PAGE FOUe t THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNE~SDAY,. APRIL1. 1934~ 1V.i4 l 1, A.70r An Editorial THE STUDENT BODY scored a significant victory in the creation of a University Vice-Presidency for Student Affairs. The long-advocated post fills an obvious gap in the administrative hierarchy by coordinating the complex field of non- academic student life in the face of higher enrollments and developments in student activities. By placing the important offices of Ad- missions and the Registrar under this cen- tral authority, recognition has been granted to the necessity of strengthening the Uni- versity's program of attracting outstanding high school students. In addition, coordi- nation of the International Center with the other student areas stresses the importance of bringing this sector out of its isolation. Although the new Vice-President, James A. Lewis, is not well-known to most students and faculty members, we are confident that the University community will be given faithful service by Lewis in his new position. The exact organization of the new office remains to be worked out on Lewis' return from Cambridge. Since this will require pull- ing together several as yet uncoordinated of- fices, the job will not be easy and we urge that Lewis be given cooperation from every corner of the University in undertaking it. Similarly, the Student Affairs Vice-Presi- dency itself will be a difficult role to fill; There have been and will be again large problems arising from the conflicting inter- ests of various student groups, between stu- dents and the faculty and between students and the administration. For that reason, it has been stressed frequently that the Vice- Presidency must serve as a channel of stu- dent thought and opinion to the President and the Regents and, in turn, must relate University policy to the student body. That too much stress may not be placed on the work that lies ahead, it must be emphasized that the creation of the new post has already begun setting things in order. The Student Affairs Study Commit- tee will be able to study the proposed Student Executive Committee In context of the reorganization, providing the back- ground which has been so vitally needed The Student Affairs Vice-Presidency at present is just another title, if an encourag- ing one. It will shortly become more than this and we hope that as it develops, the ree- ognition of student responsibility will grow correspondingly. -The Senior Eidtors: Harry Lunn, Erick Vetter, Virginia Voss, Mike Wolff, Alice B. Silver, Diane D. AuWerter and Helene Simon The GOP & Indo-China WITH THE recent declaration by Vice President Nixon that American troops might have to be used in-Indo-China in or- der to retain this strategic nation within the free world's sphere, Republicans have obviously been struck with a new threat to their chances in the mid-term elections. Though subsequent statements by Presi- dent Eisenhower and Secretary of State Dulles have attempted to minimize the possibility of U.S. intervention, recent events and a realistic insight deem other- wise. Red advances in Dienbienphu and yesterday's report by an NBC newsman that France was negotiating a coalition government with the Communists further imperils American interests. This, coupled with the inescapable complexities of solv- ng the Indo-Chinese war, makes it diffi- cult to forecast any other kind of Ameri- can policy except entering the fighting it- self. It is quite apparent that if American in- tervention does occur it will be jdstifiable and not a wanton, erratic move. However, this point probably would have little effect in minimizing the people's dissatisfaction with the present Administration for having unavoidably involved us in any Indo-Chinese conflict. But if the Republican Administration thus reaps disfavor, they sowed the seeds them- selves in the last campaign. One can not now avoid thinking back to 1952 when Eis- enhower chiefs "shrewdly" implanted in the voters a dread of the Korean War and asso- ciated with its birth and continuance the esgence of the Democratic party. The impression was given that the Ko- rean War, or any war, was preventable and that it only required the miracles of - a miraculous Republican Party to end it. Perhaps now, when they are in contact with the actual threats of Communism and can appreciate the forces that bring world disturbances, Republicans will realize that their supposed almightiness is impotent in the face of dangers presented by Russia. And it might be hoped that they can at last re- alize how politically-expedient stands on foreign policy can be so destructive to a bad- ly needed unity behind America's actions. -Paul Ladas TODAY AND TOMORROW: Mr. Nixon By WALTER LIPPMANN W HILE MR. NIXON'S speech to the Am- erican Society of Newspaper Editors had much of the appearance of being a cal- culated indiscretion, I find it hard to believe that it was calculated. For his remarks were an assortment of ideas and attitudes-things he learned on his trip, hypothetical ques- tions he has heard discussed-which mani- festly have not been added up to make any- thing that could be called a considered and coherent policy. How, for example, are we to reconcile what he seemed to be saying to the edi- tors on Friday about dispatching troops If the French withdraw with what he said in his big television speech on March 15, a month ago: "Since our former policy failed we then asked ourselves the question: What kind of a new policy should we announce? And in determining what that policy should be we decided to find out what the men in the Kremlin were up to. "We found that militarily their plan ap- parently was to destroy us by drawing us into little wars all over the world with their satellites, however, where they, themselves, were not involved, and where, due to our inability to bring to bear our great super- iority on the sea and in the air that we were unable to win those wars . . . we decided that we would not fall into these traps." .. . that we would not "let the Communsts nibble us to death all over the world in little wars." What has happened in the past month to cause the Vice President to announce that he is prepared to eat his own words? The assault on Dienbienphu and the military re- ports from Gen. Ely and Mr. Pleven have brought a sudden realization in Washington that the French government is determined to try to negotiate an armistice. Suddenly there has been a reappraisal of an old and not greatly changed situation. The notion, always an illusion and always fabricated, that there was a plan to win the war-and that we were backing that plan-has sud- denly given way to a sense of what has really been going on in Indo-China. When Mr. Nixon made his television speech, the whole Indo-Chinese policy in. Washington was based on a false estimate of the situation in Indo-China. That was why he could say in March that "during the one year of the Eisenhower adminis- tration in not one area of the world.have the Communists made a significant gain," and to promise that the new policy was working so well that there would be no need of "having more Korean-type of wars all over the world." Now that the estimate has been discredited, and with it the policy based on it, a radical revision of policy has become necessary. That is what Mr. Dulles has been laboring at-laboring under the greatest difficulties at home and abroad. A new policy cannot be improvised suddenly in so enormously complex a situation and under such very fluid conditions. A new policy can be ar- rived at .only gradually by careful and as- tute testing of what is for American diplo- macy a very new ground. Any idea that a new policy was formulated and decreed in the National Security Council one fine day recently, or that Mr. Nixon has announced that policy, cannot be true, The more one searches Mr. Nixon's re- marks, the more obvious it is that there is no policy behind them. Determination to oppose the domination of Southeast Asia by the Communist powers is not a policy: it is an objective, necessary and desirable, which requires a workable, policy to achieve it. Making up one's mind that under cer- tain circumstances we might have to dis- 's Remarks patch forces to Indo-China is not a policy. It is an element in the implementation of a policy which has' yet to be formed. '4 * * THE EVIDENCE for saying that Mr. Nix- on's remarks are not a new policy is that he begged all the difficult questions to which a policy would have to give the answers. "More men are needed," he said, "they will not come from France which is tired of the war, as we were tired of Korea." The men should come "from Viet Nam, Cambodia, Laos, particularly Viet Nam." But besides the difficulty of training the men, about which the French are slow and unrespon- sive, there is the "more difficult" problem of inducing the Viet Namese "to fight with more spirit." Some say that they would fight with more spirit if they were fighting for independence. But they "lack the abil- ity to conduct a war by themselves or to govern themselves." Here Mr. Nixon was close to the crucial question which a policy will have to ans- wer. If the Viet Namese "lack the ability to conduct a war and govern themselves," and since, as Mr. Nixon said, "if the French withdraw, Indo-China would be- come Communist-dominated within a month, how do we resolve the dilemma? The Indo-Chinese must have indepen- dence in order to fight but they cannot conduct a war and govern themselves alone. There is no way out of this dilemma if we ask ourselves the unrealistic question-how will the Viet Nam carry on the war if the French withdraw? There is no aiswer to a question of how to continue the war based on the hypothesis of a French withdrawal from the war. The French are the government and they are the army in Viet Nam. Were they "to withdraw" the Viet Namese army would con- sist of battalions without effective comman- ders much above the regimental level. There would be no civil authority at the national level. Any notion that the French could "go out" and that we could "go in"'-with the civil war being fought-is an hallucination. Such a change-over would be an enormously ela- borate and long operation. For all practi- cal purposes the Americans could not go into Indo-China unless the French remain. For it is the French who provide the gov- ernment and the military power in all the places where we could go in. They are, moreover, we should not forget, the sov- ereign power. For this fundamental reason, which I believe cannot be effectively disputed, the only military policy we can have in Indo- China is one founded upon collaboration with France. It will have to be the will- ing collaboration of France. That willing collaboration cannot conceivably be won if we go to Geneva, as Mr. Nixon appears to want, determined in advance not to negotiate about the armistice we promised to go there to negotiate about. I say this though I share his view that partition and coalition are not acceptable solutions. That is very different, however, from try- ing to rule out in advance any negotiated settlement. To do that would be mischievous indeed, For Mr. Dulles would have to go to Geneva with the impression fixed all over the world that the United States is opposed to a ne- gotiated armistice. Then the psychological victory at Geneva is guaranteed in advance to the Communists. They cannot lose. Our talkative politicians will have presented them with an impregnable position from which to isolate us from all the peoples who are yearning for peace in Asia, and from our allies who want peace too. (Copyright, 1954, New York Herald Tribune, Inc.) (Continued from Page 3) 'ette 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. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Pearson Program,. . To the Editor: THERE is a fairly good probabil- ity that Drew Pearson's radio program will be dropped unless there is a sufficient show of in- terest. If you feel that Drew Pear- son should continue being heard, write radio station WHRV Onn Arbor and make your opinions known. -Blue Carstenson * * * Cochran Speech.. . To the Editor: YOUR Michigan Daily again ap- pears to be guilty of the irre- sponsibility for which it has been' charged many times. I refer to author Frymer's edi- torial "Comunism vs. the IFC." I levy the charge for the following reasons: 1. Contrary to the connotations of the headline and the body of the editorial, Mr. Cochran specifi- cally stated in his speech that he did not mean to imply that the the fraterntiy world was under di- rect attack by the Communist Par- ty-either in or out of the N.Y.r educational system. 2. The quotation "ability to ac- cept responsibility, the art of self discipline, and the basic accept- ance of divine guidance" was tak- en out of context and, in Frymer's article, was given a new meaning. Mr. Cochran was speaking of these, ideals as worthy goals for any man or woman-affiliate or indepen- dent, college student or alumnus. He at no time indicated that a na- tional organization was the only way to achieve these goals. 3. Independent Frymer was not in attendance at the banquet when Mr. Cochran delivered his speech. And since Mr. Cochran's speech was not printed or recorded in its The discriminating individual is not fooled by the vulgarhcharges of a Senator whose methods are proclaimed immoral by one of the leading bishops of his own Church; he is not deceived by reckless charges of disloyalty levied against honest civil servants whose records have been cleared of those charges as much as eight times. But such a person recognizes that these an- tics stem from a real fear of a dangerous movement, a movement which is of itself a threat to aca- demic freedom. Our form of gov- ernment allows us to study Marx, Lenin, and Stalin objectively; the Soviet form refuses to expose its citizens to capitalist thought for fear of "losing the revolution." Academic freedom, Mr. Sharpe, does not sanction the establish- ment of agipunti. Most of us, if we ever got time to oppose the drivel LYL keeps issuing the press, would prefer that you keep your cause separate from ours. -Richard Allen LaBarge * * * LYL Pamphlet. .. To the Editor: OBJECTIVITY is a goal toward which most political analysts say they are striving. I am in- cluding professionals, professors, students, and even members of the Labor Youth League. We all (and I am arbitrarily including the Lea- gue here) like to feel that we can look at a situation with both eyes open, and arrive at conclusions whcih are consistent with the facts. Those of us with conviction are. not afraid to let our conclu- sions become known. At this point, I am withdrawing the LYL from the category of "We all." Their pamphlet "Stop Mc- Carthyism Now," is a fine example of the type of education which of Appointments, 3528 Administration Bldg., Ext. 371. SUMMER EMPLOYMENT Russell Kelly Office Service from Detroit will have a representative at the Michigan Union on wednesday from 1 to 5 p.m. in Room 3A to interview all students interested in Detroit area summer clerical employment. The Bureau of Appointments weekly Summer Placement Meeting will be held on Wednesday, 1-5 p.m., Room 3A, Michigan Union, for all students in- terested in camp, resort, business or industrial positions this summer. Lectures University Lecture, auspices of the Department of Speech, "Pearls of Great Price," Dr. Charles L. Anspach. President, Central Michigan College of Education, Rackham. Lecture Hail, Wed., April 21, 4 p.m. University Lecture. The Department of Sociology will present Prof. David Riesman of Johns Hopkins University in a discussion of "Planning Research on Our Aging Population." Dr. Ries- man is the author of The Lonely Crowd, and Faces in the Crowd. The lecture will begin at 4 p.m., Wed., April 21, in the Rackham Amphitheatre. Everyone I cordially invited to attend. Lecture Series,third and last lecture of series "Pivotal Concepts in Philoso- phy of Art" will be held Thurs., April 22, in Kellogg Auditorium at 8 p.m. Susanne Langer will speak on "Living Form." The Thomas Spencer Jerome Lec- ture, "The Golden House of Nero," by Axel Boethius, Professor of Classical Archaeology and History at Goteborg University, Sweden, Fri. April 23, 4:15 p.m., Rackham Amphitheater. Academic Notices Geometry Seminar, wed., April 21, 7 p.m., 3001 Angell Hall. Mr. W. Al- Dhahir will present "A Theorem Con- cerning a Desarguesiai Property of the Pappian Configuration." History 12, lecture section 2. Hour bluebook test 10 a.m. Fri., April 23. Sections 16 and 17 meet in 2054 Nat- ural Science; all other sections in Audi- torium A, Angell Hall. Course 402, the Interdisciplinary Sem- inar in the Application of Mathematics to the Social Sciences, will meet on Thurs., April 22, at 4 p.m. in 3409 Mason Hall. Mr. Charles Hubbell of the Department of Sociology will speak on "A Molecular Model of Social Inter- action." Seminar in Applied Mathematics will meet Thurs., April 22, at 4 in 247 West Engineering. Speaker: Mr. K. M. Siegel of WRRC. Topic: "Bounds on Cylin- drical Functions." Fisheries Seminar. David C. Chand- ler, Professor of Zoology, will discuss "Food Chains in Streams," Thurs., Apr. 22, at 7:15 p.m., in 1116 Natural Science Building. Doctoral Examination for Russell Eu- gene Bidlack, Library Science; thesis: "The University of Michigan General Library: A History of its Beginnings, 1837-1852," Wed., April 21, 303 General Library, at 4 p.m. Chairman, R. H. Gjeisness. Doctoral Examination for Elsie F. L. Edmondson, English Language and Lit- erature; thesis: "The Writer as Hero in Important American Fiction since Howells," Wed., April 21, 2601 Haven Hall, at 7:30 p.m. Chairman, J. L. Davis. Concerts Student Recital. Gloria Soice. So- prano, will be heard at 8:30 Wednes- day evening, April 21, in the Rackham Assembly Hall, presenting a recital in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Master of Music degree. She will sing works by Mozart, Reger, Mah- ler, Cortese, Poldowski, Gibbs, and Menotti. and her program will be open to the general public. Miss Soice studies voice with Chase Baromeo. Student Recital. Sylvia Biorn-Hansen, pianist, will play a recital at 8:30 Thursday evening, April 22, In Audi- torium A, Angell Hall, in partial ful- fillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Music. A pupil of Benning Dexter, Miss Biorn-Hansen has planned a program to include works by Bach, Schumann, Hindemith, De- bussy, and Chopin. It will be open to the general public. Exhibitions Museum of Art, Alumni Memorial Hall. Accessions 1953, Paintings by Jo- sef Albers, Original Drawings for Book Illustrations, all showing through May 2. Hours: 9-5 weekdays; 2-5 on Sundays. The public is invited. Events Today Freshman Engineering Council will hold its weekly meeting tonight at 7:30 p.m., in 1042 East Engineering Bldg. All committee reports are due. The meeting is open to the public. Annual Joint Meeting of the Wom- en's Research Club with the Research Club and the Science Research Club tonight at 8 in the Rackham Amphi- theater Subject: The Nature of Re- search in the University. Newman Graduate Club. Get-togeth- er and refreshments this evening at 8:30 p.m. in the Newman Center. Pershing Rifles. All Pershing Rifle- men report to T.C.B. in uniform at 1925 hrs. Bring gym shoes. Attendance is required as training for the bivouac is going to be covered. Lydia Mendelssohn Box Office will be open from 10 a.m. until 5 p.m. today for the sale of tickets for the Depart- ment of Speech production of Eugene} Hochman's 1953 Hopwood award win- ning play, VERANDA ON THE HIGH- WAY, which will be presented at 85 p.m., Thursday, Friday and Saturday, April 22, 23 and 24, in the Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre. Tickets are available for $1.20-90c-60c with a special student rate of 50c in effect opening night. All seats are reserved. Le Cercle Francais will meet tonight at 8 p.m. In the Michigan League. Spotlighting the program will be a skit on "French Television." Songs, games, and refreshments for all will complete the evening! Everyone wel- comes Izfa Meeting. The Intercollegiate Zionist Federation of America' will meet tonight at t in the Hillel Recreation Room, immediately after the Israeli Dance Group. Elections will be held, and the coming inter-chapter pienio with the Wayne Chapter will be dis- cussed. It is urgent that all members attend. Those who are not members, but interested, are welcome. Wesleyan Guild. Matin worship. 7:30- 7:50 a.m., Wednesday, in the chapel. Mid-week refresher tea in the lounge, 4-5:30 p.m., Wednesday. Playback of the Gilbert and -Sulli- van recordings of "Sorcorer" and "The- pis" tonight at 7 p.m. in the Audience Room of WUOM. All who want records please come to listen. Roger Williams Guild. Tea and Chat, this afternoon, 4:30 to 6:00. Industrial Relations Club, 7:15 p.m., Student Lounge, School of Business Administration. An important business meeting will be held to elect officers, discuss constitutional changes, plan for the SL movie, and prepare for the next speaker. Coffee and donuts will be served. All students who will be manning ticket booths the two nights of Michi- igras may pick up their complimentary passes in the Michigras Office in the basement of the Union on Wed. or Thurs., April 21 and 22, from 2 to 5 p.m. Please bring your post-card re- minder. These passes must be picked up in person. All Michigras Ticket Sellers in Cam- pus residences must turn in their mon- ey and unsold tickets by Thursday, April 22, at 7 p.m. Any seller who fails to turn In his. unsold tickets will be held personally responsible for the money. Coming Events Psychology Club. Dr. Schneider, clin- Ical psychologist for the Bureau of Psychological Services, will, speak on "Projective Techniques and 'Theory" on Thurs., April 22, at 7:30 in the League. The room will be posted on the League bulletin board. Refreshments will be served. Phi Sigma Society. Program for Thurs., April 22, to be held in the Rackham Amphitheater, 8 pm. Dr.. Richard L. Weaver, Department of Con- servation, School of Natural Resources, will speak on "Developing a State Re- source Use Program." Subject will be illustrated with colored films. Refresh- ments. Open to the public. The 48th Annual French Play. Le Cercle Francais will present "es Dame aux Chapeaux Verts," a modern comedy in one prologue' and three acts, by Albert Acremant, on Wed., April 28, at 8 p.m. In the Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. The Literary College Conference Steer- ing Committee will hold a meeting on Thurs., April 22. at 4 p.m. in Dean Robertson's office. Deutscher Verein-Kaffeestunde will not meet on Thursday. The next meet- ing will be on Monday as usual, The International Tea, sponsored by the International Center and the Inter- national Students' Association, will be held Thurs., Apr. 22, from 4:30 to 0 o'clock, third floor, Rackham Building. Floor show by Latin-American students. Scabbard and Blade. Meeting Thurs., April 22, 1930 hours, 112 North Hall. La p'tite causette will meet tomor- row afternoon from 3:30 to 5 p.m. ii the Michigan Union Cafeteria. You'd be amazed at how quickly your French will improve by. attending this inform- al group. Everyone welcome! Roger Williams Guild. Yoke Fellow- ship meets Thursday morning at 7 a.m. in the Prayer Room, Episcopal Student Foundation. Stu- dent Breakfast at Canterbury House following 7 a.m. service of Holy Com- munion, Thurs., April 22. Christian Science Organization. Tes- timony meeting Thurs., Apr. 22, at 7:30 p.m. Fireside Room, Lane Hall. All are welcome. Business Education Students and Those Interested in Becoming Business Teachers. The coffee hour scheduled for Thursday afternoon, April 22, has been postponed until Tues., May 4. Sixty-Fourth Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Harry Lunn..........Managing Editor Eric Vetter.. . ...........City Editor Virginia Voss.........Editorial Director Mike Wolff......Associate City Editor Alice B. Silver. Assoc. Editorial Director Diane D. AuWerter. . .. Associate Editor Helene Simon........Associate Editor Ivan Kaye.............Sports Editor Paul Greenberg.... Assoc. uports Editor Marilyn Campbell......Women's Editor Kathy Zeisler....Assoc. Women's Editor Chuck Kelsey ......Chief Photographer Business Staff Thomas Treeger......Business Manager William Kaufman Advertising Manager Harlean Hankin..,.Assoc. Business Mgr. 1Wiliam Selden .......Finance Manager Anita Sigesmund..Circulation Manager Telephone NO -23-24-1 + MUSIC + Rackham A uditorium . Stanley Quartet: Gilbert Ross and Emil Raab, violins; Robert Courte, viola; Oliver Edel, cello; with Clyde Thompson, string, bass. IT SHOULD be no surprise to those ac- quainted with the work of the Stanley Quartet to say that last night's concert was a model of distinguished programming and performing. The unanimity of attack, tonal balance, and phrasing was of the sort at- tainable only by long and conscientious re- hearsal-and by performers of considerable ability as soloists. The program followed the usual patern of-Stanley concerts-one Mo- zart or Haydn work, one contemporary work, and one Beethoven quartet. The Mo- zart Quartet in D major, K. 575, which open- ed the program, is a work of the compos- er's maturity, and is characterized by con- siderable boldness, especially for the pe- riod, in the writing for the three lower in- THE SPANIARDS who returned from So- viet prisons earlier this month have given us important and illuminating information regarding the present distribution and na- ture of slave labor in Moscow's realm. Slave labor camps, they report, range from Lenin- grad area in the west to Magadan in the far east, from Norilsk in the far north to Karaganda in central Asia. The returned Cr~ninrl ofer ^nTYa s al -ormi struments. That is, the first violin shares a great part of the melodic material with his partners. It is a tribute to the quality of the performance that in the passage where ideas were tossed between the instruments, the line was preserved with as much clar- ity as it would have had if played by a single performer. The Milhaud Quintet No. 2 (with string bass), which followed, is a work that grows on one with repeated hearings. The thick- ness of the texture almost conceals at times a very straightforward tunefulness that is most engaging. Milhaud here, as in his other works, makes his points with a minimum of fuss, and stops at exact- ly the right place. The moody third move- ment, a sort of exe'cise in sonorities with a single line sounding above block chords iii the other instruments, and the lively final movement are perhaps the most at- tractive. The string bass is used most of the time for rhythmic punctuation and the peculiar "lift" which only a string bass pizzicato can give to an ensemble. Clyde Thompson joined the Quartet in a truly fine performance. The concluding work was the Quartet in A minor, Op. 132, by Beethoven, one of the supposedly inscrutable "last" quartets of this composer. Though not, perhaps, as im- mediately attractive as many of Beethoven's quartets, much of it is forthright and vig- orous, and has a strong expressive appeal. The only particular faults in the perform- entirety, it appears almost incon- ceivable that newsman. Frymer was qualified to make such a criti- cal analysis. With all of your talk of freedom of the press, it seems that you have failed to keep abreast of at leastI one of the modern concepts in this area. This concept, often referred to as the Hutchins' Commission Theory, states that freedom of the press involves more than an un- fettered, libertarian right. It in- volves a social responsibility to provide its public with accurate and, authoritative information and comment. This responsibility applies with equal vigor to the news and edi- torial pages. -James H. Walters Executive Vice President Interfraternity Council Separate Causes . , , To the Editor: they so deplore. Calculated to play upon the credulity of those easily swayed by stump-orator techni- ques, the pamphlet fails on several counts. The LYL asks, "Are we to be able to hear labor's answer to the problem of unemployment and economic misery or must the dic- tums of the NAM become our text." Nowhere did I find a hint of what that answer might be. What is the League afraid of? Why can't they call a spade a spade? The LYL says "Once united, de-' mocratic America is far stronger than the forces of McCarthyism. It is against that unity that Mc- Carthyism has directed its most formidable weapon-the Big Lie that 'Communism menaces Amer- ica'." Perhaps this quote from the Communist Manifesto will help set them straight. "The Communists disdain to conceal their views and aims. They .4 .1 THE PURPOSE of a student is to openly declare that their ends can investigate ideas that they may be attained only by the forcible be better understood by him. When overthrow of all existing social a person ceases to have under- conditions." standing as his prime motive, he Is this democracy? Are we to is no longer a student or entitled consider a desire for a forcible ov- to the protection of academic erthrow as no menace at all." freedom. He who forms an action Until the LYL can put their group to agitate for the adoption programs on the table they will of a given ideology is in a poli- have to be content with trying to tical sphere, not an academic one. fool some of the people, some of Students at the University are the time. taught the pros and cons of Marx- -John Shepherd, '56 ist thought in such courses as1 Philosophy 63, History 140, and. Political Science 152; likewise, a PRIME Minister Nehru is right student may join the campus-rec- and wise in refusing to recog- ognized Karl Marx Society if henizeteegality ofsthe Communist is inclined toward independent libe'ation' of parts of the French work. However, the Labor Youth colony of Pondicherry, a tiny en- League is, by its own admission, an clave on the Indian sub-conti- action group. Its purpose is mes- nent near Madras. This is not sianic, not educational. When because Mr. Nehru does not want i