LETTERS FROM1 SCOTLAND See Page 4 L Ailan Daiij fl/I Latest Deadline in the State CLOUDY AND COLDER VOL. LXIII, No. 71 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1952 SIX PAGES S * * * * Russian Reveals Red Infiltratin e 1 ra IOR Investigating Committee Informed Of Widespread Subversive Action WASHINGTON --(A) - A former Russian official told inves- tigating congressmen yesterday that he helped direct a calculated Soviet program to infiltrate Communists into the American govern- ment, educational foundations and other intellectual circles. And now, Igor Bogolepov said, these Communists are barring the entry into this country of hundreds of anti-Communist Rus- sian intellectuals, including himself, who want to "help the American people fight communism." * * * * BOGOLEPOV, who said he was formerly a Red Army colonel and Foreign Office official, testified before a special House commit- MacArthur, Ike Discuss World Peace NEW YORK - P) President- elect Eisenhower and Gen. Doug- las MacArthur discussed across a luncheon table yesterday the problem of how to achieve peace in Korea and the rest of the world. "We discussed the possibility of peace in Korea with particular reference to the world situation, in which, of course, such Korean peace would have to be deter- mined," Eisenhower said after- ward. The meeting stemmed from a' Dec. 5 speech in which MacArthur said there "is a clear and definite solution" to the stalemated Ko- rean fighting. * * * THE President-elect described the luncheon at John Foster Dulles' home as "very enjoyable." MacArthur said it was a "very pleasant reunion with the Presi- dent-elect." Neither Eisenhower nor Mac- Arthur gave any details on the views they exchanged nod did they reveal whether they were agreed on a course to follow to achieve peace. MacArthur told the cluster of newsmen at the Dulles home that the discussion centered around "the problem of peace in Korea and in the world in general." The luncheon was arranged on the initiative of Eisenhower, Hag- erty said. He told newsmen that Dulles extended *the invitation on 'behalf of , the President-elect. -tee investigating tax-free educa- tional and philanthropic founda- tions to determine whether their funds are being used for subyer- sive purposes. Earlier the investigators were told that John Foster Dulles, secretary of state-designate, had heard reports that Alger Hiss was "a sort of fellow traveler" at the time he recommended Hiss for president of the Car- negie Endowment for Interna- tional Peace. This testimony came from Al- fred Kohlberg, a wealthy New York importer and chairman of the American China Policy Associ- ation. BOGOLEPOV told the commit- tee the Soviets started a campaign in the middle 1930s to capture the "brains" of Western intellectuals after Premier Stalin broke away from one of the precepts of Karl Marx. In his earlier testimony about Dulles and Hiss, Kohlberg said he obtained an interview with Dulles early in January, 1947, right after he learned Hiss had been elected president of the Carnegie Endowment. At that time Dulles was one of the trustees. NATO Nations Slash Budget Bus Trips Students have from 1 to 4 p.m. today to sign up in the Administration Bldg. for reser- vations on the Wolverine Club sponsored buses to Willow Run Friday. Stuaii a r t Fenton, '56,ttrip chairman, announced t h a t another bus will leave the Un- ion at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow, in addition to those previously scheduled at 12:15 p.m., 2:45 p.m., 4 p.m. and 5:15 p.m. He said that students who signed up for this bus should buy their tickets today. QuadBoard May Review 13raun CaseI The smoldering case of Beet Braun, '54, has been referred to today's meeting of the Board of Governors of Residence Hails, Michigan House president Jim Friedman, '54, said last night. The affair of the former West Quad Council member was turned over to the Board by the Michigan House Council which voted unan- imously to ask them to recommend an arbitrator for the Braun dis- pute. DEAN OF STUDENTS Erich A. Walter, the Board's chairman, said the Council's letter would be read at today's session but he did not know whether any action would be taken. The move followed Tuesday night's decision by the Quad Council to reject an offer by re- tired Mens' Judiciary president Joel Biller, '53L, that the judici- ary serve as an impartial arbi- trator between Braun and the Council. At their meeting last week, the Inter-House Council decided to allow Braun to serve as an alter- nate representative from Michigan House to the IHC. Presentation of the controversy to the Board coincided with pub- lication of the Council's charges SL Suggests Removing DrivingBan OSA Group To Seek Rules 1 By HARRY LUNN 4 general policy statement rec- ommending removal of the Uni- versity driving ban won unanimous approval by the Student Legisla- ture last night. At the same time legislators authorized three representatives tc serve on a-special committee which Dean of Students Erich A. Walter will set up to formulate a recom- mendation on driving regulations to be submitted to the Board of Regents through the Office of Stu- dent Affairs. EARLIER YESTERDAY Dean Walter invited SL to send repre- sentatives and expressed general approval of the ideas outlined in the proposal passed last night, ac- cording to Ned Simon, '55, who presented the recommendation. SL's proposal will be submitted to the OSA group as a general suggestion for driving regula- tions revision rather than as a final, detailed plan. This less formal step will en- able the group to consider various segments of the proposal rather than approve or disapprove of it as a whole, Simon explained. Simon, Keith Beers, Grad., and a member from the Men's Judi- ciary Council were designated the student representatives. * * * THE THREE-PART SL proposal sets up a plan whereby students would be allowed to drive on cam- pus by obtaining a permit from the Office of Student Affairs. Guest permits would be issued to those who planned to have a car here only a few days. Before permission would be granted, the student would be required to furnish parents' per- mission if he were a minor. All would-be drivers would have to give information in regard to in- surance on the automobile, li- Icense plate number and driver's license number. The second section outlines a plan by which the OSA would des- ignate faculty, staff and other re- stricted parking areas which would be barred to students. A general penalty system is de- scribed in the third section, with suggested punishment on offenses ranging from fines to suspension from school. An all-campus ref rendum which showed a majority of students in favor of revision of present driv- ing rules promted the SL proposal. Concurrently, the OSA has been studying the driving situation here and in other schools. Results of these studies will be merged in the special committee for presentation to the Regents. * * * Approve Big 'Ten CharterI Student Legislature gave for- mal approval last night to a con- stitution for the Big Ten Student Government Association. Set up to "consider, coordinate and integrate" activities and prob- lems common to the Big Ten or- ganizations, the Association will be governed by a Big Ten Student Body Presidents' Council. The Council will elect a presi- dent who would be charged with responsibility for the group's ad- ministrative work. Small yearly levies will be collected from mem- ber groups to support the organi- zation. * * * ANOTHER item on the crowd- i i f i i I i t r E I i L t -Daily-Alan Reid SL CHIEF WILLENS READS LETTER ENDING LECTURE COMMITTEE TALKS * * * * SL Plan Rejected By ecture Bod Proposal Now To Go To Regents; Chances for Approval Held Slight By BARNES CONNABLE Daily City Editor A five-year struggle to overhaul University policies on outside speakers has been stopped cold, it was revealed last night. At an unusually quiet Student Legislature meeting, SL President Howard Willens, '53, told the group that recent talks with the Lecture Committee on liberalizing speakers regulations had broken down. * * . THE ANNOUNCEMENT dashed hopes for eventual approval by the Board of Regents of SL's plan for restricting the University's "- * * An Editoria * 0 0 World News Roundup By the Associated Press BELGRADE, Yugoslavia-Pre- mier Marshal Tito's Communist government cut diplomatic rela- tions with the Vatican yesterday, charging in effect that the recent nomination of Archbishop Aloj- zijc Stepinac torthesCollege of Cardinals was a slap in the face. * * * UNITED NATIONS, N. Y.- Over last-minute opposition of the United States, the UN Poli- tical Committee yesterday called on Franxce to open urgent talks with Morocco on self-govern- ment. TOKYO-A handful of Sabre jets fighting against high odds clashed with the Communist Air Force over Northwest Korea yes- terday and sent one Red MIG crashing in flames, the Air Force announced. LANSING - Gov. G. Mennen Williams yesterday was certified for his third consecutive term as governor as a legal hassle loomed over a $12,500 deposit put down by Democrats in the recount. a mur' * c .. ' - PARIS - 0P) - In the face of against Braun in the West Quad warnings from their military com- newspaper in which the Council manders, North Atlantic diplo- revealed their stand for the first matic and political leaders yester- time. day cut to ribbons the proposed The article charged Braun had 428 million dollar Western defense "objected to the collection of Quad building program for 1953. dues, despite its constitutional- They said such a sum might ity and legality," had "attempted wreck their nations' economic sta- to develop a rift between the var- bility. ious quad councils in the matter Informants reported the request of determining whether the wom- by NATO's supreme commander, en of East Quad Council should Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway, for serve on IHC" and had "ap- 428 millions to spend on building proached a representative on IHC' air bases and ground defense had and asked him to collaborate with been slashed to 210 millions. him to wreck the IHC." PRIVATE MEETINGS:- Pollock Discusses New Lecture Committee Rule This is an epitaph. Hopes for liberalizing the present outside speaker re- strictions were buried as the Lecture Committee this week rejected the Student Legislature plan for a compromise on the issue. Thus an apparently insurmountable barrier now blocks further student efforts toward improving what is an unsatisfactory situation for students, faculty and ad- ministration alike. A dead end in a five-year era of struggle to protect academic freedom in its real sense on this campus has been reached. The situation reached the crisis stage last spring, when' the Lecture Committee entered a new phase of interpretation of the Regents by-law on speakers by barring not only avowed Communists, but also those who were under suspicion of harboring Communist sympathies. The basic criterion was membership in an organization on the Attorney General's list of subversive groups. The Student Legislature, in response to a 2-1 man- date from the student body, last May undertook the task of finding a compromise solution. to the problem. SL on several occasions had gone on record against the speakers regulation. Recognizing that there was no hope for rescinding the by-law, the Legislature attempted to work within the existing framework. We believe that SL in its handling of the issue acted' constructively, rationally and diplomatically. By attempting to secure approval of the Lecture Committee and administra- tion, it utilized the proper channels and deserves credit for exploring every approach, yet refusing to completely vitiate the ideal it was seeking to uphold. The Lecture Committee must also be accorded full credit for giving the plan a fair hearing and cooperating with SL in attempting to work out a settlement. And the Young Progressives, as usual, threw in a monkey wrench by attempting to precipitate a crisis during the crucial stages of the negotiations. But the premises upon which the Lecture Committee, the administration and the Board of Regents base their out- look cannot pass unchallenged. Despite administration defini- tions to the contrary, the issue of academic freedom and freedom of speech is intimately involved in the question of outside speakers at the University. It cannot be denied that the exigencies of the cold " war and the Korean conflict place our democratic ideals under a peacetime stress which they have never before faced. But our system is also endangered by allowing the sphere of free activity and inquiry to constantly shrink under the impact of demagoguery and hysteria. It is further illogical to contend that the problem is solved by officially allowing Communists or "subversives" to address secret meetings. This does not face the basic issues involved. power to ban "subversive speaK- ers from campus appearances. The Legislature's resolution, first passed last May, was de- signed to eliminate a University body's previously determining whether a speaker was likely to violate a Regents' by-law prohib- iting subversive talks. The new plan would have called for a guarantee by the sponsoring student group that the lecturer would obey the i'egulation. Joint Judiciary, with the approval of the University Sub-committee on Discipline, would have acquired the power to determine whether the guarantees had been fulfilled and mete out penalties accord- ingly. IN HIS REPORT, Willens em- phasized that the Lecture Com- mittee in its talks with four stu- dent representatives had given the SD proposal "full and fair con- sideration." However, he felt "it was impossible to bridge the gap" between alternative suggestions of-' fered by Committee members and the intent of the Legislature plan. A letter from the SL chief to Prof. James K. Pollock, Lecture Committee chairman, stating that "further discussion . . . would be of no avail" was passed on by the Legislature unani- mously. A motion by Bob Perry, '53E, to dispatch the letter evok- ed no debate. The letter read in part: "We respect the opinions which were raised questioning the meri~ts of the SL proposal, although the Legislature nevertheless reserves its right to disagree with these statements of opinion." A reaffirmation of SL's position on the speakers issue as contained in its proposal was included in the communication. The resolution is still expect- ed to go to the Regents for con- sideration, but chances for its passage are considered slight on the heels of the impasse reached with the Lecture Committee. Former SL member Ted Fried- man, '53, is presently preparing a brief to be presented with the pro- posal to a meeting of the Board sometime next year. K , , THE BREAKDOWN in the SL- Lecture Committee conferences became evident in a meeting Mon- day, according to Willens. . Most of the Committee mem- bers maintained, he said, that if student organizations did not abide by the Attorney General's list, a change in the existing set-up could not be effected. A compromise was put forth by Prof. William W. Blume, Commit- tee member, Willens said, which called for a guarantee by the spon- sor that the speaker is "not reput- ed to be subversive and there is nothing in his background to indi- cate a likelihood he will violate the standards of the Regents' by- laws." However, Willens reported the suggestion as unacceptable to him- self, Friedman, Dave Brown, '53, and Phil Berry, Grad., student representatives present at the con- ference, The majority of the Commit- tee was described by Wilens as viewing the barring of members of subversive groups from cam- pus speeches as justifiable for the duration of the cold-war. Committee Development Examined By VIRGINIA VOSS With the failure of the Student Legislature's effort to remove from the Lecture Committee its power to review all outside campus speak-. ers, the five-man board will con- tinue to operate under policies it has set during its 17-year exist- ence. Established in November, 1935, to clarify jurisdictional confusion over who should review petitions for speakers, the committee has found it necessary to broaden its administrative functions to in- lude a string of policy decisions made under Regents' criteria. * * * POLICY-WISE, the Lecture Committee was set up in 1935 to administer Regents' policies "with the understanding that (the pol- icies) are designed to serve the educational interests of the aca- demic community rather than the political interests of any party or group." Chief point in the Regents' policy statement was the provi- sion that "timely and rational discussion of topics" would be encouraged "under guarantee that . .. there shall be no vio- latidn of the recognized rules of hospitality no advocacy of the subversion of the govern- ment of .the United States. . ." Prior to the organization of the Lecture Committee, two speaking events-a talk by British Com- munist John Strachey and a de- bate between Prof. Preston Slos- son of the history department and the Michigan Secretary of the Communist Party - were barred by a "Committee on Lecture Pol- icy." Because of partial jurisdiction held at this time by a University vice-president and the managers of University buildings, a need for clarification arose and the Lecture Committee was set up. THE COMMITTEE issued no bannings and made no policy de- cisions from 1935 to 1947. In De- cember of the latter year, it set a precedent of banning openly avowed Communists from talking on campus. This policy held through two bannings in 1948 and was strengthened by one in 1950. In the election year of 1948, the Regents added to their by- laws a provision that "speeches in support of particular candi- dates of any political party or faction shall not be permitted."- Known as the political speakers ban," the by-law aroused heated campus opposition until the Re- gents relaxed it ten months later and gave the Lecture Committee full power to rule on speakers. Operating under broadened jur- isdiction, the committee last spring widened its conception of objectionable speakers to include those who had been named "sub- versive" on the Attorney General's list, whether or not they were openly avowed Communists. By ALICE BOGDONOFF Prof. James K. Pollock, chair- man of the political science de- partment and the present chair- man of the University Lecture Committee, said yesterday in ref- erence to the Committee's recent ruling oncprivate meetings that "a meeting ceases to be private when it becomes a matter of public ag- sitation." The Lecture Committee's new ruling permits campus organiza- tions to sponsor speakers of their choice in private meetings without prior approval of the Lecture Com- mittee. PROF. POLLOCK'S comment came as a result of four questions 1 submitted to the Committee by The Daily. The questions were as follows: 1. May a campus organization disciplinary action be taken against the group?! While Prof. Pollock declined to answer these questions, he explain- ed that the situation would be judged by whether the student group "was genuinely interested in a private discussion or, on the other hand, was trying to use the University for selfish purposes." THE LECTURE Committee chairman pointed to the statement of the University Sub-Committee on Discipline which was issued last May after the Arthur McPhaul dinner investigation. This statement takes the Web- ster's Dictionary definition of the word "private" as "not pub- licly known," "not open." The McPhaul dinner was cited as public and not private because among other reasons a Daily re-