PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, JUNE 25, 1953 II i/itor;d dote 1 The Farmer's Plight By HARLAND BRITZ HREE YEARS AGO today, millions of unsuspecting Americans picked up their morning papers to learn that the unfamil- iar country of South Korea had been in- vaded by their Red neighbors to the north. Not too many of those people even knew where Korea was and fewer knew the im- plications of the news. But with astounding rapidity President Truman made clear how much importance he attached to the invasion. As we look back at June of 1950 we remember not only the infamy of the Red aggression but the more important reaction which it caused. Korea proved to the free world once and for all that its strength lay in world-. wide collective security. After the United Nations took action, soldiers from all over the world flocked to the rocky terrain of Korea to contain Communism on an in- ternational scale. What's more the for- merly sluggish defenders of freedom, rea- lizing the threat, began a gigantic rearm- ament program which had been needed' all along. Today, as we look back on the whole Kor- ean episode, noting the truce difficulties, noting the current battle line which isn't too different from the original political boun- dary, many of us ask just what Korea has accomplished. Many Americans are struck with the seeming futility of the huge oper- ation< It's often forgotten that our primary ob- jective has been accomplished. The Com- munist aggression has been checked. The objectiyes of the Red warlords have been completely frustrated. If the North Koreans had any idea that a stalemate would have ensued they would never have attacked. By being taught that aggression would be met with sturdy defenses, world com- munism was forced back into retirement.. Korean type aggressions no longer hold the glamour that they did on June 24, 1950. The collective force of the free world has been marshalled together to check Red ad- vances. By cooperating, the free nations have gained an important victory over Com- munism on the battlefields of Korea. Their swift action is a heavy hint that they will do it again. But there are many flaws in the day to day operations of states that hamper the cause of cooperation. When Rhees' take ar- bitrary moves, when Americans try to ex- ploit minor differences between the U.S. and Britain, what otherwise could turn into a happy success, often falls into silly little pieces. Korea has shown what firm coopera- tion can do. As we commemorate the be- ginning of the action there, we should re- member that strength comes from a re- alization of basic common needs and from there, cooperative planning. CUR ENT MOVIES At the State .. . DOWN AMONG THE SHELTERING PALMS, with William Lundigan, Jane Greer, Mitzi Gaynor, David Wayne, Glor- ia DeHaven and Gene Lockhart. THIS IS AN average musical, except there isn't enough music. Ordinarily, it's easy to overlook the in- evitable plots in these things, but unfor- tunately in this technicolor tidbit there isn't much else. Save the standard "All of Me," the songs which provide some relief from the uninspired dialogue do no justice to Harold Arlen. In the long gaps between music, William Lundigan, as the commanding officer of frustrated occupation troops on a South Pacific island, is chased after by three women. Mitzi Gaynor, a pert but plain "native," does some amusing bumps. Gloria De- Haven, who attempts a take-off on the in- ternational set, is the only one who can carry a tune. And, of course, Jane Greer gets the guy. Meanwhile, the soldiers, suffering from acute glandular fever, take peeps at Ivory- skinned female islanders through the barbed wire. This sort of situation leads to mam- moth complications which drag slowly to- ward the happy moment when you can leave. -Barnes Connable Who's The Book Burner? IKE'S ANTI-BOOK burning speech at Dartmouth sounded fine. But who is burning the books? Why, the State Depart- ment in its Foreign Information Service libraries around the globe is black-listing U.S. authors. An order to stop this would DWARFED BY international news, the farm price program looms almost unno- ticed as the Eisenhower administration's number one domestic problem. It may prove to be a major factor in influencing the ad- ministration's chances in congressional elec- tions next year. The American farmer is caught in the worst cost price squeeze since 1948 when farm prices dropped 25 per cent. Farm price levels are gradually falling off as the high production costs resulting from the boom of the rest of the economy remain steady. As a result of this situation, the prospect of increased production controls and in- creased marketing controls to alleviate the surplus of goods and thus raise farm prices, comes as an additional sore spot to the inde- pendent farmer. The fact that farm -real estate sales have turned downward probably doesn't encourage him too much either. Articles in farm magazines offering hints to wary farmers on "beating their way out of the cost price squeeze" are prevalent and in- advertantly reveal the seriousness of the sit- uation. Such comments as "He knows that the days of easy profits are past and belt- tightening is in order," set the tenor. In Michigan, farm products dropped an- other two per cent in April and the farm- er's purchasing power is now doyn to 94. per cent of parity, that price set by the government as the farmers take in a nor- mal year. These figures would seem to indicate that the government will have to increase its price support program. Urbanites can't sympathize readily with the farmer's plight because there has been a general drop in the cost of living. What they don't realize is that this drop has come primarily at the farmer's expense. While the farm value of the "family market bas- ket" of foods is off 12 per cent; the market- ing costs for these items has dropped only three per cent. One of the major reasons for the price calamity is that dwindling foreign markets have ballooned the surplus in American mar- kets. Farmers have lost more than one bil- lion dollars worth of export business in the past year and no pickup is expected in for- eign markets for U.S. farmers. Meanwhile the Foreign Agricultural Service of the De- partment of Agriculture is exploring every possible method of finding. farm markets abroad. In the midst of sliding farm prices, new Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Benson came out with his reduced price support program or "more flexible price support" as, Mr. Ben- son chooses to phrase it. He also favored relaxing marketing and production controls, an action which would result in an immedi- ate deluge.of surplus on the markets, but which according to the economic principle of supply and demand would soon iron it- self out. Holding the last action conceivable is very idealistic, but its practical possibility seems nil owing to the necessity the gov- ernment has felt in keeping the farmers on its artiflical economic program for so long a time. Because of the obvious impossibility of following such a program as Benson's, farmers began losiig faith in him and the administration. Letters poured in to Ben- son's office and to congressmen resulting in the enactment of more legislation con- tradicting Benson's position than support- ing it. Congress has appropriated more money than Benson wanted to both the conservation program and the agricultural department. Mr. Benson has been forced because of both political and economic pressure to con- cede his former position and is now back- ing up price help and enforcing marketing and production controls. It would seem that he is now following the farm program of the Truman Administration to a "T.'' Hoyever, while Benson is regaining favor, in Congress for his revised stand, the na- tion's farmers are looking on guardedly to see what the administration will do to alle- viate their sliding standards of living. It seems that the situation as it now stands requires a new and more original piece of farm legislation than the Republicans have offered to date. -Elsie Kuffler "I'm Getting A Little Tired Of This Honeymoon" - Du- Fp T? " " " y.."i Ii. MATTR OFFACTr By JOSEPH and STEWART ALSOP t ,1 . = 'i 4.'. S' _ _ / i L-f i ' I :. A '' y q-. ir, f y -- N t *.,*z -K ?* r . DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN 1 Pakistan Gets wheat "AND YEARS OF plenteousness were known in the land of Egypt. And- the years of dearth came, but in all the land of Egypt there was bread. And all countries 'came into Egypt for to buy corn; because that famine was so sore in all lands . .." Thus have come first India, most recently Pakistan to the United States for wheat. The wheat for India bill wended a lengthy tortuous path through the Legislature be- fore it was finally ratified. A similar move to send a million tons of wheat to a starving Pakistani nation was approved in comparatively short order Tues- day. At the same time the 37 million bushels of wheat will help reduce the huge wheat surplus gathered under the American gov- ernment's price support program. Considering our. own surplus and the plight of famine stricken Pakistan, a stra- tegic sore spot in Asia, the opposition to the gift as part of an "endless giveaway merry- go-round" scarcely seems justified. Pakistan to the Westerner is often "that other India," the part that remained when India achieved independence. It is made up of two unequal sections separated by the vast territory of India. It is a Muslim nation still striving for continued existence. The plan for splitting India on a religious basis drew little en- encouragement from Lord Louis;Mountbat- ten, Nehru and Gandhi, who with the fa- ther of Pakistan, Mohammed Ali Jinnah were the architects of the division. Nehru wrote in 1936: "Politically the idea is absurd, economically it is fantastic . . and even if many people believed in it, it would still vanish at the touch of reality." Yet actually, division based on religion Is not unique. Though the peoples of 'Trans-Jordan and Israel are of the Se- metic. race, it is the religious factor that divided them. It is also religion which di- vided Belgium and the Netherlands as well as Eire and the Irish Free State. Yet the Pakistani boundary lines have led to startlingly uneven population division in the two sections of Pakistan. West Pakis- tan has 110 people to each square mile of parched plain. The Eastern portion is a swampy forest packed with 800 Pakistani per square mile.- East Pakistan trades profitably in jute with India and trades raw cotton with Red China while the narrow corridor of the West, squeezed between a hostile Afganis- tan and an unimical India is in a precari- ous position. Slums and rickety children are everywhere and water is at a premium, yet East Pakistan has sufficient water sup- ply due to 200 inch rains. Unrest, tension over the disputed Kash- mir region and famine have a tight hold on the land. Each gesture of help and good will on the part of the West should have a strong effect in turning toward the West Pakistani eyes instead of backs. -Gayle Greene The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the University of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsi- bility. Publication in it is construc- tive notice to' al members of the University. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3510 Administration Building before 3 p.m. the day preceeding publication (be- fore 11 a.m. on Saturday). WEDNESDAY, JUNE 24, 1953 Vol. LXIII, No. 168 Notices Applications for Fulbright Awards for graduate study or research abroad during the 1954-55 academic year are now available. Countries in which study grants are offered are Australia, Austria, Belgium and Luxembourg, Burma, Ceylon, Denmark, Egypt, Fin- land, France, Germany, Greece, India, Iraq. Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Pakistan, the Philip- pines, Sweden; Thailand, the Union of South Africa, and the United King- dom. The grants are made for one aca- demic year and include round-trip transportation, tuition, a living allow- ance and a small stipend for books and equipment. All grants are made in for- eign currencies. Interested students who hold an A.B. degree or who will receive such a de- gree by June 1954, and who are pre- sently enrolled in the University of Michigan, should request application forms for a Fulbright award at the office of the Graduate School. The closing date for receipt of applications is October 31. Persons not enrolled in a college or university in the spring or fall of 1953 should direct inquiries and requests for applications to the Institute of In- ternational Education, U.S.uStudent Program, 1 East 67th Street, New York 21, New York. The last date on which applications will be issued by the In- stitute is October 15. Applications for Buenos Aires Con- vention Awards for graduate study or research in Latin America during the 1954-55 academic year are now available. Countries in which study grants are offered are Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Co- lombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Guatemala, Haiti. Hondur- as, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Para- guay, Peru and Venezuela. Grantees are chosen by the host governmentof each country from a panel presented by the United States Government. The United States Government pays travel costs and host government's pay main- tenance allowances and tuition fees, Grants generally are for one academic year, but some may extend for twelve months. Interested students who hold an A.B. degree or who will receive such a de- gree by June, 1954, and who are pres- ently enrolled in the University of Michigan, should request application forms for a Buenos Aires Convention award at the office of the Graduate School. The closing date for receipt of applications is October 31. Persons not enrolled in a college or university in the spring or fall of 1953 should direct inquiries and requests for applications to the Institute of International Education, U.S. Student Program, 1 East 67th Street, New York 21, New York. The last date on which applications will be issued by the In- stitute is October 15. Student Organizations planning to be active during the summer session must register in the Office of Student Affairs not later than July 3. Forms for reg- istration are available in the Office of Student Affairs, 1020 Administration Building. Use of the Daily Official Bulletin for announcement of meetings and use of meeting rooms in University Buildings will be restricted to officially recog- nized and registered student organiza- tions. For procedures and regulations re- lating to student organizations, officers are referred to University Regulations Concerning Student Affairs, Conduct, and Discipline aailable in the Office of Student Affairs. Summer Session Hours for Women: Undergraduate women in the Summer Session must be in their residences by 11:00 p.m. Sunday through Thurs- day, and by 12:30 a.m. Friday and Sat- urday. Late permission will be issued by individual house directors. Women's Judiciary Council Calling hours for men at women's residences begin at 1:00 p.m., Monday through Friday, or at a later hour if houses so desire. Saturday and Sun- day calling hours may be decided by the individual houses. Women's Judiciary Council Season tickets for the Department of pany in Louisville, Ky., is looking for Chemical Engineers, Chemists, and a Mechanical Engineer. Men who will graduate in August may apply as well as those who have received their degree. The Michigan Civil Service Commis- sion has announced that examinations will be given for the positions of Adult Corrections Trainee I and Highway De- signing Engineer II. Requirements for the Corrections Trainee include a de- gree with courses in Sociology, Psychol- ogy, or Criminology. The Engineering position requires an Engineering de- gree plus 1 yr. of recent professional highway design experience, For applicationssand further infor- mation about these and other open- ings, contact the Bureau of Appoint- ments 3528 Administration Bldg., Ext. 371. - Lectures Professor Phillips Bradley of the Graduate School of Citizenship and Public Affairs of Syracuse UniversityI will speak before the Social Science Workshop at two o'clock, Room 429 MH, on Thursday and Friday, Juneb25 and 26. His topic on Thursday will be "The Use of the Newspaper in Teaching So- cial Studies." On Friday he will dis- cuss "Teaching Labor-Management Re- lations in Social Studies Classes." Vis- itors will be welcome. Conference on Functions of a Com- plex Variable: 10:00 a.m., "Topology of R. S. Martin and level curves of the , Green's Function," by M. Brelot. 11:15, "The Growth of Integral and Subhar- monic Functions," by W. Hayman. West Conference Room, R'ackham Building. Today, at 4:15 p.m. in Auditorium A, Angell Hal, Mr. Milton Caniff, Cartoon- gst, will speak on Art and the Comic Strip. Professor Fang-Kuel Li, of the De- partment of Linguistics, University of Washington, will speak today at 7:30 p.m. in Auditorium B, Angell' Hall. His topic will be "Chinese Phonology, Old and New." Academic Notices Seminar in Mathematical Statistics: There will be an organization meeting today at 12:00 o'clock noon in Room 3020 Angell Hall. Doctoral Examination for Sanoh Dharmgrongartama, Education; thesis: "Proposals for Reorganizing the Cur- riculum of the Secondary Schools of Thailand," Thursday, June 25, 4015 Uni- versity High School, at 3:15 p.m. Chair- man S. E. Dimond. The first Fresh Air Camp Clinic will be held Friday, June 26. Dr. Ralph Rab- inovitch will be the psychiatrist. Stu- dents with aaprofessional interest are welcome to attend. Main Lodge, Uni- versity of Michigan Fresh Air Camp, Patterson Lake, Eight o'clock. Graduate Students expecti to re- ceive the master's degree in August. 1953, must file a diploma application with the Recorder of the Graduate School by Monday, June 29. A student will not be recommended for a degree unless he has filed formal application in the office of the Graduate School. Concerts Carillon Recital by Percival Price, University Carillonneur, 7:15 this eve- ning. The program will open with three Michigan songs, The Yellow and Blue, Varsity and Victors. It will continue with four old English songs, and two modern carillon compositions by Karl Magnuson (School of Music student) and Piet Van den Broeck. Professor Price will close the program with selec- tions from Mozart's Don Giovanni, Henry Purcell's Dido and Aeneas, and Ponchielli's La Gioconda. Carillon Recital, 7:15 Friday evening, June 26, by Ronald Barnes, Carillon- neur of the University of Kansas. His program will include works by John Pozdro, Gustav Mahler, Henry Purcell, Katherine Mulky, Arthur Meulemans, and Johann Sebastian Bach. John Poz- dro and Katherine Mulky are mem- bers of the faculty of the University of Kansas. Student Recital: Andrew Broekema, Baritone, will present a recital at 8:30 Friday evening, June 26, in Auditorium, Angell Hall, in partial fulfillment of the- requirements for the Bachelor of Music degree. A pupil of Arthur Hack- ett, Mr. Broekema will sing works by Caldara, Martini, Legrenzi, Schumann, Duparc, and Copland. The program will be open to the general public. _ , *I ,- __ THE EISENHOWER administra- tion has just added another major surrender to the long tale of its surrenders to the right, or anti-Eisenhower wing of the Re- publican party. The story is cur- ious indeed. In brief, Assistant Secretary Frank Nash is shortly leaving the Defense Department. Nash is theman who handles all the intricate, vital foreign policy ramifications of American defense policy. The new Defense Depart- ment team has no experience whatever in the foreign policy as- pect of their problem. Secretary of Defense Charles E. Wilson sen- sibly wanted an experienced man to replace Nash. The White House itself, speak- ing with the authoritative voice of presidential assistant Robert Cutler, therefore nominated the former Chief of the State Depart- ment Policy Planning Staff, Paul H. Nitze, Wilson assented and asked Nitze to go to work im- mediately as Nash's assistant. Wilson further indicated that Nitze would be promoted to As- sistant Secretary when Nash left, if the arrangement had proven satisfactory in the interval. Nitze accepted Wilson's offer, and took up his new duties ten days ago. At this point, however, a veto was interposed by Sen. Robert A. Taft. Ordinary Republican patronage hunger, plus the pre- judices of Sen. Joseph R. Mc- Carthy's special Republican clique, drove the Ohio Senator to intervene. Taft admitted that he had nothing whatever against Nitze, a registered Republican who made a large fortune as a banker before becoming a bril- liant civil servant. Taft only argued that Nitze could not have the job because he was a "hang- over from the old regime," to use the current phrase. Efforts were made, through Vice President Richard Nixon, to get the veto withdrawn. But Taft was determined to prevent any repetition of the case of Charles E. Bohlen, when the Eisenhower administration was actually forc- ed, for once in a way, to take a stand and make a fight. "Clear it with Bob" is now a firmer rule than "clear it with Sidney." Nitze, hearing of the trouble, vol- unteered to release Secretary Wil- son from their prior understand- ing. Wilson .then sacrificed Nitze, with the full knowledge of Presi- dent Eisenhower. Perhaps the best 'commentary on this episode is an extremely well vouched for story of an ex- change between Robert Cutler and. Under Secretary of State W. Be- dell Smith. Cutler had brought Bedell Smith a White House de- cision that a nominee for another important post was objectionable because he served the Truman ad- ministration. Smith remarked that he was surprised to hear such an objection, since he, Smith, was also a survivor from the Truman past. Cutler hastily explained that Smith's case was different, where- as Smith growled: "And furthermore, Cutler, I can tell you still another man who's a hangover from the old regime."n "Who's that, General?" asked Cutler, unguardedly. students of the College of Architecture and Design. Events Today Summer Session Frech Club. There will be a meeting of the French Club today at 8:00 p.m., in the Michigan League: Organization of the club, elec- tion of officers; an informal talk in French on France of today by Professor Charles E. Koella, Director of the Club, and a social hour. All students and faculty members who are interested in speaking or in learning to speak French and singing French songs are cordially invited to join. Michigan Christian Fellowship: Bible Study, 7:30 p.m., Lane Hail. Sailing Club. The University of Mich- igan Sailing Club will hold its open meeting Thursday, June 25, at 7:30 p.m. in Room 3 S of the Michigan Union. Plans for the summer program will be discussed. Anyone interested in sailing is invited to attend. Re- freshments will be served. Classical Studies Coffee Hour. All students of the department, and oth- ers who are interested, are invited to a Coffee Hour on Thursday, June 25, at 4:15 p.m., in the West Conference Room of the Rackham Building. S.R.A. Lunch and Discussion, Thurs- day, 12:15 noon at Lane Hall. Dr. Saveg Shafaq, visiting professor from Iran in Near Eastern Studies, will be speaker. Topic: "The United Nations Through the Eyes of the Middle East." Call res- ervations to 3-1511 Ext. 2851. Motion Picture, auspices of the SL Cinema Guild. W. Somerset Maugham 's Quartet. 7:00 and 9:00 p.m., Architec- ture Auditorium, Thursday, June 25. Coming Events International Punch Hour, 4:45 to 6 p~m. Friday. Sponsored by the Office of the Protestant Counselor to Foreign Students and Lane Hall. Everyone wel- "Dwight D. Eisenhower," said Smith, with special emphasis. In other words, in making war on Nitze, the right wing Re- publicans are making war on the President himself. The Nit- ze case also hints how far these presidential enemies will go. The signal for the attack on the Nitze appointment was given by the McCormick press, in an ar- ticle showing the strongest in- ternal evidence of borrowings from closely guarded government personnel files. There are good reasons to think that the original borrower from the files was one of Sen. McCarthy's private espi onage net. Nor could this surprise the President. In at least two other cases, the White House has discovered and removed McCarthy spies in the Administration's midst - minor government workers who were re- porting to the Wisconsin Senator on the daily doings of the Presi- dent's highest subordintaes. Thus the President had long had the clearest warning as to the character and intention of Nitze's attackers. He has also had the clearest proof of Ntze's usefulness. The fact is that Nit. ze was the chief ideological con- tributor to Eisenhower's great speech on peace aims to the Am. erican Society ' of Newspaper Editors. This speech was the President's sole major success In the foreign field since taking office, and the President has generously acknowledged Ntze's part in it, Finally, the sacrifice of Nite is also a sacrifice of the vital ,prin. ciple of continuity and experience in American policy making. Nitze is a conspicuous, unimpeachably non-partisan member of the small group of high civil servants' who alone supply these indispensible Ingredients, experience and con- tinuity. The clean sweep of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, also made at Sen. Taft's behest, has already estab- lished the rule that our highest military commanders are to be political appointees. The Nitze case similarly establishes the rule that the American government does not need knowledge, or train- ing, or previous acquaintance with the facts, in order to tackle the hardest problem the world has ev- er known. Altogether, this is a surrender the President is likely to regret before long. (Copyright, 1953, N.Y. Her. Trib., Inc.) A COMPLICATED tax scandal has kept San Francisco in an uproar since May, 1951, when it first came to light. In San Fran- cisco to investigate the matter, the House Judiciary subcommittee took the extraordinary step of serving a subpoena on Federal Judge Lewis E. Goodman. Judge Goodman appeared but refused to answer questions concerning the courts on the ground that to do so would make the judiciary sub- servient to the legislature. All sev- en of the Federal District Judges of Northern California In a signed statement presented to the - sub- committee, expressed their unwill- ingnessto testify "with respect to any judicial proceedings." "The Constitution," their let- ter said, does not contemplate that such matters be reviewed ,by the legislative branch, but only by the appropriate appellate tri- bunals. The integrity of the fed- eral 'courts, upon which liberty and life depend, require that such courts be maintained inviolate against the changing moods of public opinion." Over the last four or five years, as we have pointed out from time to time, Congressional committees have been asserting by implication a power to review if not to reverse the decisions of the federal jud- ges. The San Francisco case is the latest manifestation of this ten- dency to make both the judicial and executive branches of the gov- ernment subservient not merely to Congress but to particular com- mittees. It is a dangerous trend. -The Nation SixtyThird Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of, the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staf Harland Britz.......Managing Editor Dick Lewis-......,....Sports Editor Becky Conrad.............Night Editor Gayle Greene......,.......Night Editor Pat Roelofs................Night Editor Fran Sheldon,.............Night Editor Business Staff Bob Miller.........Business Manager Dick Aistrom......Circulation Manager '; r t .* t. t rI I; a: II . Yhntel'pIetflt9 thefle44o -r" /' 9 Y' By J. M. ROBERTS, JR. Associated Press News Analyst WHOEVER FIRST said that the only thing wrong with communism is that it does- n't work was speaking, of course, about a social, economic and political theory, not about something that has been turned into a weapon of Soviet power politics. Nevertheless, communism with a small "c" remains a tag by which millions of Eu- ropean voters, largely in France and Italy, express their protests against social and economic conditions without regard for the fact that by doing so they also help Soviet power politics. There is, therefore, double significance in the East German demonstration that neith- er brand of communism works, and that Russia's only real hold is military. The use of force to settle any sort of argument is an admission by the user, right off the bat, of fundamental defeat. Force may be used for a long time, but not forever. For it is not profitable, and even the user eventually becomes weary of it. By this token, the end of Russian rule in East Germany can be foreseen. The current crop of German puppets who only that thousands of people in East Ger- many were so desperate they were willing to leave their homes, their savings and their life work behind them and flee into the Western Republic. From this it was obvious, but not dem- onstrable, that the more vigorous East. Germans had formed an underground. But against the background of all we have heard about Communist ruthless-. ness, the underground was hardly ex- pected to have attained the cohesion and smooth-working organization which it demonstrated last week. There was a small Communist-controlled demonstration arranged by the puppet gov- ernment to make it appear that it was mak- ing social and economic concessions in res- ponse to the popular will. The East Berlin- ers joined in too wholeheartedly, and the demonstration turned into something pretty close to revolt. Then the surprising thing happened. On wheels that must have been secretly greas- ed for a long time, the revolt spread through East Germany. Industrial plants were burn- ed. The same slogans were hurled against Communist rule in a hundred cities and x