Half-Staff Seventy-First Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICn. * Phone NO 2-3241 THE FOREIGN STUDENT:, New Solution For Old Problem Opinions Are Free Lth Will Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. "RSDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1961 NIGHT EDITOR: CAROLINE DOW Rep. Marshall: Make Us Safe for Democracy SOMEOW, it seems, we must develop "in- telligent and aggressive opposition" to the Communist menace permeating and adulterat- ing the once pure strains of American life. While the most basic issue facing our society today may not be the threat posed by Soviet military and political power, this is the one that is clearest and most imminent to most of us. Any loyal American, particulary if he is an elected political representative, must show an unyielding opposition to Moscow's welfare. ?or' those representatives not directly con- cerned with the formulation and approval of American foreign policy, it is a little dif- ficult to find a relevant issue connected with the Communist threat. This is particularly true of state representatives whose purview does not include international crises. UTA SOLUTION has been found. It con- sists simply In expanding Communism. We are not locked in a struggle with the Soviet 'Union, but with an alien and atheistic philos- ophy whose agents are everywhere. The ten- tacles of the Marxist octopus extend into Ktanga, Viet Nam and the city hall at San Francisco. Now, the greater these representatives can make the threat of internal subversion look, the more popular will they be. Thus, on the national level, we have the colorful House Cominttee on Un-American Activities whose curious belief that the American Communist party gets stronger as it loses members is tied in with its "investigations" of subversive ac- tivity among students, professors and dock Workers. Aided by the propaganda of FBI Chief J. Edgar Hoover, HUAC attempts to perpetrate the fear that domestic Communist and fellow travelers are making deep inroads into American life and are particularly effec- tive among our college youth. WEHAVE SEEN similar tactics in our own state over the past year. The campaign protesting the lifting of a ban against Coin- munist, speakers at Wayne State University centered around the thesis that such a liberal- ization of policy would be open invitation for Communist to turn the college generation away from Americanism. The campaign drew support from several Michigan legislators who wanted to create the image of anti-Communist or wield more power over the "independent" universities. This week we have learned of a new attempt to "make :us safe for democracy." Representa- tive Frederick Marshall (R-Allen)announced that he is drafting legislatipn to bar persons affiliated with "subversive" groups from work- ing in tax-supported universities and colleges. Marshall hopes to present to the Legislature a whole package of bills to "strengthen. our method of instruction for our youth in the tenets of Americanism and to develop intelli- gent and aggressive opposition to Communism." The employment of questionable persons would serve to defeat the purpose of this package legislation and "to help destroy the system of our government," Marshall believes. His ban would be against those affiliated or identified with groups appearing on the At- torney General's list of subversive organiza- tions. MANY OF THE ORGANIZATIONS on the list became defunct long ago, in the Thir- ties and early Forties Many professors, re- Prospects HEN THE ISRAELI court returns its verdict sometime soon, Adolph Eichmann doubtless will be condemned and so, once again, will be Hitler's Reich and what it stood for. Those events will duly take their place upon the con- science of mankind, alongside the depredations of Timur and Ghengis Khan; the Spanish Fury and the Massacre of Saint Bartholomew's Day; the killing of Armenians and Haymarket anar- chists; the Congo, 1860., But until each and every man, whether in NewYork or Moscow, Bonn, Tel Aviv or New Delhi, realizes that he himself shares in the guilt for every such sin that is committed, the barbarism will go on. It will end only when every man realizes that if himself and a billion others like him had only done things a little bit differently, then the world might have been better. Because self-condemnation is the habit of only the very best of men, humankind will continue in its sinful ways, as inexorably as the rivers flow into a sea which is never full. --P.D.S. Editorial Staff JOHN ROBERTS, Editor PHLip SHERMAN HARVEY MOLOTCH City Editor' Editorial Director knowned for their competence and teaching ability today, were fleeting members of these organizations or became "identified" with them by speaking before them. Many did not know that these groups were Communist-oriented, if in fact they really were. The attorney general's list has no legal significence. An ac- cused man can not be convicted under the Internal Securities Act or Smith Act merely because he has been or is associated with one or more of these groups. Marshall has failed to distinguish between past and present membership in these groups or knowledge and ignorance of their real aims. This is not a central issue in discussing the wisdom of Marshall's plan, but it is ,far from a minor one. If the legislation is adopted, one can be sure from past patterns, these distinc- tions will be blurred and many professors who are decidedly not pro-Communist will lose their jobs and any chance, of finding other ones. It is not to a university's financial advantage to hire a man who has apeared before subversive activities boards, particularly if he chooses to invoke some of the rights guaranteed to him by the constitution. For a man to hold a teaching position in the University or any of the other eight tax- supported institutions of higher learning in Michgan, he has to sign an oath of loyalty to the state and the United States constitu- tion. To this infringement on freedom of be- lief, Marshall would like to add prohibitions on freedom of action. THE "AMERICANISM" Marshall and his ilk seek to inculcate in youth is based his- torically on the preservation and protection of certain individual rights asserted in the Ieclaration of Independence (itself, a most subversive document) and Bill of Rights, and interpreted by the. Supreme Court. This "'Americanism," moreover, has always included the assertion that any issue is open for discussion at any time, that any action or policy is open to criticism and analysis. This concept is not limited to America alone, for it provides the only way knowledge can be gained and made vital, the sole means of insuring the best possible implementation of the best ideas. A university is one of the few places left where ipeople are allowed to dissent and are encouraged to question., What a professor asserts is often not dogma, but is supposed to be as a stimulus to further thought by the student. A professor is hired because of his competence and knowledge of a particular discipline. His students do not have to accept his stated beliefs about his fields, and often do not hear the ones related to other fields. IF MARSHALL'S LEGISLATION is imple- mented, by some sort of investigation com- mittee, which seems inevitable, there is no reason to believe that the committee would avoid the "witch hunting" techniques of sim- ilar groups which have stepped on civil rights and used guilt-by-associatipn exposure to ruin the careers of talented professors. If the committee is able to conduct its proceedings in a fair and judicial manner, it will only discover that the number of sub- versive professors (those actively working for the violent overthrow of our government) discovered will demonstrate the lack of any real internal threat of Communism. These men could be discovered by . presently existing agencies and tried in the federal courts. Marshall's proposals, then, are unnecessary and against the Americanism he says he seeks to protect. Since they will probably fail to become law, they could be treated humorously, except for the fact that they display an ir- rationality about the foundations of our gov- ernment and a penchant for political oppor- tunism which are sad characteristics of a man who/ is trusted with the future of the state. -MICHAEL OLINICK Nelson at Stanford FORMER VICE-PRESIDENT for University Relations (PR) Lyle M. Nelson, adminis- trating at Stanford University since late last summer, has become a part of what Time mag- azine calls in its latest issue "the hottest stock on the academic market." The article points out that Stanford is presently skimming the top scholars from almost every prestige univer- sity in the country (the University of Michigan. not included), and top dollars from the nation's wealthiest foundations and millionaires. Pres- ently waging a campaign to raise $100 million, 'the Nelson group has already collected $20.5 million in four months. The Nelson-Stanford honeymoon should be long and productive. It matches a dynamic in- dividual with a dynamic institution. His depar- ture from the University of. Michigan should cause his former colleagues in the Administra- tion Building to reappraise the oft-repeated claims that this University is decaying, that men with new ideas must waintnnly beat their By GERALD STORCH - Daily Staff Writer FOREIGN STUDENTS at they University, either by choice or by chance, tend to agglomerate in groups of their own or a culturally similar nationality. The issue was brought into the forefront when a survey research class report was recently made public. It found that 43 per cent of the approxi- mately B25 foreign students who' replied to the comprehensive questionnaire tended to have most of their friends with countrymen rather than with Americans. This is nothing new, but it is something disturbing, because' many of the foreign students come here imbued by the concept of an American as a gregarious,: extroverted fellow. More often, the foreign student finds American students to be self-oriented and somewhat impassive, and he be- comes disappointed and a little hurt. It is. obvious that in the inter- national context of life and the urgency of the world situation, the need for inter-country com-, munication is crucial and im- mense. Yet, upon examination of the role of the foreign student in a large university, there arises the question of just how much "friend- liness" one can logically expect to be shown to a foreign student. In a sense, an American stu- dent is in much the same position as a foreign student when both enter the University. The campus is large and frightening, and each student is confronted with the problem of discovering friends with a common denominator in personality. The sifting-through process is activated, analysis of compatriots in the classroom be- gins, and sooner or later every student, foreign or American, finds a niche among people of mutual traits and desires. If he doesn't, he usually leaves the cam- pus. THUS, IT SEEMS that every, student must face the dilemma. of securing "friends" in the ever- awing and extremely cosmopolitan morass, called the University. So the particular problem of the for- eign student becomes one o, de- grees, not of uniqueness. In the final analysis, do American stu- dents really ignore foreign stu- dents any more than they quietly remove themselves from otlher dis-' similar American students? Prob-. ably a little, but the reasons and factors are inherent. Except for language (foreign students speak reparkably good English), the few common 'de- nominators, such as food or dating customs, which are available to the large mass of American stu- dents are unknown to the foreign students and thus tend to make them even more unlike American .students. Also, most foreign stu- dents are much older than the na- . tives with whom he is most likely to make contact. Therefore, it would appear that the withdrawal of the foreign stu- dent into groups of his own na- tionality, while still an unfortunate circumstance, is inevitable to some extent. In reacting to tie survey's documentation of the foreign stu- dent fragmentation, Dr. James M. Davis, head of the Center, pleads for the American student to "take the initiative" in order to mend the breach. Since student organ- izations working with foreign stu- dents are doing a good job, he says, the responsibility must be with the individual American stu- dent to "go more than halfway." THE STATEMENT sounds rea- sonable, but it is largely un- satisfactory, because it seems to assume a special "role" of the foreign student, i.e., one of a guest-host relationship with Amer- icans. .This is not good because 1) foreign students have the same academic admission requirements as anybody else and 2) they should be judged as individuals on per- sonal merit, not on the mere fact that they come from another country. Davis' praise of the student or- ganizations is not entirely in line, either, although one can readily understand :his position. The most important group, International Students' Association, is not known as a dynamic, :idea-originating ,club, nor is it entirely effective in providing an arena for foreign student-American student person- al contact. On the other hand,.other stu- dent groups are improving. The International Committee of the Union, with its international bro- ther program, is finally doing something worthwhile. But if the problem of alleviat- ing the foreign students' disap- pointment 'is one that has ,a chance of non-organizational im- provement, then it might seem better to concentrate efforts on communicating with the foreign students rather, than chiding Americans. Perhaps the wisest course for the International' Center would be to explain to foreign students that the American student is a strange creature, who deep down inside is not ploof or impassive to for- eign cultures, but one who is more concerned with his own personal problems and daily crises. This in itself, might soothe the genuine and understandable dis- illusionments of the foreign stu- dents and at the same time give them some inkling that different nations and cultures may not be so different after all.' q TODAY AND TOMORROW: After the German Election By WALTER LIPPMANN [T HAS BEEN EVIDENT all sum- mer that after the German elections, which took place on Sunday, the Bonn government would have to make some very difficult decisions. They arise from the fact that since the foun dation of the Federal Republic with Dr. Adenauer as Chancellor, Western and West German pol- icy has rested on two incompat- able promises. One has been that West Germany would become in- tegrated in NATO and the Com- mon Market and even in the poli- tical institutions of Western Eur- ope. The other promise has been that West Germany can absorb and reunite with East Germany. It has been known for some years that both promises could not be fulfilled now or in any foreseeable future. None know this better than the leaders of the French government. It has been assumed in London, it has been reluctantly taken for granted in Bonn, and among serious stu- dents of the German problem in America it has long been accepted as a fact. But it would have been political poison in West Germany for the Allies to speak out loud about this choice between joining Western Europe and rejoining East Germany. In order to avoid any taint of interference in German domestic politics, there has been no serious open discussion of the German- question during this past summer. Incredible as it will seem to the historian, we have teetered on the brink of nuclear war without one paragraph, without one'ssentence, from any Allied leader seriously discussing the German problem. * * * TET A CHOICE between two Adenauer promises is now un- avoidable and all the responsible and informed Germans know it quite well. No one at this distance can say 'how large a part was played in the elections by the realization that new decisions of policy would become necessary, and that they should be made by younger men than Dr. Adenauer. But if, as the returns indicate, the outcome makes necessary a coalition government, the German voters will have done well. The decisions whichthe next govern- ment, must take should rest on broad national support, and no party should be in a position to exploit the disappointment caused by the break-up of the old. wish- f il stereotypes and slogans. * * .' THE NEW DECISIONS are un- avoidable and they are most necessary because the physical partition of Germany has become a fully accomplished fact and this fact has been acquiesced in by the whole NATO alliance. There is no use saying that in acquiescing the West has surren- dered to Khrushchev. For this overlooks the essential explana- tion for European acquiencence in the partition. The fact is that for ten years or more the Western powers have built their whole German policy on the partion of Germany. NATO is based on the partition of Germany. The Com- mon Market is based on the par- tition of Germany. The embar- rassment in the West' today, par- ticularly in Paris and in Washing- ton, does not arise from the fact that Germany is now fully par- titioned. The embarrassment arises from being asked to recog- nize the fact of partition which has so long been hidden and, al- though all Western Europe be- lieves in it, has never been avowed. The decision which the West Germans face is whether they will commit themselves wholly and wholeheartedly to the West-to NATO, the Common Market, the United Nations, and to the web of political and cultural associa- tions which constitute Western society. Or whether they will re- main with the *est, but remain with mental reservations, as for example that they might pur- chase reunification from the So- viets. We shall need some assur- ances from Bonn. For there are already voices saying that we have betrayed them, that if we call a spade o spade, we will have sur- rendered. * * * I DO NOT myself believe that the Germans can or should re- nounce re-unification. But they will have to wait a long time for it and a ,lot will have to be done first in order to make it possible in the end. Now, in the emotional crisis out of dire realization that partition has come, the mission of the West Germans -is to use their great gifts andtheir great power to make work and to build up non-Communist Europe and the Atlantic Community. That is the only present answer to Khrushchev's action of August 13 which sealed the partition of Ger- many, and indeed the partition of Europe: create in the West a great, powerful, rich, and free community which must be reck- oned with in all the calculations of world power. * * * WHEN THE GERMANS make up their minds to recognize the fact of partition, the effect in Poland and elsewhere in Eastern Europe will be far-reaching. The fear of a revived and re-armed Germany seeking its lost terri- tories is, next to the Red Army, the most powerful fact which binds the satellite empire to Mos- cow. Remove'or even reduce that fear, and the tension in Eastern Europe will decline. There is little doubt that then the spirit of in- dependence will arise. For it rises and falls inversely with the fear of German revival and of world war. If the Germans, having recog- nized the fact of partition, change their present policy and seek bet- ter relations in Eastern Europe, they will do a great service to the world. For the day would then not be too far off when the Eastern European countries, like Finland today, would begin to draw closer to the world economy. * * *' IF IT BECOMES possible to ne- gotiate a wide central European arrangement with Khrushchev, it should open the door to a gradu- ally closer association of the two German states. Under present cir- cumstances they cannot be fused into one state. But they might look forward to becoming some day a Dual State, not unlike the Austro-Hungarian monarchy be- fore the first World War. THE QUESTION is often asked these days: what is there to nego- tiate with Khrushchev? The answer, I would say, is that we can and should negotiate the follnwing. A rnffirmatinn of the j CITYSCOPE: Michigan Bell:ame The Numbers Game ByMICHAEL HARRAH t Daily Staff Writer UPON RETURNING to Ann Arbor, the average student will be cha- grined to note that the Michigan Bell Telephone Company has joined the ranks of those doing their best to confuse the American people. And disappointing it is too, for the 'phone company, in times gone past, has been a bastion of independence and' simplicity. Now it's getting so difficult to place a phone call that one thinks twice before reaching for the receiver. So what's the problem now, you ask? As if you didn't know. It's, those confounded phone numbers, that's what it is. They've grown longer than a fat cat's tail and ;there's no end in sight. Observe what I mean. * * * * IT USED TO BE that, The Daily was reached by dialing NOrmandy 2-3241. Easy number to remember. Only five digits and a catchy exchange. Everything' was nice. Now they've gone and loused it up. 'No longer can you reach The Daily by dialing NOrmandy 2-3241. (Actually you can, but you're not supposed to know that.) Now the numbei' is 662-3241 See if you can make any rhyme or reason out of that one. NOrmandy 2-3241 was pretty easy to remember. 662-3241 is nigh onto impossible. AND THAT'S NOT ALL. The easy miracle of direct dialing has come to Ann Arbor since you left in June. But it's not really direct and not very easy either. Say you want to call Tecumseh. First you must dial 1, then the number. So if you are calling TEmple 1-2345 in Tecumseh, you must dial this mess: 18312345. Try aid remember that. But don't stop yet. There's' more. Say you want to call someplace that's OUTSIDE the Ann Arbor area. Here's where the fun begins. Suppose you want to call Chicago. The number you want is FIre- hammer 7-3869. Chicago's area code is 312. And don't forget you have to dial 1. So'the number you've got toremember is-hold your breath--13123473869. NOT SO BAD you say? Well, here's the gasser. When you finally get all that done, the operator--the local Ann Arbor operator, mind you-the 'one who used to make all those complicated manuevers for you-cuts in and says: "From what number are you calling?" Just try and convince her that you're calling from NOrmandy 2-3241 and not 662-3241. You'll have a heck of a time. How much simpler the Exchange System used to be. One word and five digits weren't too hard to 'remember. Seven digits, with no word to help you remember them, is quite hard. And why did the phone company resort to this confusion? Well, it seems they don't have anyone bright enough in their employ to figure exchange words for all the number combinations. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Hammarskjor Death: No Cause for Hysteria To the Editor: AS SINCERE and long-standing admirers of The Daily we were shocked and disturbed that you permitted Mr. Harrah's editorial on the death of Dag Hamnar- DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of The Univer- sity of. Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Building before 2 p.m., two days preceding publication. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 skjold to be printed. Divergence of opinion has a legitimate and necessary place in The Daily's edi- torial policies. But unsubstanti- ated rumors cited as fact display contempt for the finest standards of journalism. The assumptions Mr. Harrah has made, the emotion-laden lan- guage he has presented them in; and the politically bigoted reason- ing reduce the quality of the Daily's editorial page to the basest of propaganda. Today's display reminds one of the Hearst news- papers on the eve of the Spanish- American War. Boldness need not degenerate into arrogance; imagination need not be fantasy; Mr. Harrah dis- plays what may be admirable out- spokenness but his judgment un- wontedl transfers susnininn from