Se meity-Thi rd Year EDrED ANDMANAGEDMBY STUDENs OF . UNIYERnsr OFMICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BoArD iw CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLIcATIONS BLD., ANN ARBOR, MIcH., PHONE NO 2-3241 THE ALGER HISS CASE: 'How Nixon Launched Period of Hystera "Where Opinions Are Free Truth Will Prevail'. storiats printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers. or the editors. Thh mus t be noted in all reprints. )AY, DECEMBER 13, 1962 NIGHT EDITOR: MALINDA BERRY ., The 'Academic' Grounds for Shapiro's Disissal IOFESSOR Samuel Shapiro was fired last week by Michigan State University-Oakland. hink the most flattering discussion among hirers and firers of MSU-O faculty which Ld. have led to the refusal to renew Shapiro's tract might have gone something like tory, complete to annotationsc and presented that list to the lib purchase of the books. That does academic inactivity. "Since he has been here, hel least one course in his field e well as heading up the departm "Last year he published a biog ofc nI..t..... XT-"".,.7n in- - -fi * * * 'ENTLEMEN, we have an important and or £icnara Henry Dana, aUri serious matter before us today. We must importance in American History Tide whether or not to rehire Prof. Shapiro "And, I would remind you all t r the coming year. In making this decision now writing a book about Dani think we should take his academic record which this university has given to account, but wp cannot forget about pos- funds. le impact of. his writings about Cuba on "By any standard of academic SU-O's image. What do you suggest, Mr. B.?" be it class room, research, or,+ service, it seems that Shapirc "Well, A, it seems to me we have to remem- achievement in his own field is r at all times that our university is known doubtful. id recognized as a result of the faculty and SShapiro's articles blaming Cuba's align- "If he has also written mater ent with Russia on United States foreign zine publication, that work has from .cting in his academic car licy is the type of anti-American writing well. I think it would be danger Lich can only bring question of our institd- him on political grounds for t n as a possible harbor for Communists, have already outlined, and I t arxists, and other leftists. That is exactly academic work here merits his r e type of image we don't want, especially ien you remember that the state gives usC r fund and that people up in Lansing don't tELL, C, you don't seem t :e people who talk against the United States," His magazine articles hav journalistic style, and I have n book on Dana so I can't really vOW, NOW B," (says C), "academic posts ,here. I'm sure we can find some are not political plums. If we make them him. I agree with A that he shoul at, then we must resign ourselves to a . "Gentlemen, you are making th iversity afraid to - speak out on political take a university can make.' ues. And, I might add,.it is the controversial cumbing to political pressure of ue that must be discussed and written about savory sort, you are sacrificing we are to have real debate. .orientation of,, free inquiry wh 'If we allow ,any political expression of a the- hallmark of a university. Yo ofessor to stand in the way of his retention ing the academic achievement a promotion, then we might have "a univer- Shapiro. You are compromising t y which will be 'acceptable' to Lansing, but, at a time when this nation's aca could never be a university acceptable to N looking for a university willin Ldents or faculty honestly interested in pro- example of resistance to politica ting thought and exchange. And that, in ing and lead the way to academi e last analysis is what- a university is all "Your doing this in the nan out." f operations of the universityo 'I sympathize with your position, C, but I reason is something which no ho ve to agree with.B that we must consider our , forgive. MSU-O will long be re blic image and the possible sources of fi- the school which fired Sam Sh nce .We have a university to operate and somebody didn't like his politics. at must come first and affect 'the choice of how you can hide that fact fron man who might impair our operation. I do . think we should renew Shapiro's con- "WELL, C, while you've been iet," (says A.) written a statement 'which V to the press. Here . are the salier kOW WArT A MINUTE," (rejoins C.) it: "Surely you are aware of the work which 'We expect a certain amount apiro has done in his own field, American work in his field of specializat story. I would like to recount some of them. writing is on the level of journa ce you did mention their importance . in man seeking tenure we look fo s decision, A, and since academic 'work is > . The principle reasons" for h e real test. of a man's worth to a university's academic ... erations'. * * "I remember that Shapiro compiled a, list of I'M SORRY, B, but that just we known, paperback books on. American His- --MICHA NAACP and School BooKS on each one, Lary for future sn't sound like has taught at very term, as' ent. raphical study gure of some. hat Shapiro is el Webster for him research c contribution, organizational 's record of anything but ial for maga- not kept him pacity here as, ous to release the reasons I hink that his etention." o understand. ve approached never read his consider that. one to replace d be released." he biggest mis- You are suc- the most un- the academic hich must be >u are neglect- and service ofj this university demicians are' ag to set an 1 Witch-hunt-, ic freedom." he of smooth or any other nest man will emembered as apiro because I don't know m the public." talking I've we will release it features of t of scholary ion . . . His lism and in a or scholarship is release are on't do. AEL ZWEIG (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the first of two articles deaing with Richard Nixon's involvement in the Alger Hiss case and some of its portents for America today.) By ROBERT SELWA LIKE THE ACHE of a bad tooth, the Richard Nixon-Alger Hiss controversy has subsided again, but it will not remain subdued. The controversy popped back in- to consciousness recently when the American Broadcasting Company presented a program on "The Poli- tical Obituary of Richard M. Nix- on." The program was arranged by Howard K. Smith, who invited Alger Hiss and Rep. Gerald Ford (R-Mich) to discuss Nixon's in- volvement in the Hiss 'case of 1949. THE HISS CASE is an uneasy memory to older people today and at best a vague enigma to the young. It came at a'time that was ripe for it and it has a parallel in the post-World War I period. In 1917 the Communists took over Russia through a violent revolution and in 1919 Communist uprisings in Bavaria and Hun- gary raised the spectre of Bol- shevism on the march. Out of a fear that the West would be over- run, Americans plunged into a great Red scare, denying Constitu- tional and political rights and freedoms to Communists, socialists and the Left in general. History repeated itself after World War II as the Cold War began, as Stalin began taking over countries in Eastern Europe -and as Americans began again to fear (more genuinely this time) that the West would be overrun. The situation was ripe for renewed hysteria and a second Red scare, especially after the Soviet Union got the nuclear bomb. And it was Richard Nixon as much as Joseph McCarthy who launched this per- iod of hysteria. VICTIMS OF the first Red scare were two alien Italian anarchists, Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti. In 1920 at South Brain- tree, Mass., a factory paymaster and his guard were killed by two robbers. The police arrested Sacco and,. Vanzett. They were brought to trial before the nonjudicial Judge Webster Thayer. A jury found them guilty and the judge sentenced them to death. The actual evidence against them was inadequate, and Ameri- cans began to realize that Sacco and Vanzetti had' been found guilty not because they had com- mitted the crime but .because of prejudice against their political convictions. Protests and investi- gations delayed their 'execution for six years, but it came in 192' amid new indignation. Alger Hiss was one of the first victims "of the second Red scare, which like the first has been slow in dying. An intellectual and a former high employe of the State Department, Hiss was accused in 1948. "by a former Communist agent, Whittaker Chambers, of having turned over classified gov- ernment documents to him 4n 1937. Hiss, a highly respected man then, quickly and persistently de- nied the charge and sued Cham- bers for slander. The case wnt to court where it became a battle between Chambers, an admitted, consistant liar 'who had renounced Communism, and Hiss, accused of being a liar and a Communist but denying both. The admitted liar eventually won. In the second of two trials Hiss was convicted of perjury on two counts. He was not prosecuted for, nor convicted of, being a Communist (this was not fully illegal). Nor was he convicted of- violating security regulations (the alleged deed occurred too long ago). Hiss served four years of a five-year prison sentence. * * * IN THE ABC SHOW, Smith ask- ed Hiss (now a New York City printing salesman) what he thought of Nixon's doings in the case. Nixon, Hiss said, seemed to be "less interested in developing the facts objectively than in seek- ing ways of making a preconceived plan appear plausible." Hiss said he does not know if Nixon was "politically motivated," but he added: "I certainly don't think that he was unaware of the political boost," the political soaring up into outer space, that the hearings and the subsequent trial provided for him. ,"I regard his actions as mo- tivated by ambition, by, personal self-serving which were not direct- ed at me 'in a hostile sense . He was responding to a situation in this country ... "If it hadn't been Mr. Nixon, perhaps someone else would have tried to jump into the same situa- tion and benefit by it." * * * HISS' COMMENTS were follow- ed immediately by those of Rep. Ford, a noted conservative Re- publican, who said: "The American people owe a great deal to Dick Nixon for his dedication to finding out all of the possible facts that the com- mittee could find out about the Alger Hiss case and its ramifica- tions." ABC promptly received more Mr. Conservative Republican, or- dered the ,program off its two stations in Cincinnati and Colum- bus. A Taft official wired ABC that "use of Alger Hiss as politi- cal commentator" is "contrary to public interest and in extremely poor taste." Former President Dwight Eisenhower called James Hagerty, ABC vice-president in charge of news and his former press secretary, to express "aston- ishment" that Hiss would be on the program. Since then some sponsors have been attempting to apply economic sanctions against ABC. All this is evidence that the second Red scare is-not yet over. The first Red scare ran its course by the late 1920's, but the second period of hysteria lingers on in the early 1960's. The intolerance of both Red scares is prevalent in last month's attempts to prevent both sides of an issue from being aired. In the past the calword was "security" last month it was "public interest." This callword was uttered callously in contradic- tion to itself, for if ever "public interest" is to be served, it is to be served not by the closeminded- ness of permitting only one side to be heard, but by the openmind- edness of listening objectively to both sides. Democracy is not de- mocracy and self-government is no longer self-government when the choice is removed and the public is dictated only one course. It is the Soviet citizen, and it should not be the American citizen, who unfortunately is permitted no alternatives. THE SITUATION may be all the wbrse because Hiss on the whole appears to be right in most of what he said over ABC. Much of this can be shown by consulting Richard Nixon himself, through his -very revealing book, "Six Crisis." Nixon was elected to the House of Representatives -'in 1946 and joined the House Un-American Activities Comittee. He was un- noted and unknown until he be- came involved with Whittaker Chambers and Alger Hiss. In August of 1948 Chambers ap- peared before HUAC to testify on alleged Communist infiltration in- to the federal government. At first, "both in appearance and in what he had to say, he made very little impression on me or the other Committee members," Nixon says in his book. But Chambers was only halfway through the state- ment he' was reading when sud- denly "I realized that -he had some extraordinary quality .. . it was the sheer, almost stark eloquence of phrases that needed no his- 'tronic embellishment," says Nixon. From that moment Nixon felt that Chambers was a man "who had inner strength and lepth" speaking with "the ring of truth. CHAMBERS named four mem- bers of "his underground Com- munist group." One of those nam- ed was Hiss who, as a State De-' partment official, had had the responsibility for organizing the Dumbarton Oaks world monetary conferences, the United States side of the Yalta Conference, and the meeting at San Francisco where the United Nations Charter was written and adopted. Two days later Hiss-came before HUAC to refute Chamber's ac- cusation. "It was a virtuoso per- formance," Nixon says. "Even at that time I was beginning to have some doubts" Nixon later looked over his notes of the testimony. "I saw that he had never once said flatly, 'I don't know Whittaker Cham- bers.' He had always qualified it carefully to say, 'I have never known a man by the name of Whittaker Chambers'." Nixon had asked a staff member to phone Chambers and ask him if he might have been known under another name while a Communist. Cham- ber's answer was that his party name was Carl. WHEN HUAC reconvened, the majority seemed to feel that the matter ought to be dismissed, but Nixon dissented. He says he feared that the case would be destroyed for good. "I pointed out my sus- picions" and "finally my argu- ments prevailed." Nixon was appointed to head a subcommittee to question Cham- bers again. "When I arrived back in my office, that afternoon, I had a natural sense of achieve- ment." Nixon recalls. "I had put myself, a freshman Congressman, in the position of defending the reputation" of HUAC and "I rec- ognized that the future of the Committee . . . was at stake -.. I knew that if the Committee failed to follow, through on the Hiss case, the effectiveness of all Congressional investigations, and particularly those in the field of Communist activities, might be impaired for years." At the subcommittee hearing, Nixon bombarded Chambers for three hours with questions. "I felt sure that he was telling the truth"' while listening to the answers. Still he was not satisfied and he decided, to see Chambers again, this time alone and informally. He relationship." Nixon decided that what was needed was a confron- tation between Hiss and Cham- bers with he and other HUAC members as witnesses. "Desiring as much privacy as possible," the group decided to have the meet- ing in a suite in the Commodore Hotel in New York City. Of Mrs. Hiss: "I could have made a devastating record had I also remembered that even a wo- man who happens to be a Quaker and then turns to Communism be a Communist first and a Quaker second." Of Communists in general: "In the years ahead I would never forget that where the battle against Communism is concerned, victories are, never final so long as the Communists are still able to fight. There is never a time when it is safe to relax or let down. When you have won one battle is the time you should step up your effort to win another- until final victory is achieved." * * * REMEMBER NOW what Hiss said on ABC last month: " First, Nixon seemed to be "less interested in developing the facts objectively than in seeking ways of making a preconceived plan appear plausible." In his book Nixon tries to convey the impres- sion that he wasbdeveloping the facts objectively, but one impres-' sion he leaves regardless is that he was trying to make his pre- conceived plan appear plausible. Right from the beginning Nixon invested his fortunes in Cham- bers and was suspicious of and increasingly hostile toward Hiss. Nixon may have tried to be ob- jective, but at least in part, he, was subjective; he was out to confirm his fears about the alleged in- ternal threat of Communism. " Second, Nixon could not have been "unaware of the political boost, the political soaring up in- to outer space" that the affair was providing for him, Hiss said on ABC. Nixon does write of his "natural sense of achievement" and of his knowledge that he per- sonally would receive credit for 'the part he had played. " Third, Nixon's actions, it seems true, were motivated at least in part by ambition and per- sonal self-serving. He was a fresh- man Congressman who so far had' made hardly any impression on, anyone. To have run for Congress in the first place at the politically: tender age of 33, to have won him- self a scholarship and studied his way through college and law school "with an iron butt"-yes, this was a man of ambition. And this in itself is good; it is when ambition is used to injure others that harm results. THIRD, Nixon "was responding to a situation in this country," Hiss said on ABC. This was true. Americans were woried not only about the spread of Communism (which was occurring) but also about the power of Communism. They were worried that Joseph Stalin would get the nuclear bomb. Stalin conducted his first suc- cessful test of the bomb in 1949. Americans found out about this with shock and horror on Septem- ber 23 of that year, between the end of the first trial of Hiss and the beginning of the second trial. Fifth, "If it hadn't been Mr. Nixon, perhaps someone else would have tried to -jump into the same situation and benefit by it," Hiss said on ABC. This also has truth to it; not only Nixon, but also Joseph McCarthy jumped into the situation and benefitted by it. To- gether they launched the second period of hysteria. Choice, ... THERE IS a higher, nobler, and more forceful justifi- cation for liberty, before which materialistic explanations pale. It is simply this: man is a moral being. His existence has ethical and spiritual dimensions which give it ultimate meaning. The moral character of his life is evinced in the making of choices. Liberty is that condition within which choices can be made and spiritual growth take place. The greater the degree of liberty the larger the latitude for choice and growth. To put it negatively, when liberty is reduced and taken away, the moral character of human action is limited and the oppor- tunities for-growth are diminished. -Clarence B. Carson in The Freeman RICHARD NIXON . . from the past At the confrontation, Hiss said he might have know Hiss in 1937 as George Crosley (not as "Carl"). Hiss questioned Chambers and Nixon questioned Hiss. The longer Hiss testified, the more apparent it became to Nixon that "Hiss' acquaintance with Crosley was far from casual." After the meeting, Nixon felt he should have been elated. "The case was broken. The Committee' would be vindicated and I per- sonally would receive credit for the part I had played." But he ex- perienced a sense of letdown, a sort of battle fatigue. * * * NIXON HAD COME to the con- clusion that Hiss-and his wife- was a Communist. Nixon con- tinually refers to them in the book as Communists, making statements like these: I i:i 4' ' 00, 'OR A SUPPOSEDLY worthy organization, the National Association for the Advance-. ent of Colored People all too often seems to dulge itself in the most unworthy of pursuits. Currently, and true to tradition, this cru- ding organization and fellow travelers are ,shing about madly demanding textbook uality. Now, it seems that they feel Negroes en't portrayed equally with their white ethern in illustrations and discussions. They point specifically to a seventh-eighth ade history text, used in the Detroit schools, d complain the part of the Negro in Ameri- n history is not sufficiently accented. 'UT REGARDLESS of the details of their complaint, it seems, on the whole, ridicu- us. The text in question, as is characteristic all the widely used texts in the nation, does t accent the' participation of any racial, igious or ethnic group in the nation's history. The figures discussed are treated as Ameri- ns, with reference to their race, religion or ed only when it is vital to'the understanding that phase of history. This is as it should be, the overwhelming majority of American ,torical events did not have their foundations racial or religious contexts. sow to be certain', American Negroes, both individuals . and as a group, have played nificant parts in. American history. The itributions of such greats as George Wash- K Carver and Booker T. Washington are imples to which -most any school child can. 'er. Their accomplishments are proud assets the American heritage. But their significance is not in the fact it these two men are Negroes; rather it is , their contributions to their country and velopment. THAT THE NAACP would have us do is to accent the existence of the Negro in our Lasrooms just because his skin is not white, a futile attempt to make him seem some- ng special. It would seem, however, that is something special ibecause he is a Negro. It is done by helping the Negro to help him- self; so that his achievements can go down In history-not as the achievements of a Negro, but as the achievements of an American who just happened to be a Negro. The presumptions that the Negro is restrain- ed by not being depicted as interacting with whites in school texts. However, this, it would seem, is not true. The Negro is being restrained by a number of forces. No one will deny that. But surely there is some better way to break these restraints than to feast upon the pliable. and unsuspecting minds of children. In fact, in view of current racial tension, not only in the South but throughout the nation, any attempt to portray the Negro in this way would only serve to worsen the crisis by forcibly alluding to it. HOW MUCH BETTER it would be for the NAACP to spend its efforts improving the Negro race so that lauditory reference to its members would be unavoidable. But the issue goes deeper than one of race. It becomes a matter of basic freedoms-free- dom of the press. Derision is rife when the Daughters of the American Revolution run about screeching at the United Nations and attempting to intimidate publishers into a less. than fair picture of the UN and its activities. In fact, the NAACP has been in the forefront when it -comes to criticizing the DAR for such pursuits. Yet this same NAACP has no qualms about demanding the same thing-preferential treat- ment in textbooks-when it comes to their cause. It would seem that what's sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander. If the DAR is to be damned for attempting to censor text materials then so should the NAACP. LAST YEAR we had this same NAACP sob- bing because Negroes weren't given good enough parts in movies. Now we have:. them wailing over the textbooks. Their cause indeed - 'I. -4 'I j~~1 ~" t~w~& SY THE MGL ; j'' SAS IT CAMSW ,FRo/A ABOVE*" LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Protest Dismissal of Shapiro To the Editor: THE SUPPRESSION of academic freedom as demonstrated by the dismissal of Prof. Samuel Shapiro must be condemned. To speak 'of a man who has written masterfully in the highest inter- ests of the nation and the reading public as writing on "... the level of journalism," honors that poor prostituted "discipline" monstrous-y ly out of proportion to what it deserves. In the last analysis Dean Mat- thews of Michigan State Univer- sity-Oakland has given ample am- munition to those who maintain Speakers .. , .. To the Editor: IN A RECENT Michigan Daily editorial on "State Speaker Policy" after mentioning the Uni- versity of Michigan, Michigan State, and Wayne, you say: "The other seven state-supported col- leges have articulated no definite speaker policy." On Monday, Nov. 5, 1962, the senate of Central Michigan Uni- versity passed on to the MCCPHE the following resolution: "We be- Gargoyle.. . To the Editor: THE MUCH heralded "new" hu-' mor of the "new" Gargoyle has finally made its appearance. We were delighted to see that the non-sick humorists of the "new" Gargoyle have chosen to' insult a paper's stand on civil rights and to call academic students "color- less." These features, and for that matter, all the features simply are not funny and actually tended to bore these readers. Any legitimate satire is certainly funny, however satirizing values