PAGL EIGAT' MIME MICHIGAN DAIIV 4tTTATnOv 's'Pirr , 19 -vApt&r' PAGF? ETGHT TUE W!CITJ(47%T 11~1!I*V @T~yv~*.~ 3~YW 4W 4*~ ZUNIDAY, APRIL 17, 1935 F Paid Political Advertisement Paid Political Advertisement National Students Assn. Names April 17-24 Academic Freedom Week; SL Policy Stand 'U' Participates 'Lack of Understanding Causes NSA Congress To Declare Week A democratic society depends upon the free exchange of ideas. It is the function of the educational com- munity to provide for this exchange of ideas to prepare citizens to assume their responsi- bilities in a democratic society. Many methods employed by legislative investigating com- mittees tend to prevent an educational insti- tution from doing its vital job by producing an atmosphere in which the novel, original, and unconventional may be punished as being pernicious or wickedly unorthodox. Therefore, the Student Legislature of the University believes it especially desirable at this time to affirm the following fundamental principles as essental if the educational com- munity is to continually fulfill its function to build questioning and exploring citizens and thus stregthen the forces of freedom. 1. The maintenance of academic freedom is of importance both to the educational community and to society as a whole. 2. The members of the educational com- munity, as citizens, have all the constitutional rights of any American citizen, and no spec. ial restrictions not imposed upon other citi- zens should be imposed upon them. 3. Provided a faculty member, adminis- trator, or student speaks or writes as a citi- zen, clearly indicating' he does not speak for the educational institution with which he is connected; he should be free from institu- tional or public censorship. 4. A faculty member should be free to express in class, along with the opposing opinions, his own opinions relevant to the material of the course, provided it is clear that he is expressing his own opinions and not insisting on their acceptance. 5. Students should be free to hear all points of view on controversial subjects fairly presented in order to aid individual formula- tion of opinion. 6. Religious, racial, and other non-educa- tional considerations shall not enter into the appointment of administrators and faculty members, or acceptance of students. It is understood that where the avowed purpose of an institution is to bring together members for a specific religious purpose, religion may be a factor considered in hiring and accept- ance. 7. Administrators, faculty members and students should be protected against dismissal as well as economic, social and political pres- ure becaue of membership in any religious, political, racial, or national origin group. 8. Dismissal from membership in the edu-. cational community should be only for in- competence, neglect of obligations to the educational community, moral turpitude, vio- lation of the academic freedom of others, or conviction under the law of the land, and then only after a fair hearing in accordance with the methods utilized in the United States Courts. LEROY GORE Leroy Gore To Talk April 24 on Freedom The Seventh Student Congress of the National Student Associa- tion decided to hold a National Academic Freedom Week because "there is little understanding of academic freedom." "Ironically, this lack of under- standing is true of students who are the most direct beneficiaries of academic freedom and the ones most directly affected by steady erosion of the freedoms of the academic community. In the midst of this poor understanding of the meaning of academic freedom, there has been a constant struggle with the problem of preventing subversion while maintaining our freedoms. Intellectual Curiosity "Education is in large part de- pendent upon a student's motiva- tion-his intellectualscuriosity. When an institution uses official sanctions to prevent some ideas from being expressed on campus, it is implying that there are dan- gers in thinking too much, in studying in some areas, or in ask- ing embarrassing questions. In- stead of motivating a student to greater intellectual endeavor, the institution is stultifying the edu- cational processes on campus. "A failure to hear all sides means that a student will have less and less chance to arrive at some approximation of reality. An in- stitution that restricts its freedom is having a deleterious effect on a student's search for truth. "The doubling of college en- rollments within the next few Program Planned During Academic Freedom Week Three events besides the speech by Loroy Gore have been sched- uled for Academic Freedom Week. The "Studio One" presentation of Justice Douglas' new book, Al- manac of Liberty, will be shown in Architecture Auditorium at 7:30 and 8:30 on Tuesday, April 19. The Wesleyan Guild is sponsor- ing a town meeting with the topic for discussion being, "Is Academic Freedom Synonomous With Po- litical Freedom?" Speakers will be Pat Roeloffs, Associate City Editor of The Daily; Mike Sharpe, president of the Labor Youth Lea- gue, and Ned Simon and Steve Jelin, former SL presidents. iV years raises new dangers to aca- demic freedom-dangers that in- crease the importance of current consideration of academic free- dom. Our institutions of higher learning will be forced to seek huge new funds to expand their facilities to absorb the onrush of students. "What price will be paid for these buildings and related facili- ties? Will our state legislatures, alumni groups, corporations, and individual donors demand new restrictions on the freedom of the institution as a condition for' supplying the requisite funds? Will the timid educator tone down controversy on campus to assure the necessary income? A tendency to neutrality of thought within higher education in order to secure these funds can mean the decimation of the stand- ards of higher education. The in-. terest of student government in academic freedom could not be more timely or imperative." Illinois Student Senate Asks Speaker Ban End 'Misuse of Fifth Amendment' Causes Dismissal of Professor A Temple University philosophy' professor, Barrows Dunham, was dismissed last year because of "misuse of the Fifth Amendment." Prof. Dunham was investigated by the Velde Committee and Tem- ple officials on charges of subver- sive activities. The American Civil Liberties Union has since taken up the case. Temple University has threatened to release further "withheld in- formation" if the ACLU released its report. In the meantime, the professor's lawyer admitted that he was formerly a member of the Communist party. Fifth Amendment When Prof. Dunham, who was chairman of Temple's Philosophy Department, was called before the Velde Committee, he refused to re- veal any other information besides his name-under the terms of the Fifth Amendment. The Committee immediately voted unanimously to recommend him for contempt and later se- cured the citation from Congress. The citation was thenforwarded, to the Attorney General's office and is waiting for a decision on; presenting it to a Grand Jury. 1 Temple immediately suspended Prof. Dunham, called him before their loyalty committee, and final- ly dismissed him fror. the faculty on a Pennsylvania law providing for a loyalty oath. The ACLU took up his case and charged Temple with violating due process of law and academic freedom. A report was submitted to Temple officials by an ACLU committee. Charges Made The report charges that Temple did not follow proper procedural safeguards In the dismissal of Prof. Dunham. Temple officials threatened to "release more infor- mation on Prof. Dunham"-which they had discovered in private closed hearings with him, if the' 4 I 4 ACLU were to make public its re- port. Prof. Dunham's lawyer felt that Temple was referring to the fact that the teacher was a member of the Communist party until "around 1945 or 1946." He said that Prof. Dunham is no longer a member. "No Reason To Fear" Prof. Dunham said that he has asked ACLU to publish its report because he had "no reason to fear criminal action from anything in the transcripts of the University hearings." Temple trustees haC formerly told newspapers that Prof. Dun- ham had explained his conduct on the ground that "he disapproved of the committee and that he in- tended to avoid acting as an in- former." Although Prof. Dunham quit the Communist party around 1946, he wrote a book in 1947 entitled "Man Against Myth-a. analysis of so- cial superstitions." The New York Times Book Review called the book a distortion of "history to fit the Procrustean bed of his Marxist convictions." Wolpert Wins First Prize In National Essay Contest Students Will Benefit Most Only if the Teacher Can Question Free From Popular Pressure Leroy Gore, originator of the "Joe Must Go" campaign will talk on the topic "Freedom is Not a One-Way Street" for Academic Freedom Week, April 24. A graduate of the University of Nebraska School of Journalism, Gore has acted in the capacities of both editor and publisher in Wisconsin for the last twenty years. Always a staunch Republican and once a personal friend as well ACLU Takes Case of Prof. Northern California American Civil Liberties Union has interest- ed itself in the case of a visiting professor at the University of California. In April, 1953, this professor stated that he had been deprived of the privilege of teaching be- cause of charges of past Commu- nist affiliation, which threw doubt upon the truth of his Levering Act loyalty oath. Communist Affiliations The University's Committee on Privilege and Tenure was told by Chancellor Kerr that there was information believed credible to the effect that there had been Communist affiliations during the five-year period preceding the per- son's appointment to the univer- sity. However, he was not at lib- erty to release this information of- ficially to the committee. Northern California ACLU be- lieves that the case represents a "complete denial of the presump- tion of innocence, of the right to answer detailed charges duly made in support of any evidence pro- duced and in the hands of the hearing body, of the right to be present when testimony is given, of the right to confront accusers, cross-examine witnesses-and, in- deed, of the whole requirement and spirit of fair hearing and due process." Two Schools Fire Prof. Immediately after Harry C. Steinmetz was fired from San Diego State College for refusing to say whether or not he was a Communist, he was offered a sum- mer teaching job by Cornell Uni- versity. However, a Cornell spokesman recently withdrew the University's offer Steinmetz first became involved in serious difficulty when he re- fused to state whether he was a l --- as supporter of Senator McCar- thy, Gore called for a recall of the Wisconsin Senator with an editorial in his own newspaper the Sauk-Prairie Star March 19, 1954. "I'm still reeling with astonish- ment at what has happened to me since then," said Gore. "As everyone now knows, the recall missed its fabulous goal of 403,000 signatures by a hair." Because of his political activi- ties legal and business pressures forced Gore to sell his newspaper. As the founder of the "Joe Must Go" club, charges were brought against him for belonging to a Wisconsin corporation which en- gaged in political activity. "Politi- cal corporations have been doing business in Wisconsin for forty- four years, and this is the first occasion on which their right to do so has been questioned," said Gore. "I will be back in the news- paper business as soon as the con- stitutional questions are resolved by the Supreme Court, probably early this summer." Dr. Novi koff, Vermont, Out College Professor Uses 5th Amendment Dr. Alex B. Novikoff, a profes- sor of Experimental Pathology and Biochemistry at the Vermont Col- lege of Medicine, was recently dis- missed from the University by the Board of Trustees for refusing to answer questions before the Jen- ner Committee. The Jenner Committee claimed to have evidence of Novikoff's participation in Communist acti- vities while a member of the fac- ulty of Brooklyn College, prior to coming to Vermont in 1948. No Communist A Vermont trustee committee formulated a policy that no known Communist would be permitted on the faculty. However, if a fac- ulty member invoked the Fifth Amendment, he would be relieved of his teaching duties, although remaining at full pay, until a special faculty-trustee committee could investigate the circum- stances of the case and recom- mend appropriate action to the full board of trustees. Vote Overruled A faculty-trustee committee was immediately set in action at Ver- mont University. Af ter two months' deliberation, 5 of the 6 members voted to retain Novikoff on the faculty. The Board of Trustees overruled the committee's Climaxing weeks of campus dis- cussion, the University of Illi- nois Student Senate has unani- mously endorsed a resolution call- ing for removal of a university ban on political speakers. The .vote followed a campus wide opinion poll by members of the senate, estimated to have reached more than 3,000 students. Only 56 of those polled voted against removal of the ban. Request Endorsed Emphatic endorsement of the Senate position was promptly voiced by the Panhellenic and In- terfraternity Councils. Next step in the effort to remove the speak- er ban will come when university president Lloyd Morey presents the Senate resolution to the board of trustees. Stating that "the Senate favors the use of university buildings, grounds, and facilities by or on behalf of candidates for nomina- tion or election to state or national offices," the resolution suggests the following steps for Implemen- tation: 1. An appropriate University committee with a student mem- bership be authorized to admin- ister the political speaker pol- icy of the University. 2: The speaker shall meet the following conditions: a. The speaker shall be a member of a recognized political party having legal status in the state of Illinois. b. The speaker shall be spon- sored by a student, faculty, or administration group. However, in the event the aforementioned "Unless the teacher is free groups do not choose to do so, the opportunity for sponsorship shall remain open to the official state party organization of the proposed speaker. c. Campaigning speakers shall be seeking state or national of- fice. d. Equal opportunities must be available to all political parties using University facilities. Scientists Protest Oppenheimer Ban The University of Washington announced last month that it had been forced to cancel an import- ant scientific conference April 7-8 because of its ban against Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer. Seven of eight Eastern and Mid- western scientists who were to have led the meeting signed a round-robin letter refusing to ap- pear because of the ban. The let- ter asserted that refusal to per- mit Oppenheimer to appear on the university campus had "clear- ly placed . . . Washington outside the community of scholars." University President Henry Schmitz invoked the Openheimer ban because of the scientist's "governmental relationships." He maintained the university's posi- tion had been misunderstood and said no question of academic free- dom was involved. Week Declared National Students Association has declared the third week in April as Academic Freedom Week. Before SL went out of existence, they also declared this week, in conjunction with NSA, as the Uni- versity's Academic Freedom Week. Working with NSA and SL, the Academic Freedom Ad Hoc Com- mittee has arranged for the acti- vities of the week. This committee was a sub-com- mittee of SL before it went out of existence. All expenses for the week have been payed by SL. to T. question and dissent, the student's mind will emerge from school, not strong with wisdom, but at best heavy with information." Speaking on "The Meaning of Columbia U' Acquits Prof. After a year-long investigation, Dr. Goodwin Watson, Professor of Education at Columbia University and a part-time research consult- ant for the Guidance Center of New Rochelle, has been "acquit- ted" by the Larchmont Commun- ity Chest of charges of pro-Com- munist affiliations. The charges, brought by the Westchester County American Le- gion, were investigated by a seven- man committee of the Larch- mont Chest, of which the Center has been a beneficiary. Five mem- bers found that Dr. Watson had not been a dupe of the Commu- nists or a "conscious, articulate instrument of the Soviet conspir- acy." They recommended that the Chest continue its support of the Guidance Center and pay it the Academic Freedom," Stanley A. Wolpert won the first prize in the 1954 national essay contest sponsored by the National Coun- cil of Jewish Women. Doubt and Wonder "The teacher who tailors his opinions to the cut of the popular pressure will hardly encourage bold inquiry in his classroom. But the shortest distance to educa- tion is still the circuitous route of doubt and error, of wonder and conflict, of struggle in the arena of ideas where all things are to be proved, and the good held fast. "Men who will one day govern themselves must first learn to think for themselves. Independent minds can neither be hammered nor drilled into shape-they must grow. Weeds and tangled brush will sprout from unscraped soil, but to reap a rich harvest of grain, the land must be plowed deep, the clods of earth turned up and brok- en, pummeled and agitated, fer- tilized, fed and watered. America's Tradition "The teacher should inspire and stimulate thought, and, by living his own fervent love of freedom, incite as fierce and beautiful a love in the hearts and minds of youth. In her colleges and univer- Chicago, U', NU Students Oppose State Broyles Bills By unanimous vote, the Student " °-- Governing Board at Northwestern tories or student organizations. University recently expressed op- Formed four times since 1949, position to the so-called Broyles the Committee works on an ad Bills pending in the Illinois State hoc basis to present its views on Legislature, issues affecting the civil liberties The Board also sent student of students. representatives to present their views before the state Senate. According to The Daily North- western, the bills make it unlaw- ful to "teach ... anyone to com- I to a t mit any acts to overthrow the government" and would force teachers to sign a loyalty oath. Ta e Fr d "Undesirable" The SGB resolution termed the The National Student Ass bills "undesirable because: (1) grounds on which a professors they destroy existing public ser- sional competence and integri vice tenure provisions; (2) they "This principle is basic. On may be used to prevent students This pniperis sic. and teachers from exploring con- petence and integrity should troversial issues; (3) they may be a teaching position. construed to apply to groups which "The NSA believes thatr are innocent of un-American acti- conspiratorial group or organiz vities, and (4) they lack provi- overthrow of the United States sions to guarantee judicial re- of certain principles and meth course and redress." the search for truth. At the Shortly after the SGB decision case, such membership extingu was announced, several North- to be professionally competent western students protested that "Membership in totalitarian student government had become zations that advocate the viole "self-appointed guardians of our is not, in and of itself, suffic liberty." SGB Representative? a university position . . . dism They maintained SGB had made vestigation of each individual+ "no effort to determine how the petence and lack of integrity. s week ave een pyed y IS I ident Group tom poseion ;sociation believes that the only should be judged are his profes- ty. only for lack of professional com- a professor be removed from membership in any totalitarian ation that advocates the violent government requires acceptance ods which surrender freedom in present time, in almost every uishes the ability of a professor n conspiratorial groups or organi- nt overthrow of the government lent grounds for dismissal from missal is justified only after in- case proves professional incom- a tribunal of one's faculty col- mine the facts and judge fairly trespass upon academic integrity, spass merits.... such a tribunal o conduct such an investigation, il outside pressures. t of the Cnaressof theU.~nited 1 Fi red Prof. Used Fifth Amendment Officials at Rensselaer Polytech- nic Institute recently dismissed Prof. Arthur L. Levy from the faculty. Prof. Levy, member of the chem- istry department faculty, invoked students which it claims to rep- resent felt toward the bills, held no public forum to discuss the is- sue, and did not even inform the student body it was going to dis- cuss ... the bills." Meanwhile, at the University of "The NSA believes thata leagues is competent to deters the nature and degree of any t as well as the penalty such tre is the only body competent to and . .. must be free from a' "NS~A rAe'nffnizpe fthe igfht ., i I ,I II I I I