Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Treason! Treason! There, I Said It Where Opinions Are Free. 420 MAYNARD St, ANN APBOR, MIcH. Truth Will Prevail NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1966 NIGHT EDITOR: JOHN MEREDITH Greek, Natioials- Looingfor Trouble By MARK R. KILLINGSWORTH Acting Editor HERBERT APTHEKER is gone, and-thanks to the generous thought control attempts of the State Senate-the campus and the state have survived him. But there still lurks an influence yet more insidious, more malign, more dangerous, more laughable. It is the spectre of the Birchnut Con- spiracy. Like everyone else, I'd almost forgotten about it. But last week as I was cleaning out my book- shelves a black-and-orange paper- back bundle of Halloween gaiety fell from an obscure corner: None Dare Call It Treason, by John A. Stormer. Our readers will remem- ber the book was distributed twice locally by the campus Young Americans for Freedom in con- junctionswith the Americanism Educational League (whatever that is). The book is being distributed by a good many groups in addition to this one, such as the John Birch Society and the Organization to Fight Communism, Inc. (they take no chances). The major thrust of what may be politely called its thesis is that the country is being enshrouded by a treasonous con- spiracy. I TURNED the front cover of this gaudy little paperback and noted the first few lines: "The cold war is real war ...we are rapidly losing." Then and there I knew this was no ordinary tome. Flipping through its pages, I noticed a rather disturbing state- ment from Stormer (p. 55): Lao-. tian Price Boun Oum, he says, was the "legal head of the anti- Communist government of Laos" in 1962 but "was ordered (by the U.S.) to give Communists key positions in the cabinet." Now, this was disturbing be- cause rightwing Prince Boun Oum wasn't the head of the Laotian government at all-in fact, he tried to overthrow the legal coali- tion government, headed by neu- tralist Prince Souvanna Phouma, but failed. After Boun Oum lost, the legal coalition government (which in- cluded rightists, neutralists and Communists as a result of the 1962 Geneva Convention on Laos) was restored. AT THIS POINT I was begin- ning to wonder. How could I trust "Treason" if all of its statements had nothing to back them up? But then I stumbled on a footnote, the first of 881. I felt relieved at once. Most of these Birchnut tracts have about as much documentation as Yul Brynner has hair, but this one looked really solid. At least it did until I decided to check a few of the footnotes. I must admit, as I did at the start, that some of them didn't seem impartial. Seventy-nine cited "Hu- man Events," (which the Anti- Defamation League called "an extremely r i g h t is t Washington newsletter"), some Birchnut pub- lications, the Dan Smoot Report. the bulletin of the Birch Society, of other rightwing literature. I was unwilling to let Stormer use himself and his cronies as a source-but I decided to continue and see if his other references were more substantial. Although I was still eager to be alerted to the treason which surrounded me, I then noticed that 131 of those footnotes re- ferred to Congressional hearings or the Congressional record, and usually didn't say who was testify- ing or talking. I love our Congress, but I could not help remembering that any- thing, even libel, can be read into the Record, everything from Wayne Morse reading the Wash- ington, D.C., telephone directory, to Senator Eastland calling Bay- ard Rustin a communist to (worse yet-only last week) an editorial in The Daily has been printed in the Record. So, somewhat less enthused, I looked up things in the Record. On p. 74, I read: "In 9 months an estimated 8 million packages of Communist propaganda mater- ial . . . were imported in the United States." P. 2828 of the March 1 Record was cited. But while there was a lot of material on Communist propa- ganda on p. 2828, I couldn't find anything at all about an 8 million package figure. Nothing daunted, I decided to keep on, hoping it was a chance error. On pp. 169-170, I read " ... an articletby Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., Assistant to President Ken- endy. . . . set forth the plan for achieving socialism in America." The Record of Feb. 6, 1962, pp. A881-A884 was the reference cited. When I had finished plowing through the stacks in the grad- uate library to find this one, I found, on p. A881, this comment from Schlesinger: "The socialist state is thus worse than the cap- italist state because it is more inclusive in its coverage and more limited in its power. Organization corrupts; total organization cor- rupts totally." And on p. A884, I read, also from Schlesinger: "The more var- ieties of ownership the better; liberty gets more fresh air and sunlight through the interstices of a diversified society rather than through the close-knit grip of collectivism. The recipe for re- taining liberty is not nationaliza- tion but muddling through." NOW I WAS beginning to get more and more suspicious. Ref- erence 32 of chapter 2 referred to "House Document 227, p. 4" but didn't say which session of Con- gress {there have been 178 of them) the document came from. Page 205 said a Communist "al- ways has been" the United Na- tions' Undersecretary for Political and Security Council Affairs-but didn't give a source at all. The last straw came when the author, defendingsSenator Joseph .McCarthy, gave as one reference the Congressional Record for Nov. 14, 1951 (reference 29, Chapter 8). I checked and discovered the Con- gressional Record for that date doesn't exist-Congress wasn't in session. Thus my reaction to the Birch- nut Conspiracy is one of some considerable dubiousness. I imag- ine the reaction of most respon- sible conservatives to the Birchnut is that of Edmund Burke, speak- ing of a similarly benighted group nearly 200 years ago: "Wholly unacquainted with the world in which they are so fond of; med- dling, and inexperienced in its affairs on which they pronounce with so much confidence, they have nothing of policies but the passions they excite." I suppose the reaction of most communists would be shorter-but equally strong: "With enemies like these, who needs friends?" * * SIGMA CHI FRATERNITY chapters are in trouble at Stanford, Colorado and La- fayette and may soon run into difficulty here with the Interfraternity Council. Kappa Delta sorority is having problems at Wisconsin; they, too, may clash soon with Panhellenic Association's new mem- bership committee. The question in both cases is discrimination and the role of na- tionals in membership selection. Sigma Chi's national has a bylaw clause which prohibits any chapter from pledg- ing or initiating any member who might be personally objectionable to "any broth- er or any chapter anywhere." The Stan- ford chapter was suspended from the na- tional days before it pledged a, Negro. Though the national gave a different rationale, it .seems like Stanford must have violated this rule since 'more than 30 per cent of Sigma Chi's chapters are in the South. The Colorado chapter was suspended by the Colorado regents because they be- lieved the rule, coupled with actions taken by the national, implied discrimination. The Lafayette chapter threatened to withdra'w from the national when they were told they couldn't initiate a pledge of Korean ancestry. MTEANWHILE, WISCONSIN is putting pressure on their Kappa Delta Soror- ity chapter because the national sorority president refused to sign a non-discrimi- nation pledge even though a national convention of the undergraduate chapters, approved the move. The basic question is: should fraterni- ties and sororities be allowed to discrim- inate? Further, regardless of the answer to this question, what control should the AGood Thing THE SENATE Advisory Committee on University Affairs allowed a Daily re- porter into its monthly meeting yesterday afternoon. It was the first time a reporter had been allowed into any formal facul- ty meeting in recent years. The admission ,was made conditionally and then for only a particular portion of the meeting. But it was still a step to- ward opening one of the most restricted information flows at a university where such flows are notoriously bad. IT WAS A PROFITABLE experience for the reporter and, through him, can be- come a profitable experience for the Uni- versity community as a whole. In short it was a wise investment on SACUA's part and deserves both repetition and emula- tion. -LEONARD PRATT Acting Associate Managing Editor national organizations have over mem- bership selection? If the answer to the discrimination question is an emphatic no, and I'm not sure it is, the nationals clearly have no place in membership selection. Any non- race, religion, or ancestry discriminatory requirements, such as academic standing, are best left to the chapters or the insti- tutions where they are located so they can account for the differences between one campus and another. HOWEVER, if the answer is that frater- nities do have extensive rights to dis- criminate, membership policies still should remain in the hands of the local chapters. One of the Greek system's ma- jor selling points is that they provide close-knit group living units and perhaps this is indeed the basis of fraternity life. Dorms attempt to establish cohesiveness between their residents with the same tools used by fraternities-intramural sports competition, social programs, par- ticipation in campus activities as a group and resident government structures. Apartments allow more freedom than any fraternity house can offer. But neither has yet been able to equal fraternities in forming close-knit groups. Most if not all contact a member has with his fraternity is through this living experience. Contact with the national or other chapters is minimal, with the pos- sible exception of the officers. Nationals provide a name, an assort- ment of secrets and ritualĀ§, often some general advice on running a fraternity, and perhaps some financial aid. But, while the reason for the existence of a national organization would seem to be for serving the needs and interests of the local chapters, the action of the Kappa Delta national president is one example of how nationals often ignore the wishes of their undergraduate local chapters. THE WILLINGNESS of the Lafayette chapter of Sigma Chi to withdraw from its national indicates that this per- haps is not enough in exchange for con- trol of membership policy. The members of the Lafayette chapter felt it was they who must decide with whom they wished to live, and that this is more important than the services the national provides. Just as a real estate agent cannot force the people in each apartment in a build- ing to conform to the wishes of the peo- ple in all the other apartments'in select- ing their roommates, neither should a na- tional fraternity force the members of each chapter to comply with the wishes or prejudices of the members of all the other chapters in selecting their members. PERHAPS THE ACTION of the Lafayette Sigma Chi chapter is the beginning of a trend. If it is, the nationals deserve it. -LAURENCE MEDOW LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: OFFSET'S Actions Only Normal i To the Editor: THE "CASE of the Offset bribe" is good, solid American politics at work. For the record: Michael Handelman, head of Offset, did not offer me a bribe. He did offer me money from Off- set for my candidacy if I chose to run for re-election to SGC. Certainly, Offset desired the elec- tion of candidates who would vote favorably on issues such as the financing of Offset. I chose not to seek re-election, but asked Mr. Handelman to consider supporting other GROUP candidates. He re- plied that Offset could conscien- tiously support only Bob Bodkin and myself and was not buying votes. Mr. Handelman did say that his organization would be solicit- ing money from SGC and that it would be nice if I would vote favorably when the time came. However, the offered campaign contribution was in no way de- pendent on my vote at that time. Mr. Handelman was guilty of tact- less honesty-isn't it repugnant that in the realm of politics tact and honesty are so often in con- flict?--and nothing more. Every student organization which extends support to candidates is implicitly if not explicitly trying to strengthen its own position on SGC, and anyone who does not recognize that is naive. Offset is guilty of being unwisely forth- right. Again, I was not offered a bribe. Further, the whole issue is being used for political ends by members of SGC. Student Government Council is seen by many of its members as a forum for the prac- tice of the "cute, unscrupulous politicking which I find repug- nant. (Not that I myself was exemplary when on SGC: I chose not to seek re-election partly be- cause of disillusion with SGC and partly because of disgust with myself.)bSelfish ambition and slander, which are elements pres- ent on both sides of this dispute, are not defensible. SGC members have more important and honor- able things to do. Steve Daniels, '67 Mitchell Trio To the Editor: ONCE MORE I was severely dis- appointed with the routinely caustic review printed in Sunday's "Daily," concerning the perform- ance of the Mitchell Trio Saturday night. It does seem that your re- viewers are actually ashamed to allow a word of praise to escape from their lips. Linnea Hendrickson, who wrote the review of the Mitchell Trio concert, obviously is not qualified to present a true picture of the trio. The title of the article, "Chad Mitchell Trio Shallow," is in itself a display of ignorance on some- one's part. Miss Hendrickson ob- viously has not taken the time or effort to find out what the members of the trio feel or think. She says with disdain that "they were not so much true folk singers as entertainers." The fact is that John, Mike, and Joe will all readily admit that they are not true folk singers, and con- stantly stress the fact that their main purpose is to entertain! If their songs make people think, then that's good too. What I'd like to know is, what's wrong with entertainment? Have college stu- dents become so "educated" that they are above anything less ser - ious than the inside of a tomb? I hope not! MISS HENDRICKSON men- tions that the members of the trio don't write their own songs. That's right-they don't feel qual- ified to write artistically good songs, so they don't, which is for- tunate.Ican't see the point of an artist writing his own material unless he is a talented songwriter. The Mitchell Trio is a singing group, not a song-writing group, and I would much rather hear them offer good songs composed by other artists than make a poor attempt at writing their own, which is what too many contem- porary folk singers have done. However, the fact that they did not write the songs that they pre- sent in their concerts does not mean that they are not 100 per cent behind every musical com- ment they make. On the contrary, did Miss Hendrickson talk with Joe Frazier long enough to find out that he was a political science major at college, and is now on mailing lists of political organiza- tions both on the right and the left so that he might better evalu- ate current problems? When the trio criticizes people who say, "I wish this war was over and through, but what do you expect me to do?" they mean it, and will gladly discuss their positions with anyone who is truly interested in what the trio is saying. Miss Hendrickson wasn't even interested enough to listen care- fully to the songs presented, for not once did she quote them cor- rectly. The trio did not open the concert with, "I can't help but wonder when I'm down," but they did sing, "I can't help but wonder where I'm bound"-a well-known song to all folk-music lovers. "The style of the songs varied little," she says. That's simply not true. The members of the trio sang solos reflecting their individual interests, and they blended to- gether beautifully in group num- bers. They sang with much gusto, and did equally well in songs re- quiring the utmost tenderness. They showed their talent in sing- ing other tongues-Hebrew, Ger- man, and even African! (They also sing equally well in Russian and Spanish-and of course, the var- ious American dialects.) How can Miss Hendrickson say, "the; style of the songs varied little?" I THINK the job of a good reviewer is to evaluate a perform- ance as objectively as possible, presenting both sides of the pic- ture, and in this respect your staff fails miserably. -Laura Cote,'68 '9 " r r t job* ft alp % M , w *0, q, OL 40 Ok The Change in Student Loans Is Not for the Best * THERE HAS BEEN much controversy in recent weeks over President John- son's proposal to eliminate federal loans to students under the National Defense Education Act (NDEA), and to instead subsidize loans made by private compa- nies. The primary objection has been that students will be hurt by the change, since banks are not going to be willing to take the risk of loaning money to a student from another state, especially when the principal may not be paid back .for 10 years. This purely practical objection deals with only half of the problem inherent in Johnson's proposal. It is equally im- portant to ask whether-supposing that banks and loan companies agreed to the program-it is ethically fair for the gov- ernment to take part in such a program. The popularity of the current admin- istration has come primarily from the success of its "War on Poverty" program. Johnson has continually stressed the ne- cessity of all-out programs for welfare, urban redevelopment, and so forth. In the area of education, he has shown con- cern for equal opportunities for elemen- for an increased budget allocation to subsidize the building of new schools, to increase the facilities of libraries and lab- oratories, and to establish and further graduate programs at universities in fields requiring specialized training. THE FEDERAL government's policy, therefore, seems generally to be one of securing equal rights of education and training for all citizens. Further, the government is promoting training in the areas demanded for our nation's defense, primarily the natural sciences. In all of this, the government has moved into areas that could conceivably have been left to private companies and foundations. Now, all of a sudden, Johnson has an- nounced that loans to college students should be switched to private companies, since they could provide for the need just as well. What could have caused this drastic change in the administration's policy? One answer may be that the government is finding that huge expenditures in for- eign ail to our allies and toward support- ing our troops in Viet Nam make it un- ohl to n rr ni+ Q1 o li c 1,i*Qfmin Russia 's Luna Landing: Not All Answers By WALLACE IMMEN SCIENTISTS generally agree that Russia's recent success in land- ing a camera-instrumented capsule on the surface of the moon was a great accomplishment. Thereis wide disagreement, however, over what value the information receiv- ed has in terms of landing a man on the moon. The Soviet pictures definitely answer many questions which have puzzled scientists for many years, but many questions have arisen which all appear to depend on results of further ex- perimentation. Scientists have been at odds over the character of the moon's surface and whether or not it is hard enough to support relatively heavy objects. Several theories have been forwarded stating the moon is not a truly dead 'sphere as often imagined, but is still in- ternally active. Another important question is whether the entire sur- face is of similar composition. Many new problems have aris- en from the luna flight itself. Sci- Luna program have brought out as never before the need for a de- cision :soon on just what type of legal and ethical code should be established for space research. Pictures of three views of the moon's surface were beamed back from Luna 9. The signals were sent in number code which rep- resented shades of tone from black to white. These signals were then fed to a computer and then trans- lated into pictures. Supposedly only the Russians were to get the information, but an observatory near Jodrell Bank, England, intercepted the signals with their huge antenna and quickly released the pictures before the Russians had a chance to announce their achievement. THE RUSSIANS did not appear too anxious to release their data, and it appears they wished to keep even the flight itself a secret. The Russian space agency finally did release their pictures, which de- spite claims of superiority, were similar to the English photos. No far is the fact that the lunar surface will most likely support the weight of a spacecraft. Of key importance here is the fact that future moon probes will not need the large landing legs which were planned to support early Surveyor vehicles in case the moon's surface was too dusty to support a craft on its surface. This now means a saving in weight which allows for a more complete set of instruments to be included to take more detailed readings of the properties of the moon than thought possible. HAROLD C. UREY, professor of astronomy at the University of California and one of the fore- most authorities on the moon's composition, commented the pic- tures were interesting, but would do little to speed up manned land- ing attempts. The big problem he foresees is that in order for us to save time, data must be exchang- ed with the Russians to make the precise calculations necessary to land a manned shot on the moon The people who have seen in Luna basis for a speedup of the space effort are guilty of dis- counting too many variables. Be- sides this we have no guarantee that the area in which we wish to land will be similar to the Sea of Storms, where the Russian craft landed. SOVIET SCIENTISTS now claim that the basaltic lava surface is the result of volcanic activity similar to that which occurs on earth. This finding has been ques- tioned by American scientists who feel that the readings of radiation from the moon are inconsistent with those of lavas found on earth. 'This low radioactivity would mean that the surface does not resemble earth lava at all. They hypothesize instead that the sur- face must be subject to a con- stant shower of meteorite frag- ments which have blanketed the moon's surface. A slight movement of Luna 9 while it was sending pictures hint- ed that perhaps the surface was fore they had a successful test. Many scientists do not expect the heavily instrumented Surveyor to be a complete success the first time. The American Surveyor system must be aimed quite accurately for it operates on solar energy and must land facing the sun in a specific manner. This is quite a difficult task. Further, the an- tenna must be aimed at the earth. The craft's orientation must there- fore be carefully controlled to pre- vent its landing wrong side up. Ten Surveyor shots are planned, to offset the possibility of fail- ure. The first shot will be made in May and early flights are de- signed to eliminate "bugs" before the final ones are relied upon for accurate readings. Ine success will mean little, as a final result de- pends on an entire series of suc- cesses. But the Russians are going ahead with a similar program to get the same data through similar means. As we gain new knowledge we concurrently go to extreme 1