to any reporter about anything pertaining to the work or duties of this office. The attorney general will lead the way in obedience to this or- der from the press." The statement indicates that, because one Detroit newspaper of- fended Mr. Black with editorial comment, all 50 of Michigan's daily papers, and consequently the people of Michigan, are to be pun- ished by being denied news from, the attorney general's office. One newspaper was "guilty" of ex- pressing an opinion which Mr. Black did not like; therefore, all must be punished. Even if all 50 of Michigan's dailies had been "guilty," there could be no constitutional warrant for Mr. Black's press censorship. There is no warrant, indeed, for such a censorship, or news em- bargo, on even one periodical by any public official be he ever so much incensed by something that periodical has printed. Moreover, there are constitutional safe- guards for freedom of the press, and especially must news of public officials and their offices be made available for publication. The public is entitled to know in de- tail how its own business is being conducted by its employes. Once before, early in his term, of office, thin-skinned Mr. Black sought to impose a similar blackout on news by barring re- porters from his office. Then his action was ascribed to a degree of ignorance of the conduct of state affairs. At thattime he was sharply set right by Gov- ernor Sigler, who correctly took the stand that news affecting the public belonged to the pub- lic. Now Mr. Black is at outs with the governor as well as with many others, and so sensible advice from the chief executive might be expected to fall upon stubbornly closed ears. Mr. Black in this case, as in Editorial [Rounds MORATILAS TAKES 1415 STAND various others, shows a puerility not at all in keeping with the dignity and importance of the office of attorney general of Michigan. * * * Chicago Suin-Times Uneasy Dixiecrats BEFORE the Democratic nation- al convention, this column ad- vised the delegates to have a showdown with the reactionary politicians of the South. We said if they wanted to start a party of their own, the Democrats would be better off without them ... The, Dixiecrats took their walk. Already they are finding it a lonesome world. Their anger at the Democratic party for taking a decent, liberal, Christian attitude toward minorities, especially Ne- groes, is nauseating to all who believe in American fair play and justice. It puts them in the same category as Gerald L. K. Smith, the obnoxious peddler of anti- Semitism and Ku Kluxism, whoi actually attended the state's righters confab as a delegate from Oklahoma. Responsible newspapers of the South that reflect the true thinking of their communities have not gone along with the revolt. Even Gov. Laney of Ar- kansas, seems to be cooling off. The machine politicians are not going along. The Crumps, the Longs, the Talmadges and the like are in sympathy with the white supremacy creed, but they are practical enough to realize any program founded almost solely on race prejudice will not pay off in the long run. THESE SMART politicos know there was more to the or- iginal hullabaloo than the civil rights issue. There was pressure by the usual utility interests and other absentee business elements which have been trying to atomize the Democratic party by splitting off the South .. In Mississippi and Alabama, the Democratic electors for whom the people will vote are pledged against President Truman. Thus, any person wishing to vote for Truman in those states will not be able to do so. Public opinion, however, can exert great influence. In 1944 Mis- sissippi electors were pledged against Roosevelt. Four days be- fore the election, a special session of the legislature was called and a slate of unpledged electors was named. If Gov. Thurmond of South Carolina and Gov. Wright of Mississippi receive the kind of reception they deserve when they begin their campaign to stir up race hate, the Dixiecrats may yet be forced to return to the Amer- ican system which guarantees the right to a free choice for Presi- dent. Publication in The Daily Official "ltet"i s constructive notice to all members of the University. Notices for tie Bulletin should be sent in typewritten form to the office of the. Assistant to the President, Roon 1021 Angell Hal, by 3:00 p.m. on the day preceding publieption (11:0 a m. Saturdays). Notices THURSDAY, JULY 22, 1948 VOL. LVIII, No. 190 Notice of Regents' Meeting: The next meeting of the Regents will be on September 24, 1948, 2 p.m. Communications for consideration at this meeting must be in the President's hands not later than September 16. Herbert G. Watkins Secretary Bureau of Appointments & Ocu- pational Information, 201 Mason Hlall The Boeing Aircraft Company, Seattle, Washington, has openings for aeronautical, mechanical, electrical, and civil engineers. Men who are interested in this com- pany may pick up an application form at the Bureau of Appoint- ments, August Industrial - Mechanical Graduates: Mr. David Thomas of GOOD- YEAR TIRE & RUBBER COM- PANY, Akron, Ohio, will, inter- view for positions in production supervision with that organiza- tion, Thursday, July 22, in Room 218 West Engineering Building. Students may sign the interview schedule posted on the bulletin board at 225 W. Engineering Bldg. Teacher's Certificate Candi- dates: All August candidates for the teacher's certificate may take the Teacher's Oath on July 21 and 22 between the hours of 8-12 and 1-5 in Room 1437 U.E.S. This is a requirement for the teacher's cer- tiflicate. Golf for Beginners Women students are invited to attend a beginning golf class at the Women's Athletic Building on Fri. afternoon, 2:30. Bring balls. University Community Center Thurs., July 22, 8 p.m., Arts and Crafts Workshop. Lesson: De- signing For A Craft. Instructor, Sylvia Delzell. Sat., July 24, 9-12 p.m., Orches- tra Dance sponsored by the Wives of Student Veterans. Dorothy Biddulph, Chr. Tues., July 27, 8 p.m., Student Wives Club. Frank L. Huntley, speaker. Lectures Summer Session Lecture Series: Clair Wilcox, Professor of Eco- nomics Swarthmore College, "Re- construction and World Trade." The International Trade Organi- zation Charter, Thurs., July 22, 4:10 p.m., Rackham Amphithea- tre. Linguistic Institute Forum Lec- ture. "A Re-examination of the English Juncture Phonemes," by Dr. Bernard Bloch, Associate Pro- fessor of Linguistics, Yale Univer- sity. Thurs., July 22, 7:30, Rack- ham Amphitheatre. Phycics Symposium, change of lecture hours for Thurs., July 22. Dr. McMillan will lecture at 10 a.m., instead of at 11 as an- nounced. Dr. Schwinger will lecture at 11 a.m. Room 150 Hutchins Hall. The fifth lecture in the special series of lectures sponsored by the Department of Engineering Me- chanics will be given by C. R. So- derberg, Professor of Mechanical Engineering, Massachusetts Insti- tute of Technology. Prof. Soder- berg will discuss "Yielding and Fracture of Metals" on Fri., July 23, 3 p.m., Rm. 445 West Engineer- ing Building, and Sat., July 24, 11 a.m., Room 445, West Engineering Building. (Continued on Page 4) _ - ' IT SO -HAPPENS .. . " More About the Doctor BARNABY f I9y 'i . Yo 6 Really,O'Malley, ldidn't get that theater group. To act in your play- Modest old Barnaby! Gus. .. Havq rn Grandma's some pears. colling me. L 21 1. iI Comforting Thought THE CURRENT women's magazine carry- ing Dr. Kinsey's preliminary report on the fair sex is causing quite a stir. But one coed, philosophically explaining the world to herself as she gazed at the cover, had a comforting thought. "I guess that's the safest place for Dr. Xinsey," she declared. Burnaby, this is Mr. Green, the C. director of our barn theater- Mr. O'Molley, my Fairy Godfather, is glad you came. EtG Shocking Question WE ALMOST missed our eight o'clock yes- terday morning when we overheard a shocked young man on the diagonal inquire of his friend, "Do you know what THAT girl asked me last night?" To the natural negative, the young man faltered, "She asked me . . . she asked ME if I would join the Wallace Progressives!" Yes, he's very imaginative, Mr. Green. He even imagines his dog talks to him- Mr. Green seems quite smart Why didn't you speak to him?