THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRrDAY, MAY 21, 198 V 'Slave' Labor? IT MAY HAVE BEEN a "school-boy's prank" when business administration students "infiltrated" and killed last year's attempts at a Karl Marx study group, but when a trained economist charges "bias" on discovering Marx being taught in a class- room, the joking period is past. General Motors official Adam Stricker, who enrolled 'in the course and attended two class periods, charged before a House labor sub-committee that he was sure the University's workers education extension service economics course attempted to in- doctrinate the students with a left-wing point of view. This was done, one may gather from Stricker's testimony, by the distribution of union pamphlets and the in- jection of Marxist theories in classroom dis- cussion. * * * P RESIDENT RUTHVEN (who labelled the business students' coup in the Marx study club here "a prank" and "good, clean fun") has evidently recog- nized the seriousness of the let-them- be-ignorant ideas behind the death of the campus study group and Stricker's charges. In a strong statement, Ruth- ven declared that "here at the University we feel that we wduld not be doing our duty if we failed to tell them (students) what Marxism and Communism really mean." President Ruthven also added that manage- ment's side had been presented in the course. Meanwhile, in the past week, several lit- erary college courses have presented (or Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily stafff and represent the views of the writers only. N: NIGHT EDITOR: LEON JAROFF shall we say "injected") Marxist theories. Nor could these courses in the political science and economics departments be com- plete without some explanation of the ideas leading to one of today's most important political and economic theories. Certainly no "indoctrination" attempts have been made in teaching on campus, and the accus- ations of indoctrination directed toward the Detroit class were made "on the basis of hearsay and unverified assertions," ac- cording to President Ruthven. * * * IN THE SOUTHERN portions of this coun- try, in many South American countries and in the West Indian Islands, during the slave period in the 18th and 19th centuries, slaves were refused education of any kind. Keep them ignorant, went the saying, and they'll never know what they're missing. Result? Superstition, fear, hysteria were rampant. Voodoo cults, weird and frighten- ing customs abounded. The ignorants be- lieved every wild rumor that reached them. Slaves are generally out of style, and the black cat no longer retains its fear- some aspect. But ignorance is still no mean weapon, which can be, and is, util- ized by groups who want no back talk. Stricker 's superficial accusations come as a new manifestation of industry opposi- tion to a national workers education pro- gram. However, even as the slaves of the last century swallowed absurd and danger- ous rumors because they knew no better, workers of today, denied knowledge, could be equally vulnerable to the soap box ora- tory, the half truths and the Utopian prom- ises of any ideology. Blocking education is a sure way to commit cultural, economic and political sui-- cide. But with a firm knowledge of con- flicting doctrines, and the resulting thought stimulation, improvements in any system are inevitable. -Naomi Stern. In Again, Out Again THE "GOOD" of the students has once again been decided by a University board consisting solely of Administrative officers and faculty m.#mbers. The latest decision for student welfare: to move men out of Victor Vaughan House next fall, to move women into Victor Vaughan House next fall; to move the women out of Victor Vaughan House next spring, to move the women into the new women's residence hall. The Board involved is that of the Gover- nors of Residence Halls. It consists of Chair- Man Erich A. Walter, Dean of Students; Alice C. Lloyd, Dean of Women; Robert P. Briggs, University vice-president; Francis C. Shiel, residence hall business manager; Prof. Donald L. Katz, of the chemical en- gineering department; Prof. John Eaton, of the German department; Prof. Margaret Tracy, of the economics department; Prof. Fred B. Wahr, of the German department; and Prof. Frederick Sparrow, of the botany department. The proposed move of students among the dormitories came after a great deal of discussion and debate in a meeting of the Board, The Daily learned. We realize how difficult it must have been for the group, so long away from dormitory living, to de- cide what would be of greatest benefit to the most students. And we especially ap- preciate their consideration in not taking any students away from pre-final study to learn their reaction to the plan. For, it was not until all the snags had been carefully removed that a group of residence hall presidents were called into Dean Walter's office to learn of the de- cision. The matter of board and room increases was mentioned at the same time. Why the proposed switching about? The new dormitory would be opened for occu- pancy for women (not men, as originally planned) in February. In accordance with the Michigan House Plan which calls for the development of a unified spirit in each of the residence halls, it would be necessary to form a nucleus of women who would then be imbued with this feeling while living at Vaughan House. In the spring, the housing situation for women will be somewhat alleviated with a number of women from the overcrowded Stockwell and Mosher-Jordan Halls, as well as Willow Run Village, joining the Vaughan House women in the new dormitory. Men from Willow Run will also be able to move to campus by being placed in the East and West Quad vacancies left by the return of the Vaughan men. These were the explanations given to the president of Vaughan who then had to face more than two hundred men with the good news. These undergraduate men have been living in Vaughan since it was taken over from women who lived there for the fall semester, 1945. (It was orig- inally built for medical students). The Vaughan men, who have developed an abundance of house spirit during their two year stay at ,the dormitory, met Wed- nesday to form a special committee to for- mulate proposals. The men decided to ask Dean Walter for reconsideration of the switch, and if not that, at least the assur- ance that the men could live where they desired next fall, without foregoing top priority in applying to Vaughan in the spring. They have been given a chance to appeal before the board next week. The Board of Governors was faced with a difficult decision, and they are undoubt- edly sincere in believing that their solution is best in view of the general housing prob- lem. Admittadly they have an over-all and' long-term view not possessed by students. Since it is evident from the present reaction to their proposal that students will not just accept any Board proposal without adequate reasons, we hope that it is equally apparent that the Board should' include student members in the future who would be in possession of the facts behind such decisions and would be able to clearly present them to the stu- dents. We hope that the Board will be able to realize this now. And we hope, too, that they will be able to completely review their Vaughan House decision with a view toward an alternative solution fair to ALL the students, men and women alike. -Joan Katz. THE "WE'LL SEE YOU crawl first." That was, in substance, the American answer to Russia's offer to negotiate the issues of the "cold war." Our president has said that if Premier Stalin comes to Washington, he'd probably see him. Marshall wasn't even that enthus- iastic. When asked whether he would be very glad to see Foreign Minister Molotov if he came here, Marshall replied, "Certainly," but amused himself and newsmen by pointedly leaving out the "Very glad." (Meanwhile, a draft measure was being rushed through Congress; a 70 group air force was approved by both Houses; atomic weapons were being tested). Russia will have to show by action, not words, that she desires peace, Marshall said. (American action for peace included deny- ing that we had suggested peace talks, turn- ing down the Russian discussion probe, hurrying the above mentioned acts for mili- tary preparedness, placidly ignoring mass executions in Greece, trying to discontinue war crimes trials, ad infinitum.) When asked whether the question of bi- lateral talks could now be considered dead, Marshall stated that a thing has to be alive before it can die. So, for Marshall the question of peace talks was never a live issue. Well, it was for the rest of the American people. Whether the offer was a tactical maneu- ver on Russia's part wasn't as important to the rest of us as was the question of securing peace. The American people didn't care who had offered to talk first, or whether the Rus- sians had misquoted our statement, or whether the move took the peace ball away from us. No, the problem of saving face didn't seem as important as the problem of saving lives by preventing another war. Marshall maintains that the way for Rus- sia to show her good intentions is to begin taking constructive action in such areas as Germany, Korea, and in the United Nations. We agree that this would be a pleasant change. But this remark, and the state depart- ment release finding fault with Russia in every area which Stalin suggested could be discussed, are merely a continuation of the charge-counter-charge procedure that has gotten us nowhere. There is an alternate course for our sec- retary of state. The United States could show her good intentions by not turning down any chance to save the peace. -Harriett Friedman. I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: Easy to Die By SAMUEL GRAFTON THE UNITED STATES must beware of taking an ultra-respectable role in the Palestine crisis, a position too legalistic, too circumspect. Nothing would be easier than for the UN to let the new nation of Israel die, while putting on a show of hunting for the correct precedents and the proper writs under which to save her. The opponents of the new nation will be those who propose to help her slowly. A real crisis engages the world, and it is not lawyers' work. The defense of peace and freedom is not like the administration of an estate in chancery. An entirely dif- ferent set of virtues is required. The danger is not that men will say we ignored a point of proper procedure, but that men will say we let a nation die. The world will not applaud if the Security Council lets Israel die, correctly, to an obligato of points of order and points of information, and short adjournments for reflection, and big ones for inspection. If death be the end, no happy throngs will cheer and marvel at how properly it was done, with what parliamentary de- corum and procedural elegance. They will say that the United Nations is dead, and the remark will not even be a verdict, it will be only the observation of a fact. It is for the United States, as a leader, to break out of the labyrinth of respecta-a bility, and to fling down its cap for free- dom.' For the world does not really respect respectability today; it rather fears ,it. It listens for some voice to rise above the diplomatic murmur, and to make noises on behalf of peace and freedom, unpleasant and derisive noises, if necessary, of the kind which humanity has had to make in the past to win some measure of rights and of stability. For the plain truth is that the United Nations has no precedents to cover the existing situation, a fact which makes it absurd to search for them, and manda- tory to invent them. The law of tomorrow will be whatever the virtue of mankind proclaims it to be today. Let it be our national iole to say these simple things, to say them with sophistica- tion and to say them with naivete, but to say them, over and over again, until u .",, "''i '~ ,;. " ;. .. .r,', ?:x:;. ° r ~FEDERATION r +t - 44 F t DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN 'f ' =a r. t ,' _: (Continued from Page 2) Leonard Cheatum, Zoology; the-1 sis: "A Contribution to the Life- History of the Deer Lungworm Leptastronglus' alpenae (Nema- toda: Metastrongylidae), with Ob- servations on its Incidence and Biology," 8 p.m., Fri., May 21, 3091 Natural Science Bldg. Chairman, E. C. O'Roke. Doctoral Examination for Paul William Harkins, Classical Stud- ies: Greek; thesis: "The Text Tra- dition of Chrysostom's Co men- tary on John," 3 p.m., Fri., May 21, 2009 Angell Hall. Chairman, W. E. Blake. Doctoral Examination for Hen- ry Obel, Education; thesis: "Dif- fering Factorial Abilities of Un- graded Boys Who Later Became Criminals," 3 p.m., Fri., May 21, East Council Room, Rackham Bldg. Chairman, W. C. Olson. Doctoral Examination for Doug- las Neil Morgan, Philosophy; the- sis: "Photography and Philoso- phy," 4 p.m., Fri., May 21, 204 Ma- son Hall. Chairman, D. H. Park- er. Concerts Student Recital: Virginia Holmes, student of piano under Joseph Brinkman, will present a recital at 8:30 p.m., Fri., May 21, Rackham Assembly Hall. The pro- gram will include works by Bach, Beethoven, Chopin, Brahms, De- bussy, Bartok, and Dohnanyi, and will be open to the public. It is given in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Music. Student Recital: Margaret Ling, harpist, will be heard at 8:30 p.m., Sat., May 22, Rackham Assembly Hall, in a program of composi- tions by Salzedo and Debussy, pre- sented in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Music. She will be as- sisted by Marie Mountain Clark, Flutist,. and Emil Roob, violist The public is invited. Student Recital: June Van Met er, Organist, will present a recital in partial fulfillment of the re- quirements for the degree of Bachelor of Music at 4:15 p.m., Sun., May 23, Hill Auditorium. Miss Van Meter, who has been studying with Dr. Charles Peaker during this semester, will play compositions by Handel, Messiaen, Franck, Vierne, and Bach. The public is invited. Operatic Scenes and Arias, pre- sented by Opera Workshop under the direction of Wayne Dunlap, in conjunction with the Sym- phony Orchestra and members of the Orchestral Conducting Class, 8:30 p.m., Sun., May 23, Hill Audi- torium. Program: excerpts from Mozart's Magic Flute; Don Gio- vanni, Marriage of Figaro; Strauss' Die Fledermaus; Delibes' Lakme; Rossi's Mitrane; Massen- et's Herodiade; and Cavalleria Rusticana by Mascagni. Open to the public without charge. Student Recital: Sarah Cos- sum, violist, accompanied by Jean Farquharson, will play a program in partial fulfillment of the re- for viola and harpsichord, by Bach; Concerto in G major, No. 3 by Boccherini; Suite for Viola Alone by John Duke; and Mozart's Sonatina in C major. The public is invited. Exhibitions Museum of Archaeology: Roman Egypt and Pictorial Maps of Italy. Tuesday through Friday, 9 a.m.- 12 noon, 2-5 p.m.; Saturday, 9 a.m.-12 noon; and Sunday, 3-5 p.m. Architecture Building: Photog- raphy by Roger and Patti Hellon- beck; through May 28. Museum of Art, Alumni Memo- rial Hall: Water Colors by John Marin, through May 25. Tuesdays through Saturdays 10-12 and 2-5;, Wednesday evenings 7-9; Sundays 2-5. The public is invited. Atomic Energy exhibition pre- pared by the editors of LIFE mag- azine, Rackham Building; through May 29. Michigan Historical Collections: "Autographs of Michigan Men of State and National Prominence" on display in 160 Rackham Build- ing, 8-12 and 1-5 daily, 8-12 Sat- urdays. Events Today Radio Programs 3:30 p.m. WKAR-On Campus Doorsteps, East and West Quad- rangles. 5:45 p.m. WPAG-Music Fra- ternities and Sororities, Sigma Al- pha Iota. Sigma Delta Chi, national pro- fessional journalistic fraternity: Meeting, 4 p.m., Editorial Room, Haven Hall. Election of officers and special initiation. Sphinx: Party at Susterka Lake Meet at 7 p.m. in front of the Union. Transportation will be provided. All former members in- vited. B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation: Friday Evening Services, 7:45 p.m. Following services at 8:30 p.m., there will be a discussion on In- termarriage led by Rev. Edward Redman and Rabbi Herschel Ly- mon. All are invited. Intercooperative Council will present "Turn of the Tide" and "Brotherhood of Man" at 8:30 p.m.. Hussey Room, Michigan League. Dancing. No admission charge. The public is invited. German Coffee Hou': 3-4:30 p.m., Michigan League Coke Bar, Students and faculty members in- vited. SRA Coffee Hour: 4:30 p.m., Lane Hall this afternoon. Prospec- tive members of the electorate are special guests. Everyone invited. Coming Events Michigan Sailing Club: Michi- gan Invitational Regatta Saturday and Sunday at Whitmore Lake Meet 8 a.m., Michigan Union for ride. The Graduate Outing Club wil' Opposition IN REGARD to the Mundt Bill, I oppose it. It seems to me that several valid premises lead to this conclusion. a. Our government is, and should be, based on the principle that the power of the truth is sufficient to enable it to prevail in a free market among an educated people. Restriction beyond that necessary to control license is ty- ranny. b. It is the right and duty of the people through their government Jo resist any attempt to impose systems of social and economic organization on them through the exercise of external force. d. Those aims of the Commun- ist Party are the type that it is important for us to resist under premise b. rather than encourage under premise a. e. It is important to distinguish between professional Commun- ists, who operate under the con- trol, management, and direction of Russian Communists, and those whom I shall call "ama- teur Communists." I refer here to those who seem impressed by ideas that might accurately be called Marxian. And certainly a belief in social reform is no clear indication of allegiance to Rus- sian Communism. I have no sympathy with pro- fessional Communists, the Com- munist Party, or Communist front organizations. Accordingly, I think that the stronger the punishment for them, the better. However, I'm a little worried about the standards for deter- mining who belongs to these vari- ous groups which are set up in the Mundt Bill. ' In the light of public informa- tion concerning the organization of the Communist International, it seems to me that there is a clear evidentiary relationship be- tween receivingfinancial aid for political purposes from a foreign nation, going to another nation for instruction in Communist doc- trine and tactics, and reporting to a foreign nation, and actual in- volvement in the sort of national organization that I fear. However, it also seems to me that there is no such clear conclusion to be drawn from the advocation of policies that coincide with those of the International unless such advocation is consistent. A federal jury, under the sup- ervision of a competent judge, subject to control by appeal, might be safely trusted, I believe, to distinguish between those who are soldiers of Russia and those who hope to convince a majority of Americans that Marxian phil- osophy means the realization of our hopes and the removal of our fears. In my opinion, once this dis- tinction has been made, these sol- diers of Russia ought to be trans- ported halfway across the Pacific and encouraged to walk the rest of the way, while our misguided but sincere minority should be given the protection of the Con- stitutional guarantee of free speech. -Ray Davis Mfore Opposition To the Editor: W E DON'T pay too much atten- tion to attacks onthe ighBs of other people. The Mundt Bil attacks Communists, a few labo antagonists, foreigners, etc., bul not us. Perhaps I had a tendency tc follow that kind of thinking too- but I suddenly realized that th Mundt Bill attacks me in the mos 1direct way anything possibly could. I have applied for a pass- port, with the intention of going ato France and getting married. I the Mundt Bill passes, I will be denied that passport because I amr a member of AYD. Think what you will about thi organization,sit hasd never beer proved subversive, and my own ex- perience with it, is that it is demo- cratically run and has democratic ideals. If I can be denied my civil liberties on these grounds, cer tainlyrothers will suffer unjustly too from this most un-Americar bill. I will never be convinced that1 am living in a democracy if thi, right is taken from me. -Jeanne Tozar * * Misquoted To the Editor: 1 WE WOULD like to state that we were misquoted in the story on the Phoenix project t which appeared in The Daily Tuesday, May 18. s --Josephine German -Helene Van Dyke Yes or No? To the Editor: CLAYTON DICKEY, '47, wants a "yes" or "no" answer: "Does he hope ERP will succeed in re- storing Europe's economic stabil- ity? Will he fight .to make whatev- er improvements may be needed to insure its success?" To both questions-yes: which in no way means that in "hoping" I necessarily equate ERP with economic stability, or that in fighting for improvements I have any illusions about our bi-parti- san program for winning econ- omic domination of Europe. Economic stability is the de- sirable first step towards full European reconstruction and sig- nificant economic progress in the future. But how long has Dickey been hoping for that stability to come to Greece and China? Civil war and mass executions, infla- tion and starvation, corruption and totalitarian oppression of the people have been the fruits of all- out American "aid." I don't hope for that kind of economic stability. Nor do I hope for a restoration of the European status quo. A major goal of ERP is the restoration of Ruhr industry to its position of European dom- inance-a German industry itself dominated by American invest- ment capital through cartel ar- rangements. ERP would require European nations to submit their economic plans to us for approval of their "efficiency." The Harriman Com- mittee neatly defined efficiency: "Whatever one's attitude towards planning and free enterprise may be, there is all but universal agreement that true economic re- covery depends on releasing the energies of individuals and cut- ting down on time-consuming regulation of production and dis- tribution." Communists will continue to fight for real American aid to all Europe-with priority on the bas- is of need, the participation of all nations and administration through the United States. We will continue to oppose a plan de- voted to rebuilding the Ruhr ar- senal and aborting the European movement to Socialism. We will continue to expose ERP is a full- scale application of the Truman Doctrine, masquerading as "re- construction" and oriented to- wards huge profits for American monopolists. -Bill Carter Ralph Neafus Club, CP )RESIDENT TRUMAN says that children and dogs are as nec- essary to the welfare of this coun- try as Wall Street and the rail- roads. In this election yearwhen nobody seems to want the candi- dates who want to be President, we shan't be surprised if the pol- iticians, in their extremity, not only kiss the babies but try it out on the dog. -The Nation. Fifty-Eighth Year s I z d THINKING IT OVER Letters to the Editor... f: 14 k I I Iron Curtain Sequel TAKING A CUE from Hollywood, the Rus- sian motion picture industries have followed up "The Iron Curtain" by a sequel called "The Invisible Curtain"-a documen- tary film based on the book "I Was a Mem- ber of Truman's Spy Ring," by Alexander P. Milquetoast. The story begins in an airplane flying into the Soviet Union from Alaska. Mr. Milquetoast and two others are en route to the United States Emnbassy in Moscow. The two others are stone faked Boston- ians who speak with hard accents. In the Embassy, Alex meets the rest of the Americans. They all have hard stony features and walk like automatons. They wear stiff uniforms and also talk with hard accents strongly reminiscent of Worcester and Brooklyn. Alex is shown his duties. He is to decode official messages coming in from the "homeland." T-T is takn thrnnouh volunteers, so I shoot ten of them. From then on I have no more trouble." "Your great - great - great - grandfather fought in the Revolution back in the States, didn't he?" asks Alex. "My great-great-great-grandfather and all the family in between him and me fought for freedom, we fought for democracy, we fought for what was good. Unfortunately, the country we fought for on the fronts has continually betrayed us at home. "I was told I was fighting for freedom and democracy too. I came home to see not only small groups of people such as the DAR and the Klan trying to destroy democracy, but even the United States Congress. "Huey Long said that Fascism would come to this country disguised as an 'anti-some- thing' movement supposedly to protect our democracy, and it sure is happening. I am a-ah m'nc to thinr of my nnCtnrcA av thinr Edited and managed by studentscr the University of Michigan tuder the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff John Campbell ......Managing Editor Dick Maloy...............City Editor Harriett Friedman .. Editorial Director Lida Dailes...........Associate Editor Joan Katz........... Associate Editor Fred Schott......... Associate Editor Dick Kraus.............Sports Editor Bob Lent ......Associate Sports Editor Joyce Johnson.......Women's Editor Jean Whitney Associate Women's Editor Bess Hayes .................Librarian Business Staff Nancy Helmick......GUeneral Marna*W Jeanne Swendeman ......Ad. Manager Edwin Schneider .. 11vance Manager r Dick Hait....... Circulation Manager Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for re-pubiicatition of all newsdispatched credited to it Os otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights of re-publication of all other matters herein are also reserved. Entered at the Post Offipe at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second-class mall matter. Subscription yuring the regula school year by carrier, $5.00, by malt~ quirements for the degree of meet for hiking at 2:30 p.m., Sun. Bachelor of Music at 8:30 p.m., May 23 at the northwest entrance May 24, Lydia Mendelssohn Thea- of the Rackham Bldg. Sign up at tre. Miss Cossum is a pupil of Gil- Rackham check-desk before noon bert Ross. Saturday. All graduate students Program: Sonata in G minor, welcome. BARNABY ... Uncle Ralph left to start work in r- I He'll have a lotfto do, adjusting the atomic Blinding Rashes, acrid smoke, explosions' I , f.ash.:t... I-r. - _- . 1 a.l