FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, MARCH 18 ____________________________________________________________________________________ m Investigating Committees ESPITE much controversy over congres- sional investigating committees, the damental political nature of these groups been largely overlooked. rhe latent potentialities of a new de- e for furthering private political and rty ends has been uncovered. Innocent n's reputations are being sacrificed to e ambitions of congressional demo- gues, and unless a new 'check' is de- ed there is no reason to believe that is situation will come to an end. case ,in point is the recent attack made n President Truman's corruption investi- or, Newbold Morris, while he was a wit- s before the Senate Permanent Investi- .ons Committee. Although it was never ;e clear what investigators McCarthy, Dn and Mundt were trying to prove, Mor- was indirectly accused of helping to at the government of a large sum of aey and of being a friend of the Com- gists. The nature of the evidence used implicate Morris who is a millionaire anthropist and long one of New York's t forthright and respected political fig- , a leading fighter against municipal uption, was weak and indirect. It was rged that a questionable deal in which e government tankers were purchased transacted in the office of one of Mor- former legal partners and that the kers were found delivering oil to China months before the Korean War broke . Hardly sufficient cause for questioning integrity of so distinguished a public ant. According to New York Times poli- .1 analysts the realities of the situation icate that the senators are not seriously stioning Morris' honesty. Actually he is er fire because he is a Republican who accepted a post from President Truman. is obvious that these attacks will not Morris in his present thankless job. The fare of the nation is being sacrificed for y political motives. Many of the injustices which have ghlighted recent congressional investi- tions parallel to some degree this one. The Red, THERE was a good sized crowd outside the Federal Courtroom last Wednesday waiting to get into the Un-American Activi- ties Committee hearings. It was a varied group--people who had just come from work in the Federal Building, men out of work, a few prosperous looking women, and even a little boy of seven or eight. As they stood there, they talked about the hearings, the Committee, and Coin- munism in Aperica. "It makes me boiling mad," one woman remarked and added, "it's about time people, were alerted to the danger of Communism." Three people talked together apart from the main group: "I know what this business is all about," a woman said, "they want to pass some new laws to control Communism, and the hearings will be evidence of a need for new legislation." To which someone replied "you can't break the Constitution with your new laws." "They can pass laws," she reaffirmed. CURRENT MOVIES. A t The Michigan. . THIS WOMAN IS DANGEROUS, with Joan Crawford, Dennis Morgan and David Brian. WITH, or perhaps despite its glittering ar- ray of "talent," this picture is mildly enjoyable. The story is aout a high class gun moll who, after a taste of the good clean life, decides to throw over her sinful past. She fails to account for a few minor complica- tions-i.e., her old boyfriend and the F.B.I. Calf-eyed Joan Crawford, as the "danger- ous woman," lacks the callousness to be much more than an attractive society ma- tron; actually, this is far from bad. Before the first reel is over the audience finds it- self in sympathy-occasionally bordering on the maudlin-with the woman. The only difficulty remaining is to get her out of her delicate position, and before the picture is over it looks like an almost insurmountable task, requiring all the patience and under- standing an intelligent audience can muter. Derjnis Morgan sems hard-pressed to con- vince anyone that he is either an amorous swain or an efficient medical practitioner. Luckily, be can be ignored without too much trouble. David Brian, on the other hand, is altogether too crooked. Sneers and brusque "shaddups" were all right on Bogart ten years ago; this is ten years later. Still, if time hangs heavy, drop in and see this one. -Tom Arp Inherent Rights "NO INDIVIDUAL and no nation has a monopoly of wisdom or talent. When an individual or a nation becomes self-satis- fied or complacent, it is time, I believe, to be deeply concerned. He who closes his ears to The accusation was made before an in- vestigating committee that Prof. Owen Lattimore was a leading Communist shap- ing State Department policy, but it was impossible to prove that he was a Red or that any of his advice was ever taken by the State Department. Unfounded accu- ations were also made in committees against many competent American diplo- mats-Philip Jessup being an outstanding example. The absence of convincing evi- dence did not prevent the reputations of these men from suffering and the prestige of the State Department from being dam- aged. It is an unfortunate reality that power unchecked will be abused. The congressional committee's power to slander innocent men and advance personal political ambitions must be checked. The ideal check would be the election of more responsible and altru- istic representatives, but the time has not yet arrived when such can be counted on. A code of behavior for congressional com- mittees is now a necessity. Such a code was presented to Congress last year by Senator Kefauver and seventeen other senators. It entailed the following provisions: A person to be accused by a committee member must be aware of the exact nature of the accusa- tion made against him before it is publicly stated. The accused has the right to present defense evidence and have an attorney who can cross-examine within appropriate limits and can file a limited number of written questions to be put to the accuser. Accused persons may put rebuttal statements in the record. This code has yet to be adopted. Recent developments indicate the necessity for such a code. The unscrupulous opportun-. ists in Congress are numerically small, but they are sufficient to shake people's faith in legislative investigations, If congressional investigators are to have a constructive rather than a destructive ef- fect it is essential that a standard of be- havior be set. -David J. Kornbluh Heanngs Just as these spectators, the general public listening to radio recordings of the hearings or reading about them in a news- paper were coming to realize the menace of Communism being revealed by the .Committee. It was a reaction of shock and disgust. They were less certain, however, about how to deal with the Red threat in this country. Indeed, their reactions might have been summed up in the question posed by witness Archie Acaciann to Rep. Jackson (R.-Calif.) as the day's hearings ended: "What are you men doing to fight Communism? When are you going to outlaw the Communist Party?" To which Rep. Jackson could only rather lamely reply "there are resolutions in Committee calling for the outlawing of the Communist Party and we are all in favor of them." If the spectator were any indication, the public was generally disgusted by the wit- nesses who ran for shelter under the Fifth Amendment when quizzed about passports, authorship of union newspaper articles, or anything else that would link them to the Communist Party. They were inclined to be- lieve that refusal to answer indicated fear, and stood as prima facie evidence of Com- munist affiliation. On the other side of the picture, how- ever, there were those who were not Com- munists, Red sympathizers or propagan- dists, but were still critical of the Com- mittee and afraid of its effects upon the concept that an individual is innocent un- til proven guilty. They would argue that the witness had a perfect right through his ideology to seek protection of the Fifth Amendment. They would also argue that a witness has a moral right to pro- tect his ideology. This argument has small effect on most of the public, who seeing these witnesses in action, have little desire to see their ideas fostered and protected. Perhaps this is a denial of liberty, but many feel that a com- promise of this liberty must be made to protect the rest of our liberty from the threat that the witnesses maniflest. However, despite the dictates of public opinion, the hearings themselves should be kept on a higher plain than the prejudices of the general public. Although the Com- mittee members were viciously accused of sanctioning lynching and various other crimes and were generally insulted oby the witnesses, they themselves made remarks which were not in keeping with the purpose of the investigation. When a Committee member tells a witness "we've been insulted by better Communists than you," his remark is entirely out of order. His function is to investigate, not to pass judgment. It should be remembered however, that argument against the committee is caused not because their purpose is bad, but be- cause their methods leave something to be desired. It would be naive to swallow the witnesses' contention that the Com- mittee came to Detroit to destroy union- ism. Most people are convinced that a very real danger exists in Communist infiltra- tion into trade unionism and other spheres of American society. It is a danger that Russell on Russia THE SHREWD English philosopher, Ber- trand Russell has advanced his own pet theory that the present conflict between the United States and the Soviet Union is root- ed in the elemental, indeed tribal, impulse which incites fear and hatred of a neighbor. Writing in the "Atlantic Monthly" on "The Springs of Human Action," Lord Russell disputes the wide-spread assump- tion that the present conflict is ideologi- cal in character. To the contrary, says Russell, it's simply a crude, barbarian clash, motivated by nothing more than fear and hate. ."There are, of course, various reasons we cite for hating Communists," Russell ob- serves. "First and foremost, we believe that they wish to take away our property. But so do burglars . . . and our attitude towards them is very different indeed from our attitude towards Communists. "Secondly, we hate Communists because they are irreligious. But the Chinese have been irreligious since the eleventh century, and we only began to hate them when they turned out Chiang Kai-shek. "Thirdly, we hate them because they do not believe in democracy, but we con-. sider this no reason for hating Franco. "Fourthly, we hate them because they do not allow liberty; this we feel so strongly that we have decided to imitate them." Russell insists that these are not the real grounds for our hatred. He concludes that "even if the Russians still adhered to the Orthodox religion, even if they had insti- tuted parliamentary government, and even if they had a completely free press, we would still hate them"-simply because we fear them and they threaten us. The con- verse is true of the Russians. The old philosopher harbors no illusions about ideological conflicts. To him, it's just a lot of poppycock, the same old, crude, rivalry all over again, the Biblical promise fulfilled. Indeed, he makes some telling points which are rather difficult to refute. But assuming that Russell was serious in his satire (he probably wasn't), it still seems quite obvious that the present world conflict is a struggle for men's minds, a struggle between ideas. Fear and hate are only one part of this ideological friction. The clash cannot be pruned, down to the stark, primal passions. Our dislike of the Russians is not, as Rus- sell implies, a blind, irrational impulse. Ad- mittedly, it has occasion for ridiculous ex- pression. But this dislike is rational in so far as it has its roots in basic differences of opinion on political, economic, and cultural institutions. In the light of ever-increasing Com- munist aggression, the dislike of the Rus- sians generated on this side of the ocean is quite natural and Justifiable. It is ,doubtful whether we would have reason to hate a religious, democratic Rus- sia. But we do have reasons to dislike the totalitarian, Communistic Soviet Union. -Cal Samra INTERPRETING THE NEWS: I ran's oil By J. M. ROBERTS, JR. Associated Press News Analyst THE world oil situation has so changed in the last year that the question of Iranian production has passed almost en- tirely from the economic into the political field. When Iran nationalized her British- operated fields last May there were fears of a world shortage. The industry adopted emergency measures for distribution and starting stepping up output elsewhere. Dis- location was held to a minimum. Now new production, especially in Kuwait,, Iran's neighbor on the Persian Gulf, has taken up the slack, although increases in demand are not fully met. Thus, as he once again breaks off nego- tiations with Western interests seeking a solution to Iran's quarrel with Britain, Pre- mier Mossadegh faces a changing situation. The West is demonstrating that it can do without Iran better than Iran can do with- out its markets. In this latest development, representatives of the World Bank had ought to establish interim operation of the wells pending some later agreement between Britain and Iran. It wanted to use the British technicians who know the operation. Mossadegh said he'd have no return of Britishers with their attempts to influence the country. The bank was willing to let Iran have part of the oil for resale at pegged prices. Mossa- degh apparently wanted the right to cut prices, thereby helping Iran establish her own markets as a weapon in future nego- tiations. The bank said no. So the negotiations collapsed. Now the big questions are how long Mossa- degh will last as premier with revenue from the fields indefinitely postponed, and whether Iran is headed for complete politi- cal chaos and a possible Communist coup. A worried Iranian senate immediately sent a delegation to ask Mossadegh what he intends to do now, and will meet tomorrow to hear the report. The failure of the World Bank negotia- tions will hardly mean that the U.S. effort ON THE Washington Merry-GoRound with DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON-A group of steel executives sat in OPS headquar- ters the other day listening to OPS officials explain a nice new price formula by which the steel companies would get a price increase under the Capehart Amendment. Most of the steel executives looked bored, twiddled their fin- gers, gazed out the window. Reason for looking out the window was not the approach of spring on the mall outside, but because it has become apparent that the steel industry is not going to accept a modest price increase merely un- der the Capehart Amendment but wants a larger price increase above and beyond this to compensate for a pending wage boost. So what the bored looks on steel executives' faces meant was that the American steel industry is heading for one of the biggest strikes the nation has seen in the last decade. Here are the factors which make that strike just about as certain as the setting of the sun tonight: -15% CENT WAGE BOOST- 1. The Wage Stabilization Board is.recommending a wage increase for steel workers of about fifteen and a half cents an hour. This in- crease is based on accepted cost-of-living indexes and the fact that other workers, such as General Motors, have enjoyed regular wage boosts while steel workers have been tied down with a long-term con- tract, 2. The Office of Price Stabilization will oppose any price boost to compensate for this wage increase. OPS will permit a price increase under the Capehart Amendment which probably will average out at about $2.49 a ton. However, the Capehart Amendment covers cost of production increases only be- tween the start of the Korean war and July 1951. It does not include cost of production increases since last July. Therefore, the recommend- ed wage boost is not covered by the Capehart Amendment. That was why steel executives looked so bored when they met with OPS officials last week. They were not particularly interested in the Capehart Amendment increase which is decreed by law and which they knew they were going to get. What they were interested in was a price increase to take care of the expected wage hike..This they knew they were not going to get. What they wanted was not $2.49 a ton increase, but from $6 to $10 a ton price increase. - And they knew they were not going to get this because the matter has been discussed backward and forward inside the Tru- man administration, and such friends of industry as Defense Mo- bilizer Charles E. Wilson and Economic Stabilizer Roger Putnam, with ex-Gov. Ellis Arnall of Georgia, now price administrator, have decided against them. They have decided first that steel profits had skyrocketed so high that there was ample margin to absorb the wage increase. They also decided that an increase in the price of steel would knock a hole as big as a barn-door in the side of price controls, and touch off a new wave of inflation. -SKYROCKETING PROFITS- B EFORE HE LEFT OPS, ex-price Czar Mike Di Salle sent a confi- dential memo to his superiors which read: "Steel industry profits are running far above the industry earnings standard which ESA has instructed me to use as a test for decision on price increases. The excess above that standard is so large that the industry clearly can absorb any reasonably probable wage increase with a substantial margin left over for other cost increases. "If a price increase were granted in spite of the industry's ability to absorb," Di Salle continued, "the most serious consequences for the stabilizatio program must be envisaged." Meanwhile, stabilization officials note a significant and vitally important contrast between the attitude of labor and industry in the steel dispute. Whereas industry leaders have been cool and uncoopera- tive, Phil Murray, head of the CIO United Steel Workers, three times has postponed a strike waiting for the government to reach a decision. This means, according to high-placed stabilization leaders, that industry, not labor, will be striking against the government- if it fails to accept the government's wage recommendations. That's also why, for the first time, there's talk of the government seizing the steel plants, not in a move against labor, but in a move against industry. At any rate, the showdown date is this week end, and if the govern- ment doesn't step in, fires in the blast furnaces will start being banked day after tomorrow. * * * * -WASHINGTON PIPELINE- S ENATOR BUTLER, the new Republican from Maryland, who Mc- Carthy used to defeat Senator Tydings, is still jittery over what the Justice Department will do about the Maryland election scandals. Butler has written a letter to Senate colleagues virtually asking if they egged the FBI into probing his campaign expenditures . . . . Credit Congressman Cecil King with tipping the scales for civil service for tax collectors. His radio appeal, on top of his tax-corruption probe, helped defeat even such powerful senators as George of Georgia and Millikin of Colorado . . . . Real reason why ('OP Senators McCarthy and Mundt went after Newbold Morris so hard was to head off any probe of certain senators. They know that if Morris ever gets subpoena powers some of his fellow Republicans in Congress will look sick. -UNDER THE DOME- SWitness . . .I To the Editor: MUCH TO my surprise, I was called Friday before the special committee investigating the Mc- Phaul dinner. After I was told that everything I said would be kept in strictest confidence (I was told this even though a stenographer was busily transcribing every word spoken), I inquired as to the pur- pose of the investigation. The members of the committee stated that they wanted to find out if any University regulations had been broken. This answer amazed me. For who on campus should know the rules better than those charged with student discipline? If eight days after the incident occurred these people were not certain of any violations, how could they expect me to help them? Further- more, this investigation does seem rather strange. This is the first time I have ever heard of a body set-up to investigate alleged in- fractions of rules. Usually such committees try to discover who violated the rules, not what rules were violated. Obviously this committee is in a quandary. Its members know, for instance, that mapy organiza- tions and individuals rent rooms both in the Union and the League for dinners and meetings at which speakers are heard. These lec- turers, whose names are not sub- mitted to the Lecture Committee for approval, have in recent months expounded on subjects ranging from such seemingly in- nocuous topics as "The Hip Joint Through the Ages" to such con- troversial ones as "Some Histori- cal Aspects of Contraception." Furthermore, many of these gath- erings have not been private. The Michigan League for Planned Par- enthood, for example, held a luncheon to which the public was invited at the Michigan Union on November 8, 1951. Many of these conclaves have even been report- ed in the Ann Arbor News. By not insisting that the speak- ers at thesegatherings be approv- ed by the Lecture Committee, the University has, in effect, abrogated its right. to police those meetings. It has, for all practical purposes, said it was not interested in who was speaking in those rooms and dining halls as long as it was be- ing paid for their use.hBy this at- titude the University has left the door open for anyone toaspeak on campus, even a person who has been banned by the Lecture Com- mittee. Thus it cannot claim that the individual or group responsi- ble for the McPhaul dinner violat- ed any regulations. It seems, therefore, that only two courses are open to the Uni- versity. Either extend the control :f the Lecture Committee to all meetings, both paid and unpaid, or abolish the Lecture Committee. Which will it be, gentlemen? -Ed Shaffer *, * * Confederate Flag . . To the Editor: FRIDAY AFTERNOON a car with a Michigan license plate was driving on State Street proud- ly bedecked with two large Con- federate flags. Evidently the young man driving the car thought this spectacle very clever and fashion- able. But to any decent person, such decoration is about as "cute" as a display of the Nazi swastika, rDAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) symbol of the gas chamber and the storm trooper. The Confederate flag is not an innocent emblem of provincial or geographical sympathies. It is quite specifically a symbol of the ownership of human beings as property--of the slave system, which history has condemned as economically unproductive and morally outrageous. To display and honor this flag keps alive the anti-human values of that system. Newspapers have shown pictures of white American soldiers flying the Confederate flag in Korea. Department stores are selling Con- federate caps, some of which have, been seen on this campus. This 'resurgence of 'sentiment" for a period in which the Negro people was enslaved in the United States is particularly ominous when it coincides with such events as the recent murder of Harry Moore, an NAACP official in Florida. Possibly, the driver of the car and others like him do accept the social theories symbolized by the Confederate flag; even if they do, one would think they would be ashamed to prodlaim it on the streets. -Natalie Davis Elizabeth Douvan Please To the Editor: pLE ASE-PLEASE, stop trying to cram down my throat the fallacy that there are Communists that don't advocate the overthrow of our Government. One of the main avowed objectives of com- munism is the ultimate victory of the proletariat by the overthrow of government-it has been since the Communist Party was formed. Where the toe goes, the heel must follow! Agai--Please, stop draw- ing your monotonous red herrings across the trail; well typified by Abner Greene's statement that the only things threatening to over- throw our Government are the Ku Klux Klan, the Un-AAC, and the McCarran Act. The KKK was a deplorable or- ganization--it should have been, and has been, met with restriction and prosecution. Today the KKK no longer exists as an integrated, strong organization; federal and state authorities have broken its back. There are still isolated, in- dependent incidents; these too are being met with prosecution. Be- yond the expedient of prosecution, the long-term solution for this problem is social enlightenment- not revolution, I am no intellectual; I make no claims to be one. Icame back from a few years service to find these ideals which I had helped uphold, being used as a screen by those who wish to destroy us. Civil liber- ties, rights, and academic freedom are wonderful things, however, like other qualities of our system, such as free enterprise, they may be abused, as well as used. The Se- curities and Echange Commission was the answer to ofte of the abuses of free enterprise; the Un- AAC and the McCarran Act are a partial answer to the abuses- of our civil liberties. One may de- plore their existence, and find in- -dividual instances in their actions and interpretations to criticize; the glaring fact remains; however, they were created by necessity, not by personal ambition. -Robert D. Longwish 0 111 "Whut Are The Odds - Er, Prospects -- O.nNebrasa" XetteP4 TO THE EDITOR The Daily welcomes communications fromits 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 at the discretion of the editors. 3 t1 r 1 {C r Y Prof. only.) Raymond L. Wilder. (MembersI Undergraduate Botany Club. Meeting, Wed., March 19, 7:30 p.m., at Dr. Clov- er's house.Q Scabbard and Blade actives and as- sociate members going to the Informal Initiation Fri., March 21 must make reservations with Ted Daykin, 1923 Geddes, by Wed., March 19. Actives meet at TCB at 1600, 1700 or 1800. Associates please meet at TCB at 1800, Friday. Forum on College and University Teaching. Rackham Amphitheater, Fri., March 21. "How to Use Teaching Aids," 3-4 p.m. Presentation: Ford L. Lemler, Director of the Audio-Visual Education Center. Film: "Accent on Learning." Rackham Assembly Hall, 4-5 p.m. "Planning a Course." Presentation: Al- go D. Henderson, Professor of Higher Education. This is the fourth of five meetings of the Forum, same time and place on successive Fridays. Graduate Sixty-Second Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board of Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Chuck Ellott '.......Managing Editor Bob Keith ..............City Editor Leonard Greenbaum, Editorial Director Ven Emerson .........Feature Editor Ron Watts .............Associate Editor Bob Vaughn ...........Associate Editor Ted Papes.............. Sports Editor George Flint ....Associate Sports Editor Jim Parker .....Associate Sports Editor Jan James ..... ..Women's Editor Jo Ketelhut, Associate Women's Editor Business Staff Bob Miller ...........Business Manager Gene Kuthy, Assoc. Business Manager Charles Cuson ....Advertising Manager Milt Goetz........Circulation Manager