E TWO 'UHU MICHIGAN DAILAr TUESDAY, AUGUST 10, 1954 ETWO / 'tilt ~UIClIIfAX fulLy TUESDAY, AUGUST 10, 1954 l Was a Counterspy For the FE DO NOT usually remember my dreams, because I know nothing about them. But this one I had the other night, in which something happened to me that had never occurred in real life, I remem- ber. In this unsavory dream, I was a Communist for the FBI. Or a G-man for the Communist Party. It was difficult to determine which. Anyway, I was a so-called counterspy. At several points in the dream I should have been wondering how I got into such dangers, but wasn't. The dream had been quite clear on that point. Someone had given me a free ticket to the. ballgarse, and, when I arrived at the stadium, it had changed into a vacated store where a cell meeting was in progress. At first I was inclined to admire the Party's cleverness, but I man- aged to overlook it and ask for a rain check. They would have none of that, so I attended the meeting. Although the meeting seemed like, well, like a meeting, a tense feeling hounded me, a feel- ing that these fellows maybe should be investigated. But, before I could stand up and say so, the store changed back into a ballpark and everyone was standing for the seventh inning stretch. After the game, I thought of all the government agents that must hang around the ballpark in con- stant vigil against subversives. So I went to the FBI. It was easy. I was passing a barbershop when it turned into one of J. Edgar's branch offices. The fellow with half a shave was actually chief investigator for the district. While wiping off the lather, he told me to join the Party and report to him on all impending disasters while they were still pending. I Think "Sho nuff," I answered, seeing that he was fooled by my fake southern accent. I discovered later that he was the head of the Communist Party in the area; although I wasn't sure it was him because he was fully shaved. He convinced me, though, when he suggested possible misleading reports to the FBI. Instead, I was to report to him on the FBI's ac- tivity. I undertook this new task with gusto until I began to think it unnecessary to report to him what he already knew. Handling the situation was becoming problematical, but he solved everything. "We're not paying you to think," he said coldly, "just report." I spent nine years in this dream reporting from "Doc" the Communist to "Doc" of the FBI. And not once did I get a paycheck. I dodged in and out of revolving doors, slunk through alleys, I squirmed before revolver barrels, testified for both sides, and not once did I get paid. So I got mad. I was getting the runaround and didn't like it. For ten more years I planned my revenge. I would liquidate both the Communist Party and the FBI, the Party first to show the FBI how it's done. Besides, I am patriotic, even in dreams. Being a member of both, I studied as many until I knew their weaknesses. After ten years, I learn- ed the precise method for eliminating the Party. First things first, I philosophized, the FBI could wait. I had learned how to eliminate the Com- munist threat in this country, which was not bad for a start. I set up a program of action. Then I woke up. If only I could remember the last part of that dream, I could make' millions on television. -Jim Dygert "INotic e Anything From Up There?" -- "s . Rr_ f~2K i .. cetter to lie 6difor . For the Belgians' Sakes A Letter to To the Editor: President Hatcher: 1N THE August 6 Issue of your paper, you refer to the pre- THIS IS a copy of a letter re- Bence on this campus of Prof. An- cently sent to President Hat- dre Hacquerre of the University of Louvain, Belgium, I feel compelled to bring to your attention the fact that there is no Professor by name of Hacquerre on the Faculty of the University. This I have ascertained after careful checking. For the defense of my country's reputation, I have pursued the truth in this matter. A long and circuitous search has led me to the person of Andrew Hacker, who is an itinerant intellectual attend- ing summer session here. It is my understanding that he has been able to crash certain social circles by posing as a Belgian Professor. I think that the public should be warned against such imperson- ations which might give a wrong impression of the character of the Belgian people. -Jacques Dreze * * * it Answer to Myself .,. . To the Editor: HAVE BEEN staying in Ann Ar- bor for a few -days visiting with friends, and I read the interview with Professor Haquerre of the University of Louvain in Belgium. Your reporter indicated that Pro- fessor Hacquerre felt that "Ameri- can sociologists are not concerned" with the problem of assimilation cher. "It is my painful duty to write t t K C t 1 1 t t i a i i ' '. i PANDORA'S POLICE STATE: -Congress and Eisenhower's Anti-Communist Legislation EVEN THOUGH last January Congress was wildly E enthusiastic about the President's proposal that anyone convicted of belonging to the Communist conspiracy should lose his American citizenship, neither house has yet given practical effect to that enthusiasm by passing the necessary legislation. Nor have many of the other measures in the Attor- ney General's large load of anti-subversive Bills got beyond the committee stage. The more the legisla- tors look into this Pandora's box, the more they suspect that they are being asked to let loose a swarm of threats to America's civil liberties and constitutional rights-and Congress has not enough confidence in the Attorney General, Mr. Brownell, to take his word for it that there is no danger of a police state hidden in his proposals. The Administration will therefore have to wait until next year and the next .Congress for most, if not all, of the additional legislative authority which it considers essential if the net against Communist infiltration is to be tightened. And if the example of the present Congress is followed, that authority, when it comes, will be in a more modified form than the Administration likes. Already the House Bill permitting the use in court of evidence ob- tained by tapping telephone wires has restricted this power to such an extent that -the Adminisra- tion regards the Bill as useless; the Senate version looks little more satisfactory and even Senator McCarrah, not usually accused of liberalism, seems to think Mr. Brownell has gone too far this time. The House Judiciary Committee is proposing that an independent commission study the whole ques- tion of Communists in trade unions and defense plants, before legislation is considered, while the Senate committee has approved a Bill dealing with Communist-infiltrated unions and businesses by methods less drastic than the forced "dissolution" and "liquidation" suggested by Mr. Brownell. The only Bill of this kind that has actually been sent to the White House is that requiring subversive organizations to give the government a list of their printing machinery. Another Bill that has a good chance of passage at this session, for its through both the whole House and the Senate committee already, is that making espionage in peacetime pun- ishable by death. -The London Economist + MUSIC I A t A uditorinnm A ... Sigurd Rascher, saxophonist: with Patricia Joy Arden, piano; James Neilson, trumpet; Eleanor Becker, bassoon; and saxophone ensemble. Pro- gram: Pugnani-Kreisler: Praludium; Handel: Sonata (original in D, for violin); J. S. Bach: Prelude to Cantata No. 156; Purcell: Bouree; von Knorr: Sonata for Saxophone and Piano; von Knorr: Trio for Trumpet, Saxophone, and Bassoon; Welander: Arietta; Bozza: Pulcinella; Freda Swain: Danse du Satyr; Gershwin: Pre- lude No. 2; Clair Leonard: Recitative and Abrac- adabra; von Weber; Overture to Der Freischutz; Chopin: Military Polonaise; Bach: Allegro from the Brandenburg Concerto No. 3; Meyerbeer: Coronation March. T HAT much abused instrument, the saxophone, came into its own Sunday night as Sigurd Rascher played a long and varied program of orig- inal works and arrangements. The saxophone is an instrument which has its own distinctive voice, and, as played by a musician of sensitivity and ex- cellent technical control, it can be as expressive and flexible as some of the more frequently en- countered. in orchestral usage.) countered wind instruments (that is, frequently encountered in orchestral usage.) Mr. Rascher's treatment of the music he plays is a straightfor- forward one. His conception of dynamics is fitted to the contour of the phrase, and in general, noth- ing in his playing seems done merely for effect. In the classical transcriptions Rascher's playing was as clean and transparent as it was intense in some of the other works. The Handel violin sonata which was the large work on the first half of the recital was played with better taste, stylistically, than we sometimes hear from violinists. The per- former's breath control in the beautiful second slow movement was amazing. The long lyric line of the piece w