?AGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, JULY 14, 1951 ____________________________________________________ U Ciu4 lete By DAVE THOMAS IN A CURRENT REVIEW dealing with a number of recent books on insects in the New Yorker magazine, Edmund Wilson re- marks that at last insects are coming into their own in being represented as more ra- tional at a time when the activity of human beings gives the impression of becoming more instinctual. Corroboration for this statement, if any is needed, can be found by reading several of the books which Mr. Wilson recommends and glancing at any newspaper this past week. For the first time since 1933, the governor of Illinois has had to call out the National Guard to quell a civilian disturb- ance. Reason: a mob of thousands, mclud- ing many minors, has been swarming over a four-block area in a Chicago suburb in order to throw bricks at an apartment house which was shortly to have received its first Negro tenant. The racial tension which now requires the services of more than 500 state militia- men and law enforcement officials has been building up ever since early in June when Harvey E. Clark, Jr., 29-year-old Chicago bus driver and veteran of World War II attempted to move himself and his wife into an apartment in Cicero, a sub- urb of Chicago. Clark charged that police prevented him from moving into his apartment at that time. This week, a local judge ordered police to protect Clark and his wife in their at- tempts to take possession 'of their 60-dol- lars-a-month apartment. On Tuesday, when the Clarks tried to move into the apartment, a mob of agita- tors prevented them and since then the crowds have grown nightly. * * * COMMUNIST INFLUENCE in instigating the riots has been charged, and it is en- tirely possible that this may prove to be the case, for this is the sort of violence which is made to order for Communist propaganda purposes. But the fact remains, that regardless of the originating cause, there is enough irra- tional, "instinctive" race hatred among the populace of Cicero and adjoining communi- ties to stir up an outrage which would be considered a disgrace even in some parts of the South. If it were possible to credit a thing of this sort with a beneficial aspect, it would be the mere fact that the Cicero incident can serve to remind thinking people in the North how fine is the line which separates us in our treatment of the Negro from the actions of Southern citizens. There are recurrent and ominous reports from Detroit about the state of racial ten- sions there, and many observers believe that all that is needed for a repeat of the last bloody race riot is a little serious competi- tion among races for employment opportuni- ties. An interracial tennis tournament was recently quashed by a parks board in Baltimore, and here in Ann Arbor, local barbershops continue to bar Negroes from their chairs. Campus fraternities and sororities continue their discrimination against Negroes either openly by restric- tive clauses or secretly through gentle-. men's agreements. With the cold war growing hotter every day and with Negro GI's giving their lives In Korea to defend a country where, by and large, they have the status of second-lass citizens, our shameful treatment of Negroes becomes more shameful and dangerous every day. What continues to be a source of amaze- ment to many is that there are so relatively few Paul Robesons and Benjamin Davises and so many loyal Americans among U. S. Negroes. It would be a mistake to think that incidents of the type which is proceeding at Cicero do not represent a serious threat to our national security. The Weekend In Town EVENTS OF INTEREST IN AND AROUND ANN ARBOR THIS WEEK-END. DRAMA AN ENEMY OF THE PEOPLE, adapted by Arthur Miller, '38, from the angry play by Henrik Ibsen is the second offering on the speech department's summer schedule at 8 p.m. tonight at the Lydia Mendelssohn Thea- tre. First nighters and critics have agreed on the excellent quality of the campus pre- sentation. DANCES BERNIE STRONG will play the balanced, smooth music of which dreams are made for dancers at Walled Lake tonight. MOVIES UNFAITHFULLY YOURS, starring Rex Harrison and Linda Darnell is set for the second of the Student Legislature's Cinema Guild's summer slate. This film should prove no exception to the Cinema Guild's usually fine program. Two performances, 7:30 and 9:30 in the Architecture Auditor- ium. SHOWBOAT, with Kathryn Grayson, Howard Keel, and Ava Gardner is brought to the screen with all the splendor of the original stage production tonight at the Acheson's Martyrdom ALTHOUGH the storm over the firing of Gen. Douglas MacArthur has in a large part subsided, a bitter remembrance of the debates which accompanied it still lingers in the national political scene. Republicans and certain Democrats con- tinue to level attacks at Dean Gooderham Acheson, Secretary of State and the man responsible for many of the Administration's international policies in the past few years. Free speech is something which particu- larly needs safeguarding in these days of red-baiting and headlong persecution of the outspoken, but the unlimited abuse heaped upon Acheson is one of the great tragedies of American politics. The kind of thing to which the man has been subjected is not an uncommon occur- rence. In the past, able men have refused to enter public life, or have been driven from it, by the brickbats thrown their way by critics. The Acheson example is amazing in a great many ways. Here is a man who is eminently qualified for his position, who had been known and is known for his quiet integrity, brilliant mind, and capacity to keep his temper. HIS RECORD speaks for itself. In the re- cent Senate investigations, he argued for his policies so flawlessly that he had his bumb- ling critics searching for misplaced commas in lieu of real material for debate. OME friends and many foes agree that the only blot on the Acheson record during his tenure as secretary was his now-famous statement: "I shall not turn my back on Alger Hiss." Whether or not this was a wise thing for a man in public office to say, it has little to do with Acheson's capabilities in directing foreign policy. After all, the statement was made before Hiss' conviction for perjury, and it is a little bit like Monday-morning quarter- backing to label Acheson a Red for this bit of Christian charity. Acheson's record, in its entirety, is a good one. American foreign policy, never noted for its lucidity and directness, has at least been comprehensible while he has been di- recting it.bT And the man has obtained results. The Berlin airlift, the North Atlantic Pact, the Korean decision have yielded some fruit insofar as peace is concerned. It seems, nevertheless, that even success can't succeed where partisan politics domin- ate the scene. Even Acheson's supporters are urging him to resign these days, and only such a stubborn man as Harry Truman prevents the inevitable. This nation can never hope to get the best in leadership as long as that leadership is subjected to illogical and emotional barrages by the opposition. It is only to be hoped that the present trend of McCarthyism and muckraking will be repudiated by those whose clearer heads make them our only hope in national politics. -George Flint "He Never Knew What Hit Him" no- - H INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Kaesong Procedure SNAFU Shows American Naivete By J. M. ROBERTS, JR. Associated Press News Analyst THE SNAFU over operational procedure at Kaesong is another case of American assumption that the enemy will respond to elastic and generous tactics. The exact conditions which were to surround the truce negotia- tions were not nailed down. As a result, a dispute over details now threatens the really important matters involved. The same thing happened when Roosevelt and Churchill left the details hanging at Yalta regarding the forms of government desired in what have now become the Soviet satellite states of Eastern Europe. It happened when the military demarcation line was fixed in Germany without detailed agreement about access to the Berlin enclave. It happened when a military line in Korea was left to become a political boundary. It happened at Potsdam regarding operational procedure for post- war Germany. It happened when Stalin agreed to a settlement of the Berlin blockade and the allied negotiators left the Kremlin without nailing down the details, which were immediately scrambled by the Russian representatives in Berlin. * * * * GEN. Ridgway's message to the enemy commanders in Korea indi- cates that the matter of press coverage has become a test case in a situation which was already fouled up by assumption that a neutral meeting place meant a disarmed meeting place, with equal freedom of movement and communication for both sides. With the Communists-and it is hard to see how this lesson could have gone so long unlearned-you can't assume anything. And they will stop in even the most turbulent of midstreams to argue endlessly over any sort of change in what they consider agreed procedure. The failure of the Washington Administration to provide Ridgway with counsel from among its experts in dealing with the Communists already had been the subject of comment among observers before the SNAFU arose. Dulles, Jessup and others experienced in picking up the nuances of Communist words and deeds have been conspicuously ab- sent from the Korean planning picture. The United States left Ridgway to deal on a strictly military basis. With the Communists, nothing is strictly military. Military and poli- tical pressures are combined in one concerted drive toward their ob- jectives. /ettePJ TO THE EDITOR The Daily welcomes communications from its readers on matters of general interest, and will publish all letters which are signed by the writer and in good taste. Letters exceeding 300 words. in length, defamatory or libelous letters, and letters which for any reason are not in good taste will be condensed, edited or withheld from publication at the discretion of the editors. 2r '" -4 DORIS FLEESON: Douglas - White House Political Rapprochement WASHINGTON - Sen. Pau Douglas of Illinois brought the olive branch into the White House Wednesday and laid it in front of President Truman. The Senator said plainly to the President what he has so often told friends: that any breach between them is not of his making and that Mr. Truman has his good wishes and good will. The President responded politely and plea- santly. He avoided personalities and his caller followed suit. As a result the three vacancies in the federal courts of Illinois for which Sen. Douglas long since recom- mended candidates were not mentioned. The next chapter in the Truman-Doug- las saga will be public and it cannot be long delayed. The federal court calendars in Chicago are piling up and the incum- bent judges are pleading for help. Senator Douglas's trio were cleared by him with the organization and have the blessing of the Illinois National Committeeman, Jake Arvey. If they are not nominated by the President the rebuff to Sen. Douglas, who has asked only what ancient Senatorial custom dic- tates, will be a pointed one. It will be up to him what fight, if any, he will choose then to wage with the President of his own Party whose program he almost wholly ap- proves. s . . ANY permanent breach between them could have national results. The Presi- dent is none too strong at best with the in- dependent voters who have made a hero of the former Socialist and ex-marine. But political history has often proved an axiom laid down by former Sen. Burton K. Whee- ler of Montana when he took on President Roosevelt. No Senator, said the experienced Wheeler, ever gets great by fighting the President of his own Party. He may inflict wounds but he will get plenty and he will lose ground nationally for sure and probably at home. Senator Wheeler was not too long proving his own case. The differences between the President and Sen. Douglas are the hardest kind to heal in politics, however, because they are not on issues but largely matters of per- sonality. Sen. Douglas was a Fair Dealer when Mr. Truman was an obscure member of the Pendergast political organization; he has not only supported the President's program but often led the fight, as in the case of the Kerr Gas Bill and price control. Penny Shortage NEWS COMES from Washington that the government is disturbed over the penny situation. It appears that the coppers are disappearing from circulation at an alarm- ing rate. Vanishing funds are, of course, no novelty in Washington, but the Administration pre- fers to monopolize this sort of disappearing act itself. Hence the appeal that has gone out to proprietors of piggy-banks, sugar bowls, old socks and similar penny reposi- tories. Frankly, we doubt that the government is going to get very far with its campaign. Piggy-bank holders are by nature suspicious of all attempts to deprive them of their property; they have been known to put up a terrible outcry when any one so much as approaches their hard-earned hoards. A penny saved is a penny earned, Ben Frank- of the President's program but often led the fight, as in the case of the Kerr Gas Bill and price control. But he led a battle for economy when the President was daring Congress to cut his budget. He is a member of the. Fulbright subcommittee which unveiled the RFC prob- lems, including the mink coat and the role played by White House aide, Donald Daw- son. He is now conducting public hearings on ethics in government. He has helped put the President on the spot with the Marines again by pushing through the Senate a bill to expand the Marine Corps greatly, which Gen. Mar- shall and the Joint Chiefs of Staff oppose. Some Truman advisers want the President to sign it and avoid another skirmish with the leathernecks but there can be very little doubt that, if the Generals and Ad- miral Sherman wish it, the President will veto the increase. The public is pleased by all this but the White House has made it clear that it is not. An incautious admission by Senator Douglas that he viewed Secretary of State Acheson as a casualty of war who should be replaced plus some indications that he viewed Gen. Eisenhower as fine Presidential timber did not help. Human nature being what it is, various Party leaders who named Douglas as their second favorite Presidential candidate after Mr. Truman also made their contribution to the feud which the Senator now seeks to re- solve. (Copyright, 1951, by The Bell Syndicate, Inc.) Hatcherian Ode THE VERY MODEL OF A MODERN COLLEGE PRESIDENT (After Sir W. S. Gilbert) am the very model of a modern college president. I'm always on the job, though nearly al- ways a non-resident. I tour about the country to assemblies gastronomical And make all sorts of speeches from sub- lime to broadly comical, I keep the trustees calm and the alumni all benevolent, Restrain all signs of riot and publicity malevolent, I know the market-value of each wage- slave professorial, And how much less he'll take for honorar- ium tutorial, I'm on to all the low intrigues and ri- valries divisional, An on the budget how I wield my foun- tain-pen excisional. So though I pile up mileage being gen- erally non-resident I am the very model of a modern college president. * * * I MIX WITH all the business kings-the Lions and the Rotary, Of heiresses and oil-tycoons I am a hope- ful votary. I'm fond of giving dinners in a lay-out that is squiffycal , And talking on th radio in accents quite pontifical, I use the phrase "distinguished guest" at every opportunity, I welcome all alumni to my parlor every June at tea. And though I like to see the neutrals' lone- ly hearts-that-burn at ease, I always have a kindly word to say about ON THE Washington Merry-Go-Round with DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON-The White House was considering a plan to send VTr Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas to Iran as special mediator, when two published items suddenly knocked these plans in- to a cocked hat. One item was in Winchell's column, the other an ar- ticle in Life magazine. The Winchell item read: "Personal memo of Tito of Yugoslavia, nvehru of India and other chiefs of foreign nations: when a 'Bill Douglas' (of Oregon and Washington, -D.C.) calls on you soon-all courtesies extended will be appreciated by this column. Mr. Douglas will file copy exclusively to us . . . It will be relayed to all I.N.S. cli- ents under the byline: 'by Bill Douglas, Special Correspondent of the Daily Winchell.' " This did not go down well at the White House. Nobody re- ally believed that the Supreme Court Justice was going to send newspaper dispatches back from India and Yugoslavia where Douglas is 'ow traveling, through Walter Winchell. Nevertheless, Winchell is not popular around the White House, and even a remote association between him and Douglas didn't help. On top of this, the State Department learned that the Shah of Iran was blazing mad over a recent article in Life Magazine in which Justice, Douglas portrayed Iran as a land of crooks and grafters. Though many agree with Douglas, the Shah apparently doesn't. For last week an urgent cable sent to the State Department warned Doug- las to stay out of Iran if he valued his life. Obviously he was not the man to mediate in Iran. -BOMBING RUSSIA-- T WILL PROBABLY be denied, but the Navy has refused to take part in bombing Russia, in case of war, rather than submit to Air Force command. This is another flare-up in the bitter, Navy-Air Force feud over whose planes should drop the atomic bomb and spearhead the air offensive. The Navy has sought the strategic air role for its carriers, but the Joint Chiefs of Staff have repeatedly over- ruled the Navy and assigned strategic bombing to the Air Force. However, Chief of Naval Operations Admiral Sherman came up with a new offer at a recent meeting of the Joint Chiefs. He accepted a secondary role for his carriers, but offered naval air support in case of strategic air operations against Russia. The Joint Chiefs in turn agreed to use carriers for strategic bombing, provided they.took their orders from the Air Force. This was too much for Admiral Sherman. He flatly refused to take part in strategic bombing unless the Navy commanded its own flight missions. A Mr. Briley . 0 . -ANOTHER PEARL HARBOR?-- DURING BACKSTAGE talks in the State Department the question has arisen more than once: "What if the cease-fire moves in Korea could be the prelude to another Pearl Harbor?" It was just before Pearl Harbor, of course, that Japan sent special negotiators to Washington, ostensibly to patch up our rup- turing relations. Suppose history repeats, now ask some of our diplomats. Unfortunately certain world developments appear to justify this question mark. One is the steady concentration of Chinese troops on the French Indo-China border. Another is the heavy shipment of kerosene from Manchuria south toward French Indo-China. Kerosene is used to fuel jet planes. Another is troop concentrations north of Iran. Another is con- tinued reports of troop maneuvers on the Yugoslav border, plus Red army movements in East Germany and Poland. The latter have gone on for some years, and may or may not mean anything. However, it is important that the United States is winning the friendship battle in both Japan and Germany, while the So- viet is losing out. And when a nation finds itself slipping, the usual move in a dictatorship is military action. Another suspicious factor is the sudden flag-waving for peace now inspired by Communist groups. Word is reported to have gone out from Moscow that the new Communist line is to plug for peace at any price. This is what makes sincere and genuine peace negotiations more difficult. Ninety per cent of the American people devoutly want peace. An equal proportion of West Europeans also want peace, are even more devoutly anxious for it than we-because they are tired, extre- mely war-weary and would not follow us in a war that came too soon. Furthermore, they would not follow us even now if we did not bend over backward to accept any and all Communist peace moves in Korea. This was one reason why General Ridgway accepted the Com- munist proposal to meet in unneutral Kaesong rather than on a neutral Danish hospital ship. This was also why he has put up with the rebuff of having our negotiators surrounded by armed Communists. For, when the pubic and your allies are peace- hungry, they expect their military commanders to meet almost anywhere. However, what the American public has to remember is that peace obtained at any price is never a lasting peace, and that as far as preparedness is concerned, this is no time for us to relax. (Copyright, 1951, by the Bell Syndicate, Inc.) To the Editor: MR. BRILEY! I am amused at how verbosely you disguise your immaturity and inexperience. I am even more amused at the' amount of spaoce you devoured with your editorial, "U Adminis- tration," when you could have ex- pressed your criticism so much more adequately and decently in a few words and still remained a man. I can agree with you in so far as this University is not perfect or entirely faultless, but neither is any other institution of higher learning, large or small. I know! Four years ago, I set out on a na- tion-wide search for the perfect college you dream of. Since then I have attended four academic colleges, one business college, and visited at a half a dozen other colleges from the East Coast to the West Coast. They varied in size from a student population of 200 to 25,000. I became well-enough acquaint- ed with the members of the ad- ministration, teaching staff, and' student body to provide ample proof on a comparative basis that this university is organized and functions for the benefit of the individual student and that its ef- forts are aimed in the direction of providing closer teacher-student rapport, but that, my friend, is a two-way proposition. This University is not designed to pamper and coddle those indi- viduals who can not and will not express and uphold their own con- victions. It is building mer and women to meet the future with courage and forthright. It is a future that demands men and wo- men of positive action resources and not namby-pambies weeping cynically through words. You are the fool not to take advantage of the opportunities the University offers for meeting with the administration officers and faculty - and expressing yourself. Their motives for instigating them are irrelevant. You are fortunate for their existence. Leaders are made, not born. The leaders any place on this campus will be no better than we, the students, make them. They can not be expected to pull out opinions from students like teeth. This is a big University. This is a big world, too.. The channels you will wade through in the largei world to get what you want are even more numerous and longer than you suggest of this Univer- sity. It takes perseverance. This University might be a good place to begin practicing it in prepara- tibn. Moreover, I am certain that the mud-slinging and fault-find- ing methods you employ to obtain action out of the University will never substitute for it. Since I have come to this Uni- versity I have never failed in re- ceiving the attention and consid- eration that was due me. I have always been able to express my opinions. I have received direct and fair answers to my questions. I have been treated with respect and human decency. The worth of the individual has been tried, test- ed, and proved in my case, and it is my hope that my testimony will stand as proof for other students who have been falsely endoctrin- ated by the cynical writers and speakers on this campus with feel- ings of fear and discouragement concerning administration and fa- culty. I say only to them that if they don't like something, to say so, but with sincerity of purpose to fight for, not against. We can not ever achieve democracy with- out using it. -Georgia M. Rese Bal r l it Sixty-First Year Edited and mxanaged by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications D Editorial Staff DaeThomas ........Managing Editor George Flint...........Sports Editor Jo Ketelhut.........Women's Editor Business Staff Milt Goetz ....... ...Business Manager Eva Stern .........Advertising Manager Harvey Gordon......Finance Manager Allan Weinstein .. .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 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, $6.00; by mail, $7.00. ,; 4 A" BARNABY Let's see what the children have painted. !'m sure they've forgotten about Barnaby's They all seem to have painted the same thing!g!uclm r./ t