Seventy-First Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN inions Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Will Prevail" STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 )rials printed in The Michigan Daily ex press the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. 'RIL 21, 1961 NIGHT EDITOR: PAT GOLDEN nvestigation f Birch Society Could Help Destroy HUAC "I Hold in My Rand a List of 179 Million U.S. Underground Communist Agents!" r s a T - - s By JUDITH OPPENHEIM THE OVERWHELMING APPROVAL won by Roger Seasonwein's motion for a Student Government Council reshowing of "Operation Abolition" is probably an indication that most of the Council members do not agree with the rationale of E.xecutive Vice-President Per Hanson. Hanson decided to go ahead with last Tuesday night's presentation of the film even when it became obvious that the discussion following it would have to be cancelled because no speaker had been found to defend the film in a pro-con debate. Hanson said he felt that since the entire program could be divided into two objective parts, the presentation of the film and the playing Full Debate Ne Gl.1 On HUAC Film E OF THE RESULTS of the intense clam- r over the fanatic John Birch society is despread demand that the House Un- -an Activities Committee investigate the like past delands, this request for exam- n is being made by such liberals as Sen., Javits of New York. Javits commented HUAC should investigate extremist right- as wells as extremist left-wing, political dtzations. , e reasons why HUAC should not investi-, the society are the same reasons HUAC d not investigate the Communist Party, why HUAC should be abolished. estigation of organizations which engage bversive or illegal activities is ,not a funs- of a Congressional inyestigatory commit- rhich was ostensibly designed to gathir nation pertinent to congressional legisla- h groups as the Birch Society 'and the nunist Party are the proper concern of ulstice Department and the Federal Bureau vestigation-not because their viewpoints Langerous, but because these viewpoints Democracy, DEMOCRACY CANNOT exist as a per-, kanent form of government. It can only; until the voters discover they can vote, selves largess out of the public treasury. that moment on, the majority always. for the candidate promising the most its from the public treasury with the re- hat democracy always collapses over a fiscal policy, always to be followed by a orship and then a monarchy.", that's not 'sour grapes' from the Nixon. nor even dire warnings from Sen. Barry vater (R-Ariz). was actually written some 200 years |go ninent historian, Prof. Alezander Fraser r, and he was not speculating. He was ing specifically- to the decline and fall ie first democracy in the . world, the Tian Republic in Greece." is significant that he wrote the words is the newest republic, the United States, 3orn. Perhaps he saw the same fate for lea, and perhaps, if history -does indeed t itself, he is right. w about it Mr. Kennedy? --M. HARRAH may lead to action aimed at the violent over- throw of the American government. Many who have demanded investigation believe the John Birch Society is a Fascist organization, com- posed of racists and demagogues who are dan- gerous to a democratic society because of their beliefs and public assertions. IT IS AN ANALOGICAL LINE of reasoning which has been used as the justification for the existence of HUAC-an organization which has existed for 22 years on the promise that it will cripple the Communist menace, and has no record to match that promise. HUAC has not succeeded in eliminating, or even in discovering, dangerous blocs of subversive ac- tivity. Its methods of flagrant publicity are the very opposite of methods used by those or-, ganizations which more earnestly seek the elimination of such Communist subversion as there may be in this country. However, the committee has created climates of fear and timidity in various parts of the country, caused numerous job-firing of harm- less ex-Communists and socialists and has aroused considerable antagonism among lib- erals, whose opposition to the committee is not tainted with Communist sympathies. It therefore seems curious, indeed, that HUAC should be asked to conduct such an in- vestigation in view of the fact that the com- mittee, like the society, prefers the easy path of inflammatory and irresponsible charges to a policy of honesty and discretion. HUAC, like the society, indulges in vicious distortion, the principle of guilt by association and excessive innuendo. THERE IS, HOWEVER, another important distinction between HUAC and the society. Members of the John Birch Society and leftist. groups exercise their constitutional rights in expressing their opinions, and even their dis- tortions. HUAC, a government agency, has no claim to this right. It has, instead, a responsi- bility to be infinitely- more responsible in its methods than- the political splinter groups which it investigates.; The Society has already defeated its purpose with extreme allegations. But in raising anew the question of HUAC jurisdiction and meth- ods, the Society can be of some value-if it contributes to further dissatisfaction with a more powerful (and more harmful) body-the house Un-American Activities Committee. -RALPH KAPLAN 4% TODAY AND TOMORROW: Germany'Key' to Khrushchev State Can't Control 'U' Policy ISCUSSING appropriations for the Uni- rsity, many legislators seemed resentful large percentage of out of state students chigan's state-supported institutions. Allison Green (R-Kingston) and several lawmakers have suggested cutting down amber of outstaters by a provision in the >riations. re this becomes more than an idea, leg- s should consider the constitutional stat- the University because limiting the per- e of outstate students could be considered empt at internal control of the Univer- ious attempts of this nature have been d by clear decisions of the State Supreme In each case the court has held that the of Regents had exclusive control over eration of the University, free from leg- e interference. POWER STEMS from article XIII, Sec. of the Constitution of 1850 which says, Board of Regents shall have the general ision of the University, and the direction )ntrol of all expenditures from the uni- r interest fund." of the delegates at the 1850 convention "My object is this-to place the Uni- beyond all political influence. There is, ntleman, I suppose, in this convention,' ed to put this institution within the of either political party of the state, or ig it under any improper influence." t provision was continued in 1908 Con- on and upheld in letter and spirit by ne Court decisions in 1896, 1911, 1914 24. There is no reason why it would not eld again. Editorial Staff THOMAS HAYDEN, Editor AN MARKEL L JEAN SPENCER ~City Editor. Editorial Director TH McELDOWNEY.....Associate City Editor- [ DONER... .......Fersonnel Director 1S KABAKER..................Magazine Editor D APPLEBAJM .. Associate Editorial Director S WITECKI........... ...Sports Editor. EL GILLMAN...........Associate Sports Edito' IN THE 1911 CASE the court held that the 'auditor general of the state had no control over University expenditures. The court ruled that: "By the provisions of the Constitution of 1850, repeated in the new Constitution of 1909, the Board of Regents is made the highest form of juristic person known to the law, a' consti- tutional corporation of independent authority, which within the scope of its functions, is co- ordinate with and equal to that of the Legisla- ture... That the Board of Regents has inde- pendent control of the affairs of the Univer- sity by authority of these constitutional pro- Visions is well settled by former decisions of this court." In 1914 the Legislature attempted to limit the amount of appropriations going to a cer- tain department of Michigan State University. The court ruled that this was unconstitutional because it was an effort to control the size, quality, etc. of that department and that this was a managerial function vested exclusively in the State Board of Agriculture. AN ATTEMPT TO LIMIT the percentage of outstate students by the Legislature would also be a usurpation of the managerial function in a sovereign University. Although the Legislature has, and rightly so, the right of appropriation for the University, its control should end there. Any attempt to do otherwise would violate the original pro- viso for a University in the Constitution of Michigan, in spirit, if not in letter. -CAROLINE DOW (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the final article in a series on an ex- clusive interview with Soviet Pre- mier Nikita Khrushchev.) By WALTER LIPPMAN IT WAS CLEAR tome that the end of a long talk that in Mr. Khrushchev's mind the future of Germany is the key question. I sought first to understand why he thinks the German problem is so urgent, and so I asked him whether, since agreement was so fir off, a standstill of five or ten years might not be desirable. He said this was impossible. Why? Because there must be a German solution before "Hitler's generals with their twelve NATO divisions" get atomic weapons from France and the United States. Before this happens there must be a peace treaty defining the frontiers of Poland and Czech- oslovakia and stabilizing 'the ex- istence of the East German state. Otherwise, West Germany will drag NATO into a war for the unification of Germany and the restoration of the old Eastern frontier. HiS feeling of urgency, the, springs from two causes,his need to consolidate the Communist East German state-known for short as GDR-and second his need to do this before West Ger- many is rearmed. He said several times that he would soon bring the German question to a head. Quite evidently, the possibility of nuclear, arms for West Germany is not immediate. BONN DOES not now have the weapons and although the possi- bility of it is real enough, the threat is not so urgent as to be a matter of a few months. The more immediately urgent consideration is, no doubt, the need to stabilize the East German regime, particu- larly in view of the flow of refu- gees. My general impression was that he was firmly resolved, perhaps irretrievably committed, to a showdown on the German ques- tion. But it was evident also that he dreaded the tension-he refer- red to this several times-and is still looking for a negotiation which will work out a postpone- ment and an accommodation. In the talks it transpired that he is thinking of the problem as having three phases. THE FIRST is what he consid- ers the real and also the eventual solution. He has no hope, how- ever, that the West will now ac- cept it. His thesis is as follows. The two Germanys cannot be re- united. The West will .not agree to a unified Communist Germany and the Soviet Union will not agree to the absorption and de- struction of the GDR by West Germany. There are in fact two Ger- manys. The way to proceed is, then, to "codify" the status quo in the form of peace treaties with what he called the three elements of Germany. These three elements are West Germany, East Germany, and West Berlin. This codification would require de facto but not diplomatic rec- ognition of the GDR. It would fix by international statute the posi- tion of West Berlin as "a free city," with its right of access and its internal liberty guaranteed by the presence of "symbolic contin- gnts" of French, British, Ameri- ference of the Foreign Ministers. It would call for a temporary agreement. In the Russian view but not in our view this temporary agreement would have a short and fixed time limit of perhaps two to, three years. During this time the -two Ger- man states would be invited to ne- gotiate on a form of unification-- perhaps, though he did not say so specifically in this talk, a kind' of loose confederation. At the end of the fixed period of time, if a new agreement about Berlin along the lines I have outlined previous- ly was reached, it would be em- bodied in a treaty. If no agreement was reached, the legal rights of occupation would lapse. This German solution was, as we know, refused by the West. But if there is to be another, round of negotiation, variants on it are likely to be the substance of the bargaining. * * *. IF THIS FAILS, Mr. Khrush- chev's third position is that he will sign a separate peace treaty with East Germany. Then the GDR will in the Soviet view be sovereign over the rights of ac- cess to West Berlin. If the West- ern powers refuse to do business -with the GDR and use force to enter West Berlin, then the So- viet government will use the Red Army to blockade West Berlin. Though it would.be foolish to undervalue his determination, the threat is not quite so fierce as it sounds. For he most certainly does not want a military showdown, and "doing business" with the GDR is a flexible and 'not a rigid conception. * * *. I HAVE confined myself strict- ly to reporting my understanding of the Soviet policy on Germany. If I may venture an opinion of my own, I would make these points. First, Mr. Khrushchev will not precipitate a crisis until he has had a chance to talk face to face with President Kennedy. Second, he will surely sign a separate peace treaty if he can- not negotiate a temporary ac- commodation which is described under his "second position." Third, the crucial points which will determine whether the Ger- man question is resolved by ne- gotiation or goes to a showdown are whether the prospect of nu- clear arms for Germany increases or diminishes, and whether or not we say-that the freedom-of West Berlin, to which we are pledged, can be maintained only by a re- fusal to negotiate about this fu- ture. I HAVE been asked many times since we left the Soviet Union to come to London whether I found the whole interview encouraging, or depressing. I found it sobering. On the one hand, the evidence was convincing that the U.S.S.R. is not contemplating war and is genuinely concerned to prevent any crisis, be it in Laos, in Cuba, or in Germany, from becoming uncontrollable. On the other hand, there is no doubt that the Soviet government has, a relentless determination to, foster the revolutionary movement. in the underdeveloped countries. This .trelentless determination springs from an unqualified faith in the pre-destined acceptance of Communism by the underdevelop- ed countries. The Soviet govern- ment has great confidence in its own military forces. But it re- gards them not as an instrument of world conquest but- as the guardian against American inter- ference with the pre-destined world revolution. I was sobered by all this be- cause I do not think there is any bluff in it. (c) 1961 New York Herald Tribune, Inc. of the tapes of the House Un- American Activities Committee hearings in San Francisco, the overall effect would still bb objec- tive even if the discussion was omitted. SEASONWEIN'S MOTION for the reshowing specifically requires that it be followed by "a pro-con debate by two qualified individuals on the question: Does the film present a distorted picture of the student (demonstration in San Francisco against the House Com- mittee on Un-American Activi- ties?" The approval of this motion by everyone but Hanson, who voted no, and Philip Power, who ab- stained, indicates that the Council does not consider the tapes alone adequate refutation of the im- pression created by the film that the students who participated in the demonstrations were Com- munist-led and that all students are potentially Communist dupes. AT LEAST TWO Council mem- bers. were not satisfied with the newmotion for reshowing. Philip Power and Kenneth McEldowney both felt that the debate should be waged on a broader basis. Mc- Eldowney even proposed an amendment to the motion which would have included in the debate a discussion on the film's effect on student political activity, public reaction to the film and govern- ment programs which have ben instituted to combat Communist subversion. . He agreed that it is necessary to establish the fact that the film is distorted and presents a totally in- distorted in its presentation of student demonstrationss. * '* * McELDOWNE'Y CERTAINLY has a valid point if he is gearing his presentation to a particular type of audience. For those who have seen the film several times and have been following the ac- tivities of the House Committee, it is wasteful to devote further dis- cussion to the question of the' film's accuracy. It is a monstrous distortion. This is indisputably true, and many people have come -to take this for granted. Their problen then is the one posed by McEldowney, and it would be -a sound idea for SGC to devote a discussion program to this topic as soon as possible. But the primary responsibility of SGC, since it has already com- mitted itself to censure of the film, it to at least aim its presen- tation at the grounds of the cen- sure and to emphasize the dis- tortions in the film and the dan- gerous implications of such dis- tortions. YET CONSIDERING that 600 people flocked to Saturday after- noon's showing of the film and more than 750 attended Tesday night's screening, many for the first time, we must asume that there is a great deal of unsatisfied curiosity . about the film itself. Until people have had an oppor- tunity to see the movie at least once and to hear both sides of a discussion on the film's basic charge; it is premature and un- realistic to expect them to benefit from a discussion as sophisticated as the one McEldowney proposes. AT THE STATE: Cameos,. Mar 'Pepe IN SPITE OF Cantinflas and elaborate name - dropping, "Pepe" is a dull successor to "Around the World in 0 Days." It is basically a reiteration of the classic, "A Star Is Born"-a would-be movie star, Shirley Jones, meets a has-been producer, Dan Dailey (apparently he was type- cast); they make a movie which will be a phenomenal hit and fall in love. This hocum is set into action by a random Mexican horse-lover, Cantinflas, who man- ages to follow the wandering mo- vie-makers because they have his horse, Don Juan. It would seem impossible to steal a scene from Maurice Chew valier singing "Mimi," Bing Cros- by crooning past hits, Jack Lem- mon in his "Some Like It 'Hot" dress. and Janet Leigh in a bath- tub-but Cantinflas, the baggy- pants clown of Mexico, does it with a quick two-step and a sly grim- ace.- He is unbelievably delightful. ONE OF THE especially fine achievements of "80 Days"' was its excellent photography, which was often done under extreme cir- cumstances. But George Sidney could not keep his lighting' and colors consistent even on the sound-stages in this production, and oh what happens 'to those flesh tones in Acapulco . There are several single scenes of "Pepe" which are very enter- taining. Miss Jones lives up to the faith of her discoverers, Rodgers and Hammerstein, as she parades through the fiesta streets of Mex- ico City singing "Pepe" and as she dances a "Rumble" (which is far too reminiscent of "West Side Story") .. The Las Vegas seuence tries for the same hunorthat did not. come off in "Oceans Eleven" and achieves it with the whole Sina- tra Clan on hand to throw quips. * * * NONE OF THESE scenes are good in themselves. They are in- teresting merely because of the stars exhibited and because of their overpowering ability to make a dull moment humorous. One remembers the balloon scene and the Indian raid from "80 Days" not' because of ,the stars but be- cause these scenes were genuinely humorous. "Pepe" balances its good mo- ments with real duds. Donna Reed . handles an unwitty exchange with Dailey with, the grace of a cow. An almost dream ballet is set ,into, motion with the immor- tal words spoken on top of a fog- gy 'mountain: "I hear music." "Funny, I hear it too." And the conclusion cannot be saved from sentimental tripe even with the intervention of St. Anthony in the guise of Edward G. Robinson. -Milan Stitt '1 LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Reader Defends John Birch Society Change To the Editor: STEVEN HENDEL'S recent letter to the Editor concerning the John Birch Society suffers from the common fault of most of the critics of the society: they have little or no understanding of the principles or methods of either the John Birch Society or of the Communists. This makes diatribes on the Society rather easy to write, but also rather inaccurate. For instance, Mr. Hendel states: "..:r Ironically, the John Birchers are similar to the ideology they profess to hate-Communism-in that they claim that they have the whole truth, the indisputable. If you disagree, you're a Red."- and so on. ROBERT WELCH makes the following statement in his book, "The Life of John Birch": "None of us knows beyond all question that a socialist or Com- munist organization of society, such as the Communists claim to desire, would not make for a hap- pier world. We do not believe it, and there are sound reasons in historical experience, in philo- sophic reasoning, and in intui- than coercion, on an honest pre- sentation of their arguments and blueprints " rather than oppor- tunistic crimes of every nature, to advance their cause, we should have no right nor reason to con- demn them. S* * "THE MEN, for instance, u iio founded the Intercollegiate So- cialist Society (there are listed, and include Upton Sinclair, Clar- ence Darrow, Jack London, Wal- ter LippMann, Eugene V. Debs, and Walter Reuther) were not criminals or scoundrels. "It was only as some of them, swept along by the encouragement of their fellows into a growing fanaticism about their own super- ior wisdom, joined the Communist criminal conspiracy or at least began. to condone the use- of any means to bring about a socialist society, that they lost the right. to our admiration no matter how completely we disagreed with' them." -Ronald Fleming, Grad Quarters .. To the Editor: N VIEW OF the widespread in- terest in a possible University year calendar, it is to be regretted that Philip Sherman's otherwise excellent article on the Pittsburgh trimester system included one fac- tually inaccurate statement re- garding 'the quarter system: "Un- der a quarter system, every course must be radically altered because of substantial time changes." Since this seems to be a widely held misperception, among my col- leagues as well as among students, I should life to call attention to the fact that it would be entirely possible and feasible to change from a semester to a quarter sys- tem wiki practically no alteration in the number of class sessions, their length or the total class time devoted to any course. For example, the present semes- ter includes 15 weeks of classes. A three semester hour course meets three hours per weeks for a-total of 45 class periods. In - a 12 week quarter, the same class might meet four hours per week for 11 weeks for a total of 44 periods for four quarters hour credits. The essential difference is that students would be registered for and concentrating - on fewer courses in any one session. Like- wise, staff members would teach fewer courses and have fewer stu- dents in any one session. Some in- stitutions preferring the quarter system favor five quarter credit courses with students registered for only three courses at a time. As one who has both studied and taught under both the semes- LAST NIGHT, the Union Board of Directors showed an unusually status-quo attitude in rejecting the proposal to consider the de- letion of the third paragraph of its oath of office. The paragraph says, "I shall not now or at any future time suffer the good name, prestige or traditions of the University of Michigan Union to be violated. The proponent of the change, Michael Oli- nick, '62, argued that the meaning of the paragraph was vague, that it committed the Union to tradition for the sake of tradition, and that its probable intention is covered in [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 April 26 Student National Education Assoc., business meeting and movie on a Broader Concept of Method, discus- sion; period. will follow, SAB, 7:00. p.m.