m Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS .'.''.'..'.'.'. .. . ...... .'....'..... ROGER RAPOPORT: A Black Looks ata WhiteWorlId ............:'1 JJ:.4:': .... . *. ..*.*. . *.*. * . *. . ...:"'".... ,. ..... ..,...Y .. . . ....,... . .... .. .411,...n...,L;-.. . ............ {:...4...,.... :4.... . . . . . . .n.**.*............... . . . .. .. "".. . . . . . ... ... .. .."..1..::4... .. .":: ' : :: ..:...... ... Where Opinions ArFee, 420 MAYNARD St., ANN ARBOR, 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. SUNDAY, MARCH 12, 1967 NIGHT EDITOR: NEAL BRUSS Consular Treaty Debate Displays Fear and Mistrust THE CONSULAR TREATY, which would establish a Soviet consulate in the United States in exchange for similar American privileges in Russia, was con- ceived as a display of good faith and sin- cere interest in peaceful relations between the two nations. But an effort to kill the treaty pro- posal by amending it to death in the Sen- ate has, instead, made it a display of fear and mistrust on our part. The issue at point is a provision of the treaty which will grant full diplomatic immunity to consuls and their aides while they are in the United States. The pro- posal is meeting heavy resistance from Senate conservatives who wish to make sure that full immunity is not granted to any more Soviet citizens than Ambassa- dor Anatoly Dobrynin, presently the only diplomatically immune Soviet in the country. There are currently over 800 So- viet representatives in this country, most of whom are connected with the United Nations, but they receive immunity only from misdemeanor charges. THE STRATEGY to defeat the treaty is to amend it, striking the clauses which grant full immunity. This would make it unacceptable to the Soviet Union as well as the United States. As Sen. Jacob K. Javits (R-NY) said, America will definite- ly not set up a consulate in Russia unless its personnel has full immunity. The reasoning behind amendment, as one senator explained, is that "we 'think It is wrong to give the Soviet Union a privilege not granted to other nations." But it is clear that the real reasoning be- hind the move is that we would rather not give any Communists free rein in this country because we fear they will be sent to carry out espionage activities. So, while we have made advances in understanding with the Soviets and ex- pect them to bargain in good faith with us on such issues as the nuclear weapons ban and a space explorations pact, the Senate action shows that there still exists a deep distrust of their motives in this country. The treaty was saved by just three votes this week as 57 senators upheld the trea- ty as it stands and 26 voted for amend- ment. (The treaty will need approval by two-thirds of the Senate for passage.) These 26 senators have done a great deal of harm to our relationship with the So- viet Union. THE TREATY should be considered on its own merits. There is much to be said for the establishment of consulates in both countries because the recent opening of transportation routes between Moscow and New York will bring about more exchange of citizens who will need representation. Consulates will also be valuable sources for exchange of ideas. But whether or not the current treaty proposals are acceptable should be de- cided after proper discussion through nor- mal legislative channels and not on the basis of one clause. -WALLACE IMMEN "MAN, WHEN I first came up here I expected this place to be utopia,"' says Knox Tull, '67 E, one of the University's 450 Negro students. "But when my dad and I pulled in to Ann Arbor in the fall of 1964, we found this sophisticated, intel- lectual city had essentially the same discriminatory en- vironment I thought I'd left behind in Virginia." "We saw that it was still the Negroes who were getting bad wages for scrubbing floors, washing the dishes, and collecting the garbage. I discovered that Negroes here get about the same treatment they do in the South." What irks Tull is that the situation has changed little during his three years here. "I haven't enjoyed living here and I don't want to come back for alumni reunions," he says. "I tell my friends not to come here unless you want to be surrounded by a bunch of phony white people." WORDS LIKE THAT probably come as a surprise to Tull's many white student and faculty friends here. For he is an easy-going 22 year-old who is always joking and seldom has a harsh word for anyone. He says he's "not bitter because no one made me come here. I got exactly what I came here for, a good challenging edu- cation."' But when you press him about what life is like for one of the 1.5 per cent Negro minority at the University, he comes forth with some blunt answers. "The University is just like the rest of white America -they don't really want Negroes. Sure they have a few of us around here so that the government won't get mad and cut off defense contracts. But that doesn't mean anything." "Mostly the intellectuals here just sit around cross- legged and talk about civil rights. They don't do any- thing. Sure there are symposiums on the urban ghetto but that isn't going to change anything-the Negroes will still sweep up the floor after the well-meaning liberals go home. "The fact is that it's not economically feasible to do what the liberals say they want to do for the Negro. American society is built on exploiting the Negro." TULL SAYS THAT until "you start talking about paying the Negro Mississippi cotton workers the $20 a day they deserve instead of the $3 a day they're getting, civil rights is irrelevant." "Of course if they started paying good wages instead of $3 a day then the price of cotton is going to zoom. Then the white man's pocket book is going to clash with his great liberalism. And you know which one is going to win out." With a structural engineering degree in hand this August, Tull will have a choice of jobs with dozens of top firms all crying for Negro employees that would offer him a sure place in the white establishment. But Tull, who wants to work independently, isn't excited. He doesn't want to live in a white suburb. "The people in Cicero aren't good enough to live in my neighborhood." TULL ISN'T MAD at the University itself. Rather he sees himself immersed in the white establishment which just isn't for him-"It's not my bag." White life in Ann Arbor has turned him off. "I think the people in this environment are the most cul- turally deprived of any I met." "The average white kid here is protected from the real world. He's never struggled. His father has given him everything. In my neighborhood the fish man, and vegetable man and the rag man would all come through, and there would always be people laughing and singing. People weren't rich but they were happy. "But in the average white neighborhood everything is quiet and sedate-I don't think they've found the brotherhood and togetherness I've known," he says. "A big car and a ranch house do not mean culture." TULL ALSO THINKS white students here take themselves too seriously. "When I went back home to work at a restaurant after finishing my first year here," says Tull, "my friend George Scott asked me what the average rich white boy talks about at Michigan." "I told him that he asks himself 'Who am I and where am I going.'" "George pondered a bit and then said, 'I'm George Scott and I'm going to hell if I don't pray.' " "Pretty soon all the guys waiting tables picked up the phrase and it became a standing joke. Guys would come up to each other and ask 'Who am I and where I going?' Usually they'd say I'm so and so and I'm going home to eat dinner or start my car.'" Tull is somewhat skeptical of the Ann Arbor tutorial project where University students work with poor Negro children." "Supposedly culturally deprived Negroes are being cultured by white college students. These little kids may be poor and broke but they are happy and have culture and environment of their own. Just because they are being put in the white man's environment doesn't mean they are being cultured." "I'm not culturally deprived either," says Tull. "I'm proud of my heritage and my environment that I grew up in-even if it wasn' the most pleasant place in the world." "Just because I don't associate with whites and mainstream America doesn't mean I'm culturally de- prived. From what I've seen so far of mainstream white America-it's a very sterile world. I don't want to be assimilated into it. "THIS ENVIRONMENT constrains emotion and feeling. People in this white world have a cutthroat dog eat dog attitude. Everyone is trying desperately to get ahead. I'm not knocking it or anything, but I just can't live like that. "There are few friendly people in white America. Everyone has an angle. He wants you to vote for him or play in his football game." Thus, despite his generally friendly relations with whites here, Tull has tended to stay with his Negro friends and culture. "Those TG's and the Canterbury House aren't for me. "I want to stay in my own Negro culture, my own idiom. I like Saturday night fish fries, and the pool room." "Sometimes," says Tull, "I feel sorry for the white kids. "They've been stuck with roast beef and steak. All their lives they've been denied my good food-pork chops, black-eyed peas, neck bones, hush puppies, pickled pigs feet and chitterlings. 4 I 4 The Atomic Spy Who Never Was? '4 'The World's Greatest Newspaper' By DAVID DUBOFF FEB. 14 the Federal District Court in New York denied Morton Sobell's petition for a ju- dicial hearing at which he might present charges that the govern- ment's case against him was per- meated by fraud. Sobell, now in his 17th year of imprisonment on a 30-year sen- tence for "conspiracy to commit espionage," remains a living re- minder of the tragedy that sur- rounded the deaths of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg in what has been termed the most sensational court case of the twentieth century. Although he was never implicated in the atomic bomb spy con- spiracy that sent the Rosenbergs to the electric chair, Sobell was tried as a co-defendant and was given the maximum sentence for his crime. The verdict is revealing itself more and more a result of the mass hysteria that surrounded the trial. Until recently, Sobell's appeals for a retrial and for a pardon have been based on his claim that he was not a part of the atomic plot and was unfairly handicapped by being forced to stand trial with the Rosenbergs. Moreover, in 1965 a book by Walter and Miriam Schneir. "Invitation to an In- quest," 'brought to light evidence that casts doubt on the guilt of the Rosenbergs themselves. Federal law provides that a prisoner who can present suffi- cient evidence to show that his constitutional rights may have been violated shall be granted a hearing at which he may seek his immediate freedom or a new trial. At this hearing he may subpoena witnesses and records to prove his charges. Sobell has never been granted such a hearing, despite repeated applications on various grounds over the years. THE FIRST HALF of the recent petition for a new trial charged that the prosecution had, by "false testimony and evidence and other deceptive and fraudulent devices" established in the minds of the jurors that the defendants had stolen the so-called secret of the atomic bomb. This belief was said to have so prejudiced and awed the jurors as to have made them completely receptive to the testimony of David Greenglass, Ethel Rosen- berg's brother, and Harry Gold, the only two witnesses who pro- vided evidence of the Rosenbergs' involvement in the atom-spy ring. At the trial, the prosecution pro- duced a sketch of a "cross-section of the atom bomb"-which Green- glass testified was a copy of a sketch he had passed to the Ros- enbergs-and called as an expert witness to authenticate it John A. Derry, an employe of the Atomic Energy Commission. Though neither Derry nor anyone else ever testified as an official of the AEC, the prosecution is said to have "falsely represented and im- ported" that the sketch and tes- timony had the "imprimatur of authenticity and accuracy" of the commission members seated at the prosecution's table. The government also read to the jury a list of witnesses who would be called, including Harold C. Urey and the late J. Robert Op-, penheimer, both leading scientists involved in the development of the bomb. Though none of these wit- nesses were ever called (both Urey and Oppenheimer have stated that they were never, asked to testify and had not been aware that their names were on the witness list), the implication was that they had expressed to the government their agreement with the prosecution's case, SOBELL'S PETITION was back- ed by long affidavits from scient- its, who commented on the Green- glass sketch, which has finally been unimpounded. (At the trial, defense attorney Emanuel Bloch was led to the error of requesting that the sketch and related testi- money by Greenglass be impound- ed, fearing that under the coach- ing of the government Greenglass may have produced an accurate representation of the Nagasaki bomb that could incriminate the Rosenbergs.) Dr. Philip Morrison took issue with Derry's qualifications as an expert and called the Greenglass sketch a caricature, terming Greenglass' testimony "confused and imprecise." Dr. Henry Linschitz, one of a small group of scientists who ac- tually assembled the Nagasaki bomb, described the sketch and testimony as "garbled, ambiguous, and highly incomplete." He said, "It is not possible in any techno- logically useful way to condense the results of a two-billion dollar development into a diagram drawn by a high school graduate machin- ist on a single sheet of paper." Judge Edward Weinfeld, in his 79-page opinion on Sobell's peti- tion, termed the present criticism of the Greenglass sketch and testi- money "irrelevant" since there was no assertion by the government that Greenglass had obtained any "definitive documents" or that he was a "scientific expert." And yet, despite the legal import of the judge's opinion, it ignores Sobell's argument that the trial record shows that the government repeatedly urged the view that the Greenglass material encompassed the then widely-believed in-"secret of the atomic bomb." THE FACT THAT the Green- glass testimony was instrumental in the Rosenbergs' conviction is hardly disputable. In his opening to the jury, U.S. attorney Irving Saypol said: "We will prove that the Rosenbergs devised and put into operation . . . an elaborate delivered them to the Soviet Union." Moreover, Judge Kaufman, who heard the same testimony as the jurors, said in sentencing the Ros- enbergs to death that their'"con- duct in putting into the hands of the Russians the A-bomb years be- fore our best scientists predicted Russia would perfect the bomb has already caused, in my opinion, the communist aggression in Korea ." And yet, though the trial oc- curred during the Korean War, and at the height of McCarthy- ism, Weinfeld said last month that the degree of importance and ac- curacy of the Greenglass material was irrelevant to the case. Sobell's petition also charged that the government knowingly permitted Greenglass and Gold to give prejured testimony as to a June 3, 1945 meeting between them in Albuquerque and cor- roborated this prejury through a forged Hilton Hotel registrationy card entered into evidence in the form of a photostat. The charge is backed up by considerable evi- dence: testimony of a handwriting expert indicates that the initials of the hotel clerk on the card were a forgery, the date-time stamp on the card is at variance with the testimony, and pre-trial record- ings and other communications between Gold and his attorneys show that, prior to the arrest of Greenglass, Gold's testimony con- tained none of the details that the prosecution termed the "necessary link in the chain that points in- disputedly to the guilt of the Rosenbergs." NOT ONLY IS there such com- pelling evidence that the Rosen- bergs were framed, in which event there would be no case against Sobell, but there is also consider- able doubt that if there were a conspiracy, Sobell was involved in it. The only witness implicating Sobell in the spy ring was his friend Max Elitcher, a convicted perjuror. The extent of Elitcher's testimony concerning Sobell was that he had been approached by Sobell about procuring informa- tion for the Soviet Union, and that one night he had ridden with So- bell to a spot which appeared to be near the Rosenbergs' home, that Sobell had with him what looked like a film can, and that when Sobell returned after a few min- utes wally he no longer had the can. Such evidence hardly seems con- vincing proof of a crime meriting a 30-year sentence. Nor does the prosecution's claim that Sobell travelled to Mexico in an attempt to leave the continent, following a pre-arranged flight plan. True, Sobell did travel around Mexico using aliases and seeking travel information, but when one realizes that this occurred shortly after the round-up of "communist spies" began, and Sobell knew that he had left-wing connections, his be- havior in Mexico begins to look more like the irrational actions of a frightened man rather than the following of a flight plan. DURING THE past 15 years many distinguished world figures have joined Helen Sobell's plea for her husband's freedom. Among them have been Nobel Laureates Harold Urey and Linus Pauling, Lord Bertrand Russel, Queen Eliz- abeth, and the Queen-mother of Belgium. Despite the severity of his sen- tence in light of the shaky evi- dence against him and the cir- cumstances surrounding the trial, Sobell's petitions for parole have been denied, as have his appeals for a pardon to each new Presi- dent.\ . And now, faced with the possi- bility that the Rosenbergs, with whom Sobell is intricately tied, may not have been guilty at all, it seems only fair that a new trial should be granted to settle the long-standing doubts and correct any injustice that may have been done. The only plausible reason why this has not been done is that the government is afraid that a new trial would prove once and for all that the Rosenbergs were framed by the Justice Department in an attempt to smear the left-wing movement. Such a revelation at this time-in the midst of protest against the Viet Nam War-could prove extremely detrimental to the administration politically. And yet, as long as Morton So- bell remains incarcerated, the doubts about his guilt will linger on, his lawyers will continue the battle, and he will thereby serve as a living monument to the martyrdom of the Rosenbergs. 1 Providing Legal Services STUDENT GOVERNMENT Council on Thursday night created a student le- gal service, something that University students have needed for a long time. The service, which will provide readily avail- able legal consultation at a low cost, gives students an opportunity that they have not had in the past to receive ad- vice concerning their legal problems. The service is to be established on a two week trial basis beginning March 17 with its future hinging on the amount of response that it receives. Students using the service will be charged two dollars for a 15 minute ap- pointment with an attorney whom the service has retained. This fee is far be- low what a student would have to pay if he consulted a lawyer on his own. The service will only provide advice about stu- dent's legal rights. Of course, any further action that is taken concerning the prob- lem will have to be handled by the stu- dent at his own expense. The service should be most valuable to those students who have problems con- cerning apartment contract fulfillment, damage deposits and other types of ques- tions about landlord-tenant relationships. In the past the landlords have been al- most unchecked in their actions because students had neither the time nor the money to consult a lawyer about their rights. The legal service should alleviate this situation. THE SERVICE will also provide students ...__ . .. . . - J . . . _ MORTON SOBELL scheme which enabled them to steal through David Greenglass this one weapon which might hold the key to the survival of this na- tion and means the peace of the world, the atomic bomb." Again, in his summation, Say- pol stated: "We know that these conspirators stole the most impor- tant scientific secrets ever known to mankind from this country and A C, 4* id* ,gau - The Daily is a member of the Associated Press and Collegiate Press Service. Subscription rate: $4.50 semester by carrier ($5 by mail; $8 for two semesters by carrier ($9 by mail). Published at 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich., 48104. Daily except Monday during regular academic school year. Daily except Sunday and Monday during regular summer session. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor. Michigan. 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48104. Acting Editorial Staff I f.. ... .. .. . ..................... ..rJ ....a... A.... ...r.....t.... .... . ..r... ................ .......,..,....... .....................}..................... .....: .... .! ..1 .......... ........... . r ................... ........... . . ..r..... ..... ..... . . .... . . ............. .... ..,. . .., r. 4..,............ ...y' . . A +.r C '/ . } ,{ f y ! } .. .Xh .... .... .r" Letters:* In Defense of Graduate Deferments To the Editor: THE RECENTLY proposed change in our Selective Service Act, aimed at eliminating the many inequalities and "escape clauses" under the present sys- tem, unfortunately includes an al- tnra-ii-mnrah ,,,fl thn hanP suspension of graduate deferments to be unnecessary; the problem has been solved by the termination of occupational deferments as well as those for fathers. Although this proposed change solves no old problems, it creates n- nnac Rth th nnni-- of EQUALITY in the system could be maintained, students could pur- sue their graduate studies with- out interruption, and the Army could attract a large number of specialists in various fields if one addition were made to the propos- ed Selective Service law. The the advertisements by Army re- cruiters in national magazines have emphasized, the student who continues his education is more valuable to our armed forces than he who interrupts his studies to enter the military services. -Joe Winer, '68 is committed to the policy of rn- restraining Communism by limit- ing the amount of land under its domain, there can be no victory under an "honorable withdrawal" that leaves one inch of land claim- ed by aggression under Communist control. I