FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 17, 1951 Case Against McCarthy FOR FOUR years the American people have allowed Senator Joseph Raymond McCarthy of Wisconsin to usurp the au- thority vested in him by perpetrating one of the greatest plots of character assassina- tions concocted in modern history. Never in the history of our Congress has one legislator slandered so many pri- vate individuals without apparent cause or proof.r We believe it is high time for the people to strike back at McCarthy's malicious at- tacks and prevent him from being a further influence in the augmenting crisis. Congress is empowered by the Federal constitution to impeach any of its members found guilty of misdemeanors, high crimes or treason. This power was tested in 1798 when Senator William Blount of Tennessee was tried and acquitted. Since that time, no Senator has been tried or impeached. Impeachment in a legislature is very rare. But McCarthy's detrimental influence is also very rare. We shall attempt to prove that impeach- ment of McCarthy would be justified on le- gal grounds and beneficial on moral grounds. For ten cogent reasons we recommend that Senator McCarthy beremoved from the national legislature: (1) He has been accused of suppressing evidence in various cases in his former role as judge in Wisconsin. A move was made for his disbarment and much damaging evidence was brought to bear against him. However, because of the strong judicial tradition which opposes taking such drastic action against judges, he was acquitted. (2) He has been found to have granted quick divorces and other swift legal deci- sions to people who made large contribu- tions to his political campaign funds. (3) He has repeatedly manipulated his state income tax returns to evade paying a single cent. In 1943, for example, the rec- ords show that his income was approxi- mately $43,000. However, he reported that he had no income at that time and was never formally charged with the strongly suspected evasion. (4) He has violated his own state's con- stitution. In 1946, when he ran for the Sen- ate, he was still serving as a state judge. This dual role is prohibited by the Wiscon- sin constitution. (5) He has saved some of the most brutal of Hitler's mass murderers from execution. He headed a Congressional commission in- vestigating the "unjust" legal retaliation against SS men of the Third Reich whom he claimed were not morally responsible for their crimes. By throwing up a smoke screen around . the investigation, he managed to save a number of SS men from paying the penal- ty for the slaughter of at least 80 un- armed American prisoners and 100 Belgian civilians during the Battle of the Bulge. (6) He has accused, depending upon his mood at the moment, from one to 205 em- ployes of the State Department of being Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: BOB VAUGHN Communists. He drew his list of names, which became increasingly smaller, from the two-year-old files of the House Un-Ameri- can Activities Committee. The persons nam- ed had been investigated by the Committee and found not guilty of Communist charges. His charges shifted with amazing ra- pidity, keeping always one step ahead of the truth. One by one, his accusations against Dorothy Kenyon, Philip Jessup, John Service, Harlow Shapley and Anna Rosenberg (to name only a few) proved to be complete fiascos. The Senator is not only indiscreet-he lies. (7) He has himself admitted his own fail- ure and incompetence. He promised that he would "stand or fall" on his serious, libelous charges against Owen Lattimore. He fell but a gullible reading public propped him up. Not one charge against Lattimore was substantiated by fact. The only thing the investigation proved was that Lattimore was an unusually acute analyst of Orien- tal affairs and that, far from being the "architect of Far Eastern policy," his ad- vice was not heeded often enough. (8) He has as recently as last November engaged in corrupt campaign activities. In the Butler-Tydings Maryland senatorial campaign, the damaging picture which showed Tydings and former Communist chief Earl Browder together was instigated by McCarthy. This photograph, which play- ed great political dividends for Butler, was a faked composite shot. Also, McCarthy's henchmen took Bal- timore printer Donald Fedder on an all- night "ride" to obtain from him a letter which proved that Butler had violated the Corrupt Practices Act by receiving exces- sive campaign contributions. (9) He has made the obviously ridiculous charge that Washington columnist Drew Pearson is a "spokesman for international Communism." In this case, as in all the oth- ers, he has refused to come out from hiding in his cave of Congressional immunity and make his charges publicly so the accused can sue him for libel. (10) He has by virtue of his constant re- course to the Big Lie as a political bludgeon written his own impeachment. What higher crimes could be committed than sowing the seeds of disunity among our people by base- less condemnations of our leaders, commit- ting ruthless and malicious slander of pri- vate citizens behind the cowardly screen of Congressional immunity and playing on the misguided emotions of a. free people in tur- bulent times? To paraphrase the late Huey Long-if Communism ever comes to this country, it will come in the form of anti-Communism. We feel that McCarthy represents as great a threat to democracy as the Kremlin. Tolerance of political differences is part of our American heritage; but McCarthy's demagoguery cannot be treated as mere innocuous deviation from the convention- al pattern. McCarthyism and all its evil implications represent a "clear and present danger" to the free world. We recommend that all citizens take an active part in terminating this pseudo-crus- ade. Americans have not only the opportunity but the duty to request that their Congress- m e n initiate impeachment proceedings against Senator Joseph Raymond McCarthy. -Barnes Connable and Crawford Young Art & Politics YOU CAN SPOT him easily at any gather- ing of "aesthetes"; the bespectacled, feiercely serious liberal, intent on saving the cause of free expression. He is the one who supports avant-gardism against all comers, although he scarcely ever has any real know- ledge of what he is defending. He will scream for liberality, which, to him, usually means the same thing as clearing art of all the sentimentality and crassness of our modern day world. He will heartily damn American civilization, claiming that free enterprise has ruined freedom of expression, and takes a maso- chistic pleasure in being "persecuted" in return. He is aloof; in his aloofness often lies a frustrated contempt of the society he is "forced" to live in. In his spasm of revul- sion, he has spotted the ideal freedom of- fered by the classless society of ultimate Marxism. In a similar spasm, he has seized on what he likes to call freedom of expres- sion as a personal aesthetic crusade. IT WOULD BE easy enough to expose the falsity of this man's position. By his own canon of artistic freedom, he reasonably asks that we accept the latest efforts of avant- garde, but, in the same breath, asks that we throw out the modern romantics. For example, Rachmaninoff is called decadent and trite, not through any serious conside- ration of his personal merit, but merely be- cause he is a member of a "decadent" school. But it is not our purpose to show the weakness of his treatment of the idea of intellectual freedom. We will assume that he is not a dilettante, but that he has a true definition of that liberty; that his ab- horrence of American civilization was ra- tionally and coolly arrived at. The most serious aspect of this man's viewpoint is the ideological position into which he may be led. Hampered by the "stifling" effects of contemporary American life, he has made a wild grab and come up with Marxism. This is a concept which agrees with him; its ultimate goal, the class- less society, clicks into place with his op- pressions and neuroses, and he has found a creed. This society, hopefully enough, will offer him the intellectual freedom which he feels he must have. As he happens to be trundling the cause of "art" along with him, he seems to form, somehow, a messianic impression of him- self as a deliverer of the "finer things" from the crassness which will undoubtedly be their death. Though few enlightened people would dis- agree that the greatest freedom would exist, as the Marxist thesis claims, in the class- less society, the method of reaching this fine state is questionable. The catch comes when our hypothetical "liberal" turns to Russian Communism as a practical expe- dient. * * * THE THREATS to intellectual freedom from the forces necessarily existent in the democratic systems of the United States and England are certainly great. The writer, for example, must first of all look to his market, to the people who he expects will read what he writes. He must consider their desires and attempt to satisfy them, or be ignored. He must become involved, to some extent at least, in the tangles of business procedure. He must often prostitute his en- deavors, particularly in Britain, to some ag- ency which will help support him when he falls on lean times. Add to this the sometimes warped pub- lic feeling of °what is "right" and what constitutes truth, and we have the tra- ditional picture of the beleagered literary man in his confused world. The hot-eyed and basically short sighted liberal cannot see beyond these obstacles, however, and thunders off in a sweeping are to the left. He will leave all behind, and achieve his classless and free society through Communism. This fellow's actions would be quite laud- able, but nobody has yet proven that the Communist party is bent on getting the freedom of a classless society. It is impossible to regard the Russia of 1951 as anything other than a totalitarian dictatorship. Yet he seems to believe, or at least would have us believe, that artistic freedom lies in that direction. IN THE CASE OF literature, totalitarian society such as is now represented by Rus- sia spells certain death. When the words must be turned to make anything other than the truth, it becomes impossible to write anything but the baldest journalistic propaganda. Imaginative literature would suffer a similar fate, simply because it must con- form to the artificiality of the totalitarian society itselt; it must become artificial, re- flecting neither truth of fact nor emotion- al sincerity. History shows that literature cannot sur- vive in such an atmosphere; never before in history has the atmosphere been so intellect- ually stifling as in the Communist state. Literature would be aborted before it ever reached the perfect freedom of the classless civilization. The talk of the self-styled liberals (and this term is used arbitrarily, for want of a better one) may have an intriguing ap- peal, what with their blasting of "senti- "Who Says I Haven't Got A Foreign Policy?" Paz - .- ~;- =.,Y PA 011(y Xettei4 TO THE EDITOR The Daily welcomes communications fronm Its readers on matters of general interest, and will publish all letters which are signed by the writer and in good taste. Letters exceeding 300 words in length, defamatory or libelous letters, and letters which for any reason are not In good taste will be condensed, edited or withheld from publication sat the discretion of the editors. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 3) Y t t C ' i t t i l t f i t i j 1 l J l 1 have accepted positions or who are going into the services are re- quested to give this information to the Bureau before they leave campus. For General Division Regis- trants: Calls are received daily and since there is no way of pub- licizing these during final exams students are invited to come into the office at any time to look through requests starting Mon., Jan. 22. The United States Civil Service Commission announces the fol- lowing examinations: Geologist GS 5 and GS 7, closing date Feb. 6; Meteorological Aid GS 3, 4, and 5, closing date Feb. 6; As- tronomer GS 5 through GS 13, no closing date. The Carnegie Institute of Tech- nology announces an opportunity for advanced study and research through teaching assistantships, graduate fellowships and research assistantships for the academic year 1951-1952 in the following fields: chemical, civil, electrical, mechanical and metallurgical en- gineering, physics, chemistry, and mathematics. For further information con- cerning the above announcements call at the Bureau of Appoint- ments, Room 3528, Administra- tion Bldg. Employment: The Zurich General Accident' & Liability Insurance Co. of Chi- cago needs a man from the field of journalism, sales, or adver- tising, to fill a sales promotion position. The person would write copy for advertisements, bulletins, and various advertising material; also, 'editing of a monthly em- ployee paper. The advancement in sales work is excellent. The posi- tion is in Chicago. The U. S. Rubber Company needs chemical engineers to work in the Cleveland area. Position is open to new graduates. For further information con- cerning the above, call at the Bureau of Appointments, Room 3528, Administration Bldg. Lectures nar: Wed., Jan. 17, Room 101, W. Engineering, 4 p.m. Mr. Newton will speak on "Some Engineering Uses of,-Radioactive Materials." Geometry Seminar: There will be no meeting of the Seminar this week. Mathematics 183: Will meet in Rm. 2084 E. Engineering, Wed., Jan. 17, at 10 a.m. The Teacher's Oath will be ad- ministered to all February can- didates for the teacher's certi- ficate on Wednesday and Thurs- day, Jan. 17 and 18, Room 1437, U.E.S. This is a requirement for the teacher's certificate. Speech 36 will be given at 11 a.m., Monday, Wednesday - and Friday the second semester. Doctoral Examination for Ro- ger Cecil Norton, German; the- sis: "Basic Themes in the Lyric Poetry of Max Dauthendey;" Wed. Jan. 17, 102D Tappan Hall, 4 p.m. Chairman, F. B. Wahr. Doctoral Examination for Ah- mad Mohamad Shaaban, Civil Engineering; thesis: "RelatingA the Shearing Strength of Clay Soils to the Bearing Capacity of Clay Foundations." Wed., Jan. 17, 1224 E. Engineering Bldg., 3 p.m. Chairman, W. S. Housel. Pre-social work undergraduates: All undergraduates interested in the field of social work are in- vited to attend a meeting Wed., Jan. 17, 7:30 p.m. in the Hussey Room at the League. Dr. Arthur Dunham, Acting Director of the U. of M. School of Social Work, and Mrs. Cranefield, also of that faculty, will speak briefly on the subject, Social Work: Preparation, and Opportunities. Ample oppor- tunity will be provided for ques- tions and discussion. Concerts Horowitz Concert Postponed on Doctor's orders. New date will be announced as soon as possible. It will be appreciated if readers will notify their out-of-town musical friends who may have tickets. Events Today Congregational, Disciple, Evan- gelical and Reformed Guild: Sup- per Discussion, 5:30 p.m. at the Guild House. Roger Williams Guild: Wed. Tes 'N Talk at the Guild House, 4:30" 6 p.m. Wesleyan Foundation: Do-Drop- In for tea and chatter at the guild. Religion-in-Life Week Commit, tee meets at Lane Hall, 4:30 p.m. No Bridge Tournament in the Union tonight. (Continued on Page 6) 4 ,; Diplomacy . 0 To the Editor: NOW THAT the nations of the world have talked themselves^ into a stalemate and are lookingI for something sharper than words to throw at each other, we find the United Nations becoming thet subject of bitter attack as a fail- ure and a fruitless waste of time. There is a growing realization< among the peoples of the world< that very little serious and sincere- effort to seek peace is being made by members of the UN. Yet when the United Nations3 Charter was ratified in the happy days of 1945 very few of us didt not hold out great hopes for the success that the principles of thisi international roundtable wouldI bring. On paper the plan for openI discussion of international prob-i lems looked like the final rewardi of years of struggle.I Our long sought after goal ofE "open diplomacy" has proven a' failure. Diplomats have ceased to1 regard UN open meetings as a clearing house for peae proposals. Most countries are very success- fully using the UN as an outlet for a constant stream of propa- ganda., To my mind the time has come] when we have to recognize that diplomacy with an audience won't work. Diplomats can't evolve com- promises and yield sovereignty un- der the watching eyes of millions.- Therefore, it is only natural that nations with something to lose will continually deliver carefully pre- pared propaganda lectures to fel- low UN members who are simul- taneously writing their own re- buttals. The alternative is one men have fought against for decades, but unfortunately its practical chances for success are consider- ably better. Close the doors again. And let the statemen settle our problems without the theatrics. The past has shown us that behind closed doors there is a genuina possibili- ty of international agreement. In fact most of the significant set- tlements the world has seen have been negotiated in secret. . . And if a reversion to secret di- plomacy is impossible at this stage of the game, then at least let's make sure we're winning the bat- tle of lies. The people of the world are watching. -Bob Layton * * * Peace . . . To the Editor: AN ARTICLE of several weeks ago quoted Dean Haywood Keniston's view about the power of the people to prevent war. He said at the Lane Hall peace con- ference: "The decisions are out- side of the hands of the peo- ple . . . " I cannot agree with this view. I cannot agree that the five hun- dred million signatories to the Stockholm Peace Appeal carry no weight in the capitals ofthe world. I cannot agree that the pleas of the Warsaw Peace Con- gress, carrying with them the yearnings of millions and -mil- lions of men and women, have no effect in deciding whether or not BARINABIY there will be war. It does not ap- pear to me that the popular re- vulsion in Europe against a wart with China and against the use of the atomic bomb in Korea did not help to tip the scales away from war. I am unable to con-1 clude that the eight hundred let- ters and telegrams per hour thatt Truman received after the re- verses began in Korea, messages expressing the demand of Ameri- cans to prevent the spread of war -I am unable to conclude they were without effect. Yes, the power for peace lies1 with the people of all countries,, not with a handful of men who can roll back the ocean tide. Peace will vanquish war. Peace is stronger than war, but it is necessary for everyone who loves peace deeply to struggle for it, to make her and his voice heard in every possible way. We cannot leave the initiative to someone, else; we cannot believe that our voices count for nothing, that they are too small, too insigni- ficant. The decisions for war are not yet made. The voices of millions1 of people must be listened to by the governments of the world. War can start only when the peo-, ple are silent. We Americans are not alone in the struggle for peace. I saw the passionate desire of the Czech- oslovakian people for peace this summer. I spoke with students of France, of South Africa, of the Soviet Union, of many, many countries, and I saw that there is one universal struggle going on in the world, and one universal determination: that there will be no war, that the people have the power to prevent war. The outcome depends on no one else but ourselves, the ordi- nary Americans, Italians, Niger- ians, Russians. Who will be blameless if war comes and he or she did not lift a finger to prevent it? Who will be blameless if she or he says: the decisions are outside of my hands, and by silence, acquiesces to a sentence of death? -Myron Sharpe, Grad. MacArthur's Prose.. . ALONG WITH other commenta- tors, we've had occasion from time to time to remark on the odd- ly celestial prose style of General MacArthur. If it will cheer him any in what may otherwise be a bleak period for him, we extend our congratulations on the terse, a typical communicatior he sent to John Foster Dulles approving the State Department's note to Russia on Japan. According to the papers, it said, in toto, "Reply to Malik on the Japanese peace trea- ty question is a honey." The ad- mirable conciseness and simplici- ty of this message, and its felic- itous termination, should not go unacclaimed. Our compliments to General MacArthur. It is exceed- ingly comforting to know that de- spite his long absence from our midst, he retains at least one tiny fragment of our earthy native id- iom. -The New Yorker ON THE Washington Merry-Go Round WITu DREW PEARSON University Museums Lecture. "Animal Life in Michigan During the Ice Age" (illustrated). Dr. Claude Hibbard, Associate Pro- fessor of Geology and Curator of Vertebrate Paleontology i n the Museum of Paleonotology. Wed., Jan. 17, 8:15 p.m., School of Pub- lic Health Auditorium. University Lecture, auspices of the School of Music. "Music and the Eighteenth Century." Dr. Curt Sachs, Lecturer in the Grad- uate School of Liberal Arts, New York University, and President of the American Musicological Soci- ety, Thurs., Jan. 18, 4:15 p.m., Rackham Amphitheatre. Lecture, auspices of the De- partment of Zoology. "The Pro- perties of Cytoplasmic Particles" (illustrated). Dr. M. J. Kopac, Professor of Biology, New York University. Thurs., Jan. 18, 7:30 p.m., Rackham Amphitheatre. University Lecture in Journa- lism: Michael Straight, editor of the New Republic will address a journalism assembly at 4:15 p.m., Thurs., Jan. 18, Rackham Lecture Hall. Subject: "Peace Without Appeasement-Can Liberal Jour- nalism Provide the Answer." Op- en to the public. Academic Notices Political Science 52: Final Ex- amination, January 29, 9-12 a.m. Room assignments as follows: Sections 1 & 5 (Laing)-2231 A.H. Sections 2 & 4 (Filley)-1025 A.H. Sections 3 & 10, (Vernon)--229 A.H. Section 6 (Abbott)-4 A.H. Sections 7, 8 & 9 (Bretton)-1025 A.H. Bacteriology Seminar. Wed., Jan. 17, 10:00 a.m., in Rm. 1520 E. Medical Bldg. Speaker: Dr. Carl Lawrence. Subject: Chemo- therapy of Mycotic Infections. Botanical Seminar: "Studies or callus development and adventi- tious bud production in stem cut- tings. of Lombardy Poplar.' Speaker: Mr. Seymour Shapiro Wed., Jan. 17, 4 p.m., Room 1139, Natural Science Bldg. Chemistry Seminar: Prof. L. O Brockway will discuss "Structures and Bindings in Iodohalides.' Wed., Jan. 17, 4:07 p.m., Roon 1308, Chemistry Bldg. Engineering Mechanics Semi- W ASHINGTON-President Truman isn't likely to move on it, but some of his genuine well-wishers have been dropping discreet hints that the most important thing he can do to bring about national unity is appoint two top Republicans to his cabinet-including possibly Governor Dewey as Secretary of State. Most unfortunate difficulty about the current bickering over foreign policy is the reaction abroad. All over Europe there has been indecision and dismay. The recent foreign-policy controversies came on top of the Korean disaster, also on top of the President's music-critic letter, both of which increased lack of confidence among our allies. Most people don't realize it, but the music- critic letter was published all the way from Africa to Norway. To the man in the street it may have been humorous, but to the Prime Ministers and Foreign Ministers of Europe, it aroused fear that the head of the United States government might lose his temper, not merely over a music critic but over a potential enemy, and plunge the world into war. For these and other reasons, some of the top Democrats in Washington ardent- ly hope for more unity, even if it means surrounding the President with a few Republicans. of State Acheson would be glad to bow out in favor of Dewey in the interest of national unity. Acheson and Dewey have been con- ferring privately for the last six months, and several times Dewey has come to Ache- son's support. Finally, Acheson had pri- vately hoped to leave the State Department, though he does not want to do so under fire. * * * MORSE SAYS NO DURING EVERY recent election, Wayne Morse, the independent, pro-labor Sena- tor from Oregon, has waltzed out into the politial arena to make speeches for his conservative anti-labor GOP colleagues. No matter how much Morse disagreed with those colleagues, he rallied to their support at election time-even making a speech against his close friend, Democratic Sen. Paul Douglas of Illinois, in favor of the Chicago Tribune's candidate, Curley Brooks. Now, however, Morse says "no more." Failure of Republican leaders to put Morse on the important GOP policy committee of the Senate was too much. "They need not think they can get me to campaign all around the country for reactionary candidates," he told friends, "and then discipline me in the Republican conference by not putting me on the policy s 1 .r . I, !, 5 n a' Sixty-First Year Edited and managed by students .c the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Jim Brown............Managing Editor Paul Brentlinger.........City Editor Rtoma Lipsky.... .... Editorial Director Dave Thomas.........Feature Eidtor Janet Watts............Associate Editor Nancy Bylan.......Associate Editor James Gregory......Associate iEditor Bill Connolly............Sports Editor Bob Sandel.... Associate Sports Editor Bill Brenton.... Associate Sports Editor Barbara .tans......... Women's Editor Pat Brownson Associate Women's Editor Business Staff Bob Daniels........Business Manager Walter Shapero Assoc. Business Manager Paul Schaible. ...Advertising Manager. Bob Mersereau........Finance Manager Carl Breitkreitz....Circulation Manager Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches creditea to it or otherwise credited to this newspaper. All rights of republication of all other matters herein are also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan as second-class mail matter. Subscription during regular school year: by carri r. $6.00; by mail, $7.00. tc1 ga n:4 Da tI - - Why did you ever let your Fairy Godfathr see that detective set? You should lave known beffer- It's a safe profession. Anyone familiar with radio, television, and quarter books knows that the population very rapidly is being, decimated by criminals, who meet a So it's obvious. At the present rate of crime and punishment, the land's only surviving inhabitants soon will be-who? .17 l ,