A-4Iggan Bady Seventy-First Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN "Where Opinions Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Truth Will Prevail" STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. " ANN ARBOR, MICH. " Phone NO 2-3 242 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. SUNDAY, MAY 14, 1961 NIGHT EDITOR: ROBERT FARRELL The Basis of Dissension On 'Operation Abolition' THE COMPLEX QUESTION of the validity of the film "Operation Abolition," which claims student demonstrations before the House Un- American Activities Committee last May were Communist planned, incited and led, was sim- plified to a difference in "perception" in the debate Friday. Roger Seasonwein, '61, a member of Student Government Council, and Fulton Lewis III, technical director of the film, had both seen the film many times. Yet on the basis of the same information, the debaters drew diametrically opposed conclu- sions. Lewis claimed the film contained several scenes in which "known Communists" were shown leading student action inside the lobby of San Francisco City Hall and outside the Com- mittee hearing room. He was supported by at least one student in the audience who quoted the Congressional Record as stating the exis- tence of seven such scenes in the film, and who claimed to have recognized these scenes himself. YET SEASONWEIN, and others in the audi- ence did not see "known Communists" in "positions of leadership" in any of the demon- strations scenes, and also pointed out distor- tions and inaccuracies in the film. But since it was Lewis and HUAC who had made the allegations, the burden of proof was upon them, and in attempting to present this proof, Lewis failed miserably. The evidence that Lewis cites as to the identi- fication of the "known Communists," besides being invalid, has frightening overtones. First he claims that the two subpoenaed witnesses, who had not been completely investigated by the committee and who were arrested in the "Private Enterprise Has Been Dealt Another Blow. The Government Wants Us To Pay For This Ourselves" B f - 4 ~ .. -. -e -TN " - I JOHN BIRCH SOCIETY:, Its Aims andStrategy By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst W HENEVER CONGRESS starts considering ways of mobilizing private enterprise on the side of the Foreign Economic Development Pro- gram, as one of its committees has been doing recently, it runs into the problem of risks. Investors move very slowly in countries whose very political insta- bility makes them a prime object of American-and Soviet-concern in the cold war. However, the United States Chamber of Commerce has now en- dorsed an idea taking hold in Washington that the new African states INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Role of U.S. Busi ess lobby demonstrations were Con T oynbeeunfortunately, assumes judgem( .Toynbee r--e24e vestigation. And when it was pointed out1 nd t e ew sno indication that the two witn any "leading" in this part of t tion, he then suddenly rememb THE TWO LARGEST Orthodox Jewish bod- eight other Communists who w les in this country have criticized Arnold naed witnesses, who were not m Toynbee for saying recently that inter-mar- film, and who had been the on riage would break down "the traditional caste-. action. barrier between Jews and non-Jews." Toynbee had further predicted that when THESE EIGHT had been ident this barrier was broken Judaism would be- Bureau of Investigation agen come "one of the great spiritual possessions of and by the local police chief,v the whole human race." were Communists "through con The Orthodox organizations objected on the mai,,' Lewnscsuid n grounds that "The Jewish prohibition against This information could not be intermarriage is the basic guarantee of Jewish film, however, because the eight1 survival of that Judaism which Jews are per- charged before a public court of petuating for the benefit of all mankind." Statements like these leave th But as Toynbee says, by not intermarrying, the uncomfortable vision of lis Jews are limiting the scope of their culture of "known Communists," who an rather than preserving it. FBI, the local police, but will nev A strong faith should not fear assimilation, the public. for it can withstand it. Orthodox Jews should This is again a case of "pe have a strong enough conviction in their faith government and its agencies "se to realize that intermarriage would be the where others see, no proof. The source of strengthening rather than weakening on the demonstrations and the the religion. Francisco "see" Communist le the film does not show any to 01 It is indeed ironic that in their zeal to per-t - s-o petuate a "pure" race, they are imitating a This is the uncomfortable ba: doctrine not of Judaism but of Adolf Hitler. opinions on "Operation Abolitio -C. WINTER -BEATRICE Problems of Free Speech amunists. This, ent before in- that there was esses had done he student ac- ered "at least" ere not subpoe- entioned in the nes leading the ified by Federal its on the scene who knew they fidential infor- included in the had never been f law, he added. he listener with ts and pictures re known to the ver be known to erception." The e" Communists Hoover Report mayor of San adership while ther viewers. sis for differing En. R E TEODORO I need not take sides with the West to qualify for help toward eco- nomic and political stability. Respect their right to neutrality but encourage them with such eco- nomic aid as will enable them to keep clear of entanglement with the Communist sphere, was the ad- vice of 3,000 delegates to the Chamber's annual meeting. More and more the country seems to be getting away from the idea of demanding political align- ment from those who need aid- the idea of attempting to buy friends. ON ANOTHER point the Cham- ber called on American private enterprise to get behind the na- tion's efforts to raise living stand- ards throughout the world in "an enlightened and imaginative pur- suit of its own interests." That's a pointswhere private enterprise, with some important exceptions, has been weak in imag- ination -in realization that its own preservation is one of the major objectives of the cold war which it has largely been leaving to government, and worth taking some risks for. The word "enlightened" also has a special meaning against the background of an all-too wide- spread feeling over the world that American private enterprise seeks a new field of colonial exploita- tion before it is interested. Government officials, indeed, have been much concerned over American business practice and in- volvement in political activities in foreign countries. AMERICAN and British business interests, though small, are ac- cused in diplomatic circles of join- ing hand in hand with the Bel- gians in the Katanga secession movement which has played such a disruptive role in the Congo. In connection with the new offi- cial thinking with regard to emerg- ing states, Western private enter- prise may find, too, that some of its major concepts-especially con- cerning risks and profits -may have to be laid aside temporarily. Some sacrifice for the establish- ment of economic stability and new markets, in order to preserve for the future a world in which private profit can be made at all, is increasingly demanded. Mistake "JUST WAIT," said a Nicaraguan attorney, "until the day that a Fidel Castro comes along here with some social reforms." By us- ing Nicaraguan bases in its CIA- managed invasion, the United States brought that day nearer. If our leaders are wise, they will accept defeat-and not make the same mistake in some other form. -The Nation HURSDAY NIGHT a very dangerous speech was given in a University building. It was a markedly anti-Semitic speech given by an Arab consulate official to an audience of people of Jewish and Arab descent. In giving the United Arab Republic view of the 13-year conflict between Israel and Egypt, the lecturer constantly used inflammatory phrases about Jews such as "arrogant; Israel never payed one stinken penny for the land they took over from the Arabs; Arabs have protested since 1922 the unjust invasion of their lands by Jews; American Jews through tax-free organizations are financing one third of the Israeli budget." The speaker constant. 7 Help WHEN VICE-PRESIDENT Lyndon Johnson arrived in Saigon Thursday, he told a crowd of Vietnamese that the United States was prepared to bolster the army in its fight against Red guerrillas. Perhaps Johnson and the whole Kennedy Administration should think more carefully about giving such blank checks to Southeast Asian dictatorships. They should consider the affect such aid has had on neighboring Laos. The highest U.S. aid per capita has resulted In corruption, a multi-party civil war in which the U.S. paid two of the sides to fight against each other, and finally the imminent threat of a Communist dominated government. These people had no. desire for war and bloodshed, yet six expensive years of American "support" has resulted in great losses for the Laotian people and the free world. Does the United States want this to happen again? -P. SUTIN Editorial Staff THOMAS HAYDEN, Editor NAN MARKEL L JEAN SPENCER City Editor Editorial Director Business Staff JUDITH NICHOLSON, Business Manager MARJORIF BLUESTEIN... Associate Business Manager STEVE AUGUSTYN .................Finance Manager BETSY UNDERWOOD...............Accounts Manager KENNETH McELDO'WNEY......Associate City Editor JUDITfl DONER... ................Personnel Director equated the Jewish people with Zionists and refused to admit that the serious Middle East conflict was a result of aggressions by both sides. It was obvious to most members of the audience, be they Jew, Gentile or Islam, that the only effect of the speech was the airing of misleading propaganda without any con- structive information on an important issue which needs some light. FIDAY AFTERNOON another instance oc- curred in which a bombastic speaker faced a largely hostile audience. The narrator of "Operation Abolition" dealt in innuendos and avoided discussing the real issues at hand. The narrator never proved that the demonstrations against the House Un-American Activities Committee last year were Communist-led. "The film speaks for itself," he claimed, and yet the movie did not show Communists actually instigating violence as was charged. THE REASON that these two speeches were dangerous is twofold. First of all, the dis- tortions and misrepresentations of fact only deceive and harmfully misinform the people in the audience who had been previously ig- norant of the "facts." Secondly, the persons in the audience who are informed and recog- nize the deliberate errors usually have a per- sonal interest in the case or at least deeply personal feelings. These individuals tend to react strongly if not violently to distortions of fact. During the Arab's speech, for example, one Jew who had been in Israel in 1948, when the strife was at its worst, became enraged when the speaker referred to the alleged Israeli aggressions. In the HUAC debate, the crowd became incensed when the committee defender said there "were no distortions in the film" and made other similar statements. All of this has relation to the current con- troversy over the elimination of the University speaker ban. If speakers are allowed to express all ideas, including the advocation of the violent overthrow of the government, there would certainly be a direct effect on the feelings of everyone in the audience. If there is near-violence during a speech which has immediate relevance to only a portion of the audience, one wonders about crowd behavior during a speech advocating treason or violent revolution. It could be tragic. AN IMPORTANT ISSUE in the problem of abolishinz t+he nakr b an is whether the (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the first article in a two-part analysis of aims, values, and methods of The John Birch Society.) By HARRY PERLSTADT Daily Staff Writer "BASIC Communist strategy for conquest of the world, as laid out thirty-five years ago and relentlessly followed ever since, consisted of three steps: (1) Take Eastern Eur- ope; (2) next take the masses of Asia; (3) then take the rest of the world, including the United States. The Com- munists completed their first step in 1950; the second step is now at least three-fourths accomplished; and they have gone more than one-fourth of the way towards carrying out their third step ... Commun- ist influence as a percentage of total control as of summer 1960 in the United States was 40-60 per cent." The above report is from "Amer ican Opinion," a magazine pub- lished by Robert Welch, Founder of the John Birch Society, The Society announces that it is dedi- cated to the elimination of Cor- munism and to the principle of less government and more in- dividual responsibility. The John Birch Society has emerged as a powerful pressure group on the reactionary right. The extreme right, however, has much in common with the far left which it so strongly opposes. Italian and German Fascists, for example, hate Communism. Yet both Fascists and Communists be- lieve in and utilize the police state, the single party, the leader, the ultimate conquest of the world, and the necessity of war and vio- lence as a tool for the development of the world. The John Birch So- ciety shares many of these charac- teristics. The Society has a great interest in the Fascist government of Chiang Kai-shek on Tawain. Na- tionalist China is one of the few countries the Society considers safe from Communist infiltratior. Captain John M. Birch, for whom the Society is named, worked with Chiang's army during World War II against the Japanese. "As soon as the Communists began to wreck every effort of the Nationalist Government to reestablish com- munication, industry and the whole economy on a peaceful basis and to turn loose their lies about Chiang Kai-shek . . . Birch would have used all his energy to deny their lies and try to stop their destructiveness," Welch writes in "The Life of John Birch." Birch was killed by Communists in late August 1945. * * * JUST as the Fascists had their great leader, the Birch Society has its. Robert Welch is the Founder with a capital F, of the Society. Founder Welch says he wants no other credit than that. He points out that to fight Communism an energetic leader is needed to at- tract the interest and support of a basically apathetic and timid American public. Welch, in a sec- tion of "The BlueBook" runs through a list of conservatives ..L ....x U4. 1.., 4M r l o - utf A -- against Communism. For the mo- ment, the Society must be a "dedi- cated few" who accept major de- cisions from the top down. There can be no dissension in the ranks, no real division of opinion. This is necessary to present a solid front, Welch claims. Anyone who dis- agrees with the policy is asked to leave and his dues are refunded. IN DEFENDING its ideals Welch compares his group to an army instructed to shoot at anyone who approaches the fortification of Americanism no matter who he is or what he says. The Communists have no moral feeelings and must be fought on the same grounds, Welch implies. But Welch and the Society do not advocate the use of violence. Dr. Vernon J. Johnson of Detroit, ones of the Society's Committee of Endorsors, said that the Society fights Communism "not by taking up guns and shooting, but through legal means like writing to Wash- ington." The current legal means, as ex- hibited by the House Un-American Activities Committee, which the Society backs, are political smear and the use of propaganda such as "Communism on the Map" and "Operation Abolition." The So- ciety has worked hard to see that these films are distributed to the public. TlE SOCIETY claims that the greatest infiltration of the United States has been in the communica- tions media. To combat this, the Society proposes to establish read- ing rooms to promote conservative and Birchean literature. It has worked to keep Boston radio an- nouncer Hugh Kregeloh on the air and tacitly supports Dallas announcer Dan Smoot. In this area the Society, true to form, is doing exactly what the Commun- ists are attempting to do-influ- encing the communications media. Welch also proposes setting up all kinds of front organizations to further the Society's fight against Communism. The best statement on the group's use of Communist methods comes from Welch him- self in the "BlueBook". "We are, in fact, willing to draw on all successful human experience in organizational matters, so long as it does not involve any sacrifice of moral- ity in the means used to achieve an end." But whether or not Welch rec- ognizes it, the Society, through its methods and organizational structure, does in fact come into conflict with "morality" and the American value system. LETTERS to the EDITOR Facts .. To the Editor: THE West Quadrangle Council noted Mr. Storch's May 9 edi- torial with some interest. Although matters of opinion are usually open to debate, matters of fact are not. The statement that "the administration sets the standards" for dress regulations, presented as common knowledge, is simply not true. The resolution of the issue is solely the concern of the Quad- rangle Councils and the ultimate decision is theirs to make. East and South Quadrangle dress regu- lations have already been set by their respective Councils and our council will face the issue next week. Student government is by no means all-powerful, but misrepre- sentation of its current role will do little to help it expand in the future. -Dennis Moore, President West Quadrangle Council Peace ... To the Editor: W HAT HAS HAPPENED to the Union? Why has the cheapest popular music replaced intelligent conversation? As a graduate of the University, now at Harvard, I was shocked to find the Union transformed into something resembling an ice cream parlor for junior high school stu- dents. Surely the Union should provide a place where students can meet, talk, or read over their cof- fee in peace; under the present circumstances peace is clearly out of the question. I sincerely hope that this change in the Union does not reflect a change in the University as a whole. I have so far been proud of my Michigan degree. -Hilary Smith, '60 Irresponsibility ... To the Editor: FOR ONE wish to add my voice to those who accuse The Michi- gan Daily of irresponsible journal- ism. The specific charge is The Daily' handling of the flight of Alan B. Shepard. The Daily does not seem to consider this news, in fact, The Daily in its last three issues has not printed a single word on the actual flight, or on Commander Shepard. Its four small articles (three Saturday-26 col. inches, one Sunday, 3 col. in- ches, total 30 in), have told only of the prestige which the flight has brought us, the Russian reaction, the campus reaction (for which we are intebted, we thought there was some), and that the sailors on the carrier had a live show. When, to the rest of the country, this is the biggest news since the Cuban invasion, we can't even read about it in The Daily. The Daily has taken the editorial policy of belittling the flight to the extent that it excludes the news from its pages. Its editorials have been derogatory, to say the least. If the campus did not care about the flight, this policy would have a slight justification, but the signs in the A&D building and the conversations around campus do not support this view at all. In today's Daily (Tuesday) de- spite Commander Shepard's news conference, motorcade, meeting with Kennedy, etc., we find no mention of him. We only get an editorial that ridicules the people, such as myself, who felt any emo- tion in the countdown and flight. -William Altenburg, '63 Advertising., To the Editor: IF PROF. PRESTON SLOSSON were Fidel Castro he would face a real problem: how shall a press be supported. A paper of any size cannot live on sales alone; it needs large support from advertising, or political parties, or public money. In Batista's impoverished Cuba, Havana had 18 dailies, all, heavily subsidized and many with heavy advertising. It was a bad press. With the revolution, these subsi- dies were withdrawn from all pa- pers; they then had to make it on sales and ads alone, and many of them folded. Then economic war with the United States brought about rapid nationaliza- tions from June-October 1960. This cut the advertising revenue to papers sharply, and they were loft n+ i t m;+ n -1 f: k nlar, 1 l I I 4 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN .: . n..........r.......n1...n....!... . r"..".'.a... .. . . ..h...1fi\i r'. '1:F li:: :'F{:I.a... .n..Y 4': . f........s ..r.....rJ.o".,, ....... SrJ .::{i .'":4}'::ti1 a".f . i:'a. n1' Yd11Jrf:: J. vS }::"r:.:""..se.".".i.."::"t""":v: S 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. SUNDAY, MAY 14 General Notices President and Mrs. Hatcher will hold open house for students at their home Wed., May 17 from 4 to 6 p.m. A Special Meeting of the University Senate will be held on Tues., May 16, at 4:15 p.m. in the Rackham Lecture Hall. *Students: If you need to order a transcript without grades for the cur- rent semester, you are urged to call in person at 515 Admin. Bldg. not later than June 2. *-Does not apply to students in Engr., Law. Recommendations for Departmental Honors: Teaching departments wishing to recommend tentative June graduates from the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, for honors or high hon- ors should recommend such students by forwarding a letter (in two copies; one copy for Honors Council, one copy for the Office of Registration and Rec- ords) to the Director, Honors Council, 1210 Angeli Hall, by 4:00 p.m., Fri., June 9. Teaching departments in the School of Education should forward letters di- rectly to the Office of Registration and Records, 1513 Admin. Bldg., by 8:30 a.m., Mon., June 12, Attention June Graduates: College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, School of Education, School of Music, School of Public Health, and School of Busi- ness Administration: Students are ad- vised not to request grades of I or X in June. When such grades are abso- lutely imperative, the work must be made up in time to allow your instruc- tor to renort the make-up grade not viser's Day," for all second semester freshmen in Engineering will take place all day on Wed., May 17, to help fresh- men select their degree programs. Ad- visers and other faculty counselors will be available in their offices for individual consultation with freshmen who wish to obtain information con- cerning their programs. All students concerned are encouraged to take full advantage of this opportunity. Events Monday Panel Discussion: "The Application of Social Science Research in Cross-Cul- tural Exchange," at 7:30 p.m., Mon., May 15, West Conference Room, Rack- ham Bldg. Robert A. Hefner, Jr., Psychology Dept., will serve as mod- erator. All interested persons are in- vited. Public Lecture: Mon., May 15, 4:15 p.m., West Conference Room, Rackham Bldg. Ilya Gershevitch, Visiting Prof., Columbia University, Reader in Iranian Languages, Cambridge University, "The Religion of Zoroaster," Automatic Programming and Numer- ical Analysis Seminar: "Introduction to BE-FAP MACRO-Instruction Concept" by Larry Flanigan on Mon., May 15, at 4:00 p.m. In Computing Center Seminar Room. Engineering Mechanics and Naval Ar- chitecture and Marine Engineering Seminar: Mon., May 15, at 4:00 p.m. in 311 West Engineering. V. A. Postnov, Docent at the Leningrad Shipbuilding Institute, will speak on "Bending of a Ship's Double Bottom as an Ortho- tropic Plate Including the Shearing De- formation." Coffee at 3:30 in the Fac- ulty Lounge, Doctoral Examination for Christopher Rudston Longyear, English Language & Literature: thesis: "Linguistically Determined Categories of Meanings: A Comparative Analysis of Meaning in 'The Snows of Kilimanjaro' in Eng- lish and German," Mon., May 15, 2601 Haven Hall, at 7:00 p.m. Chairman, A. M. Marckwardt. Doctoral Examination for Alexander Chairman, K. M. Siegel., Doctoral Examination for Jean How- ard Munzer, Education; thesis: "A Study of the Relationships between Mobility and Academic Achievement of Third-Grade and Sixth-Grade Chil- dren," Mon., May 15, 3206 University High School, at 1:30 p.m. Chairman, H. R. Jones. Events Tuesday Tues., May 16: Lecture by Prof. Rob- ert L. Aronson, New York State School of Industrial and Labor Relations, Cor- nell University, on "Research and Writ- ing in Industrial Relations-Are They intellectually Respectable?", Wayne State University McGregor Memorial Conference Center, 3:00 p.m. Transpor- tation may be arranged by calling In- stitute Office, Extension 456c. Linguistics Club Lecture Meeting: Er- nest N. McCarus, Department of Near Eastern Studies, will speak on "Leb- anese Arabic Baby Talk" on Tues., May 16 at 8 p.m. in the Rackham Am- phitheater. Lecture: Dr. A. G. Everson Pearse, University of London, will speak on "Enzyme Histochemistry and Its Bio- chemical Alignments" at 4 p.m. in 2054 Natural Science Bldg. on Tues., May 16. Public Lecture: William R. Pork, Cen- ter for Middle Eastern Studies, Har- vard University, on "The Fertile Cres- cent and Europe in the Nineteenth Century" on Tues., May 16 at 4:15 p.m. in Angell Hall Aud. A. Social-Work Social-Science Collo- quium: Prof. Arnold S. Kaufman, Dept. of Psychology, on "Some Ethical Prob- (Continued on Page 8) Forthought "IT IS AN IRONIC and disturbing example of our need to soft out 't lli -a tq .ninriine i n .r V+Q+