'I THE MICHIGAN DAILY RIDAY, MAY 2, CAMPUS INTIMIDATION: The McPhaul Dinner Investigation "Looks Great!" Tuition Hike (Editor's Note: This is the second series of editorials dealing with the current controversy on student rights) WITHIN TWO HOURS after Arthur Mc- Phaul spoke at the Union, it was an- nounced that a University investigation might be made. This "might be" became cer- tainty the following day when the Student Affairs Committee was named as the investi- gating group. However, when it was learned that a member of the SAC was at the Mc- Phaul dinner, the case was turned over to a special student-faculty committee appoint- ed by President Hatcher. On the Committee were Dean of Stu- dents Erich Walter, Assoc. Dean of Stu- dents Walter Rea, Dean of Women De- borah Bacon, Prof. William Blume of the Law School, who is also on the Lecture Committee and the Sub-Committee on Discipline, Len Wilcox, president of Stu- dent Legislature, John Merrow, chairman of Men's Judiciary and Betty Ohlheiser, chairman of Women's Judiciary. In an- nouncing the Committee's formation, Dean Walter released the following statement: " . The special investigation will be conducted in such a way that no students who may be interviewed need suffer em- barrassment. The inquiry will be directed towards determining whether arity Univer- sity regulation was evaded." The statement indicated that the Uni- versity was not sure that any regulation had been violated. In effect they were trying to find trouble. All they did find was a good chicken-dinner and a dull speech. Then they made trouble. MITATIONS TO the dinner were extend- ed by word of mouth to more than thirty people. Some invitations were general in the sense of "you can bring a friend." The price was two dollars. Thirty-one people at- tended the dinner, 24 of whom were stu- dents. McPhaul spoke informally, attacked the House Un-American Activities Commit- tee and repeated the Civil Rights Congress M USIC] THE FIRST concert of Festival began on a this year's May note of musical charge of United States' genocide against the Negro. Though some people praised Mc- Phaul, one member of the dinner party said that "anyone with an eighth grade educa- tion could have poked holes through the speech." No host appeared at the dinner. McPhaul was introduced by a graduate stu- dent who also collected the money to pay for the meal. He claimed that he had acted out of common courtesy when he saw McPhaul unaccompanied. The person who had contracted for the Union room gave the name Henry Gerard, apparently a pseu- donym. At the meeting were at least seven Young Progressives, one Democrat, one SL member and assorted personalities. The Young Progressives denied that they had made the arrangements. Despite the fact that no host could be found, there were numerous reasons to doubt the justification of an Investiga- tion. The Union rents rooms and serves meals to any group or individual. Speak- ers, too numerous to mention, have ap- peared there without being cleared by the Lecture Committee. The dinner was pri- vate insofar as it was not thrown open to the public. There is no regulation against a student renting a room for a private affair. Nevertheless the investigation proceeded. The atmosphere surrounding the committee was strikingly similar to the Un-American Activities Committeehthen meeting in De- troit. This was heightened by the role of interrogator played by Prof. Blume. Students were faced with two alternatives. Either they cooperated and were appreciated or they hesitated and were literally scorned. The in- timidation was extensive both in the de- fensive position students were placed in and in the general questions that they were ask- ed, the answers to which could be inter- preted at the discretion of the listeners. Other questions such as "Whom do you suspect?" and "Have you seen any suspi- cious characters loitering about?" were stock inquiries. The investigation soon spread out from trying to find if a violation of a rule had occurred to a general investigation of left-wing and Communist activity on cam- pus. People who had nothing whatever to dor with the dinner were called in. Editors of The Daily were summoned to explain its policies. The paper was berated for letting itself be used by agitators when it covered the dinner, and perpetuating its ill effects by printing a letter signed "Henry Gerard, the Eternal Pseudonym." All told, the Com- mittee questioned approximately 20 stu- dents, 14 of whom had been at the dinner. The remaining 10 students could not be discovered. a.f R * A STENOGRAPHER was present through- out the hearings, except when one stu- dent refused to testify if she remained in the room. 126 pages of single-spaced, typed testimony was taken down. Though the transcription was fairly accurate there were often places where the stenographer ad- mittedly put down what she thought was the sense of an answer rather than the specific answer. She also misquoted several witness- es, even going so far as to change a "yes" response to a "no." It was learned a week after the case had gone to Joint Judiciary that witnesses could change any inaccurate testimony. At this time, however, after all the statements had been used there seemed little possibility of a corrected inaccuracy changing a general attitude. This also meant that gross mistatements could be put into the testimony if a student wished to do so. Despite the fact that the witnesses had been told that their testimony would be kept in confidence, Dean Walter later declared that because this is a state University he could not refuse the testimony to any government agency that asked for it. When students were interrogated the actual wording of the "confidence" introduction was such that the committee can do what they want with the testimony. All of the witnesses, however, came away with the impression that what they had said would go no farther than the room they had been in. When it finished its hearings, the In- vestigation Committee reported to Presi- dent Hatcher, but made no public dis- closures. One month later, the President gave the case along with the "confiden- tial" testimony to the ten member Joint Judiciary Council. The 14 students who were known to have attended the dinner, including the reporter covering it for artistry on the one hand, and mediocrity on the other. Of extreme beauty was the sing- ing of Mozart's "Exsultate Jubilate," by Eleanor Steber. This work is virtuoso in every respect. It has a wide vocal'range making beauti. ful use of the lower tones of the voice, and also contains many scale-like passages that are instrumental in character. Miss Steber was perfectly at ease and sang the work with a simplicity and plaintiveness necessary In, giving this work the long melodic flow that it demands. The outstanding orchestral performance was Daphnis and Chloe. Dr. Ormandy is at home in this music, and the Philadelphia Orchestra is at its best when it can display Its fine balance and beautiful tone. I always marvel at the dynamic range of this orches- tra so particularly apparent in the first movement during the long crescendos to the statement of the theme. The Roussel Ballet was also performed well by virtue of delicate handling of the different orchestral choirs. However, this brought out the chief fault of the work; it relies purely on orches- tral effects without distinguishing musical material, thus becoming over-long and monotonous. The contemporary work of the evening was the Howard Swanson "Short Sym- phony." Written in 1948, this work, as the title implies, makes a deliberate point of its conciseness. The themes of the three movements are all derivative; there is particular use. of dance rhythms in the syncopations of the last movement. The trick endings of the last two movements seemed arbitrary, and the theme itself which is treated contrapuntally seemed insufficiently distinguished to merit the attention it received in a monothematic work. However, the work is interesting and deserves more consideration. Miss Steber offered four other arias. Of particular note was "Marietta's Lied" by Korngold. The enc4ore of "Merry Widow Waltz," effective in its.own right, was un- fortunate, placed as it was after the high art of the Mozart motet; which was the musical climax of the evening. -Donald Harris The Daily, were charged with the viola- tion of the Regents' by-law that reads; "No permission for the use of University property for meetings or lectures shall be granted to any student organization not re- cognized by University authorities, nor shall such permission be granted to any individual student." Seemingly, if this rule were violated, the guilty party should be the person who grant- ed the permission to use University property; not the person to whom the permission was granted. The University's interpretation, however, places the blame on the latter, and when the individual who had arranged the meeting could not be found, all who attend- ed the dinner were considered guilty. However, the by-law has not been vio- lated because it does not apply to the Union. Another by-law does. "The use of other University property by students or student organizations shall be in accordance with rules prescribed from time to time by the Vice-President in charge of business and finance, except that the use of University property specifically committed by action of the Board of Regents to the care of other University agencies shall be as prescribed by such agencies." The Union is such a specifically committed property. It is run by a Board of Directors made up of students, faculty, and alumni. Originally the Union did not belong to the University. Several years ago, however, it was transferred to the Regents for income tax purposes. Keeping the Union free of speaker restrictions is necessitated by its business character. The Union has such a large turn-over of non-University affairs that it could not run with any sort of effi- ciency under a screening process. Such or- ganizations as the Lions Club, the Michigan League for Planned Parenthood and Argus Camera Co. would violently object to sub- mitting their speakers for approval. * * * . WHEN THE ILLEGAL charge was placed in the hands of Joint Judiciary, Univer- sity officials were palming off a rotten egg on student government. The Joint Judiciary could determine punishment ranging from no action to expulsion. Members of Judiciary, however, feeling the pressure of the situa- tion, said that they could not see how they could dismiss the charges, that they had to take some action. One of the influences placed on them is that the constitution of the Joint Judiciary is presently up for ap- proval before the Student Affairs Committee. Till now Joint Judiciary has been on a trial basis. The McPhaul case is supposedly a fin- al proving ground of the principle of stu- dent discipline. When the hearings and questioning started all over again, several students were told that refusal to answer ques- tions would be considered conduct unbe- coming a student. The penalties for this in- clude expulsion. Everything that was said was checked against the testimony from the original investigation. The witnesses, however, were not allowed to see their pre- vious testimony until after the hearings. The Joint Judiciary sat for more than two weeks. In that time they questioned sev- eral more students who had had nothing to do with the dinner. They also charged one more student who had attended the affair. One of the ironies of the investigation oc- curred when-Joint Judic held a hearing at the same time as the Honors Convocation. The parents of an honor student came up to attend the Convocation with their son. In- stead they found him facing the Judic on a charge that he had had nothing to do with. Throughout both these investigations the University wrapped a cloak of secrecy about itself. When it was accused of calling in character witnesses, of accepting hearsay evidence, of asking people whether they own- ed a red jacket, there was no official- ans- wer. The Civil Liberties Committee, in an attempt to find the truth to such accusa- tions, asked Dean Walter if they could see the transcript of the testimony. He said yes, if they could get the permission of the wit- nesses. They got the permission of most of them. However, when they presented they signed release statements to Dean Walter, they were informed that University policy would not permit them to see the transcripts. * * * TODAY THE faculty Sub-Committee on Discipline is expected to release the judgments on the accused students. Their wisest move would be to take no action, and try to forget that the sordid mess ever oc- cured. Should they decide to take some disciplin- ary action, the Committee owes it to the campus to give specific reasons for such ac- tions. Phrases such as "conduct unbecoming a student" or "disturbing influence," have no meaning. Should such phrases be the in- dictment against the students it will only add to the suspicions and injustices that have beencarried out so far. One University Dean has stated that he hopes that a clarification of the rules re- garding University property will come out of the investigation. Such a clarification, however, could be achieved more simply and fairly by executive decision than by the drawn out process of accusing students of non-existent crimes. DREW PEARSON: City Bosses Fear Victory By Sen. Kefauver's Forces WASHINGTON-Naturally you can't get any of the Democratic high command to admit it, but the frantic jockeying to sidetrack Estes Kefauver largely boils down to a deep and frenzied fear on the part of the big city bosses of having him where he could control the Justice Department. That's the reason why a lot of northern money is being sent down to Florida, gambling money and otherwise, try to defeat Kefauver with another Southerner - Russell of Georgia. It isn't so much that certain Northern Democrats love Russell; it's that they figure Florida is a key state to set back Kefauver. To understand exactly what this means you have to understand the cardinal strategy by which the Democratic party has won its victories in recent years. This strategy is to control the big city machines. Such control does two things. First, it gives the party a huge block of votes to lead off in any national election; second, the power and patronage of the city machines is more important to some leaders than a national victory. That is why Washington has long witnessed the paradoxical posi- tion of certain Brooklyn, Manhattan and Chicago congressmen who consistently vote for liberal legislation in Washington, then go home and vote conservative on local issues. What this means is that, in return for their votes on national issues in Washington, these con- gressmen and these city machines are given complete power at home. CITY MACHINES AND JUSTICE This complete power, however, depends on a friendly, cooperative Jusitce Department. Without this, city machines cannot safely operate. For part of their campaign revenue frequently comes from gambling and underworld sources; so that any attorney general who gets tough about the Corrupt Practices Act or income-tax prosecutions automatically jeopardizes their business. That was the real reason why Attorney General Frank Murphy was boosted up to the Supreme Court when he got too tough with the big city machines; and it is also why the Democratic leaders of those machines are deathly afraid of a crime-buster named Kefauver. Likewise it is why Governor Fuller Warren of Florida is bitterly opposed to Kefauver. For Kefauver helped expose the huge amounts of gambling contributions which helped Warren get elected -a total of $154,079 coming from Chicago's William H. Johnston, big-shot owner of dog tracks who dominates dog races in the entire state of Florida. Protests over Murphy were somewhat similar to the protests Calvin Coolidge received when his Attorney General, Harlan Fiske Stone, started to prosecute the Aluminum Corporation of America under the Sherman Anti-Trust Act, despite the fact that the head of Alcoa, Andrew W. Mellon, was sitting as Secretary of the Treasury in the Coolidge cabinet. The protests at that time came from big business, and Stone promptly was promoted to the Supreme Court-even though he was a very close friend and former Amherst classmate of Coolidge. BOTH PARTIES COVET JUSTICE DEPARTMENT Ever since shortly after the Civil War, when the once radical Republican Party became the defender of business, its campaign chests have received their main contributions from business. Simul- taneously, the Democratic Party has received generous contributions from certain shadowy figures who support the big city machines. Jimmy Hines, the Tammany leader who later went to jail for his underworld connections, attended the Democratic Convention in Chicago when Franklin Roosevelt was first nominated, and Frankie Costello, the gambling king was with him. This gives an inkling of why certain leaders are so sore at Kefauver. It also gives an inkling of why control of the Justice Department is so important. In the case of the Democrats, they need control of the Justice Department's criminal division which has the power to put people in jail. In the case of the Republicans, they hanker for control of the Anti-Trust division with its power to prose- cute corporations. KEFAUVER PROBED BOTH SIDES The first Democrat since Frank Murphy who really disrupted this unofficial alliance between the Justice Department and the big city machines is the gentleman from Tennessee who is now running for the Democratic nomination. Kefauver had the nerve not only to push a crime investigation through the Senate, but to probe such cities as Chicago and New York just before elections. Kefauver was urged by Democratic colleagues to concentrate on Philadelphia, a city where crime was bad, but which was controlled by Republicans. Instead he began with the President's own home- Kansas City, then moved up to Democratic Chicago, and on to Demo- cratic New York where he seriously embarrassed the ex-mayor of New York, Democrat William O'Dwyer. Ordinarily, party bosses don't shy away from a winner. On the contrary, they rush in his direction. Results from all Democratic primaries indicate that, measured in the terms politicians understand best, hard cold votes, they have a possible winner in Kefauver. For instance, total Democratic votes cast in all primaries prior to this week is 1,417,660, out of which Kefauver has won 1,124,804 or about 80 per cent. Here is the break-down: Democratic votes ...........................1,417,660 Kefauver........................................1,124,804 Michigras..*. To the Editor: HIS YEAR'S MICHIGRAS was an impressive one and the admirable quest for originality pleased one and all. Indeed, at- tainment of an original effect seemed to be the dominant and most praiseworthy keynote of many of the booths. Two notable booths exhibited a most lofty re- finement of taste and a basic hu- manity which attained the heights of sublimity. One booth consis- tently attracted a great and select group of enthusiastic though gen- teel sportslovers with a fascinat- ing game in which one was to throw rings around the heads of seven picturesquely swimming ducks. Unfortunately, the game lost much of its vitality and lustre towards the end of the evening due to the regrettable fact that the ducks, for some strange reason, lost their vigorous sprightliness and soon became far too easy a target for the eager participants. Another booth, a "Hall of Won- ders," kept true to both its name and the glorious quest for origi- nality by its exhibition of live chickens against a wire screen. A unique variety was introduced in- to this act with in-between ses- sions of a most laudable tearing out of feathers with the wild-man's teeth. It was unfortunate that this act also became less effective due to the regrettable indirect propor- tion existing between the number of times the chickens were thrown against the screen and their ori- ginal pristine vitality. In spite of the somewhat inconsiderate lack of cooperation among the animals, both booths triumphed, one re- ceiving first prize, and the other up there with the best of them in monetary acquisition. It is truly admirable that four years of higher education have im- bued our glorious intelligentsia with such a high and moral atti- tude towards the entertainment of their fellow students with such an admirable representation of the value and dignity of life. It is to be hoped that this trend in enter- tainment will continue in all cam- pus activities for the edification of both students and townspeo- ple. -Kenneth L. Becker * * * ~ Apologia .. . To the Editor: UPON RECONSIDERING my previous letter (The Daily, April 25), I am disturbed by its rather harsh tone. For this harsh- ness I apologize. Frankly, I was angry when I wrote it and my girl friend, whose temperament is milder than mine, was not around to bluepencil it for me. I was, and am still, moved deeply when I contemplate the at- titudes and actions of man, the Rebel, in the presence of God, his Maker; of man, in the embrace of illusion, who will not take God at his word; of man, in need of for- giveness now as much as ever in the past, who nonetheless forgets the Father of all Mercies. We cry for righteousness and do not realize that "righteousness standeth afar off ... for TRUTH is fallen in the street" (Isaiah 59:14). -John Vriend ,1,W * IFC Ball ... To the Editor: TODAY, QUITE by accident, it was brought to my attention that the date of the Inter-frater- nity Council Ball has been chang- ed from Friday, May 9, 1952 to Sat- urday, May 17, 1952 because of contract difficulties with the Ralph Flanagan Band. It is now approximately one week before the proposed dance of the ninth of May, and as yet there have not been any notices or ad- OSTENSIBLY, there have been a number of complaints registered I by students unappreciative of the Univesity's decision to hike tuition rates (by $15 in non-professional schools and by $5 to $75 in other schools). To the sentimental alumnus who got by with $10 per semester back in 1875, a $90 or $350 tuition fee would be regarded as pre- posterous. But before the disgruntled initiate a pamphleteering campaign, it might be wise to consider the University's irrevocable position. No doubt it is painful for University officials to request a raise in tuition. The consequences of the move could easily affect next fall's enrollment. And, perhaps it will inflict some hardship on students in the lower income brackets. The Administration, however, had no choice in the matter. Haunt- ed by increased salary scales, increased cost of fuel, maintenance, and other supplies, University officials were faced with a grave deficit for the 1952-53 school year. The $1,600,000 slash in the University operating budget by the economy-minded legislature left University officials with the prospect of lowering the proverbial standards ascribed to this institution. Jack- ing-up tuition rates was the only reasonable, though unfortunate, way of maintaining these standards. Better to protest inflation. -Cal Samra ettei/ TO THE EDITOR The Daily welcomes communications from 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 at the discretion of the editors. mittee should be quickly remedied. The students should have been informed of the corrected date of the dance as soon as the date was changed. This irresponsibility on the part of the committee has caused confusion and chaos among the University students who had planned to attend the dance on the publicized date. May I suggest that in order to rectify this condition immediate advertisements should be posted around campus concerning the corrected date of the Inter-frater- nity Council Ball. --Donald Ferguson 'Monstrous' Germans . . To the Editor: AS ANYBODY will readily admit the creation of a Western al- liance with a US-Western Euro- pean army as a necessary manifes- tation constitutes one of the most important political tasks at the present time. Many sincere poli- ticians in this country as well as in Europe are working on its re- alization, and most of the people of all countries concerned are will- ing to contribute to it, even if it may mean great sacrifices,-any- thing, to prevent another war. The prerequisite of such an alliance is mutual trust and good will, in in- ter-human and international rela- tions. Does it seem necessary or timely to portray the Germans in "Afri- can Queen" in such a monstrous stereotyped manner, notwithstand- ing the fact that such types may have existed? At,present however Germany is engaged in the task of moral as well as material recon- struction. Unfortunately these ef- forts receive ever so little publici- ty. Surely the superb acting of Katharine Hepburn and Humph- rey Bogart in itself called for the Academy Award; the war-scenes, far-fetched and left-overs of war- time propaganda seemed to us rather to distract than to add to the quality of the picture. Furthermore, the influence of such a film goes beyond the Ameri- can sphere since American movies constitute about 50% of all pic- tures shown in Europe. Charac- terizations of such a nature, even if meant to be comical, are most influential and are bound to uh- dermine gradually developing feel- ings of mutual trust. We did not read or hear com- ments in this regard, or did your critical statement of the story be- ing "weak" imply this? --Dr. Magdalene Denzel -Dr. Marlies von Hattingberg u1l 'The Male Animal' TONIGHT SL Cinema Guild will show the motion picture version of "The Male Animal." And there is something ironical about it. The story revolves about a University professor who has casually mentioned to the editor of the college magazine that he intends to read a letter to his class. The letter had been written by a convicted and executed anarchist who died for an ideal. The young editor writes an editorial in which the academic interest of the professor is represented as a step in a crusade for serious play, and today at the University of Michigan it is even funnier and even more serious because it is so close; be- cause 1940 and 1952 are not after all so different; and because we too much laugh at our predicament since we can do noth- ing else. The movie that will be shown tonight is worth seeing, partly because it is a good picture and partly because it seems that on University property the only way we canl hear a message is in a comedy. Sixty-Second Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Chuck Elliott ........Managing Editor Bob Keith .................. City Editor Leonard Greenbaum, Editorial Director Vern 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 1