PAGE FOUR THE M1t11116Ai :Ut1.1LV SATURDAY, APRIL 4, 1954 PAGE FOUR TIlE MIClih(~AN flAIIA TODAY AND TOMORROW: Negotiations & Surrender By WALTER LIPPMAN Speaking on the record at Cincinnati on Tuesday evening, Mr. Nixon tried to re- pair the damage done by his remarks on Friday. The difference between the two speeches is crucial. In the first he left everyone belieing that he had ruled out a negotiated settlement; in the second he said that we would seek to negotiate an "honorable and peaceful settlement"-ruling out "any settlement which means surrend- er." There is a vast difference between being opposed to a negotiation and being op- posed to a surrender. Friday's speech was a cardinal mistake. That was not because it accepted the possibility of dis- patching American forces to Indo-China. A possibility of that kind is always in the background of all diplomacy. The car- dinal mistake was that the Vice-President appeared to place Secretary Dulles in the Indefensible position of refusing to ne- gotiate at a conference called for the purpose of negotiating. This is not in fact the American position and the Vice- President's Friday speech misinterpreted the true position and needed an im- mediate correction. It will not be easy to repair the damage and to convince the uncommitted nations of Asia and our own allies that we do in fact intend to negotiate in good faith. We may believe it and I for one do believe it. But there are many Americans who do not be- lieve it and most people abroad will find it hard to believe. That is because there is a deep division of opinion not only of Congress and in the Republican party but within the Eisenhower administration it- self. There are those who think that the mak- Ing of the Korean armistice was a mis- take. They contend that the only way to prevent Red China from becoming the dominant power in Asia within a generation is by keeping it engaged and threatened in a great semi-circle extending from Korea through Formosa to Indo-China. But in- fluential as they are, they are not now dominant in the pisenhower administra- tion,-not in the White House, the State Department, or the Pentagon. They could, and almost certainly will, become dominant if there is no progress towards and no prospect of an honorable and peaceful settlement at Geneva. Foreign governments will have been misled if they assume that what Mr. Nixon said on Friday, rather than what he said on Tuesday, is the present policy of our government. But they should also understand that if there is a failure at Geneva, the supporters of the present policy will almost certainly cave in. It is, therefore, of vital importance-to speak plainly it is an issue of life and death for countless people-that the constructive and statesmanlike forces in all the countries concerned should gain the ascendancy at Geneva. On what common ground could they begin to build? On the ground, we may suppose, of a common understanding of what is the real problem of a negotiated settlement. We may begin, I think, by saying that the basic principle of an armistice (which must be distinguished from the final set- tlement) is an agreement as to where the opposing organized military forces are to stand still and to cease firing. An arm- istice of that kind would in no sense be a surrender. For at least until there was an agreed political settlement, such an armistice would sanction and confirm the physical presnce of the French Union forces in the main ports and cities of Indo-China. To say that we shall stand opposed to surrender is to say, when we translate it concretely, that we oppose the military eva- cuation of the country and the acceptance of the military mastery by Ho Chi Minh of Indo-China from the Chinese border to I+MMU Composers' Forum Leslie Bassett: Sonata for Trombone and Piano Fred Coulter: Trio for Clarinet, Viola, and Piano David Tice: Four English Songs Wayne Slawson: String Trio Roland Trogan: Sextet Fred Fox: Sonata for Solo Viola Edward Chudacoff: String Quartet THE LIST OF WORKS on this concert readily reveals its variety; there was perhaps more than on any program this season. Equally present was its originality, fostered by the younger composers search- ing for a personal expression and the older more mature ones seeking new paths for their inspiration. Foremost among the first, group was Rol- and Trogan's Sextet, which was given a virtuoso performance by the University Woodwind Quintet assisted by pianist Bruce Wise. With jagged rhythms and melodies that wer e scattered among the instruments much like colorful points on an abstract canvas, it arrived at a fabric which was both suitable to the percussive quality of' the piano and the many coloristic combina- fHinnc orf +tm heinnin A nuintef Saigon. A negotiated armistice would be one in which there remain substantially equal opposing forces in being. *$e * This is, I firmly believe, the true military principle for us in Indo-China. It is to support the French Union in negotiating such an armistice,-based on a decision not to withdraw until there is a political settle- ment agreed to and confirmed by the principal powers of the world. This is something which all the world knows we are able to do. For it is no commitment to destroy Ho Chi Minh or to make Hao Dai the Nam. It Chi Minh policy of policy of -can be strategy" undoubted emperior of all Viet is a commitment to deny to Ho the mastery of Indo-China. The denial-as distinguished from a military victory and pacification carried out by that "peripheral which is the natural strategy of a sea power like the United States. It is appropriate to Southeast Asia which is a peninsula, where many critical points are- because of the primitive internal communi- cations-in effect islands. It is, it seems to me, defeatism caused by a failure of diplomatic energy and re- sourcefulness in the Western world, to assume that any armistice is tantamount to a Communist victory. I think there is 'at least as good reason for regarding a negotiated armistice of the kind I have described as the best immediate practical measure for preventing a Communist vic- tory. The thing which I think we have most to fear is that Ho Chi Minh will think so too and will try to obtain a military de- cision in the north of Viet Nam before an armistice is agreed to. The prospects at Dienbienphu are not good and there are, according to Mr. William L. Ryan of the Associated Press, who has gotten out from under the censorship, ominous signs of a mass uprising in the Red River delta. Let us bear it in mind that the troops we are saying we might conceivably be sending there are far away, comparatively few in numbers, and have a long way to come. They count in the situation at the moment not as a military force in being in Indo- china but only as they may influence the attitude of Peiping and Moscow, of London and Paris, in the negotiations at Geneva. The negotiations of an armistice which is in substance the recognition of a balance of power is the foundation on which a political settlement might be constructed. But it is also true that the negotiation of that arm- istice will be helped and may well require some agreed conception of a political set- tlement. To this we can contribute, not expect- ing or seeking to take the leading part. The problem of a political settlement is, reduced to its elements, as follows: The Indo-Chinese states have not been pre- pared for independence and they are not now ready for it: when they cease to be colonies of France, how are they to be protected against becoming satellites of China? This is a problem which must be solved if Southern Asia is not to become the battle- field of a very great war fought for the paramount control of Southeast Asia. Since we will not give paramount control to China and the Chinese will not give it to us, the problem is soluble only if the uncommitted Asian powers intervene and produce that third force which they talk about so often. The prime ministers of India, Pakistan, Ceylon, Burma and Indonesia are meeting at Colombo on April 28. Can they provide a place in their community of Asian states for an independent Viet Nam, Laos and Cambodia? We could ask for nothing more and hope for nothing better than that the people of Indo-China should be as they are-liberated from the old colonialism and independent of the new satellitism-and with a place of their own in Asia and in the world community. (Copyright, 1954, New York Herald Tribune, Inc.) The two trios, by Fred Coulter and Wayne Slawson were both tremendous steps for- ward for these composers. Coulter's work, played by clarinetist John Dudd, violist George Papich, and the composer, was high- ly contrapuntal.sIts effect was like asuite of different moods, many of which, such as those in the first and last movements, were skillfully conceived. Slawson's Trio, performed by cellist Camilla Heller, violinist Carolyn Lentz and Mr. Papich, left the banality of his piano pieces of a few months ago in the distant past as he found newer more expressive ideas in the richer texture of the string trio. Both this work and that of Coulter were successful in their sincerity of musi- cal feeling, something an audience im- mediately recognizes, yet both leave open a certain expressive gap that only more craft and continual compositions will fill, The "old guard" took the fore at the pro- gram's beginning and its ending as Leslie Bassett's Trombone Sonata began the pro- ceedings and Edward Chudacoff's String Quartet (the first two movements only) end- ed them. Their point was well made; they showed us young folks a thing or two, the onata, with its mlndv nutlined in crafts- The Voice AND THE hallowed voice rang out from the Senate Chambers, saying: "All ye who support public housing are Communists. "All ye who favor national health insur- ance are Communists. "All ye who believe in progressive taxation are Communists. "All ye whom the Daily Worker favors are Communists. "All ye whom the Daily Worker attacks are Communists. "All ye who read the Daily Worker are Communists. "All ye who attack me are Communists. "All ye whom I attack are Communists. "All ye who try to take the lime-light away from me are Communists , . etc., etc., etc. But as The Voice droned on, the Little Man, sitting in the balcony grew calm. Now that he was included in the list of Com- munists, he could work for the Justice De- partment at $25-dollars-a-day and grow wealthy by turning in his friends' names. -Dorothy Myers The McCarthy Hearings THE HEARINGS in the case involving Senator Joseph R. McCarthy and the United States Army have now begun in an atmosphere quite different from that which usually prevails when Mr. McCarthy is on the giving instead of on the receiving end. True, the batteries of television and movie cameras, the ubiquitous news pho- tographers, the crowds of spectators, all contribute a familiar circus touch to the hearing and all help to give it the some- what less than judicial aspect that per- sons who follow the McCarthy procedures have come to expect. But here the re- semblance ends. The Senate subcommit- tee under the acting chairmanship of Mr Mundt has adopted a set of rules designed to give fair and equal treatment to all parties at interest in this dispute. For once Mr. McCarthy has no special advan- tage over his adversaries and for once the people whom he has accused are placed in a position where they can ade- quately defend themselves. A number of factors contribute to this re- markable situation. For one thing, Mr. Mc- Carthy is for all practical purposes tem- porarily divested of his privileged position as a committee member and he finds him- self, instead, at one end of a table with his aides and on exactly the same basis as the other principals in the case. While he has the right of cross-examination that he has never given any witness before his commit- tee when he was chairman, the other prin- cipals have that right also. The subcom- mittee will hold no sessions unless a mem- ber of the minority party is present-an in- novation where Mr. McCarthy is concerned. Both sides have the right to call witnesses and both sides have had plenty of oppor- tunity to prepare their case-again a de- parture from Mr. McCarthy's usual pro- cedure... . So far as the testimony itself is con- cerned, obviously it is much too early to draw any conclusions. Mr. McCarthy's in- sistence that his quarrel is not with the Army but with a handful of what he con- temptuously referred to as "Pentagon politicians" is a patent effort to run away from the major issue that he himself has created. His quarrel is really not just with the Army but with the entire Exe- cutive Branch of the Federal Govern- ment ... . It is an excellent thing that the hearings are being covered fully by the press, tele- vision and radio. The American public will be able to judge for itself the relative rherits of the Army's case and of Mr. McCarthy's case. For the first time we will also 'have the opportunity to see what Mr. McCarthy looks like when he is fighting on the de- fensive, and not on his own terms. -The New York Times New Books at Library Alexander, Holmes-Tomorrow's Air Age; New York, Rinehart, 1954. Bonner, Paul Hyde-The Glorious Morn- ings; New York, Scribner, 1954. Dodson, Kenneth-Away All Boats; Bos- ton, Little, Brown, 1954. Hayes, Joseph-The Desperate Hourp; New York, Random House, 1954. ch Mkra,roSre Schorer, Mark-The Wars of Love; New York, McGraw-Hill, 1954. Truscott, L. K.-Command Missions; New York, Dutton, 1954. Peace instead of bringing quiet to the world has brought the assurance of con- tinuous tumult instead, a Cold War that at any time may turn hot, a hot war in Korea that may never turn cold, storm and stress in Indo-China, in Malaya, in the Near and Middle East. The new generation brought up on such a diet, has a right to fell a little grim and suspicious. It finds difficulty in accepting readily all the old values. Its faith in the 4 .7ia- f:'' .':a:pR : , ; - .; = . t :¢ ^ r:. .: : , a . ' h fi ± . ry y = f '-f. }' ^- 1 f.. 1 s * V6 .-. ., .. _ a , . w "Here Goes" The Price Case ... To the Editor: Whoever was involved in the re- cent Shaffer-Price case, Shaf- fer plays only a secondary role. And the game of the young girl playing a "spy" certainly does not have my sympathy. Politically unexperienced, she got involved in a human conflict, with herself and her environment. Here I go along with Mr. Richard LaBarge referring to the necessity of any person confronted with politics to know his own stand and hold a clear viewpoint about the rights and duties of a member of a free society. I disagree with him in his criticism of Mrs. Silver. Mr. LaBarge is still too idealistic, may- be too immature to interpret in a correct way Mrs. Silver'; edi- torial. The performance of Miss Price is not the important factor in this case-it is the background of Mr. Shaffer. I know that a number of innocent students will feel sym- pathy with this poor man, who gave a birthday party for his girlfriend while she spied on him. Well, the same "poor man" was for years an active member of an instrument which is tr ing to rip- j 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 34 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. ON THE WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND WITH DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON-The inside story has never been told of how close stroy our existing pattern of life. Sen. John McClellan, Arkansas Democrat, came to a fist fight Mr. Shaffer realizes that he was with Sam Sears, the Boston attorney who was kicked out after one and through his former action still week as chief counsel in charge of investigating the Army-McCarthy is an outsider in our society. I row. don't believe that he is today an Behind closed doors McClellan demanded why Sears had lied anti-Communist. But we excuse to the Senate Investigating Committee about his past support his actions in the past with the for Senator McCarthy: Earlier, Sears had claimed that he had phrase: yes, in our society we have never expressed an opinion on McCarthy "publicly or privately," freedom, of thought and action. but it developed later that he had been an ardent McCarthy rooter This so-called tolerant and liberal and was once even recommended by Mrs. McCarthy to take the viewpoint gives full rein to the pro-McCarthy side in a debate. hand of the Kremlin, which is But at the closed-door meeting. Sears blandly claimed: "I told certainly satisfied about this feel- Senator Jackson (Washington Democrat) about my past statements ing of Americans in general. But onc a k(m)yy"m at the same time the institution for which Mr. Shaffer was working "That's asinine;" shouted McClellan. "I was there when you with all his personality is killing troduced to the fact that there may be in your class a neighbor spying on you is one of the ter- rible facts in our modern life. Against a totalitarian system you have to use certain methods of prevention. But these methods should be fair and democratic. In this case they were not. But that Mr. Shaffer should be supported by our own moral code there is something basically wrong too. -Peter Kalinke * * * Very Juvenile * To The Editor: There is no good reason WaY the co-ed FBI informer should feel guilty for what she did and even less reason for the mysterious graduate student to feel persecuted or nobly indignant. The whole thing is really very very juvenile. It seems to me that the motiva- tion behind participation in Com- munistic activities by an American is identical in quality with that which leads old ladies to join the DAR. And little girls who become "co-eds. for the FBI" are dramati- cally unbalanced, influenced too much by the Matt Cvetik tales. It would not be pleasant to be ruled by either General Motors or General Timoshenko to my way of thinking and while any retribution meted out to Communists or in- formers might be the result of their own childish romanticism, it seems that squares like myself, who do not want to be dictated to by the Lord Bishop or the Lord Bretheren, are the only genuine sufferers. -Bob Washbunne As the tool of a world-wide con- spiracy, Communist propaganda is no more invincible or infallible than the conspiracy it serves. Its function is to aid in the seizure, consolidation and maintenance of power by Communist minorities. Communist propaganda has one function inside the Soviet Union and the satellite countries, and quite another in the rest of the world. Internally, it is used in conjunction with the police power of a ruling group that has complete control of the entire administra. tive apparatus of the state, to keep its citizen-targets docile and mal- leable ... Externally, it seeks to make men into mobs that can be swayed eas. ily by emotional appeal. --The Reporter r talked to Senator Jackson!" "I don't remember ever meeting you before," shrugged Sears. Yet McClellan and Jackson had spent an hour with Sears, questioning him about his past, and had actually taken Sears in to meet the other members of the subcommittee. The Arkansas Senator was so furious at Sears' bland denial that he had to be restrained from going after him with his fists, * * * * SPRING BUSINESS BOOM T HE PRESIDENT'S economic advisers are more worried than they like to admit over the spring business boom. Reason for worry is that the boom hasn't been as big as they expected. There has been a seasonal spurt of prosperity, particu- larly in the construction business. But retail sales are down, though the figure has never been made public. And a flood of high school and college graduates will pour into the labor market in another month and a half. This almost certainly means worse unemployment this summer-unless rumors of war in, Indochina pick things up. S* * * JOE JUMPS TO FARMERSE DESPITE A PAST record of anti-farm voting, Senator "Jumping Joe" McCarthy has cocked a political ear to Wisconsin rumblings and has sent his investigators to comb the Agriculture Department. Their orders are: ferret out the "secret Communists" responsible for "undermining the farm economy.'' Joe has already taken the stump against Benson's flexible price-support plan, and has added his voice for high, rigid price supports. In fact, he has gone the farm bloc one better and called for 100 per cent of parity instead of the present 90 per cent. However, this just happens to be an about-face for McCarthy- and a belated one. For in the past he has fought for a sliding scale of price supports ranging from 90 down to 75 per cent of parity. His position was identical with Benson's. When Georgia's agriculture- minded Sen. Dick Russell rammed legislation through Congress in 1949, pegging support prices at 90 per cent of parity on the six basic commodities, McCarthy joined in the motion to recommit the bill. E He wanted to substitute the sliding, 90-to-75 per cent scale, instead. * * * - * JOE'S FARM RECORD r "HIS DID NOT end McCarthy's anti-farm voting record, however. He has voted against the farmer right down the line. When the Commodity Credit Corporation wanted to increase its borrowing authority by $2,000,000,000, so it could pay the price supports, he voted no. And when the Truman Administration wanted to increase storage facilities, McCarthy also voted no. This was the worst blow "Jumping Joe" has struck at the national farm program, and, partly as a re- sult, farmers' surplus grain was left overflowing the bins and rotting on the ground. McCarthy has also voted repeatedly to cut vital appropriations for the Agriculture Department, including a straight meat-ax slash of 5 per cent on May 19, 1949. Later, on July 26, 1951, he backed a one- third cut in the funds for helping farmers obtain machinery and other production materials. On the critical subject of soil conservation, McCarthy has voted six times to sabotage the program. Agriculture experts now agree that inadequate soil conservation is a basic cause of the tragic "dust bowl" in the Southwest. Since he first came to the Senate, McCarthy has also had 15 chances to vote for rural electrification projects bringing electric power to the farms. On the 15 roll calls, he voted 12 times against the farmers. But today he has suddenly become the farmers' passionate, new- found friend, probing for "Communists" in the Agriculture Depart- ment who are "sabotaging" the farmer. * * * JOHN SPARKMAN'S FOES SEN. JOHN SPARKMAN of Alabama, who ran for Vice-President on the Adlai Stevenson ticket, is'-paying the penalty of accepting the, Democratic national platform. He's also paying the price of being a conscientious Senator. Because the Democratic platform contained a civil-rightsI clause-which isn't popular with some people in Alabama-and because Sparkman automatically had to accept it, he is faced with nrmarvfi-h r om L,,-aur,. atte. a nicebt on the whole inno- and holding millions of people in concentration camps behind the Iron Curtain. It seems to me there is something wrong with our "liberal, democratic viewpoint." Yes, Mr. Shaffer should be able to follow his religion. The FBI should be able to take care of him. But when he spreads his poison into the minds of his fel- low students, and even in The Daily quotes America as a "police state", then the students should be able to make a judgment, clear- ly from precise knowledge, as to where humanity lies, in the Com- munistic or our democratic sys- tem. That our campus is now in- A DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN . The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the University of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsi- bility. Publication in it Is construc- tive notice to all members of the University. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 2552 Administration Building before 3 p.m. the day preceding publication (before 11 a.m. on Saturday).. SATURDAY, APRIL 24, 1954 VOL. LXIV, No. 140 Lectures University Lecture, auspices of the Geological and Mineralogical Journal Club, "Structural Geology of Finland," Dr. Heikki V. Tuominen, Professor of Geology from Finland and now visit- ing Professor at Lehigh University, Mon., April 26, 4 p.m., 2054 Natural Science Building. Notices President and Mrs. Hatcher will hold the fourth of a series of monthly open houses for University faculty, staff, and townspeople on Sun., Apr. 25, from 4 to 6, at the President's House. Academic Notices The Department of Biological Chem- istry will hold a seminar in 319 West Medical Building at 10 a.m., on Sat., April 24. The topic for discussion will be "Indoleacetic Acid Oxidase in High- er Plants," conducted by C. R. Noll. Diving Class. A diving class for wo- men students, whose physical educa- tion requirement is completed, will be held in the Women's Swimming Pool on Fridays at 3:20 beginning April 30. Sign up in Office 15, Barbour Gym- nasium. IDoctoral Examination for Gaylord Kirkwood Finch, Chemistry; thesis: "The Effect of Alkyl Groups in Nitro and Nitroso Phenols," Sat., April 24, 3003 Chemistry Bldg., at 11 a.m. Chair- man, W. R, Vaughan. Seminar in History of Mathematics will meet Mon., April 26, at 3 p.m., 3231 Angell Hall, Mr. Riordan will speak on Approaches to the Solution of the Cubic and Quartic. urged to visit the "Pfefferkuchenhaus" booth at Michigras Friday and Sat- urday nights. Members of the Ger- man Club will present a Hansel and Gretel puppet play, and gingerbread wi-l be sold. Coming Events The Russian Circle will meet Monday, April 26, at 8 p.m. at the International Center. Refreshments will be served and all students interested in Rus- sian are urged to attend. Undergraduate Math Club. The next meeting will be held in Room 3-B of the Union on Mon., April 26, at 8 p. m. Prof. Kazarinoff will speak on G. T. Bennett's Mechanism and Torus. . All interested are invited to attend. Informal Folk Sing at Murial Lester Coop, 900 Oakland, Sun., April 25, at 8 p.m. Everyone invited. 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. ... sceEditor Helene Simon..........Associate Editor Ivan Kaye...............Sports Editor PaulGreenberg.... Assoc. Sports 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. William Sesden.......Finance Manager IAnita Sigesmund. .Circulation Manager r Concerts -Telephone NO 23-24-1 a o